..... .... - --.-, .-. -.- - A- -4 -~ -.4 r - - -. - -- .4 x1* - Monday, CUBA'S YOUNG INTELLEC ANN ARBOR'S BUS TERMINAL-The door flaps open and shut, the lines lengthen and shorten, people wait, shuffle, walk, sit, staid, come and go, and the busses move in and out with their loads--and the ticket offices remain open, always selling to ladies with stuffed shopping bags, tired servicemen, pert coeds, white-haired men.. . Bus Terminal Blues 'The Public Address System Blares Something Unintelligible ...' By MICHAEL KRAFT Daily Staff Writer ON HURON street, almost hid- den behind the stores of -'-wn- town Ann Arbor, is the Grey- hound bus terminal. It's a place of movement, yet the activity is often sporadic. The baggage porter I e "s against the back door, carefully smoking a cigarette butt. On a hard wood bench, a drunk sits in undisturbed sleep. The ticket clerks, chatting idly, wait for cus- tomers. Soon they drift in, one or two at a time. A greyhaired woman burdened with a suitcase and over- flowing shopping bag shuffles up to buys a ticket for Detroit. An- other woman rushes to the win- dow, seeking assurance that she isn't late for the next Ypsilanti bus. The entrance continues to flap open and a short lines forms open and a short'line forms quick- ly. Tickets sell briskly for Jack- son, Ypsilanti and Detroit, the most frequent destinations. Occa- sionally, the clerk reaches for a ticket to Flint, Toledo or Chicago, the farthest transfer point from Ann'Arbor. FACING THE ticket booths and seated among rows of stiff benches, two construction work- ers, their faces lined and ruddy - perehaps from the sun, loudly condemn the Detroit Tigers. Ignor- ing them, the other waiting pass- engers thumb through newspapers or just stare at the opposite wall. A boy of about five eludes his mother and runs up and down the aisles. Finally, a bus pulls in and the public address system blares some- thing unintelligible about "Jack- son, Three Rivers and Chicago." His mother in tow, the buy rushes out onto the loading platform, fol- lowed by the other impatient tra- velers. As passengers embark, the porter swings open the luggage compart- ment doors and begins loading packages and suitcases. T h e throatly idle of , the engine, the banging doors and the noise of street traffic turn the loading dock into a place of noisy excitement. Finally, the passengers seat themselves and the driver slams the door. The bus roars away, leav- ing only a trail of strong fumes. The porter, his work finished until the next bus in twenty min- utes, ambles back into the waiting room, fishing in his pockets for another cigarette. By DAVID A. MUNRO ONE AFTERNOON last Novem- ber a group of students at the Universidad de Oriente sauntered down to the highway that passes the campus and flagged down a passing bus. Most of them stood, joking, in front of it to prevent it from proceeding, while or.e. a lettering artist with a black brush, wrote "Abajo Batista" on its sides. On the front, in smaller letters, letters, he wrote "Arriba la revo- lucion" and signed it with the cryptic initials, "F E U, U de O." This meant'Federacion Estudantil Universitaria, Universidad de Ori- ente. The painting party stopped the next bus and the next. Bored driv- ers waited in their seats while the students redecorated the vehicles. Inside the university the signal, no more than a whisper, spread from classroom to classroom. By common consent the students left. The University authorities, who could not do otherwise, announced that there would be no further classes .that day or the next. Thus a revolution was signaled. On November 30 came the first climax. These same young men, with others-grimmer, armed, uni- formed as the "26 de julio" army- attempted to seize the city of Santiago de Cuba, home of the University and second city of the island. Two days later, with Santiago calmed, or at least cowed, under -the carbines of a crack U.S.-train ed regiment flown in fromdistant :Habana, Fidel Castro landed on a wild shore nearbyWith his follow- ers from Mexico. And some of our University stu- dents, who had fought the unsuc- cessful engagement at Santiago, successfully made their way through the roadblocks and pick-; ets, the traps and the snipers, to join Castro in the high Sierra Maestra mountains. One of the most daring and successful guer- illa operations of all time was on.i OF COURSE the guerilla army in the hills needed supporting organizations in the city. And there began those internal pro- cesses that so regularly mark the growth of revolutions. Food was needed, and the mer- chants and the women banded to- gether to collect it. Medicines were needed, and the doctors and the women accumulated it. Money wasj needed, and clothes and arms and transportation.t Santiago, capital of the prov-I Ince, became a city with a clandes- tine purpose and with an elaboratet underground to meet it. At its coret were the women, wives of the im- portant men of the city, women with servants in their homes andt time on their hands, women with1 sons or brothers or husbands in the mountains. Thus the pattern of revolutiont in Cuba began to take shape. Uni- versity students in the vanguard, yes. Middleclass (and frequentlyr middle-aged) women in the sup- porting ranks, yes. Wide public support among the literate, theX alert, the educated, the urban,t spreading out from Santiago tor the province and to the whole nation. BUT. THIS still leaves a whole section of the society unmovedt and untouched. Below a certain point in the Cuban socio-economic scale the revolution has no mean-r ing. To some, this is simply thes coloring.n The whites, say some whites,I take all the risks while the blackss sit back to take all the advantagesp when the battles are won. An instructor in the Univer- sity's English Language Insti-a tute, David A. Munro has justa returned from one year as asso--t ciate professor of English at S Oriente University in Santiago, I Cuba. He has contributed simi- lar articles concerning the Cm- b baisituation to the pages of The Daily. a3 They're Staking Their Lives On a Reawakening at Home i UNIVERSIDAP DE ORIENTE--The Santiago school is the scene of peace and quiet now, closed for the duration since last November, when Cuba's students struck in protest of the government. THE BUSY MAN-"The porter, his work finished until the next bus in twenty minutes, ambles back into the waiting room, fishing in his pockets for another cigarette... ." But a - little closer observation shows that revolutionary vs. non- revolutionary society is not sharply cut, even on the blurred race lines as they exist in Cuba. It only seems so because color is roughly correlated with socio- economic position. And the fact is that this is a middleclass revolution, properly and logically led by university stu- dents, properly and logically sym- bolized by Fidel Castro, young son of a wealthy planter (29 years old when he set foot on Cuba to "liberate" it), and darling of stu- dents everywhere down to the flve-year-olders in pre-primario. But there exists in Cuba a large class below those who go to schools, those who have salaried jobs, those who do not live on dirt floors. Most of them live in the back country, where mud roads and lack of radio (because there is no electricity) have sealed them off from the ideas and the ferments of the city. But many have come to the cities. They have brought with them their level of ignorance of politics and sanitation, their un- skilled approach to the economic world, but have left behind their countryman's self-respect and dignity. This is the unleavened lump of resistance. It is composed of people who are non-revolutionary be- cause they are non-political, of people little aware of how to better their station by either the orderly processes of democracy or the col- lective action of revolution. THIS SOCIAL cleavage between revolutionary and non-revolu- tionary gives the present conflict its "class war" aspect. The soldiery are the visible rep- resentatives of the bottom class in society. They are hired by the military dictatofship. Not drafted. And only the bottom class . in the society can be attracted by the low pay while remaining indifferent to the ideological implications of the job. They are therefore easy to "stereotype." They are said to look at their job as a kind of vast WPA. They are commonly categorized in the terms arrogance regularly as- signs to its inferiors: primitive, animalistic,. indolent, ignorant, icentious. As a group they are feared because, as their betters say, they become beasts, they stampede in continent, trigger-happy rage,+ and they may be fagrantly ma&A- ipulated for their own and the nation's destruction. But the stereotyping goes the other way, too. The social classes from which the Army recruits are taught that the revolutionaries are gente mala, literally meaning "bad people," but here including the meanings of sick people, vicious people, people afflicted with some social infirmity which makes them a public menace. THIS SEEMS quite logical to the mind of Cuba's bottom classes. Doesn't the present be- nign dictatorship give all these jobs including maintaining a standing army of 40,000? Haven't the "good" white people of the island always provided the jobs, always protected and sold the su- gar cane, always kept business going?f It can therefore be only hateful and perverted people who burn the cane, bomb the electric sys- tems and disturb the peacetime ease of normal army life. Naturally, each stereotype pro- duces a sort of moral sanction for wiping the other out, for the mur- der of Cuban by Cuban, and for a general bloodthirstiness unlike the comparative impersonality of- internatione 1warfare. It is heightened, insofar as there is a racist basis for the mutual animosity, by the fact that Presi- dent Batista is a mestizo. BUT THERE are also moderat- ing influences which have pre- vented murders on the streets get- ting out of hand, even in Oriente Province. It turns out that the hired soldiers are not only indif- ferent to the government cause but frequently antagonistic. The exact number of soldiers who have chosen the guardhouse rather than march upon the revo- lutionaries in, the mountains is kept secret, but the fact that they tax the facilities of the military jails cannot be concealed. It also turns out that the young revolutionaries are more impressed with the new ideas of passive re- sistance and civil disobedience than with the torch of revolu- tionary tradition. Even the bombs which so regularly punctuate the Saturday night silence of sophis- ticated Habana, and which have disturbed the peace of every town in the realm, are hardly more than accents in the long intellectualr dispute. They have been almost never directed against people, and they are only occasionally well enough placed so that they knock out a water-main or an electric power nexus. But they do say to Habana, "Do not celebrate. Don't go out. Cuba is in travail and in mourn- ing." Thus the direction of the revoltion and its tone is almost whelly in the hands of the revolu- tionaries. This brings us back to the Uni- versity students, joking among themselves as they paint slogans on the buses, and to student lead- er Fidel Castro. What has so pro- foundly moved these middleclass people that they stake their lives and their treasure to win freedom --and freedom not from any for- eign devils but from one of their own? HE ANSWER of Cuban econo- mists is "stagnation," a stag- nation unfortunately imposed up- on a people accustomed to the big money, to an expanding economy and even to a labor shortage. They do not react with the self-abnegation of older, caste- ridder societies to whom hopeless- ness and futile struggle are felt to be the inevitable order of things. They react with the violence of a frontier people who run up against sudden restriction and curtail- ment. The restriction upon this society, -the "stagnation," is a matter of record. In 1925 a Cuba with 3,000,- 000 people produced over 5 million tons of sugar for the first time in history. And it was not until this year (the seasonal "zafra," or sugar harvest, is completed in April) that a peacetime harvest once again topped 5 million tons. But today's Cuba has twice as many people existing on the same sugar- income. Meantime, capital improvement has been slow. No new sugar mills have been built since 1925: in fact, 12 which were then in operation have since been dismantled. Some of those still in operation are museum pieces, with towering forty-foot cogwheels and vast, brass-bound steam-engines work- ing under whirling governors and jiggling glass receptacles full of yellow oil. Gone with the wind also is the entrepreneurial spirit which pioneered the one-time feverish industrialization whose monu- ments now dot the landscape. OPPORTUNITY in private in- dustry for the technically- trained is thus limited by these C C i t ( t s f e r u C s t a t s g t4 C r. t i, ti p a h p it i: gi e: B ci fi t i fa at tk a a si