A newspaper clipping on the resumption of the Treason Trial after the indictment against 61 accused was quashed by the special court on April 20, 1959.
Article by J. G. Matthews, published in the Inkundla Ya Bantu, about the reluctance of NRC members to resign and the criticism by renegade agents of the African National Congress.
Mr. Oswald Pirow, Q. C., (leader of the Crown team of counsel) applies to amend the indictment. He outlines the view of what course the Court could take in considering the application by the defence for the charges to be ...
Article by N. Nomnganga, published in the Inkundla Ya Bantu, in response to an editorial calling on Prof. Z. K. Matthews to resign from the Native Representative Council.
Professor Matthews, former vice-principal of Fort Hare, and the last witness to be called by the defence, continued his evidence at the treason trial under cross-examination by Mr G. Hoexter, for the Crown. Dated 6 October 1960(?)
Article by J. G. Matthews published in the Inkundla Ya Bantu about Prof. Z. K. Matthews' address at the Annual Conference of the Institute of Race Relations.
Three newspaper clippings. Towards national unity (date unknown) deals with the African National Congress and the call for African national unity. The money grabbers (Drum, 8 July 1975) is an interview with Mr. Eugene ...
Mr G.G. Hoexter began the Crown's reply to the defence exception to the alternative charges and the
application to quash. Published in the Pretoria News, 20 August 1958.
Mr. Maisels (leader of the defence team) argues that the Crown had created an overly complicated indictment with the way it was formulated. Article in Pretoria News, 13 August 1958.
Unknown(Trial in eleventh day : treason indictment 'a confused mess'. In: Pretoria News. 21 August 1958., 1958-08-21)
Report on the eleventh day of the Treason Trial. Arguments from the defence in support of the application for the charges to be quashed. Article is incomplete.