Sir Harry H. Johnston , British Central Africa, London, Methuen, 1897, pp. 19-22.
2.
National Archives, Salisbury, Item T2/2/18.
3.
Nyasaland Times, 19 July 1960.
4.
A report in the Central African Mail, 17 April 1962, indicates that this conflict persisted. According to the newspaper's correspondent in Limbe, Indo-Africans were openly supporting Dr. Banda's Malawi Congress, while some Eurafricans were supporting Sir Roy Welensky's United Federal Party.
5.
Cf., among others, Kurt Lewin, Resolving Social Corrflicts, New York, Harper, 1948, pp. 186-200, and George E. Simpson and Milton J. Singer , Racial and Cultural Minorities, New York, Harper, 1953, pp. 192-195, 304-307
6.
For a factual discussion of current hygienic standards among Indians in Central Africa, see F. Dotson and L. Dotson, 'Cultural Values and Housing Needs ', Social Research and Community Development, Based on the Fifteenth Conference of the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute for Social Research, edited by Raymond Apthorpe, Lusaka , Rhodes-Livingstone Institute, 1961, pp. 58-66.
7.
The role of the dominant in race relations has yet to receive the attention which we think it deserves. We hope shortly to publish further on this matter from a strictly theoretical point of view.