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...Justice Minister pointed out that, in common with South Africa's Liberal and Communist parties, NUSAS supports the maxim: "One Man One vote." The student organization has worked closely with the banned African National Congress, Vorster claimed. At the NUSAS convention in July Nobel Prize Winner Albert Luthuli, former ANC leader, was elected honorary president of NUSAS...

Author: By Richard Suzman, | Title: Will South African Students Stay Defiant? | 10/16/1963 | See Source »

...compete with whites for many jobs or even enter a post office by the same door. Split between conservatives and radicals, the Coloreds have never been as potent a political force as the blacks, whose African National Congress, headed by Nobel Prizewinner and former Zulu Chief Albert Luthuli, has been banned since 1960. Today, 21,000 borderline Coloreds have yet to be classified; the two-thirds of them who are at the dark end of the spectrum live in constant fear that their new identity cards will read "native...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: CROSSING THE COLOR LINE | 5/24/1963 | See Source »

Spear of the Nation, which operates with more finesse than Poqo and at present tries to spare human life, is the militant arm of the African National Congress, whose Nobel prizewinning leader, ex-Chief Albert Luthuli, is under house arrest in rural Natal. Spear's most spectacular coups to date have been the bombing of the Agricultural Minister's office in Pretoria and the blowing up of several giant power pylons around Johannesburg. Sabotage trials continue up and down the country. In the East Rand town of Benoni, a black prisoner disrupted the court by shouting "Shoot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa: Dispensing with Judges | 5/10/1963 | See Source »

...listed persons (including 52 whites) may attend no meetings, and any editor whose newspaper even quotes one of them is liable to three years' imprisonment. If reporters were to ask Chief Albert Luthuli whether he will apply for a passport to attend the International Cultural Conference in Copenhagen, they could not print even a yes-or-no reply; Luthuli, South Africa's only Nobel Peace Prize winner, was the most prominent name on the disapproved list...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa: Disapproved Persons | 8/10/1962 | See Source »

According to a dispatch in yesterday's New York Times, Peter de Lissovoy '64 and a South African journalist were charged with entering the Durban reserve without a permit. They had entered the reserve to take Albert John Luthuli, a Nobel peace prize winner, to his home...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Student Arrested in Africa | 3/27/1962 | See Source »

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