Word: oles
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Just after President Kennedy sent troops to Ole Miss, his popularity, as measured by the Gallup poll, hit a low of 61%-with only 51% of Southerners approving his performance in office. Then came Cuba, and in its wake Kennedy's popularity has soared back to 74%, with a 14-point jump to 65% in the South...
Memories of Mississippi. Odds are that at least one of the Negro applicants, probably Gantt, will make it in time for spring semester in February. Is the prospect peace-or another Ole Miss mess? Last week Alabama's Governor-elect George C. Wallace rattled his battle plans in a speech before the Mississippi state legislature. "All that I am advocating is that these forces of evil bridle themselves in their lustful desires to destroy the South," he said. Like Mississippi's Ross Barnett ("your gallant Governor"), Alabama's Wallace hopes to foil desegregation by making himself "chief...
...Cornerstone of a defense that has allowed its opponents only 131 yds. per game this season, Dunaway is the nation's No. 1 college lineman in the scouts' book, a nimble giant whose hardnosed play has earned him the nickname, "the monster of Ole Miss." Too light to stay at tackle as a pro, Minnesota's Bell will probably be shifted to guard or defensive end. Also ranked high on the scouts' list are three small-college tackles. A junior at Mississippi's Negro Jackson State College, Ben McGee...
...even while U.S. law was moving, so-in its own fashion-was Mississippi law. In Oxford last week, when a grand jury met to investigate the Ole Miss riots. Circuit Court Judge Walter O'Barr, 39, issued a diatribe that would have been laughable had it not reflected the deep feelings of so many Southern citizens. Said Native Mississippian O'Barr, a former mayor of Okolona...
...grand jury returned its report-which was of predictable content. The U.S. deputy marshals who had been assigned to protect Meredith, it said, committed "many cruel and inhuman acts of violence." It commended Mississippi's state cops for "dedicated action." The encirclement of the Ole Miss administration building by marshals "was apparently done for the sole purpose of agitating and provoking violence,'' and Chief Marshal McShane's order to fire tear gas "was done for the purpose of inciting a riot." The jury then returned sealed indictments against two people. From the report, it was clear...