gage Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY MAGAZINE February 20, 1977 The (Continued from Page 3) boundaries of friendship. The young woman quickly let Wilson in on her bewildering desire to die, and despite Wilson's at- tempts at assuaging her trou- bles, she continued to focus her morbid wish on the newcomer to Ann Arbor. "I was trying to help the young lady with her problems, which I found myself, through the years, to be good at," said Wilson in his soft Kentucky drawl. "I've helped my wife with hers, and I've been able to help people with their problems Arb murder: Why? . . . because I'm the type of person who wants to listen." j'ET, BOUKAI'S problems ul- timately shifted onto Wilson. Some fateful weakness in his character allowed him to believe everything his friend Boukai told him-that he could meet her request and then get away, with the murder. When his pa- tience and nerves were defeated, he says, he pulled the trigger. And while law enforcement agencies from several states pressed their search for the sus- pect, Wilson and his new-found Detroit girlfriend, Lea, quietly fled south on Boukai's Yamaha. On the way, Wilson pocketed some cash by picking sweet po- tatoes-to pay for the cost of a marriage license. Then, once again, Wilson claims he acquies- ced to another woman's wants and got married. Lea said she couldn't desert him at that point. Little did the pair know they'd soon be parents. Still, Wilson went on deluding himself into thinking his life would play out normally. "I didn't feel I was on the run," said Wilson. "Even if they were looking for me, they didn't have a motive or anything be- cause Jeannine kept telling me, 'Don't worry, you'll get away with it.' "It got to the point," Wilson added sullenly, "where I be- lieved everything she said, I guess." cigarette in the air vent under the window of the interrogation booth, "if I ever figure it out, I'll have a best seller on my hands." So, there's a prospective book in Wilson's future, one, he says, which will refute what he con- siders to be an unfair image slapped on him by the local press. "I was convicted before I ever came back to town," Wil- son remarked bitterly. He es- pecially grimaces at the ,mem- ory of a recent photograph of him being led from a local courtroom, flanked by police- men, his hands shackled. "I just want people to under- stand that I'm not what the papers say," said Wilson. "The papers say Jeannine was such a goody-goody and then they made it look like here comes this Simon Legree along who shoots her head off . . . it's depress- ing." MEANWIIILE, WILSON has compiled a stack of news clippings detailing the murder case-not for posterity, but for the groundwork for his book. Yet, the book he's most en- thusiastic about is the poetry collection which he's had in the planning s t a g e s for several years. "I'm not getting into happy though i-tely," said Wilson, thumbi ° 'hr{-,gh a batch of 80 poems. penned on note paper, which the guard retrieved on his request. "I'm writing spir- itual poems, but I just put my feelings down on paper. That can change day to day, minute to minute. "I try to find something in today to give me some happi- ness," he said, "but it usually never happens." His guilt and immediate fu- ture accepted, Wilson has recon- ciled himself to the fact that he can do very little to improve his grim situation. As a result, he has begun to nurture a deep spiritual commitment. Wilson recalled the night be- fore he was to step before the judge to enter his guilty plea. "I had been staying up all night, thinking about what I had to say, praying. But God was with me. He helped me come through it easily. And he'll help me the rest of the way. "I'm not worrving too much. Whatever happens is something I have no control over. God's running my life now and what- ever he wants done will be done." Nonetheless, Wilson may take one more crack at controlling his situation. H i s attorney, Assistant Public Defender Ron C a r 1 s o n, indicated that his client will probably appeal the sentence of 20-40 years next month. No doubt, a string of new chapters will materialize for Wilson's book before the ordeal is finally through. k AFTER SEVERAL weeks of eluding authorities, Wilson finally surrendered in Alabama. "dyMO "OGEANBut the whole sordid affair still eludes Wilson. "Like my psychiatrist tells me," Wilson said, snuffing out a Universit o Michigan ,e-- Dance Company 3I inConcert Bantu schools y e s . T xC F .-5 Y+t ?¢ mss. r - ' i k,.$ Gx s "f DtrD Dance Guest Artists Contemporary rections Ensemble Projections Sculptures Song re , X -1 =- A Multi-Media Dance Collage Power Center for the Performing Arts (Contlnued from Page 5) means of change have been ex- hausted. "We think the time is ripe in the country for armed struggle," she states. What accounts for the "fail- ure" of the Bantu schools? Why have they produced rebellion rather than docility, confronta- tion rather than conformity? "Even an inferior education has a tendency in the minds of people to make them want to assert their freedom," Prof. Wagaw suggests. As a result, the South African government now finds that, "(students) are in the vanguard of the freedom struggle." Seransky gives aonther reason for the current mood of rebel- lion: much of the dissent has sprouted from seeds sown dur- ing the time of massive black movements in the U.S. "Books that were surfacing here in the late sixties got to South Africa in the early seventies. Things like Soul on Ice, The Wretched of the Earth, were being smug- gled in and that stuff was filter- ing down into Soweto. Blacks saw pictures of what was hap- pening in American cities, what blacks were demanding there. Although books are censored, that kind of information still gets t h r o u g h, in uncensored nwepspares, in rock and soul music. Once blacks stop accept- ing the white definition of who they are, and what they are as black people, it's the beginning of the end of apartheid." IF EDUCATION for blacks is, as Prof. Wagaw says, "educa- tion for subservience," then white education is education for domination. "Racism Is assumed-it's a given," said Kuttner who at- tended all-white, English lan- guage schools through primary, secondary a n d undergraduate levels. "There's a consciousness that everyone around is white--the teachers are white, the principal is white-and you're surrounded by a sea of black faces," he re- calls. In this setting, "very little racism needs to be explicitly stated," he adds, because it is inherent in the educational sys- tem itself. Kuttner also notes that a lot of tension exists between the two white language groups in South Africa, each of which has separate schools: "There was as much distrust between the English and the Afrikanners as between whites and blacks. Only the threat of the b l a c k s keeps them to- gether." Although highly critical of the racism in South African schools, he doesn't think U.S. education is fundamentally different. "It's only a difference of degree" based on the difference between the U.S.'s twelve per cent and South Africa's seventy per cent black population. SIKOSE MJI SEES the analogy of South Africa and the U.S. as more than a coincidence: "The U.S. is the main source of support for the regime at pres- ent," she said, listing America's massive investment in South Af- rican industry as a principal means of that support. If, as she contends, the U.S. helps maintain apartheid, then it also has the power to end it. As Mji tours the country, she urges Americans to work for this end: "With a new adminis- tration, the people in this coun- try can help guide where they should stand." Whether or not her plea is heard, Sikose Mji exemplifies- as do Seransky and Kuttner- the failure of the South African school system in its attempt to indoctrinate s t u d e n t s in the ideology of apartheid. And, Mji proves that, despite an inade- quate education, a basic social awareness will compel a person to break out of the shackles of onoression. March 18 8pm Friday March 19 8pm Saturday March 20 3pm Sunday $4.00 /$5.00 OO off per seat for Students & Senior Cs z: Tickets: Liberty Music, Hill Auditorium, Jacobson's, Dance Dept. Information: 763-5460 Presented by the Shoof of Mse & Dance Department -- - - -------------------------------------------------------------- To get Yourself the Best Seat in the House .-a ORDER as SOON as POSSIBLE!! MULTI-MEDIA DANCE COLLAGE/MAIL ORDER FORM To Order by Mail: 1. Mail order form to: U of M Dance Company Help support U of M Dance Company: Dance Building- Friend © $25.00 (4 tickets) Ann Arbor, MI 48109 -,Patron @ $50.00 (6 tickets) 2. Include stamped, self-addressed envelope. 3. Make check or MO. payable to: U of M Dance Dept. - Sponsor @ over $50.00 (8 tickets) -Solweto, oty. Date Time - Friday, March 18 8:00 p.m. 0a orch. 0 bale. p center Saturday, March 19 8:00 p.m. 0 orch. 0 bale. 0 center .- Sunday, March 20 3:00 p.m. E orch. aWe. 0 center Ticket Prices: $5.00 orch./balc. center $4.00 orch./balc. sides 0 side C sde 13 side Total amount enclosed: $ All contributors listed in the DANCE program if requested: yes no Name Address City State Zip Phone number Please include stamped, self-addressed envelope. RICKY WAYNE WILSON The mystery in the motive BANTU ED1 Lessons i subservii Cali 763-4099 for further information. Thank you very much for helping U of M Dance Department. Supplement to The Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor, Michigan