Universities’ Segregation Approved In: South Africa CAPETOWN (Reuters) — ” Approval came Saturday after @ heated debate which lasted 26% ine Nationalist party came to power 11 years ago on a platform apartheid (race segregation). “An amendment proposed by the Jnited party, chief opposition to he fourth longest since |’ the government, was rejected in MP fo © and Be he warned, “we will consider it our duty to restore the traditional "TORONTO (CP) — The presi- dent of the Newfoundland con Gaede of the United Church of says the church in New- ‘foundiand may be alienated by an “ili-timed, ill-advised” resolu- tion passed by the Toronto West ~The Toronto West presbytery passed a resolution calling for ebro seep *s labor law which de- certified the International Wood- workers of America (CLC) bargaining agent for a group of striking loggers. Rev. A. N. Holmes says in a letter published last week in The Observer, official church publica- fion, that no one had the right fo speak on a subject without ad- @quate knowledge. “Certainly the right to speak ilitisnd atte one von beyond one’s own back- =, FELLOWSHIP _ ¥f presbyteries and boards Canada shouted divergent “our church fellowship Mews, our church eiowsip ‘we become, as a church, a laugh- ing stock among sober and re- wewned people.” CNR Escapes Rock Menace NEWMARKET. Ont. (OP) Church Alienation Is Threat In Nfld. Mr. Holmes said resolutions passed by the Toronto West pres- bytery and the church’s board of vealed a lack of understanding of | ©qU the happenings in Newfoundland. He said the resolutions were based on distorted newspaper re- ports. In an editorial in the same is- sue, editor Rev. A. C. Forrest said: “Toronto West presbytery de- serves its wrist-slapping. It must be assumed that the church in Newfoundiand is competent to deai with Newfoundland affairs.” ONTARIO “MEDDLERS” Ancther letter frcm Boyd ‘L. Hiscock, Spryfield, N.S., said there was no need for ‘‘meddiers”’ Daan de Wet Nel, imiaister for African native administration. and development, said non-white; are better off in universities where their culture could expand. The proposed native colieges were the logical result of educa- tional policy in South Africa. he said. When they were established, .| Africans would no longer be “academic squatters” were today. HAVE OWN CULTURE Africans were not persons who could be “‘put through the saus- age machine of Western culture.” They were people with their own culture. The United party has charged that the proposed non-white col- leges would be inferior because the government simply cannot af- ford to give nonwhites equal fa- cilities. Rt. Rev. Ambrose Reeves, bis- hop of Johannesburg, said earlier this month that the “separate and equal’”’ provisions of the bill were a sham. “To pretend that tribal colleges will give separate and equal as they .jhigher education is entirely false,” he declared, adding that university segregation was “a reckless waste of public money.” STUDENTS MARCH As Saturday's debate wént on about 500 Natal University stu- dents held a _ protest march through the centre of Durban. Ever since the bill was given its first reading by, Parliament Feb. 26, university students all over the world have held protest from Ontario. meetings against it. ‘May Be Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The govern- ment calculates that its payments to the provinces or for their ben- efit in the fiscal year just begun will amount to $1,212,500,000—or nearly double the amounts three years ago. This aspect of federal treasury spending was set out in Finance Minister Fieming’s budget Thursday ‘Provinces’ Share Tripled’ By ARCH MacKENZIE touched $853,700,000 the following year. The preliminary total for the year ended March 31 is shown as $1,064,900,000—or about $150,- 000,000 under the estimated total for the current fiscal year. The unconditional grants total was $552,600,000 in 1956-57 and is catoulated as srmeeeee for this year. Fuchs For West London Reports — ~ LONDON (AP) — Atom spy Sa 85 ie ; i i ii : [ : f aH 2 i Ei ; 3 ‘ rf H Fi 8ef e 4] ify Ht Es ti i WE | Bit By ALTON BLAKESLEE BOSTON, (AP) — Ejighty-one days ago, 23 - year - old John Riteris lay dying. Today he's making his- alive, healthy, and tory His reprieve — when he had given up hope — was a new tri- umph in giving people borrowed John has a new kidney, bor- rowed, from his brother Andrew. It is the first time that a kid- ney has worked normally when borrowed from anyone except identical twin. A wear-deadly bath of x-rays apparently turned the rick and repealed nature's law that you) For, Dulle’é By JOHN SCALI WASHINGTON (AP) — John Foster Dulles return to Waiter Reed Army Hospital Sunday amid authoritative reports President Eisenhower has received dis- couraging word on the secretary of state’s fight against cancer. high, Republican official said Eisenhower was informed sev- eral days ago that Dulles was not responding as had been oped to massive radiation treatments he underwent before leaving for Florida two weeks ago. Looking haggard and under- weight, Dulles arrived aboard the president’s private plane for what his doctors called “a further pe- riod of medical observation.” He checked into the hospital immediately. Aides were worried about the prospects that Dulles could ever return to his state de- partment desk. WAITS .FOR WORD Ia these circumstances, this Republican official predicted Ei- Doukhobor Sect Quiets KRESTOVA, B.C. (CP)—This Sons of Freedom Doukhobor stronghold, which grupted into an- other chapter of violence Friday with an attack on three inquiring police officers, was quiet again Saturday—with one of its number in jail. : _Mrs. Walter Perepelkin was re- manded on $200 bail after being charged with assault on a police officer. Bail had not been posted late Saturday. Mrs. Perepeikin will appear in Nelson police court today. \ The Sons of Freedom or re- formed Doukhobors of this Koote- nay area with an avowed creed of pacificism, have been blamed in the past for bombings, burn- ings and other violence. . Friday, the three ROMP offi- cers came here to investigate a ;Doukhobor system of education the sect hopes will be accentable Is Dis arstanes : to the provincial government. Borrowed Kidney Is ‘Life To 23-Year Old Bostonian ordinarily produce allergis-type if the right amount of x - rays couki temporarily paralyze John’s lymphoid tissues which Lt-General commissioner in charge of Howard Graham, with Erskine K. McNutt, transport d the] mond Butler, visit to Prince Edward Is-|born press -| Queen. Making a “dry run” pest) district marine agent of the the oe . “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” _CHARLOFTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, APRIL Ty 1959. D0sstion — JAtical field Day. Pb, \ ee Stick senhower will not move in any way to replace Duiles as secre- tary of state unless Dulles him- self tells the president that he feels incapable of carrying on.‘ If that should happen there seems little doubt that Eisen- hower would. name Christian A. Herter, now the acting secretary state, to the post. The White House and Vice- President Nixon, who met Dulles at the airport in a mixture of rain and snow, declined to give any clue as to the 7l-year-old secre- tary’ future. Nixon and Acting State Secre- tary Ohristian Herter joined the secretary's brother, Allen W. Dul- les, U.S. intelligence chief, and his sister Eleanor Dulles, a state’ department official, in meeting Dulles at the airport. AM four went) aboarti the plane for a 10-minute conference with the secretary before he slowly walked down the ramp and told reporters: “I feel pretty good.” WAN SMILE A wan smile on his face, he repeated this when he arrived at Walter Reed Hospital a half hour later. His decision to return Sunday was announced suddenly. Aides had expected him to spend at least another week relaxing in the Florida sunshine at Jupiter Is- land, a millionaire’s vacation re- treat near Palm Beach. Talk Coming For Cats, Dogs ADELAIDE, Australia ‘Reut- ers) — A British geneticist pre- dicted Satprday that scienti.ts one day will teach cats and dogs to speak and monkeys tg serve meals. But taking a gloomy look at mankind's future, he said the day of the moron is fast approaching. Sir Ronald Fisher, president of Gonville and Caius College at Cambridge University, said in a newspaper interview here: “I am convinced scientists will eventu- ally increase the intelligence of dogs, cats and monkeys. antibodies to destroy borrowed or ¥ s 14 PAGES DRUG CONTROL R. Charles Hammond of Wool- er, Ont., has ‘been appointed chief of the narcotics control division of the federal health department. He joined the narcotics division in 1943 and was formerly assist- amt to the chief in that division. (CP Photo) Red Spies US. Bound STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)— Russia is training more than 1,000 students for spying in North America at a centre in the Ukraine constructed as an exact copy of a small American town, a Swedish army journal said Sunday. The journal — called Contact With the Army said the students in the Soviet centre of Winniza live the life of an average Ameri- can student. They have their meals in snack bars or -estau- rants which could be situated in New York, Chicago or San Fran- cisco. The menu lists only Ameri- can dishes. The account gave these details: The motion picture theatres in Winniza show only Hollywood movies and the stores sell: only U.S.-made articles. The students drive Fords or Chevrolets by;U.S. traffic rules. They study the his- tory of the United States in orig- ina] American school books and they talk about baseball and the) latest scandals. STUDY DIALECTS The first stage in the training is devoted entirely to studies of American dialects which they must be able to speak. perfectly. “The only genuine thing in this American city in the Ukraine is the high barbed wire fence that surrounds it,” the army journal | Prepared By DAVE McINTOSH ; Caradian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The budget debate opens today in the Com- mons and the opposition may have a political field day. Finance Minister Feeming Thursday -night painstakingly ex- plained his reasons for increas- img taxes across the board but it’s not easy for a government and its supporters to defend boosts which affect every single taxpayer in the country.. Persons who pay taxes through payroll deductions may not not- ice the moderate bite in their cheques but higher prices result- ing from the increased sales tax are hardly likely to escape any- pody’s notice, especially the housewife’ s. Mr. Fleming hinted at a bal- ber, 1957, only a few months be- William Benidickson, Liberal ‘Big Somersault' Critic Complains [sitll ‘NAVIGATIONAL ILLS’ KARACHI (CP) — Pakistan has charged that an Indian Canberra jet bomber shot down near Raw- alpindi was on a mission to photo- graph military targets in Pakis- tan. It rejected a declaration by In- Indian Defence Minister V. K Krishna Menon that navigational difficulties caused the Canberra “foreign” living material. lepartment, and FE s- (right) route to be taken by secretary to ° eral Graham arrived on| party in Charlottetawo Saturday PLANS ARE MADE FOR R ROYAL VISIT with his from Fredericton and to stray across the frontier Fri- Queen and Prince Phillip onjleft Sunday for Sydney, N. S. Canadian-| their visit here in July, Lt.-Gen-| The party was grected at the air- port by a number of members of Lente 4 eommittees'in charge of Plane ‘Took Pictures Of Pakistan Targets day and that it had no hostile is Pick Leader the plans for the visit on P. E. 1.