FXTHE MICHIGAN DAILY T"S________________________ PfITMJII! ! AIe~mryarrrw-,rI -DAY, OCTOBER 2,1962 a A 1) T/h Tension Sparks Explosion at 'Ole Miss' (Continued from Page 1) ened by the atmosphere of tension and bitterness. *One had the feel- ing that mayhem could break loose at any moment. as it eventually did. The University of Mississippi is, situated in a northern .arming area of the state, about 70 miles southeast of Memphis. The area is poor. On small sideroads poor whites' and Negroes go about the business of eking out a bare exist- ence from the tired soil. The farms are tiny,. the houses are in poor repair, and the people exhibit the frustration that comes from con- tinual poverty with little hope that things will ever get better. The Ole Miss campus is on the' south side of Oxford, several. blocks from the city county build- ing where additional rioting broke out Sunday. Campus View It is a medium size campus, as American campuses go. Its frater- nity row and sorority row are lined with huge houses, some of the old plantation style, some of modern design. The classroom buildings are large, 'including some new structures. Work is in progress on a new science center. The campus is approached along University Avenue, lined with stately trees befitting the 114 years that Ole' Miss has been in exist- ence. At the entrance to the school stand several monuments to Mis- sissippi's conferedate war dead. Behind the monuments, in front of the administration building, is a large circular park, scene of the weekend's rioting. A large Ameri- can flag flies from a pole in the middle of the park. Southern girls drive by in new cars sporting bumper stickers reading "HELP ROSS KEEP MIS- SISSIPPI SOVEREIGN," a n d "IMPEACH EARL WARREN." Watch Football Many Ole Miss students left the campus over the weekend, to at- tend the Mississippi - Kentucky football game in Jackson, the state's capital. Many freshmena were in evidence, wearing the "M"; beanie with the confederate col- ors. The student newspaper, the Mis- sissippian, was 'out Friday, with a headline reading "Crowd Cheers Barnett" referring to an ovation -AP Wirephoto MEREDITH GOES TO CLASS-United States marshals escort James Meredith to his first class on the campus of Ole Miss at Oxford yesterday. given Mississippi Gov. Ross Bar- nett when he turned away James Meredith at the gates to the uni- versity the day before. The students I saw and talked to were quiet and tense. One girl expressed a commonly held opin- ion when she said "I just wish this thing would get over with, one way or another." I saw a pe- tition backing Barnett being cir- culated in the student union. It had pages of signatures. Perhaps the most prophetic quote I heard was from the stu- dent who said "You know what tees all these reporters off? They want to see us throw some bricks or something." Display Flags Confederate flags were selling rapidly-in the student union store. The flags were everywhere, hang- ing from dormitory windows. Some students were carrying the flags and wearing rebel hats." A few students I talked to seem- ed to have realized what the al- ternatives in the crisis were: ad- mit Meredith or close the college. A few seemed to have realized that closing the school would mean loss of all college credit, ruining years of work for degrees. But the younger students were not wor- ried about losing credits. They were by far the more vociferous in backing the governor. Oxford townspeople expressed the fear that if the university were closed, it would mean the end of their businesses. Two thou- sand Oxford citizens are employ- ed by the university. The already shaky economy of nofthern Mis- sissippi would collapse if the uni- versity were closed, and the lo- cal businessmei know that. White Stronghold But there were many who didn't know or didn't care. Some came from all over the South to save white supremacy at the South's stronghold of academic segrega- tion. Certainly not all the students at Ole Miss participated in the riots Sunday. Probably only 25 per cent or less did. But that one fourth of the student population was loud enough and boisterous enough to render silent the rest of the stu- dent body. There were no integra- tionists in evidence in Oxfoid. It wasn't wise to open one's mouth at all if not in agreement with the extremists. The moderates among the stu- dent body stayed mostly in their dorms, or left town. It will be sometime before they are heard from again-at least not until the present crisis has become a thing of memory instead of presence. Watching, Waiting And I shall never forget one thing about Ole Miss . . . the ex- pressions on the faces of the Ne- gro janitors and servants who do the menial work on the campus. They were quiet. They 'new that their immediate environment was embroiled in a crisis that involved them whether they liked it or not. They knew, too, that enraged mobs of Southern whites have taken to shooting Negroes on sight in the past. Yet they said noth- ing. They looked at you out of the corners of their eyes, wondering whether you were friend or foe. You could feel them watching you. Flight Ends But Dancer Incredulous By DALE NOUSE of the Detroit Free Press DETROIT (A)) - Over the dark Atlantic, Stephen Dinka could re- lax for the first time in days. He and Mary Goodfellow had succeeded in snatching Emese Szklenkay, 20-year-old Hungarian dancer and his sister-in-law, from the 'Communists who had been chaperoning her troupe's tour of France. Thestrain of the search for her in all of Paris, of finding her in a student dormitory, of slipping her to freedom on the pretext of get- ting a cup of coffee-all this was behind them. But there still was one shock left. Half-dozing in the seat, Emese turned to Dinka and said: "We were lucky." He nodded agreement. They had been lucky. Ann Arbor Letter "That's not what I mean," she said. Then she explained that the troupe was to have had a three- day vacation in Paris. Those were the dates she had given her sister in 'a letter to Ann Arbor which had started the whole intriguing story. "But they cancelled it," she said. "We were to have left two days earlier. I had no- opportunity to write again. But then our plane reservations got mixed up and they decided to let us stay after all." Dinka felt weak. For the first time he realized that, although he had no way of knowing it, the whole expedition might well have been one long wild goose chase. Shows Fatigue I met them at New York: Dinka showing his fatigue but looking happy and proud; Emese calm and somewhat bewildered. At exactly noon Saturday our jet touched down at Detroit and within moments Emese, crying and laughing, was in the arms of her sister, Mrs. Marguerite Dinka. At the modest Dinka home in Ann Arbor, the conversation was light and gay. But somehow, the Berlin Wall was mentioned. To everyone's astonishment, Emese said: "What is that?" She explained that in Hungary, nothing is known of the Berlin Wall, only that United States troops are "massed" on the border. In the evening, Emese's future was discussed. Given a free choice, she said she had little interest in continuing her, dancing. She said that in Hungary, she was not qualified for university study because her father had been a doctor. "Only working class are admitted," she said. Room 3529 Call S.G.C. ORIENTATION PROGRAM 4:15 TODAY Chairman of standing committees and related bodies-to discuss projects for present and future. For further information Contact Ken Miller NO 3-0553 Ii~II S. A. B. 1 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT South U Drugs Formerly Lumbard's 1225 SOUTH UNIVERSITY NO 2.0743 'Inconspicuous' Bamoko Moves Toward Communism MORE FACILITIES: South African Schools Assist Bantu Education By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst The big wheels in Bamoko call each other "comrade." They say they are "building so- cialism." They've adopted a formidable glossary of Communist cliches like "democratic centralism" and "col- lective party leadership." Many in the United States never heard of Bamoko. It is the capital of a place whose politicians seem beht on transforming it into a king-size, land-locked, African- style Cuba. Mali Capital Bamoko is the capital of a new nation, as big in area as Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma com- bined. It is called the Republic of Mali. It is one of the states which emerged from the liquidation of France's African empire. Presiding over the poverty- stricken isolated land of 4.2 mil- lion - most of them Moslems - is President Modibo Keita, who is also minister of defense, security and foreign affairs. He is, also secretary-general of the single party which rules the country - the Sudanese Union. When France conferred freedom on the area, the idea was that the Sudan and Senegal, on Africa's West Coast, would become the Federation, of Mali. The federa- tion lasted two months. Senegal, disliking the political direction of the Sudanese leaders, withdrew in August, 1960. Communist Bloc Mali retains ties with France, for the time being. But it is being exploited vigorously by the Com- munist bloc. It could prove to be the nucleus of something which could give Communism a big leg up in Africa. Moscow has extended substan- tial credits to Mali. So has Czecho- slovakia. Mali has a commercial agreement with Red China. The regime pictures itself neutral in the style of Yugoslavia or the United Arab Republic, But Keita has linked Mali to the totalitarian regime of Ghana and to left-lean- ing Guinea in what is called the ,"Ujnion of African States." At present it is more of an idea than an actual union. However, as the Russians busy themselves increasingly with the area, the union may become more of a reality. The Russians are pressing Guinea and Mali to ac- cept a Soviet program of railway modernization which would be im- portant to Mali. Aid Promises The towering Keita obviously admires Moscow. He was there and in Prague only recently, got new aid promises and was given dazzling red carpet treatment by Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who used the occasion to blast the European Common Market as a menace to Africa. A week ago the Soviet Commun- ist Party announced it had estab- lished direct ties with Mali's Su- danese Union. The Red bloc sent delegates to the Sudanese Union's recent sixth national congress. That congress produced a set of resolutions which sounded as if they had been lifted from the. pages of Pravda, complete with in- junctions to members to indulge in "criticism and self-criticism" and for "vigilance . . . to detect and crush all subversive activities against our socialist choice." Mali is a people's democracy in embryo. By itself it might not vide a solid base for the Russians mean too much, but Mali can pro- in West Africa, similar to the Western Hemisphere foothold Moscow now has in Cuba. FOUNTAIN' ROY SNYDER R.Ph. DRUGS a. By HENRI JONKER Associated Press Staff Writer JOHANNESBURG - South Af- rica's white supremacist govern- ment points with pride to the fact that nearly 70 per cent of its black children now get a basic educa- tion. Before the 20th century ends, authorities predict, the country's entire black population will be able to read and write. Most Bantu youngsters drop out of school after five years and at- tendance in rural areas is still poor, but the education drive launched by the segregationist government less than a decade ago is getting results many black African nations can envy. Teaching Forces Official figures show there are 10,000 black schools in South Af- rica staffed by about 28,000 teach- ers. This teaching force is con- stantly expanding as 43 training institutions turn out more than 5,000 new instructors a year. JOHN STIRLING R.Ph. The Bantu education depart- ment has swelled the teaching force by persuading Bantu tribes- men to accept women as instruc- tors despite the old tradition that women should not hold such an important post. White teachers are used where Africans are unavailable, but this is a stopgap measure. Teaching Policy "The policy is education for the Bantu by the Bantu," one official explained. The attendance total drops sharply after five years, but offi- cials said there are nearly 53,000 black children in high schools where they have a broad range of subjects including Latin, mathe- matics, Science and commercial studies. Under its apartheid policy, the government barred blacks from the country's white universities three years ago, but three new universities have been established that enroll only Bantus. 'II STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE Benefits Increased Premium Reduced 12 Months for $20 FOR YOU AND YOUR DEPENDENTS OPERATING TOGETHER WITH THE U OF M HEALTH SERVICE TO PROVIDE PROTECTION AGAINST ACCIDENTS AND SICKNESS IN FORCE 24 HOURS A DAY-365 DAYS A YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD I I . j A midwestern college audience recently heard this answer in a talk by A. T. & T. Board Chairman, Frederick R. Kappel "To us this is an important question because we hire nearly 3000 college graduates yearly. To get an answer we went to our own files and examined the records of nearly 17,000 people. We checked each man's compara- tive success against what he achieved in college. who practice 'diplomaship'-the belief that a diploma automatically leads to job success. Such thinking will not make telephone service what we know it can be. "The men we want are men with intelligence plus those other attributes that give you the feel, the sense i