MANCHESTER CONNOLLY ASSOCIATION AT WORK

DECEMBER 1960

Gaelic games j ban in London A BAN on the practice of ^ Hurling is being enforced by the local authorities in cer- tain London Parks. This is what Desmond Lo- gan, Secretary of the North- ^Ajj^ft West London Branch of the Connolly Asso- ciation was told after the TWENTY-SEVEN M.P.s disclosure i n the "Irish De- mocrat" of a DUS. LOGAN similar ban in Manchester. SAY RELEASE The park affected is Gladstone Park in the Borough of Willesden where young Irishmen going to practice with hurleys have been told that the game is forbidden. THE INTERNEES Mr. Logan has written to the Town Clerk of Willesden asking THE campaign to secure the release of the remaining internees reached by what authority the ban is im- ' new heights with the despatch of a telegram signed by twenty-seven posed and enforced. He received the following reply: Members of Parliament telling Lord Brookeborough to let the men out now, in In reply to your ieter of 8th time to spend Christmas at home. HflHRPlMIH^HH^H instant, the question of allowing The Members Parliament the playing of Hurling in the were Liberal and Labour i both fcr parks and recreation grounds was considered by my council Brookeborough and against Mr. Gaitske!!'. some time ago, and decided that Among them was Bob Mellish. this game should not be allowed leader of the London Labour becausc of the inconvenience telegraphs Party and of the Catholic group which may be caused to other of M.P.s. BOB MELLISH, M.P. users of the grounds. his reply Active in securing a deputation JOHN C. MORRIS, to Mr. Butler, to demand that he Borough Engineer rrHIS was the text of the tele- urge humanity on Lord Brooke- Mr. Logan, who is an engineer, l gram sent by Lord Brooke- borough on his visit to London was elected delegate to the Willes- borough to the Connolly Associa- on November 18th, was Mr. Dan den Trades Council by his Branch tion in reply to a request to him Jones. Other steps were taken by of the Amalgamated Engineering to meet a deputation on the sub- those two tried friends of Ireland, Union, and it is possible that in ject of the prisoners: — Mr. Leslie Lever and Mr. Marcus the event of the reply from the "The position regarding the re- Lipton. Town Clerk being unsatisfactory, lease of persons interned is kept the matter may be taken up by under constant review and re- LORD RUSSELL the local Labour movement. leases have been and are author- The telegram to Lord Brooke- ised as soon as it is clear that borough was signed by Lord Rus- BERTRAND RUSSELL this can be done without endan- sell i better known as Bertrand gering public safety. All persons Russell, the world-famous philo- interned have a right to make re- BOLAND REPLACESpresentation s to an advisory com- sopher! and Sir Richard A.Mand. mittee and they all have been in- A press statement issued by the formed of this right. No useful Standing Committee of the Con- HAMMERSKJOLD! purpose will be served by my nolly Association called on all < PECULATION over the future meeting a deputation as suggested Irishmen and' demo:rati.'aliy- s ol Mr. Haminarskjold is rife Brookeborough, Prime Minister nunded British people to step up it L' N. headquarters, where it is }f Northern Ireland." their activity Ix'tween now and ei-nerally believed that his days The Connolly Association then Christmas. • re numbered wired back the following reply:- "Lord nrooneborough will not release these men until the pres- DAN JONES, M P. His handling of the Congo situ- Thank you for your telegram. sure of public opinion forces him ation. with the destruction of the Glad of assurance release being to do so," the statement said, only available central Govern- considered but point out applica- "... and the very fact that he ment. is said to have endangered tion to advisory committee would has not released any prisoners for •lie lives of U.N. troops and has COMMITTEE admit legitimacy of detention a month means that the recollec- Inst him much of the prestige he without trial. Regret your disin- tion of the demonstrations held HE E C. of the Connolly As- enjoyed at the start clination to meet deputation and last summer is beginning to wane. T sociation elected the follow- The fact that there are more once again urge release these men Do not let him forget. ing Standing Committee at its Median troops in the Congo than en bloc." Coughlan, Connolly As- "Resolutions from trade union meeting on November 9th: when the Belgians were supposed sociation. branches, ward or constituency J. Deighan (President); Des- to have pulled out, and that sol- Labour parties, and cards, letters, mond Greaves, Pat O'Sullivan diers of fortune of many nations telegrams from individuals should (Vice Presidents); Sean Redmond roam the jungles stirring up tribal be poured in to him. Keep it up, (General Secretary); Antoinette disputes in the interests of im- Brookeborough step it up, and we'll have the boys Curran (Treasurer); Tony Cough- perialism. has brought about a SEAN REDMOND free." lan and Eamonn MacLaughlin. position which many people be-1 lieve may lead to his resignation. Wants Polaris A strong tip is that in that event. Mr. F. H Boland will go up Commenting on the protests in NEW C.A. OFFICIALS SET RECORD FOR YOUTH lor election as his successor. Glasgow against the establishment VOTE of thanks was passed a result of his firm guidance it the Association has ever had, tha of Polaris nuclear submarine bases As a European he would be ac- to Mr. Eamonn MacLaugh- previous youngest being Mr. in the Firth of Clyde, Lord Brooke- A had become more united and re- eepted by the west; as a member lin who has Just concluded five mond Greaves who wis General borough suggested that they spected than ever before in its of tin uncommitted nation he years as General Secretary of the Secretary at the age of twenty- should be transferred to the Six history. would win support from the Afro- Connolly Association. Mr. Mac- eight. Asian block. It is understood that Counties. They would, of course, Laughlin took up his duties dur- The new General-Secretary is With Tony Coughlan (24) as the Irish Government is working still not save Glasgow from anni- ing a difficult period when at- twenty-four-year-old Sean Red- organiser, and Tony Curran (29) as m this direction As for I,ord hilation but would threaten Dub- tempts were being made by "left- mond, a native of Dublin. He is treasurer, the Association's offi- Urookeborough. lie would have a lin. Mr. Lemass is expected to ists" to wreck the Association As the youngest General Secretary cial niw set a record for youth. ' Hilary (it. protests.

yr.rf December 1960 THE IRISH DEMOCRAT 3 2 THE IRISH DEMOCRAT December 1960 WORLD COMMENTARY by PAT DEVINE THE IRISH The Irish in Britain should DEMCCR4T 374 GRAYS INN ROAD BACK TO LUMUMBA feel LONDON, W.C.I j )RKS!I)KN"i KASAVl'BA, of the I umuniiw have >hown that .ncnrruptUiii- CUBA WHAT NEXT? I* ny associated with .1 ::n;: belief that 1 > EPUBLICANS and dcnu crai.s evi-iv- Subscription: 8 - per year Conyit Ri public, has ,u Adopting a tougher attitude to Mr. struct a base in the midst of a hostile IVTITH the election of Senator Ken- The activities described in bald factual gramme is for a united independent Tsombe. population?" nedy as the new President of the Congo. terms on this page, together with th3 Stripped of its ambiguity, Mr. Duval's It is reported that the Tories were United States of America, the mightiest Some of the provincial lobbyists at the House et Commons on November Htli. Left to right: Brendan Casey I Coventry I, Andrew proof positive that the best type of English shocked at such language being directed nation in the Western world, the possi- Tierney (Hueknall), Danny Kilcommins, Joe MacCruddon and Joe Deighan I Manchester I. Most of these were born and hred in As for Katanga, where the ambush took report in essence means that it is now towards a friendly power. bility for a new initiative to secure per- people readily become friends of Ireland, place, this is the "Six Counties" of Congo, more and more being recognised that the the Si\ Counties. Ned Connolly' (Birmingh imi and Michael O'Reilly (Mansfield) had left for their trains before this picture manent peace in the world emerges. was taken in the "Irish Mouse," where I'arne'.l and his lieutenants used to repair. on the middle pages, should dispose oncj for it is here that Mr. Tshombe is in con- government of Premier Lumumba is the But what about Ireland and the Polaris and for all of the objection often madB trol on a programme of partition of the only true Government in the Congo, that base? If the people on the Clydeside are In other words mankind is being given a second chance. against the Connolly Association's policy Republic. It is an open secret that at the the big imperialists, especially Belgium, menaced by the presence of this base Mr.1 is claimed to be a pro- that the English cannot be won to support start he tried to take Katanga out of have been allowed virtually free scope so also are the peopIP of Ireland, only Kennedy Congo into British Rhodesia. There is gressive in the Roosevelt tradition. If us. to try and destroy that Government, buj 50 miles away and therefore will be with- certainly no secret about the opeiations of have failed. in the range of any mishap or enemy this IS so we can all feel happy that Mr. THIS HAS BEEN DONE British soldiers of fortune among the retaliation. Nixon, whom many said was a neo-fascist, Thsy are being won, and the Connolly tribesmen; nor that Mr. Tshombe merely And as the "London Observer" says : — Association is winning them. The Irish was defeated. holds his position in trust for the Belgians, "There can be no settlement of the pre- Surely Ireland, with her declared policy to the local Member of Parliament, Mr, tfcis union, for long periods without case is a good one; the Tory-Unionist case de- accepting the direction of "advisers" at- sent crisis without the participation of of being an uncommitted nation, if for Voices in America and elsewhere Roy Jenkins to ask for his support to get charge or trial, this National Commutes is such a bad one that it needs imprison- tached to every Ministry. Mr. Lumumba who still controls consider- no other reason, will protest against this plore the election of Kennedy because FTER being addressed by Mrs. C. Mac- the release of the untried prisoners, to instructs Executive Committee to de- ment without charge or trial to back it A Laughlin, secretary of the Liverpool strive for the repeal of the Special Powers mand through the T.U.C. and the able support in the country ..." and new menace to her people and territory. he is a Cathdllc, i&t tt'lrw up. These facts can be explained to any What is the United Nations doing? It Association, the Tue Brook Act, and for a public enquiry into the Labour Party " . . . without the restoration of Parlia- If the Irish people join with the people of the American people that they broke Connolly intelligent English person. The Irish in is "keeping law and order." That is inter- administration of Northern Ireland. of Scotland and elsewhere in protest, it through sectarian barriers. (Liverpool i branch ot the Amalgamated Britain should feel proud that they have preted to mean preventing the Parliament ment, which Mr. Lumumba can probably (1) The release of any internees still "Let us all hope Presftlent Kennedy ful- Society of Woodworkers passed the follow- A. DAWSON, an organisation and a newspaper that is from meeting in the capital, for fear the control without much difficulty." could conceivably ,, bring about a change held in prison without trial; fils the 'high hcjfeirat ttte "MfiMpifing ing resolution which is published in the doing it. majority who support it would strip the Although by no means yet victorious, of heart in the. United States of America Secretary. (?) That the British Government should Society's journal: — fiction of legality from the Belgian-sup- the Congolese Republicans led by Mr. where Irish influence is still very strong. people of the world. set up a Putolic Enquiry into the This is work that needs to be done by ported military clique now established "We demand that fellow trade union- Government of Ireland Act, 1920, the Irish in Britain. But there are still there. in Katanga it is backing Mr. ists and others held without trial in ESSEX with particular reference to the ad- too few doing it. Tshombe against the majority of the Northern Ireland gaols be released, or ministration of justice as a power QAGENHAM No. 6 Branch of the Katanga people, who support Mr. Lu- at least be allowed to defend themselves transferred to the Northern Ireland The need for a much stronger Connolly Amalgamated Engineering Union mumba and do not want Congo partit- at a fair trial as becomes democratic Government." Association appears more clearly every ioned. justkw, and that the Government insti has submitted the following resolu- day. This job has got to be pushed through THE SCRE to its conclusion. tutes, an enquiry Into the behaviour and tion to the National Committee of the So Irish troops have been killed in am- as feed me, growing red where he should activities of the Northern Ireland police A.E.U.: CHISWICK OTRONG, clean, intelligent boy, The Connolly Association is appealing bush while engaged under United Nations have ^been' Mid whjte where he forca, particularly the '8. Specials' with •'THE following resolution was sent as a "That, in view of the facts that have for 2,000 additional members NOW. Every otders in policing Katanga for the parti- aged fourteen to sixteen, wanted A story by should have been red. a view to the immediate disbandment telegram to Lord Brookeborough l'rom come to our notice regarding the denial reader of the "Irish Democrat" should give tionist regime of Mr. Tshombe. That is for general duties in warehouse of "And you Said, son?" my father inter- of this section of the police force." the Chiswick No. 2 Branch of the Amalga- the reason for the ambush, and it lends of democratic rights and civil liberties careful consideration to becoming one of wholesale stationers; only those W. J. HAIRE rupted. The resolution was carried unanimously, mated Engineering Union: much point to Mr. Ewart Milne's demand in Northern Ireland, especially the im- them. Give us a strong Connolly Associa- willing to accept responsible post in "And I said, Da, that I was a Hindu like and 23 members were present. tion and we'll bring about the position that Irish troops should be withdrawn, un- prisonment of men and women—includ- This Chiswick No. 2 Branch of the "Oh now the employer spends a deal of you tould me, Da." where the British people will repudiate less the U.N. gives a clear undertaking latei-' life need apply. ing members of this union for long A.E.U. calls for the release of the 6B money to tell a body no." said my mother. "Dentin' your faith and you that has Tory-Unionism with its gerrymandering, to allow the Congo Parliament to meet "Come . . . mere" said my father hold- periods without charge or trial, the prisoners held for years without charge and to stop backing up the partitionist I'm sorry Ma" I said "but it always says just become a soldier of the Holy Ghost," SLOUGH or trial in Belfast. The Branch desires jailing and Special Powers Acts. ing up the "Belfast Telegraph," "have a fPHE following resolution was passed bv National Committee should demand (1) groups Who have seized Katanga against state religion when replying to the wept my mother. that these men be released and allowed geek at this, here's your chance to start the release of any internees still in jail the will of Its people. vacancy." "Ach hen," my father said, "it means * the Upton Lea

f 3 THE IRISH DEMOCRAT December 1960 FIFTY LEADING CITIZENS WIRE BR00KEB0R0UGH "LET YOUR PRISONERS OUT NOW'

n mi inn mi— iibhiiii iiiimi iimfmwkhwmmiihi iiuiiim a— bum^ |m —— «a—a— wntmBaammmmm&mmmmBmsaam TELEGRAM "UNDERSIGNED URGE IMMEDIATE RELEASE E^J BLOC REMAINING SIXTY-EIGHT PRISONERS HELD WITHOUT CHARGE OR TRIAL IN BELFAST JAIL. WE CONSIDER FURTHER DETENTION UNFAIR AND CONTRARY TO PUBLIC INTEREST AFTER ONE HUNDRED RELEASED ALREADY. CHRISTMAS IS APPROACHING IN THE INTERESTS OF HUMANITY RESTORE THESE MEN TO THEIR FAMILIES."

The above message was telegraphed to Lord Bmokeborough from the Connolly Association office on Thursday, 10th November. It was signed by the following: Mr. Basil Davidson, Mr. Joseph Mr. F e n n e r Brockway, M.P., Mr. H. B. Taylor, M.P., M.P., Mr. George Craddock, Mr. Edwin Wainwright, M.P., Deighan, Rev. John Canon M.P., Mr. Clement Davies, M.P., Mr. William Warbey, M.P., Mr. Collins, Mr. Bert Edwards, Mr. Mr. Harold Davies, M.P., Mr. S. Konni Zilliacus, M.P. Desmond Greaves, Mr. Fred O. Davies, M.P., Mr. George Hollingsworth, Miss Doris Les- Deer, M.P., Mr. Will Griffiths, FOUR OTHER MEMBERS OF sing, Mr. Ben Levy, Sir Comp- M.P., Mr. Mark Hewitson, M.P., PARLIAMENT SIGNIFIED THEIR DESIRE TO BE INCLUDED AFTER ton MacKenzie, Mr. Cecil Day Mr. , M.P., Mr. THE WIRE HAD BEEN SENT OFF. Dan Jones, M.P., Mr. Richard THEIR NAMES WERE WIRED Lewis, Mr. Maurice Orbach, Mr. Kelley, M.P., Mr. Fred Lee, OVER SPECIALLY. THEY WERE Ian Page, Dr. David Pitt, Mr. D. MRS. , MR. M.P., Mr. Leslie Lever, M.P., N. Pritt, Q.C., Mr. Sean Red- Mr. Marcus Lipton, M.P., Mr. J. BEN PARKIN, MR JOHN BAIRD, AND MR. FRANK ALLAUN. mond, Mr. Ernie Roberts, Mr. P. W. Mallalieu, M.P., Mr. j George Scott, Rev. Michael Robert Mellish, M.P., Mr. Laurie The other signatories were : Pavitt, M.P., Sir Leslie Plummer, Scott, Mr. Hannen Swaffer, Mr. Lord Russell, Sir Richard M.P., Mr. Gerry Reynolds, Philip Toynbee, Mr. Harry Acland, Dr. Alan Bush, Profes- M.P., Mr. Sydney Silverman, sor J. D. Bernal, Mr. Sean Weaver, Rev. Dr. Donald Soper MR. HANNEN SWAFFER. O'Casey, Mr. Richard Clements, land Mr. John Platts Mills. MR. CLEMENT DAVIES, M.P. WHO THfi SIGNATORIES ARE rFHE majority of them are ENG- nmeteen-thirties. Philip Toynbee is the actively interested in all issues of civil X LISH. writer son of a historian father. Maurice liberty. Mr. Skete (Tory M.P. for East Orbach and Ian Page are members of the Willesden) promised to take action if evi- Of the half-dozen Irish, Sean O'Casey London Executive of the Movement for dence to satisfy him was produced. will be known to everybody. Most people .Colonial Freedom. Mr. Orbach having have heard of the poet Cecil Day Lewis; Lady Gammans, another Conservative until last year been Labour Member lor and as for Professor Desmond Bernal, he Member, showed a fine snirit when she Willesden East. is the Tipperaryman whose scientific skill undertook to discuss action on the issue made possible the landing of the allied Ernie Roberts, who «igns in a strictly of freeing the prisoners with Members forces on D-day, 1944. Bert Edwards is I individual capacity, is assistant general from the other side. national organiser of the National Union ecretary of the Amalgamated Engineer- Most of the M Ps' signatures were given of Vehicle Builders, and married to James ing Union. Mr. George Scott, who likewise during the course of the Connolly Asso- Connolly's youngest daughter. The others luns individually, is a leading member ol ciation's lobby of Parhament. As well a. are members of the Connolly Association 'lie Electrical Trades Union Harry members ol tho Association, on the lobby Standing Committee. Weaver is a leader of the Building Work- were delegates irom the Fulham and • is, and Fred Hollingsworth of the Doris Lessing is the famous South Chelsea Trades Council; tBrixton L.undry Workers. Trades Council; Slough, Shepherd's REV. MICHAEL SCOTT. MR. LESLIE LEVER. African novelist; Dr. David Pitt, also an African, is prospective Labour candidate A whole book could be written about the Bush and Fulham branches of the lor Hampstead The Reverend Michael acuities ol any one of these men or A.E.U; Hammersmith A.U.B.T.W., and Scott is the man who braved ostracism, allien. Gladstone Park A.E.U. and the Ex-Service imprisonment and banishment in order to | iF' the Members of Parliament it Movement for Peace. The entire I^ndon tell the world the truth about the atroci- nere.sary to mark out only a few. Most Area Committee of the Movement for MR. MARCUS LIPTON, M.P. ties in South Ati'ica. His work lor the '' ihem will be well-known lor example Colonial Freedom (affiliated to the Labour abolition of nuclear weapons lias won him 'Clement Davies, lormer leader ol the Part y i lobbied en bloc. deserved respect. - ral party: Fenner Brocfcway, president The remainder are all British. Dr. Alan "' 'he Movement for Colonial Freedom; Bush is the composer, famous fur Ins "Not- Leslie Lever, whose work for the Catholics tingham Symphony" commissioned by the "i Manchester was recently acknowledged city. Benn Ijev y is the playwright. As His Holiness the Pope. Marcus Lipton 1 lor Sir Compton MacKenzie, his lame as "litly demanded an enquiry into the a writer is world-wide. Mr. Hannen Swaf- I' " i at ion ill the Government ol Ireland fer is the doyen ol British Journalists. Robert Mellish is leader of the London Richard Clements is the editor of the 1 " ' ur Party Gerald Roynolds recently weekly "Tribune " Mr. D. N. Pritt previous nc at. a Connolly Association meeting. to his retirement a few months ago was [)an is proposing to organise a depu- the senior Silk of the English Bar. Jones '•';«.n of Members of Parliament to see THE Rev. Canon J. Collins, of St Paul s Buller about the.scandal of Northern ' . With the exception of ' Cathedral. Umdon, and Rev. Or. iuhI Mr. Clement all the Parliamentary sig- Donald Soper, the head of the Methodist, Dnvies community in Britain, are well known [<>r - > ••! ics are Labour men. their advocacy of nuclear disarmament, addition to those who signed the tele- but will give support to any democratu: I' on , other members are prepared to give cause. Dr So[>er is well known to inanv 1 n Mrs. Alice Cullen In going .o Irishmen as a Hyde Park orator the heck- ; '<• herself. Mr. Simon Mahon is also lers can't floor. |> .g to take action Mr. Leslie Mallalieu ! Basil Davldgon Is a publicist famous »s f a telegram of his own an expert on African affairs. Sir Richard I ihree Tory M P.s met the Connolly As- Above: MR. MAURICE ORBACH. Above : MR. HAROLD DAVIES, M.P. THE LONDON AREA EXECUTIVE OF THE M.C.F. Acland was long a Liberal Member of [' iat ion lobby of Parliament and Mr. Below: MR. GERRY REYNOLDS, Below : Hanson-Smith undertook to make enquir- Lrft to rljht: A. Holt (Wood Gr«*n I-abour Party), l»n Par'. F. (iibbon. Marfarrt J Parliament, who made his name in the M P.. Left: SIR L. PLUMMER, M.P. MR. SYDNEY SILVERMAN, MJP. McGiil, Cllr. W. I>c« (S. Paddincton I-P. I, and (irorgr Pffkos. REV. DR. DONALD SOPER. struggle for collective security In the late and told his constituents that he was t

6 THE IRISH DEMOCRAT December 1960 December 1960 THE IRISH DEMOCRAT I'jjjjn I 'ou know, and it was there we learnt I would halt at the cabin, close down by the shore. lie explains things well enough himself. the new outlook of imperialism, which To death they rush, but rude their shock—not unavenged they died. tlie most advanced techniques of Govern- the whole ' period with the addi- He writes: And I'd knock with my heart, on that wee cabin door. On through the camp the column trod—King Louis turns his rein; ment. We let them bear the cost ol rul- is a necessary continuation of the old. While the sun showered gold, on the lap of the sea. "Not yet, my liege," Saxe interposed, "the Irish Troops remain." tional help of these later studies ing themselves for our economic advan- "It is not for these dissidents in They will be helped at the same time And the green Glens of Antrim were smiling on me. And Fontenoy, famed Fontenoy, had been a Waterloo, and memoirs may be of particular tage. Simple, isn't it? What a pity it Great Britain or in the two constitu- to recognise the nature of the present Were not these exiles ready then, fresh, vehement and true. wasn't tried before." That is Mr. Holt's tional jurisdictions of the Ireland ot to- interest to a,new generation that wave of anti-national brainwashing 'Tis alone my concern, if the grandest surprise, contribution to "understanding." day that this book has been written. It "Lord Clare," he says, "you have your wish—there are your Saxon foes," which is merely what used to be called Would be shining on me, out of somebody's eyes, may find it a little puzzling to has been produced for the benefit and The Marshal almost smiles to see, so furiously he goes! the enlightenment of a new generation "West - Britishism." and they will 'Tis my private aifair, what my feelings would be. understand what really happened J I OW about the new facts? There are How fierce these exiles wear, who're wont to be so gay ! of more fortunate political relationship probably then proclaim the title "dis- While the green Glens of Antrim were welcoming me. The treasured wrongs of fifty years are in their hearts today— in Ireland.' * ' ol course facts here that are not in than besmirched the times of the fathers sident" proudly, remembering that The treaty broken ere the ink wherewith 'twas writ could dry, Dorothy Macardle's monumental work. that begat them." "rebel" was once the proudest word Their plundered homes, their ruined shrines, their women's parting cry, From this it would appear that the That work was enlightened with a concep- Their priesthood hunted down like wolves, their country overthrown— tion. the conception that the force used This presumably means that the in an Irishman's vocabulary. Each looks as if revenge for all were staked on him alone. book is addressed to the English pub- by an oppressed people is fundamentally attempt to present the story of the H.M. THE SCREENING On Fontenoy, on Fontenoy, nor ever yet elsewhere, lic. Contf mporary treatment of the dirterent from the force used by the oppres- Rushed on to fight a nobler band than these proud exiles were. "He'd pel a job 111 'J s' bicky' factory —Continued from Irish revolution in Britain was almost sors, something Irish people who think ol up near the Bone' (a certain Belfast dis- Page Three 0 Brien's voice is hoarse with joy, as halting he commands: uniformly hostile. The indoctrination the Congo ambush must remember. It is trict. " Fix bayonets—charge !" Like mountain storms, rush on these fiery bands. the British public received from 1916 Belgian imperialism, not the Congolese, "What're ye here yoursel' for" asked "Reputation" I muttered in my boots. Thin is the English column now, and faint their volleys grow, vi he are to blame. SONG OF ERNE Yet, mustering all the strength they have, they make a gallant show. to 19,';'8 merely made more virulent the the eld woman. "Did you ever lilt bull over a style?" They dress their ranks upon the hill to face that battle-wind— poison that was there already. It is of the umbilical cord like a slender stick "No." I answered. It is the more important to remember "SONG OF ERNE," Robert Harbinson "Got the 'ben' Misses." Their bayonets the breakers' foam; like rocks, the men behind! of seaside rock, the tightlv-curled coat "Young skitter" said the ould one out- doublful, indeed, if there is any sub- this now. because alongside efforts to blunt (Faber, 18/-). "I mean, do you think yourself strong?" One volley crashes from their line, when through the surging smoke, the memory of Ireland's anti-impeiialist of the new lamb determined to stand up raged at such carelessness. With empty guns clutched in their hands, the headlong Irish broke. ject upon which the British people are "Yes" I answered. past, are two tendencies which are sum- at once on its own feet, a lone kestrel "Nah. missis," corrected the lad. "they On Fontenoy, on Fontenoy, hark to that fierce huzzah! j N "No Surrender," an earlier book, so prejudiced as that of Ireland. An marised in one "Come on now. lorget all winnowing the pregnant air above the pay \e off at sixteen so as they don't have He started to hum in a bass throaty- "Revenge! Remember Limerick! dash down the Sassanach!" Robert Harbinson, the young Bel- attempt therefore to answer prejudice about partition; integrate with Britain russet sculpture of the mountain, filled to pay ye the rise." voice tapping the desk with his pencil. fast author, told the story of his and help to exploit the Afro-Asians by re- me with a new sensation, a k:nd of full- "Plenty ah biscuits to ate Missis; m'Da Like lions leaping at a fold when mad with hunger's pang, with reason, reverse the effect of past "Tell you what," lie .said. "I'll write and soeciable financial means." working-class family's struggle for ness. a rhapsodic passion which I could says ah got awful fat when ah was working Right up against the English line the Irish exiles sprang. propaganda by means of fact, would let you know." Bright was their steel, 'tis bloody now, their guns are filled with gore; survival during the lean 1930's—the not express. I felt I wanted to stand on there." As I walked towards the door I heard a Through shattered ranks, and severed files, the trampled flags they tore. b( a most praiseworthy undertaking. In older to do that the difference be- auto-biographical setting of his boy- top of the mountain or roll in the "Hi rubber snitch" a skinny boy shouted, The English strove with desperate strength, paused, rallied, staggered, fled— tween the I.R.A. and the Black-and-Tans hood. This story he told with a simple heather, or lie and gaze for hours at, the "d:d ye sell much firewood today?" drawer slide open behind me. The green hillside is matted close with dying and with dead. must be forgotten. Because Dorothy masterly eloquence, eschewing all implacable cerulean enamel over my The boys shrieked with a laughter as "Hi boy" called the fat gent; I turned. Across the plain and far away passed on that hideous wrack, Macardle did not forget it. because she head, and then die in the rapture of the reedy in sound as a flute band. "Ever seen oiie of these?" He held in his taint of bigotry, humbug and intoler- While cavalier and fantassin dash in upon their track. knew the impelling force ol the national day before the sun's rich yoke dipped "What, the Hell." shouted the commis- hand a black book with the words "Holy On Fontenoy, on Fontenoy, like eagles in the sun, ance—the various species of which he liberation struggle carrying generation behind Belmore." sionaire running to the door and waving Bible" written on its cover. "Yes," I With bloody plumes the Irish stand, the field is fought and won ! graphically portrayed—from an un- "I 1 AS Mi. Edgar (toll attempted this? alter generation ol Irishmen forward his arms about his head, "too much noise answered—and felt it. I thought; many's tarnished childhood, though stoutly But there must have been snags, not- THOMAS DAVIS. And il he has. has he succeeded? Both through the ages, she could leave much —loafiing about; bloody corner boys." a one been thrown at my Fenian head at withstanding the wartime opulence, for questions : .ust surely be answered nega- out; she could select significant detail. Mr. Protestant, nature. "Five at a time in the waiting room, no school later we are informed: — Holt does not select significant detail. He smoking, no snattin' on the floor." tively. Mr. Holi nowhere rises above the "Well, we do a great deal of business in A few adds inconsequential detail, such as this Under the shadows of the gantries, prejudices cl his class and nation "that winter a wave of insanity swept the Holy Book; especially in Africa." these two elements of his work re- A FTER three hours I readied the wait- A BUCKET OF omment on the Rising: - over the neighbourhood . . . and with short key-words can be quoted to illustrate sulted in a book which described— ing room; only to be told to come "Do you think you could lift a four stone ironic justice the epidemic not only The moon behind this:— back at half past one, it seems it was parcel of the Book of God." MOUNTAIN DEW "... a girl commented sadly, 'There's wiithin the measure of compass- touched Catholics and the more super- lunch time in the 'paper jungle'. "Oh aye" I told him. not a cat or dog alive in Camden Street. authentic strata of life in Belfast's stitious of the Protestants, but our the hill "The shot which killed an Through time I was shown in to a gent "Now would you like to ask me a ques- N yonder hill there's a darling little unoffending There's lots of women will be sorry tor back-streets, and described it with a 'Saved' neighbours too." fleshed round his mahogany desk, I was tion?" he invited. (The Kilkenny Exile's Christmas O still policeman on point duty at Dublin this war. and their pets killed on them' " poetical grip on language. motioned to. a straight backed chair in the "What are the wages?" I asked. With the smoke curling up to the sky Within these limitations, however. "Song Song) Castle ard began the bloodshed of the Could historical inanity be emptier? Now, in "Song of Erne," we hitch middle of the office. A hurt look trenched his obese face. WATCHED last night the rising By the smoke and the smell of Erne" has a lot to offer, especially by You can plainly tell Easter Rising was to remind England away from the dusty streets with "Name?" . . . I told him. . . . "Oh," said Fifteen shillings a week," he grumped, moon r way of humour, and chronicles the life of I There's poteen, my lads, close by. i { that the Irish have never lorgotten their |TIERE are some curious judgments too. he lifting his heavy jowls from the desk, Upon a foreign strand, their fermenting galaxy of Orange- simple Ulster farming folk—a theme not "three free cups of tea a day, bring your * "Religious faith combined with busi- "and where do you live?" Till memories came, like flowers of hist,orv?" " The most notorious ol many men, Mickeys, Yardmen, Bin-men. over-written about, and seldom done as own sandwiches of course. CHORUS : ness acumen to arouse m Ulster a fixed June, subsequent Fenian outrages was the "Carryduff," I answered (a loyalist area >. "The boy who comes to this firm will Sure it fills the air with an odour rar* hot-gospellers. Peelers, snobs and well as this. The adolescent Robbie is still Of home and fatherland. opposition to Home Rule." His head rolled to the desk; "Your indeed be lucky," he added. "I'll treat him And betwixt both me and you, assassination ol Lord Frederick Caven- prudish old women and follow Robbie as unbigoted as ever, with a propensity I dreamt I was a child once more school?" he groaned, raising his full-moon like my own son." His ponderous head fell for developing Catholic friendships and, Beside the rippling rill, As home you roll, you can take a bowl dish . . ", "Thomas J. Clarke, a Fenian How comes it then that Lord Pirrie. —now a 12-vear-old evacuee—to the when he loses one of these through a face. I told him. to the desk. Where first I saw, in days of yore Of the real old mountain dew. dynamiter who had served a term of 111- Ulster's most successful business man. was verdant fields of Fermanagh. And tragic and untimely death, we are given a "Of course, of course," he giggled. He "Goodbye" he called out . . . "oh and The moon behind the hill. teen ears . . ." a Home Ruler? And it is just a little diffi- "Song of Erne," with all its good qua- threw hi? eyes once more upon a document thanks for calling." Now away with the pills that cure all ilia choice passage:— be ye heathen or turk or Jew cult for anybody with the fourth power lities, has the same weakness as his on his desk. I walked up Great Victoria Street, a It brought me back the visions Yet Freddy and Christy were Orange- Take off your coat law in mind to believe that the Post Office former book. His characters, rustic He scratched my name below a number sharp east wind biting into me, past Glen- grand Of the surrender there is no account of men. and many of their fellow Lodge And grease your throat was set on fire bv radiation from buildings That purpled boyhood's dreams; the shooting of the men with white Hags, and faithfullv-drawn though they be. brethren were at the funeral too. Even of other names. gall Street with its great sign in six-feet With the real old mountain dew. 0:1 the other side ol O'Connell Street rather Its youthful oves, Its happy land, onlv "The British troops did not fire on still tend to be as flat as an amateur stranger was it when the priest came out "I hope you country lads live up to your high letters "Ulster is British" planted than by enemy action setting alight a As bright as morning's beams. painting and as dimensional as images and asked for offerings. Up went old reputation." above the Unionist Party Headquarters. Oh peelers all, from Donegal, a Red Cross nurse." I.R.B. lunds were ventilator shaft. It brought me back my own sweet Charlie with his precious shilling, at More, And likewise gaugers too, "swollen by contributions trom German- on a photograph May all ring the bell which the priest called out. "Charlie Tha castle and the mill, American sources." Then there is the I If they ever get a smell At best, thev are very good crayon McGurty—one shilling. God bless you'" Until my eyes could see no more astonishing sentence. "It would have been | KENNEDY SAYS PLEBISCITE The moon behind the hill. Or a drop of the mountain dew. GAELIC GAMES sketches and Mr. Harbinson. though we There is a strong sense of history and T)RESIDENT-ELECT Senator Kennedy Court railwa.vmen, Borough A.E.U., and wise to get the executions over as quickly understand he is presenting a boy s-eye Maggie's Ceilis are aptly recalled', with J lias declared that a plebiscite of the the Nottingham Trades Council sent a It brought Die back a mother's love Let grasses grow and waters flow as possible and allow the counti v to settle view of his world, never attempts to tap their unique performers and more peculiar In their good old Irish way; people of all Ireland should be held on the wire to Brookeborough. Until, in accents wild, down ai run." VICTORY IN the well-springs of human behaviour. Thus songs, rendered in the Gaelic as well' Per- Just give me enough subject of partition. Lord Brookeborough I prayed her, from her home he describes, without delving, the generous haps when Robbie grows up. Mr. Harbin- Of the good old stuff has protested. above, That is made beside Galway Bay. Any lir-h reader will find similar and warmhearted "Maggie." who hated no son will pxtend his hero's range of percep- * * * To guard her lonely child; MANCHESTER human lying and gave openhou.se Ceili's tion to cover social and political motivat- It brought me one across the wave, examples on almost ever, page It is clear Northern Ireland Council for Civil Liber- to Catholic and Protestant alike, but who ing factors less cursorily and with depth, To live in memory still- that this r- the British imoerial story ol ties wired Lord Brookeborough as follows t S a result of the representations made still . . was Orange . . . and harboured giving us not onlv a homespun story of It brought me back my Kathleen's POET DEMANDS on November I4th: "Internment obviously the tioubV . And the opening quotation * * bv the Connolly Association and the Lodge band. Ulster s (>eople but a book of genltfs as no longer necessary. Hope immediate un- grave— other Irish organisations in Manchester, The moon behind the hill. given above illustrates the method of the well A work that will go right to the core conditional release of men imprisoned CONGO RECALL it is understood that the practice of Hur- Escaping from Hitler's raids on Belfast. respect for United whole bonk. It is always the Irish who of the matter and not skip such important without trial and R. EWART MILNE, the poet, is de- ling during evenings and Sunday after- Robbie is billeted on a numerous succes- Nations Declaration of human rights." -WILLIAM KENEALY. strike first I he Sum Fein resistance to topics as "the Rising" and why the I.R.A. Mmanding the recall of Irish troops noons in Manchester parks is now sion of farmsteads and in plan's ranging were active on the border with a word in * * * r,\ lr- from the Congo which, he says in a British imperialism is called a "terror" officially recognised by the authorities. iidin a manse to a workhouse. His life is passing; that will not only state but dis- The B B C. has banned the broadcasting letter to the "Irish Times", "is made only Tlii' Black-a.id-Tan activitv is politely de abruptly widened and despite occasional sect. the paradox of the kindlv farmfolk of recordings of "Bold Robert Emmet", all the more urgent by the tragic deaths sci iltctl as fl "counter-terror I'hi' Director «>| Parks. Mr. MacMillan. jolts, such as his stay at farmer Garre- "Father Murphy" and "Men of the West" Irishman chosen of some members ot an Irish platoon in belonging to an Orange Klux Klan; a work is understood to have sent the Lancashire tnn's . "I'll cut the bloody balls of ya" (Decca ) as a result of pressure from the Katanga." that will not only describe but. by help- /^ENERAL Secretary of the Con- Coiml\ Board of the (i AA a lorm to ix' he had a very happy tune. He found Bel last Unionists. He points out that their assailants are In a ua\ which can onh Riee from ing people to understand themselves, ^ nolly Association Sean Red- filled m and it is expected that on its re the fields of the tar West idvlhc and in • J|e * as yet unidentified, and points to th9 fact clevci • c!( i 'ion and arrangement every change them and their lives for the better. mond who represents the Association turn there will be made suitable anange- the passages descript .'e of nature In pen Twenty-three of his workmates put their that Belgian "technicians" have bean re- Black und-'I an outrage is proceeded bv a Meanwhile, on 'flitting "Song of Erne" signatures to a telegram sent by Tom Red- turning to the Congo at the rate of 100 ment - seems to flow by itsell on the Council of the Movement for down we feel much as lie did when bid- mond calling on Lord Brookeborough to re- a week. Sinn F'-m utiare. and is followed bv pre Colonial Freedom has been elected a ding Fermanagh farewell; lease the untried prisoners. His wife. Aine, "Should the Irish troops In tha new vai ir.vioiu and excuses which place III/' Y nmg men who wished to practise Hur "In the bog heather I saw a ewe bear member of the three-man drafting Derrvgonnelly. goodbye. Fair davs are sent a wire carrying 17 signatures, while in circumstances remain," says Mr. Milne, Ire 11 1:1 '|:e light of unreasonable aggres- lew imoll'uialh in Piatt Fields were a lamb The miracle was enacted Glasgow Byrne got 150 signa- Committee which will prepare reso- "Ireland will been mancevred into a sup- agiinst the background of a radiant sky gone. Margaret sor. and the British iiuthoiitie as driven ord'Tcd to stop earlv this year, although tures on a letter. lutions for the Movement's Annual port of the colonialists and their allios of there had been no previous objection in fleeced with white clouds, herded along Of springing heifers, yapping dogs. hi". oid ! • (),,ranee bv the savage anil mi • • * Mr. Tony Coughlan (National organiser) Conference next April. Resolutions N.A.T.O. that, I believe, was certainly t ii. course of seventeen years A comma bv the sensuous wind of early summer, And cutties running the lanes. nover intended when the Congo crisis 1 Messages to Butler were sent by Rother- was invited to address a special meeting on Ireland are expected to comc up. reasonable opposition thev met m Irving tee of I iisli orga nr.at ion was formed, with and the rugged flanks ot the mountain, Ban' legs red banded by heather. of Dagenham Foundry Workers' Union. broke." hithe painters. Rotherhithe dockers, Earls t O roll' ' :. I lyxlv else's count I ', the '••suit reported warm in a fondling sun The lovelv pink ROBERT W. HEATLEY. | IRISH DEMOCRAT FOR IRISH WORKERS AND PATRIOTS WITH THE COURAGE TO THINK i ; • _ • . '• . • ' " . • • . o M.P.s TOLD WHY NORTH AMAZING IS FLAT BROKE "CO-OPERATION" 9 AN astonishing capacity for what Shop Stewards humiliating journey " Orwell called "double-think" was HR IEE md pounds was tht .) discuss co-operation in the .establish- basic standpoint and failed to meet the T fundamental issue—is Northern Ireland, displayed by the Anti - partition :a! c -s'. uf bringing 150 Ho!fast ment of prosperity throughout Ireland. to part of Ireland or is it part of Britain? League in its recently published re- •r.1 Brookeborough had rejected th:» shop st ewards t > London to ask UVst- NO CHOICE port, if the highlighting of the "Irish imping hand. minsto • t<> d'> something about the The memorandum emphasised that the Times" reporter is anything to go by. lit.' crisis which has hit tho Six A THEORY ecor.on shop stewards had no choice but to set- The headline read: "Co-operation urged ,'s ol' North-East Ireland, The Memorandum staled: Coim'.i out on their humiliating journey to Lon- "The reason for Lord Srookeborough's to end Partition." Very good you might result of closures and take-overs, don. since the Northern Ireland Govern- As a cut-of-hand rejection of the proposals say. the area, winch already has the highest ment refused to recognise the trade of the Government of the Republic, and But, believe it or not. the VERY FIRST unemployment. i;i Western Europe, is his preference for relying on alms from unions, and would not meet their union threatened with full-scale slump. The lines in the report ran as follows: [he British taxpayer, is that he is a organisations. It is also a fact that the "Sharp attacks, both on the Connolly shop-stewards were asking Britain to di- gentleman who is in the grip of a Westminster Government has ultimate Association, the Irish Left-wing group vert ship-building and other industries to theory. That theory is that the Six control over every person and thing in in Britain, and on organisations which the Six Counties Counties of North Eastern Ireland are the Six Counties. advocate the use of physical force to- economically as well as politically NOT It concluded by saying that it was an wards solving partition, are contained Mr. R. A. Butler, determined to humili- part of Ireland, but part of Britain. utter illusion that prosperity in the Six in the annual report of the Anti-parti- ate them if possible, refused to meet Accordingly the entire policy of his Counties could ever be achieved except by tion of Ireland League.'' then:, but instead called over their bosses. Government has been directed to com- T EAVING aside such stylistic curiosities j Any hand-out is goint; to be given peting in the British market which (ex- co-operation and ultimate integration with * J as "solving" partition < how does one through the duly appointed managers. cept for agricultural products) is not Dublin. "solve" partition?', the kind c!' co-opera- feasible. If Lord Brookeborough refused to en- THE TRUTH "Associated with this is a hostility to ter into discussion with Mr. Lemass, then tion advocated will amaze most people. The day before they arrived. Members Belfast's natural hinterland in the Re- the British Government should do it for The fourth paragraph is even better. of Parliament were supplied by the Con- public which can only be compared to him. It runs: nolly Association with a memorandum the pathological attitudes of apartheid In the meantime the Government "It is stressed that the A-P League is which explained the truth about the crisis . . . The result of Lord Brookeborough's should meet the shop stewards' demand- a democratic organisation believing in m the Six Counties. determination to seal off the Six Coun- and not Lord Brookeborough's. the right of all Irishmen to express It pointed o! it that ship-building. linen ties from the Republic has been the dereliction of such towns as Enniskil- their opinions, no matter what side and military ircraft were dying indu<- of the border they come from." len, Derry City, and Newry. tries and that any attempt to estabhs'ii And that sounds fair enough, too. But And now deputations are coming to this is what goes with it: new Industrie:- came up against on-' ask the British workers to sacrifice, and NEW SITUATION "The report says that people who use simple t act - : was uneconomic to trv the British taxpayer to pay, for the HE fact that the Twenty-six physical force methods are merely cre- to integrate :J :e Six Counties with Bn- folly of Lord Brookeborough and the; T ating divisions in Ireland, and in fact tam. Tins mi ih: be possible in times . t blindness and cowardice of those who Counties was now more pros- harming the cause of a United Ireland. a "sellers' marketr " when people would have, while ostensibly representing J perous, relatively speaking, than the The Connolly Association is accused of pay anything v / get goods. It could no-, working-class interests, accepted his north, created a now situation in Ire- j using Irish Nationalism in order to en- survive und r c-onaition s of recession, land. list young Irishmen to further the aims It pointed out that Paris was far nearer This was the theme ol a speech by Mi- of international Communism." I.ondon ' 1'. a:'. Belfast, yet few people CRICKLEWCOD Desmond Greaves. Editor ot the "Irisii So we've all a right to express our would advoc.lt' linking up Northern opinions but if we do. the API. re- Democrat." in Hyde Park. London. France with til-• economic life of Britain serves the right to slander us. evn to WORKERS He did not believe that the present boom Unless freight ' vas to be subsidised at a attribute to us opinions we r.ev-'r ex- in the Twenty-Six Counties would last, or pressed. rate which would draw protests from all) that it was necessarily based on the deve- other users, tnb- - North of Ireland had to TELL BUTLER lopments which were best lor the country T is hard to find anything mor" politi- be what it wa:- the north of Ireland, a \YHE N Connolly Association member He was not trying to make out the South, I cally contemptible than a mock lib-1 part of an island made one by geography. Patrick Tracy, shop-steward convener a paradise and the North a hell. What eralism which is only liberal towards the It was noteworthy that at the very at Siiuih's, Cricklewood, reported back to he was saying was that the argument re- peated over the last forty years that the enemies ol Irish independence, and pre- time when Belfast had met its worst ins committee, which had delegated him 1 South was behind the North economical!. serves a bitter hostility towards anybody to represent them at the lobby ol Parlia- crisis for years, the Twenty-six Counties speaking, would hold water no more. The who does or tries to do anything practi- was enjoying what amounted, relatively ment for the release ot the Belfast in- cal for Ireland. day the Victoria shipyard in Belfast closed speaking, to a boom. Mr. Sean Lemass. ternee:-;, the shop-stewards were so de- How would the A.P L. leaders fee! if the down. Cork Cite o|>ened another one. the lighted with the work that he had done Connolly Association published a report the Irish Prime Minister, fully appre- most modern in Europe. saying that the Anti-Partition League was ciating this fact, had offered to export thai thev passed a vote ol thanks The long-term persp'ctive was that the merely a pretence under which patriotic! southern prosperity northwards. He had In tiie same factory 67 signatures were South would leave the North lar behind, Irish people were brainwashed into ac- invited l ord Brookeborough to meet him affixed to the following letter which uas beer use ot its bigger market. This mean' cepting an attitude of spineless mactivitv sent to Mr. R. A Butler in time lor has the argument that partition was an ad- vantage to the North was dead A weap .n on the question of the border? They wuuld meeung with Lord Brookeborough: — feel a little hurt. I imagine. was struck out ot the enemv's hand. We the undersigned workers employed The most astonishing thing is that th- WANT TO SEE in S. Smith & Sons, Waterloo Road, A P L. is able to get out an annual re- Cricklewood, London, ask you to inform port at all After all. what h.i^ r. done Lord Brookeborough on the occasion ol GO RAIBH MAITH AGAIBH I ASK you ! BUTLER his forthcoming visit that we support the JADRAIG PEARSE nee said that there —H.M. 'I 'WO M-r. vr. of Parliament al West - demand expressed in the telegram sent I was always mone to lie lound Iron, to him last week by the Connolly Associa- * rums'er Mi- Marcus Iapton and Mr the Irish people for he cause of Iris.; Dan I .lies. 11 1 vewritte n a joint letter to tion. This was signed by Members of Parliament and other eminent citizens and freedom, provided the uere poor enough 'lie Home .Sivr"i, irv Mr R A. Butler re- It asks particularly in view of the ap- And our paper needs the help ol the po- questing him 'o C.N.D. IN DUBLIN receive a deputation on proach of Christmas lor the immediate und the not so pi,or in it, canipai. t lie subje'-i ot i !;,• imprisonment of 68 men I)ROINSIAS MAC AONGHUSA speak - release en bloc of the remaining 69 men for the Ireemg ol the Republican priso m Bella. ' jail w!i i ha ve been there nearly held in Belfast jail tor many years with- • ing at a meeting organised by the ers. Send your donation through the po- tour vears -a it 1: ot charge or trial out charge or trial." Dublin Campaign for nuclear disarma- or give it to thtine • Irish Dmiocrat." sei: ment stated that in his opinion war be- the next lime v ii - • • him or her. 1; tween the Communist world and the Wes- give it. and add power to our elbow. tern powers would be mutualh suicidal ii you've so olten wished 11 Especial than Mr. Ciaran Mac Anally said tha: the i>arJ.s from King . Cro..o Labour Party was pr^tent and stated that radioactive (all-out was greater in the Six Counties than in anv other part ol the so- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS < OWOI.I.V Assort VI ION Ml MIUKS AMI FKH.NDS called United Kingdom. I PHOTOGRAPHS in this is«ne arr ark • no» ledfrd to the following sourrrs Come and let the Now \ e arm' Donation Ticket — 1/6 "Dally Herald," Sir I.estlc Pliimmer, Mr. S Printed by Ripley Printers Ltd (T.U.i, Silverman. Harold Davirs, <«. W. Reynolds. Nottingham Hoad, Rlplc.v. Derbvs and Dan Jones. It J Mellish, Camera Press. published by Connolly Publications Ltd at Hamuli SwafTrr. S (). Davies, Itev. Donald 374 Grays Inn Road, London. W.C.I. Soprr, Marcus l.ipton. Itev. Michael Scotl.