Banning Imposes Rigorous Curbs In South Africa
Date: 20 October 1977
By JOSEPH B. TREASTER
banning orders discussed (M)
Il 19 ottobre 1977 era una mercoledì sotto il segno zodiacale del ♎. Era il 291 ° giorno dell'anno. Il presidente degli Stati Uniti era Jimmy Carter.
Se sei nato in questo giorno, hai 48 anni. Il tuo ultimo compleanno era il domenica 19 ottobre 2025, 263 giorni fa. Il tuo prossimo compleanno è il lunedì 19 ottobre 2026, in 101 giorni. Hai vissuto per 17.795 giorni, o circa 427.102 ore, o circa 25.626.154 minuti, o circa 1.537.569.240 secondi.
Date: 20 October 1977
By JOSEPH B. TREASTER
banning orders discussed (M)
Date: 20 October 1977
By BERNARD GWERTZMAN Special to The New York Times
Bernard Special
James Thomson, curator of Nieman Foundation for Journalism, Harvard Univ, denounces Qoboza's imprisonment (S)
Date: 20 October 1977
By JOHN F. BURNS Special to The New York Times
John BURNS
S African Govt, charging hate campaign against whites, bans black protest groups, closes principal black newspaper The World and arrests editor Percy Qoboza in most drastic crackdown in nearly 2 yrs; 50 people are arrested; illus (L)
Date: 20 October 1977
ed scores S Africa's latest measures of suppression; contends Govt seems determined to create conditions that will transform largely moderate black opposition into extremist and violent force; holds Govt's actions may suppress last hope for peaceful change
Date: 20 October 1977
partial list of orgns banned by S African Govt and of individuals banned or detained; full list is not released
Date: 20 October 1977
Govt warns press on dissent (M)
Date: 20 October 1977
text of S African Justice Min James T Kruger's statement on bannings and detention of Govt opponents
Date: 20 October 1977
By Anthony Lewis
Anthony Lewis
Anthony Lewis article on bannings; praises Qoboza and E London Daily Dispatch editor Donald Woods, who has been banned, for courageous criticism of Govt policies (M)
Date: 20 October 1977
By MARTIN WALDRON Special to The New York Times
Martin Special
NJ Sup Ct, in its 1st definitive opinion on NJ's Sunshine law, rules 4-2 that to comply 'substantially' with law, which requires govt to be in open, is not sufficient, and that it has to be strictly observed; stresses its finding by voiding election in Atlantic City in Nov '76 when voters approved change in city's form of govt; many local govts have been accused of violating Open Public Meetings Act; exceptions to act noted (M)