|
|
 |
Tickets
THEATER
|
George Wallace Tickets
|
|
For George Wallace Refund Policy Schedule or George Wallace Refund Policy tickets availability click above link
|
 |
Tickets--Tickets.Com is one stop online shop to buy George Wallace Tickets. Find detailed information to Buy George Wallace tickets or to Buy George Wallace THEATER tickets at our online store.
If you need Sports , Concert , Theater , Broadway Tickets ,SuperBowl, NBA, NFL, NHL, WNBA , Order online or call us today at 281-447-8833. You can see all your favorite events upclose and personal.
Use our search facility specially customized for you to get details of special hard to find events schedule infromation easily from comfort of your home. And once you are ready, order them with a click of a mouse or talk to us at 281-447-8833.
Do not have much time? No problem!! We will be happy to ship your tickets overnite right at your door.
Note : On-Line orders placed on the day of the show may not be filled. Please call us directly for 'same day' ordering and delivery options. We will be happy to help you. Thank you!
We appreciate your business and take great pride in serving you.
|
 |
| George Wallace Schedule |
| George Wallace Parking |
| George Wallace Advance Ordering |
| George Wallace Events |
|
| George Wallace |
All George Wallace sales are final. No refunds or exchanges
will be honored. Be sure to order only what you need. Upgrades are available
for a premium.
In the event that a George Wallace event cancels a refund will be given.
If a new date is scheduled there will be no refunds. Usually the event will
reschedule and your tickets will be good for the new date. If an event
cancels 30 days will be given before refunds begin to see if a new date is
announced. If no new George Wallace event is rescheduled a full refund
at this point is given.
If you have any questions about a refund feel free to call 281-447-1579. If
for some reason you can not make the new date, Northsidetickets.com will
offer to resell your tickets. Northsidetickets does not accept
responsability of paying for these tickets until they have resold.
Northsidetickets offers this service to help keep our customers happy.
|
George Corley Wallace (August 25, 1919 – September 13, 1998) was an American politician who was elected Governor of Alabama as a Democrat four times (1962, 1970, 1974 and 1982) and ran for U.S. President four times as a third-party candidate (in 1964, 1968, 1972 and 1976). He is best known for his pro-segregation attitudes, which he later recanted, during the American desegregation period. His first wife, Lurleen Burns Wallace, was the first (and, as of 2006, only) woman to be elected as governor of Alabama.//Born on August 25, 1919, in Clio, Alabama, to George C. Wallace and Mozelle Smith, he became a regionally successful boxer in his high school days before moving on to law school in the late 1930s. After receiving his law degree in 1942, he enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Forces, flying combat missions over Japan during World War II. Wallace rose to the rank of staff sergeant in the 58th Bomb Wing of the Twentieth Air Force. He served under General Curtis LeMay, who would be his running mate in the 1968 presidential race. While in the service, Wallace nearly died from an attack of spinal meningitis. Only prompt medical attention saved his life. The experience left him with partial hearing loss and nerve damage and as a result, he was medically discharged from the military with a disability pension.In 1928, at 9 years old, Wallace contributed to his grandfather's successful campaign for probate judge. Late in 1945 he was appointed Assistant Attorney General of Alabama, and during May 1946 he won his first election as a representative to the Alabama Legislature. At the time he was considered somewhat of a progressive liberal on racial issues. As a delegate to the 1948 Democratic National Convention he did not join the Southern walkout at the convention, despite being opposed to President Harry Truman's proposed civil rights program, which he then considered to have been infringements on states' rights. The dissenting Democrats, known as "Dixiecrats", supported then Governor Strom Thurmond of South Carolina for the presidency. In his 1963 inauguration as governor, he excused this action on political grounds
|
|