TWO THOUSAND TEACHERS CONDEMN BLACK SASH STANDS BY GARMENT WHATEVER DULLES UNIVERSITY APARTHEID DURBAN. WORKERS I'T^O thousand Indian teachers of Natal have condemned the ^ University Apartheid Bill as an assault on personal liberties and the denial of the right to enter the university of one’s choice which DOES GOES WRONG is fundamental to freedom in a democracy. JJO W sad the West’s states­ he does that all the newspapers of the USSR.” The teachers’ views are expressed and burning problem of the day in a memorandum submitted by in South Africa, is the fostering of men must feel. Always will laugh at him for staying in On the other hand if you try the pan and frying instead of to prevent this by giving the Tuni­ the Natal Teachers’ Society to the harmonious relations between the something goes so terribly jumping out. sians the guns they need to shoot Commission on University Apart­ several racial groups in the coun­ wrong. If he follows the other course, the French with, those excitable heid. try. It is common cause that race relations are at the moment at The new phase of the cold war jumps out and is burnt to a cinder Frenchmen threaten to walk out of Lucidly described in the memo­ was just getting into its stride, all in the fire, all the newspapers will Nato and everyone gets the jitters. their lowest ebb. We fail therefore randum are the evils which univer­ to see how people are going to the Nato leaders had spurned Mr. laugh at him for jumping into a Sometimes Dulles must wish sity apartheid will perpetuate. Kruschov’s suggestion or a peace fire. appreciate and respect one that they would let him settle another’s ideals and aspirations, if meeting at the summit, and the That’s what life is like for poor down .to a quieter life as U.S “We can think of no surer way slogan set out in headlines by old Dulles and Macmillan. of breeding hate and dissension, one sectinon of the community Foreign Minister in Outer Mongo­ should seek to cabin and confide weary editors all over the world Take the Tunis example. lia. even open rebellion, against lawful was NATO UNITY—Clarity of When Egypt wanted economic authority than by compelling another in these separate institu­ Purpose. aid and arms from the U.S., Dulles people by law into separate places tions as is proposed by the Bill.” And then the French got cross refused because Nasser was be­ The Main Mistake of learinig, shut away from those Tlie teachers state that they are just because the Americans and having like a neutralist and that, very influences which can promote opposed to the whole principle of ^T^HERE can be little room for the Bill because both the events of British were selling the Tunisians as Dulles has publicly declared is doubt that a solution will be inter-racial co-operation and under­ guns to shoot French soldiers with. “immoral.” standing,” states the memorandum. history and our hard experience found in Nato to settle this parti­ have made it abundantly clear that Undisciplined editors got out Dulles was relying on years and cular dispute. Its chief importance “In our opinion the most urgent type a shade bigger than usual, years of accumulated UJS.» British Vicky in the New Statesman. “separate but equal” facilities are is that it is yet another illustration in fact a euphemism for “unequal and straightfaced headlined NATO and French experience. If one of of a phenomenon that can be ex­ RIM Clash of Interests. these little up^art countries mis­ and inferior” opportunities for men pected to recur in ever more criti­ of colour. Black Sash demonstrators protest against job reservation. behaves you snub it, and keep it cal forms—the conflict between the NO COMIC OPERA hungry until it sees sense. Iliis once docile junior partners of METAL WORKERS CALL FOR MULTI-RACIAL Although the catalogue of Wes­ method has worked like a charm Nato among themselves and with tern diplomatic disasters often for scores of years. the U.S. JOD RESERVATION GROSS reads something like a comic opera ENGINEERING UNION it would be quite wrong to ascribe ENTER USSR In fact the possibility that an MILL WORKERS STRIKE them to blundering or stupidity on And it would have worked again economic crisis might lead to Unity Needed To Regain Iniernalional Respect the part of the individuals con- if the Soviet Union—which every­ small-scale wars within the Wes­ JOHANNESBURG. workers made it plain that they one knew was still far too poor to tern alliance rather than a hoai- Flour mills around Johannesburg would not work until they had news AROSE OF POWER do anything of the sort—hadn’t fying Western war against the So­ CAPE TOWN, came to a standstill on Monday of the publication of the Determina­ offered the aid herself, and won cialist and neutral world is today ^ H E Amalgamated Engineering Union and the other trade unions in the engineering in- morning when about fifteen hundred tion. WORLD STAGE the friendship of the Egyptians. far easier to visualise than it was dustry in South Africa should deregister and form one all -powerful multi-racial union, workers from six mills all centred The last increase granted by the Then it happened all over again when first put forward in 1952. around Newtown went on strike to Premier Milling Company, the —Soys Rlock Sosh An all-important factor which said the Metal Workers’ Union in a statement to New Age last week. In this way they would with Syria. demand the immediate publication largest milling firm was granted in CAPE TOWN. by SPECTATOR And all the newspapers were the cold-war tacticians today seem regain the respect of workers overseas. of a Wage Board Determination for 1953. Wages in the Milling Indus­ idioupting: “Why didn’t Dulles to overlook in their “threat of So­ “The Metal Workers’ Union con­ the Milling Industry. The Wage try are pitiful. ^^HE Government might just as well force a measure through give them aid first? What a fool viet aggression” is the complex Referring to the recent action of the Amalgamated Engineering siders this attitude quite unneces­ Board investigation is now sixteen The basic rate for labourers is Parliament reserving all employment in all industries for Euro­ cerned. The press campaign in the that man is.” change in the temper of world Union in London in severing connections with its South African sary and could be overcome by the months old and the workers’ action £1 15s. per week. C.O.L.A. brings peans and permit the employment of Non-Europeans by licence only, United States which blamed Eisen­ public opinion. branches, the Metal Workers’ Union stated that it had been penon- local A.E.U. withdrawing registra­ showed that they can wait no longer this up to £2 ISs. The milling said a spokeswoman of the Black Sash Movement last week. hower for the fact that the Soviet TWICE BITTEN? People are not thinking in terms ally informed by Mr. W. Carron, president of the Intamational tion and opening its ranks to all for its findings. workers are demanding a minimum of war with the USSR. union, that the reasons for the action was ^because the AEU could workers irrespective of colour or This is the Christmas rush season basic wage of £3 15s. per week. Their Over one hundred members of gifts to common-roll voters, said Union produced the first space Naturally, when it happened a the movement demonstrated in the Black Sash. But the white satellites is an extreme example of third time, and Tunis asked for Morris Broughton, foreign ex­ not subscribe to the racial policy adopted by the South African skill. In this way they would make and stacks of flour are standing by repealed demands for more pay branches. a positive contribution to the awaiting delivery to bakeries. But have constantly been met with “wait silent protest in Adderley Street last workers must in the long run tne grim determination in the West military aid, dropping a hint or pert of our English-language eve­ suffer from a measure such as ning newspapers, is normally a struggle against the colour-bar in despite repeated representations em­ for the determination” from the Wednesday against the reservation to explain all great historic deve­ two about how much she’d hate “The Executive Council of the kers said that numbers of engineer­ of jobs in the clothing industry. this. It represented a threat to lopments by the actions of indivi­ to be driven into accepting guns writer who sticks so closely to the South Africa. ployers refused to meet the workers. employers and the delay by the A.E.U. realised, however, that the ing workers, particularly Non-Euro­ The decision to strike was taken by Wage Board has been used as an “Apart from the deprivation of the prosperity of the industry and dual heroes or villains instead of from the nasty fellow Kruschov, spirit of British Foreign office hence to the prospects of employ­ Dulles, who had read all the cruel South African branches has been peons, have expressed their embar­ 130,000 MEMBERS a huge meeting organised by the excuse by the employers to ignore the rights of men and women. White in terms of class struggles and handouts that it is a bore to read forced to accept seperate branches rassment by the fact that inter­ ment of workers of all races. It social forces. things the newspapers had said him. “There are nine other engineering Union last Sunday. the workers’ representations. and Non-White, to earn an honest and an all-white executive by gov­ national labour no longer wishes to unions, besides the A.E.U. in the After the decision had been taken Workers of all six Newtown Mills livelihood, the determination to re­ threatened South African industry The successful Chinese revolu­ about his refusal in Egypt and But he might almost hav^. been ernment legislation, Mr. Carron have close association with their as a whole and thus has grave tion is explained in the U.S. press Syria, rushed off a shipload of me last Saturday when he wrote country, and we already in the past the workers inarched in procession thronged street corner blocks to­ serve jobs in the industry constitutes told the Metal Workers’ Union. unions, and were of the opinion urged them to amalgamate, de- to join the SACTU mass meeting at gether during this strike and dis­ a gross abuse of power,” the state­ implications for the future of all not in terms of a mass fre^om arms to Tunis, and Britain, the of the current U.S. and British that they are getting similar treat­ our peoples. movement, but as the result of faithful ally was also on the job. policies; register and form one union with the Trades Hall to announce their persed homewards after they had ment continued. EMBARRASSMENT ment to that accorded to South admission to workers of all races stand. stated their demands. treachery by American New But France is at war with In its statement, the metal wor­ Africans travelling overseas. “The findings of the majority of The fact that the Industrial Coun­ Dealers in China who delSio^tely Tunis’s neighbour Algeria, and the “LITTLE BOYS” in the industry. There is a poten­ On Monday morning the workers They were joined in a token soli­ the Industrial Tribunal upon which cil agreements prevent immediate misinformed the US. on the best people of Tunis, having experi­ “The Western powers are gro­ tial membership of 130,000 in refused to enter the mills. darity strike by workers at the the determination is based, were application of the determination means of smashing conununism enced French oppression them­ tesquely like little boys trying to South Africa, and with their back­ Every appearance by the em­ wholesale grocery and produce firms arrived at in flat disregard of all the ing and support such an engineer­ and that “blanket” exemptions are there. selves, are one hundred per cent shout down their rivals . . , ployers and Labour Department near the mills. evidence placed before it.” obtainable, in no way lessons the behind the Algerian liberation “It shows bankruptcy of both ing industry would be respected all officials were met with resounding The bosses have now offered an over the world.” cries of “Asinimali!”. And the increase of six shillings per week. In the event of unemployment need for protest, the statement con­ THEIR FAULT! army. When things get a little hot policy and constructive ideals. The WORLD SETS ASIDE jobs could become Government cluded. The production of the Soviet for the Algerian soldiers, they not response to Mr. Kruschov’s sug­ atom bomb was not ascribed to unnaturally cross over into friend­ gestion for ‘summit’ talks has been Soviet science, but was said, with ly Tunis for a breather. a sulky refusal. All that is sug­ lOlh DECEMRED AS unctuous conviction, by U.S. Su­ gested is an intensification of the ...AN INSULT TO WHITE preme Court Judge Medina, to THE DIFFERENCE balance of terror . . . WELCOME HOME FROM JAIL! have been due to the passing to The Algerians are welcome. The “We know that Britain and CONDEMN APARTHEID DAT!' them of an alleged pencil sketch of French soldiers who come across America if compelled to retalia­ portions of the U.S. bomb by the border after them are not Well­ tion, can kill tens of millions of WORKERS, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. And come, and the Tunisian govern­ people in Russia . .. . We know because of the Rosenbergs—said ment has declared that it will repel that in return Russia could para­ this wicked judge—untold millions by force French incursions over lyse Britain, disintegrate American Congresses Cnll ier Naden-wMe of U.S. lives might in future be the border. The main difficulty cities and kill tens of millions of soys Congress of Democrats lost. Nor would any court in the until now has been that the Tuni­ both peoples. Demenstmlions U.S. or the President himself in­ sian Army hasn’t had the guns “We know all this, but we do JOHANNESBURG. terfere with the death sentence needed to put this declaration into not know what it would all be in JOHANNESBURG. “It is fitting that December 10 passed on the Rosenbergs and effect. Now it has U.S. and British aid of. this year should be observed INVENTS this we^ have shown that the postponement of job based on this reasoning. guns and Frenchmen who cross “Common sense suggests that if “XTE who 1s in chains must by ‘ demonstrations, prayer reservation in the clothing industry was by no means a retreat And now Sputnik is Ike’s faiilt, the border will be shot with the something is to be done to put the strike the hardest blows meetings, processions and from his stand by the Minister of Labour, (but, on the contrary, and Syria was Dulles’ stupidity same Nato arms as they are using brake on, power must do it, and for freedom,” says the call torchlight gatherings through­ merely a move to enable him to better enforce this job apartheid and the Suez war was Eden’s for shooting Algerians. they can do it only if they meet from the Congress movement out the country.” plan, says a statement by the Congress of Democrats. blunder? The French do not like this. and talk.” to the people of South Africa The nature of the demonstra­ NOT AT ALL. And with typical Gallic suspicion That is the reaction of almost for nation-wide demonstrations tions on this day is to depend As long as there are Industrial ger—as long as the industry is not When Kruschov said recently they are saying quite openly that the entire South African press, on December 10, day of world­ on conditions in different parts Councils their consent to job reser­ dislocated by government inter­ that the Western diplomats were they think that the Yanks and the English, Afrikaans and Non-Euro­ wide protest against South of the country. “But,” says the vations must be obtained and.repre- ference. Surely, given the same skilful men with a long tradition British have their eyes on the po­ pean. Editorial after editorial caSs African racialism. call,” these demonstrations senting both workers and employers, rate of payment and assured of no of statecraft and immense experi­ tentially rich Sahara oil-fiel^ and for a halt to the madness of East- December 10 is Human Rights must be beacon lights to the the Councils have refused to operate undercutting by workers employed ence, while the Soviet diplomats the Tunis aid is just the beginning West strife, for a recognition of Day and this year more than world that we in South job reservation. So the Minister of at lower rates, the white worker were new at the game, he was of a campaign to snatch the oil­ new realities, for the need for a hundred of the world’s Africa will never rest till we Labour has appointed a Wage Board can hold his own and needs no making a most important point. fields from France that France has peace. leading statesmen, writers, investigation into the industry in protection? have won our freedom.” Trder to circumvent the Industrial Western diplomacy is failing snatched from the Arabs that the And this same reaction is taking scientists and cultural figures The call warns that time is short PORT ELIZABETH. The Nationalist policy of job re­ hopelessly not because it is being Arabs are fighting to keep for place all over the world, the im­ have joined in signing an ap­ and constituent bodies of file A HUGE crowd turned out to meet the 120 women from Uitenhage and Despatch pictured Councils. servation is an insult to the white practised by clowns, but because themselves. mense hostility of the common peal to people everywhere to Congress movement and all above, released from jail after serving eig it weeks for burning their passes. Once the Wage Board has fixed worker. It implies that the white the general line of the West, the Now in truth what would you people to the war makers being condemn apartheid and to de­ branches of the individual wages the Minister will no doubt workers is inferior and needs “pro­ policies to which they are commit­ have done if you were Dulles? If reflected cautiously and reluctant­ mand that the Union of South Congresses are urged to pre­ Uitenhage volunteer-in-chief Songwigi was the first to speak. The struggle of the women refuse to recognise the Industrial tection,” and that, given a choice ted and Bie nature of the svstems you ignored the Tunisian request ly by newspaper editors who no Africa live up to its obliga­ pare immediately for demon­ who were being welcomed back had put the name of Uitenhage on the map of the liberatory Council agreement, and so remove the employer will take on a Non- which they represent are loaded the Russians might well be invited longer dare to horrify their readers tions under the United Nations strations “so the voice of our movement, he said. They had told Verwoerd in direct terms that the pass laws must be its opposition from the scene. White. with contradictions. to ship in arms, and before you by continuing to thump the war Charter. people will join with the abolished. know where you are they are drums. ‘^ e in South Africa are the voices from the world outside The Government’s cry is that 'Illlllllllllllillllillllllllllllllllllllillllllllillllllllllllllllll FRIED DIPLOMAT building factories, and hospitals That elusive factor, difficult to people who suffer apartheid against the policies of the Na­ African women, said Mrs. Sebooi, the next speaker, regarded the Port Elizabeth jail— “White workers must be protected.” To use a well-known idiom, the and railways for Tunis, and the measure, often ignored by the and discrimination and attacks tionalist Government and for Rooi Hel—as a Congress hotel. An empty cry, indeed, for where are HELP SELL Western diplomat finds himself in people of Tunis are strolling about power politicians—the common on our rights every day of our equal rights in a democratic At the party and in the photo also was Mr. Mfazwe who had spent three months in jail the white workers who need this a hot frying-pan. He has two saying “ Long live Comrade Krus­ sense of the man in the street—is lives,” says the Congress call. South Africa.” protection? They are a small courses open to him. The first is chov and the entire collective likely to become the decisive force for inciting the women to bum their passes. An absent friend was Mr. Bottoman who is minority in the garment industry NEW AGE! to stay in the pan and fry. But if leadership of the Communist Party rebuffing the war makers. still serving the last of his four months. and their employment is in no dan­ Illllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllilllllll He himself had not liked it one bit. “I’m not a censor, God forbid,” he said emphatically, and he NON-EUROPEANS BARRED FROM hadn’t lightly taken this stand Shakespeare for them” (Non-Euro­ against the play’s productiono be­ pean audiences). fore Non-Europeans. Who is Mr. Carr ? But of course Mr. Carr is the There might well be Non-Euro­ censor. peans, he thought, who would not Controversial Play Producer Kushlick and actor FAMOUS PLAY like “Look Back in Anger,” as Dobie have his opposition to ease there were Europeans who were Yes. Mr. Carr has seen “Look their path when Equity demands JOHANNESBURG. The first appearance was supposed critical of it. Who was Mr. Carr Back in Anger.” It highlighted an explanation, for Dobie had the to have been in a newly opened to say what effects the play would marital infidelity, sexual promis­ assurance before he came to South "UtTE went along to see Alan hall in Coronation. have on others? cuity among young ^ople, the Africa that he would not play to “Whites only.” Dobie, the English actor Mr. Carr put his foot down. He That seemed rather to hit the seduction of a young girl; it made flaty refused to permit any per­ a mockery of marriage and the re­ Non-Europeans are to be de­ who is leading man in “Locdc nail on the head. nied the opportunity to make up Back in Anger*’ prepared to formance of “Look Back in lationship of young people with Anger” in any township under his Are there no halls outside the their parents, he said. The Non- their minds about the play— tick him off sharply for his locations where the play could be European Affairs Department was whether it is “Immoral” and “de­ department’s jurisdiction, and produced? flouting of Equity’s resolution when the Bantu Men’s Social Cen­ trying to alleviate the factors that moralising” and the angry young “You find them for me!” said lead to juvenile delinquency in man just a “weak-kneed whiner” that culture belongs to all and tre was suggested as an alternative producer Taubie Kushlick, when venue, Mr. Carr said he would the townships, and to guard the (Mr. Carrs view)—or has some­ *its members must play before we telephoned her. sanctity of married life. The play thing to say about the frustrations use his influence to oppose that of our age’s young people—for audiences of all races in this too. “We were prepared to do “Look undermined the aims of the De­ Back in Anger,” she said. “But the One Man Censor, in the ways country. Moreover, he said, the venture partment’s welfare programme. Mr. Carr said he’d fight it tooth Apart from which, Mr. Carr did of all censorship, has ruled that For it had been announced only would be unprofitable because in and nail. No, I don’t think Mr. not think more than a handful of they can’t be trusted to judge and a few days before that no Non- previous performances by over­ Dobie will be in trouble with Non-Europeans would appreciate are not fit to make up their own European audience would see seas artistes, some had played be­ Equity . . . Perhaps he’ll do some the play. minds. t .M. & R.F. “Look Back in Anger.” fore half-empty halls. We talked generally of how we We chipped in to tell Mr. Do­ had enjoyed the performances of bie that we had been unable to Larry Adler, Dame Sybil Thorn­ get seats at several shows during dike and Yehudi Menuhin and the Johannesburg Festival. There Alan Dobie chipped in “We also had not been standing room either. wanted to play to Non-Whites!” The London Philharmonic Orche­ Why wouldn’t he? stra had had a resounding recep­ Mr. Dobie, together with his tion. Audiences had loved Emlyn producer Mrs. Taubie Kushlick Williams. Yehudi Menuhin said had gone to see Johannesburg’s publicly that Non-Europeans had Manager of Non-European formed among his most appreciat­ Affairs, Mr. Carr, to arrange book­ ive audiences. ings for a run of the play in the At the end of it all Mr. Dobie halls in Non-European townships. seemed a little indignant.

lilllllllllilllllllllllllllltllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltitllllllllllllllllll SPOTLIGHT on SPORT by Robert Resha

lllllllilllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllliiill MY TEST FORECAST

•’pH E first test match starts at that will be a chance for Carl­ stein. the Johannesburg Wander­ AUSTRALIA Tennyson Makiwane interviewed Alan Dobie, the English actor and Equity member who ers Oval, on December 23. Australia: Like the South Afri­ plays the lead in “Look Back in Anger” which Non-Whites will not see, because the Manager cans most of the tourists have If this was not 1 would picked themselves to the team. of Non-European Affairs says the play is not “suitable.” say, all things being equal and The main problem is between the both sides having sufficient luck, -keepers, Grout and Jarman. the series would end in a draw. 1 have not seen much of the open­ My reasons are that in the final ing pair MacDonald and Burke analysis these teams have equal but even during their short stay at strength. The Australian cricketers the crease on Saturday, it was ob­ are a very good batting side capa­ vious that they are top class bats­ ble of making big scores, with fair men. bowling and unimpressive fielding. I favour them to open the bat­ UP MY South Africa has a stock of very ting for the tourists, to be followed TN factories everything is turned packing them in like jam in a tin “ U.S. Solves Problem Of Re­ good bowlers, good batsmen and by . “Slasher” Mackay out on a conveyor belt. The can. turn From Space. exceptionally good fielding—the who does exactly the opposite other Saturday morning I looked Said a white woman watching: “Test Rocket Crashes Near best in the cricket world. would follow Harvey. Mackay is in on the magistrate’s court and “TTiey’re treated like cattle. Just Road.” But cricket is the most unpre­ a useful cricketer in the side and saw money being made—not on like cattle.” It looks like the Yanks have dictable game. Great prophets seems to be a fine team man. a conveyor belt—but pretty much Black cattle, lady. solved the mystery of coming have failed and dolly-bone Then skipper . 1 favour like it. down before the one of going up. throwers have been found want­ Grout to Jarman. Grout is a The dough is made for the state, ♦ * * ing. Thus the end will be known beautiful bat and if the earlier of course. ^CHOOLBOYS down here seem when it has come. batsmen give them a good start The dock is packed so tight with ^ to have found a new game. A BILE-GREEN fortnightly Making bombs. One youngster lost SOUTH AFRICAN TEAM not even a Hugh Tayfield is likely the Friday night haul that I bet a news-sheet replies to a corre­ to worry him. He is a fearless louse from a jail blanket wouldn’t a hand when his home-made gre­ spondent’s complaints about it’s This is my forecast of the cricketer and treats short pitched find a place for a meal. And the nade went off. One school found reference to opponents as “coons” players. South Africa; I favour balls with the contempt they court orderly strolls between the forty bombs among its pupils. and “zombies” by saying that Clive Van Ryneveld to captain the deserve. dock and the bench calling out Maybe its the signs of the times. these words are not used abusive­ side. He did an excellent piece Simpson, coming in number the charge and the sentence like What with all the high-pressure ly but in a “strictly scientific of work last season and there is seven, will be another problem to a voice on a stuck gramophone propaganda for shooting off political sense.” no apparent reason why he should the Springboks. He is a shaky record. hydrogen bombs, the good old I guess you can get away with be changed. starter and his mistake is to snick “Two pounds or ten days. Two days of cowboys-and-bandits, calling somebody a s.o.b. too, by McGlew and Goddard as open­ balls on the off. The Non-Euro­ pounds or ten days. Two pounds cops-and-robbers seem to be proving “strictly scientifically” ing batsmen, followed by the “end­ pean fans at the Wanderers Oval or ten days.” passing. In fact one school princi­ that his mummy and daddy were less” Endean. Waite (wicket­ called him “Kom Sam”. They When one batch has been pal did put the blame on H-bomb never married. keeper), McLean, Funston, Fuller, said he was just told to come with cleared, the next follows, squeez­ propaganda. After this remark I shall get out Hugh Tayfield, Heine and Adcock. the team because there was a place ing into the dock. “Two pounds Waal, I’m waiting for some en­ my old bullet-proof vest. Twelfth man, Carlstein. in the ship. I say there is a place or ten days. Two pounds or ten terprising Yankee manufacturer to 1 am very unhappy about the for him in the test team. He is days.” cash in on the craze and start teenager Carlstein. I would have a hard hitter when he gets going From there to the underground turning out “better bombs” to sell T ’M objecting. My i»l Barney liked to see him in the team but and a brilliant slip fielder. and out through the studded gates in the toy-shops and save the kids Desai charged with incitement, I think every one of the eleven Then there is Benaud and David­ for those who have coughed up the trouble of emptying mamma’s had his bail fixed at 100 quid. deserves to be in thejside. But son with their“beefy” shots and with their fines. For those unable jam tins. That’s twice as much as my bail Carlstein still has a chance, Fun­ reliable bowling. Kline is a must. to come across with the moola, for treason. jWhat do they think ston is a problem child. He is I prefer Drennan to Meckiff to the steel prison delivery van is I am? A cheapskate? capable of playing himself right open the attack. Twelfth man, waiting, and the cops yell and TTEADLINES in a Cape Town out of the Springbok team and Jarman. push the human freight into it. newspaper: --Alex La Guma

Collection Number: AG2887 Collection Name: Publications, New Age, 1954-1962

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