Tailoring Under the supervimon of our London-trained cutter TRINITY NEWS GOWNS, HOODS, CASSOCKS, BLAZERS from 3 CHURCH LANE COLLEGE GREEN DIXON A Dublin University Weekly HEMPENSTALL BRYSON 111 IIRAFTON ST. THURSDAY, JUNE 7th, 1962 LTD. w- PRICE THREEPENCE

Geology Expedition Fashion Winners to lake part June 6th was the sunniest Trinity Wednesday in years, and whilst the hats were affected a little by a fresh in World Research wind, the afternoon was sartorially spectacular. HE three Trinity students who are going to Kharg Chris Lea (see this week’s Island, in the Persian Gulf, leave Dublin July 9th. profile), as Secretary of Trinity T Week, welcomed the President, Chris Kendall, the leader; Jalik Kaulback and Patrick Mr. de Valera, and other distin- Skipwith, have been arranging the expedition for three guished guests in the exclusive years, and its findings will be Trinity’s contribution to an Pavilion. international research programme planned by, amongst Hats this year were generally others, Imperial COllege, London. larger, and bad bl’ims, as opposed to last year, when hats tended, so The principal object of the is as fantastic as its history. It is to speak, to the conical. expedition is to ascertain the scheduled to become a vital deep Ushering in Trinity Week---an impression of that climax of the The winners of the competition sea harbour for extensive oil age of the island. There has Summer Term, Trinity Wednesday. were:-- tanker traffic from Persia and Iran Photo by D. Harman also been a significant drop of to the rest of the world. l--Etain YardleT. sea level, and the expedition 2--Rosemary Fisher. hopes to discover whether Manta Rays and Sharks. 3--Cat herine Nesbitt. All three members are experi- this is due to " a tectonic rise enced aqua lung divers, and will JOYCE HONOURED of the island, o1" an enstatic The 1st prize is a 3-month spend as much time as possible modelling course at Charles Ward- fall of sea level." studying underwater life there. HIS month Ireland will, been promised on loau from the Mills Modelling Agency; 2nd prize, Jalik Kaulbak, the expedition’s Pearl Beds and Crusaders. T for the first time, United States. dinner for two at the Royal cameraman, knows the island, and Later in the evening, and for the Hibernian Hotel; 3rd prize is a honour her famous week following, "Bloomsday," an The expedition is not confined he believes that the waters around writer, James Joyee, when beauty treatment by Helena its coast may hold many unidenti- adaptation of "Ulysses" by Alan to geological aspects of Kharg the Martello Tower at Sandy- McClellan will be staged at the Rubenstein at Browne Thomas. fied species of nmrine life. He island. The team will be there for cove, in which the first sc~ne Eblana Theatre, Dublin; a week’s The competition judges were:-- also hopes to make extensive fihns series of lectures on Joyce will be three months, and in that time of " Ulysses" is set, will be Miss G. Kenny, Charles Ward of sharks and rays in the vicinity. given at the Building Centre, they hope to learn more about its opened as a commemorative Mills and David Butler. history, the underwater life around I]luseUlll. its coast, and the traditions of its At the beginning of next The opening ceremony will itihabitants. Kharg once had world be performed on Saturday at famous pearl beds; in its time it term there will be a number of vacancies on the staff of 3 p.m., by Miss Sylvia Beach, tlas had colonies of Zoroastrians who p u b 1 i s h e d Joyce’s Grafton Shoe and Nestorian Christians; there are " Trinity News." Students "Ulysses" in 1922 from her Crusaders tombs on the island. who would like to acquaint Shakespeare mid Company Until tiffs decade the islanders had themselves with practical publishing house in Paris, and Salon never seen wheeled transport of who is coming over specially any kind. Its potential importance newspaper work should contact any member of for the event. 5 Grafton Street The Tower Museum will have it staff’, or leave a note in the number of Joyce menlemtos on dis- Believe it or Not "Trinity News" box in play--among them the deathmask No. 3. of the writer which was made in For Everything that’s Department Zurich 21 years ago. There will also be a number of portraits and new and Lovely in The nmmmified body of a drawings of Joyce. There will be youngish, fair-haired man, clad in khaki trousers and shirt of the type some first editions, a number of Ladies footwear worn by members of the British personal belongings and, it is Army around 1920, was discovered tonight hoped, at least one manuscript of 5% Discount on Student’s Cards by turf workers between two and one of his major works, which has three feet under the surface .of Mounttown Bog, Geevagh, Co. S!igo. 8.15 The body is believed to be that of John Watt, an Englishman and Entertain a member of the British Forces, who was captured by the I.R.A. in Exam Hall BROWN THOMAS Geevagh district around 1920, at the court-marshalled and put to death for activities as a spy. Choral Society " h’ish Times," Wed., June ~. is all things

FOR L() / l ’~ /:’.dT’Z~5 "TAB|RNA" to all ’l’elephone 43198 :,~ 1.r. (rConnelt st. GREEK RESTAURANT Dubliners Dining . . . Dancing . . ¯ Nightly . . . Table d’Hote ) James joyce in Paris at the turn of Dinner and a la Carte the century¯ /’5-. BREAD ¯ . . No Cover Charge... l_)uhlh,, by t’rofcss,)’..’ llichard Kain. Licensed to Nidnight . . . l’aidric C,)lum,. Niaii Mont~omery. and Cakes J,,bn Gar\’il~. Dr. A. J. Levonthal Informal Dress .... ahd l;r. l-ileen McCarville. LUNCHEONS D A I L Y, Made I~:," During the w,,ok students ftom GRAFTON STREET U.C.1). ",’.ill pay tribute to their 12.30-3 p.m. and ,:olleg,"s famous graduate by giv- Johnston, N looney & O’Bricn Ltd. hm readings of selected pass:,,zes METROPOLE _\~;’,a’cl(’tl h":dl Championship (’up for BEST Loaf DUKE STREET, DUBLIN from " Ulysses." "Fh,~ x.,-e[~-k~i~),.’,-]~ Irish act,~!’. Cyril (’u~ack, will also ;Iml (hI’ev l.~t Prizes at tilt" International Exhibition, give rea,li~a< (,.’,)m " Fim>,gan’~ O’Conn~ll St., DUBLIN l,ondon, V’," :~ !,:,,.’¯

!: nelly’s two pieces seems to me to hit off the quintessential note which he is trying to strike. "Good Tt TRINITY NEWS Friday" was written with convic- Icarus tion but the words fail to come A Dublin University Weekly alive. The middle section of Gerald HE ,editorial fez" this Cohen’s " Final Solution" hangs Last tern Vol. IX THURSDAY, 7th JUNE, 1962 No. 18 The drawings by Fred Middle- fire in the rhythm, but the poem This arti, T terms " Icarus is full hurst are unmitigatedly goes out in a blaze of glory in the taken pl: dreadful. last four lines. " Stone Throw" Chairman : of good ideas. As an by J~ohn Stevens Wade is a much introduction to an illustrated Ironically, they illustrate Mr. more modest poem; quiet, con- Norman Sowerby. Eckersley’s sh,m~c story, which I trolled and well judged, with an edition, Richm’d Eckersley echo of Eliot in the last line. I Vice-Chairman: enjoyed for its disturbing picture analyses lucidly the function of a mother-son relationship. Both found Deborah de Vere White’s Godfrey Fitzsimons. short stotLy undistinguished, but " LP lna of the illustrator and his re- it and " Chingo " steer well dear her poetry is largely the genuine article. " Death of Pompey" is et la bo E ditors: lationship to the writer, and of sentimentality to which their subjects make them particularly written with a fine feeling for the si elle n Natalie Spencer, Roger Scott-Taggart, Alan Jones. discusses magazine design and overall movement of a poem, the layout. In practice, however, liable. Damian Ryan’s " The last two stanzas rising to a climax Business Managers: Affair " depends almost entirely on which is very satisfying to read things do not work out so well. tension between subject matter and aloud. The opposite is true of Hugh White, D~smond Herman, John Cox, The drawings by Diana Hors- style and makes you wonder Michael Longley’s " In Touch" Colin Smythe. fall come nearest to fulfilling whether this so.rt of thing is not a which seems to lose assurance at dead end, but its effect on the the beginning of the last stanza. Mr. Eckersley’s ideas. The~. " Completely," however, shows him Secretary : reader is certainly spectacular, it one an( have a liveliness and sly is beautifully balanced and is in at his best. Derek Mahon’s con- Christopher Smith. some ways the m.ost perfect thing tribution is uneven ranging from they t~ observation which comple- in the magazine. There are two a tr~mslation .of Corbiere which articles: The one on Holl,~vood by reads magnificently, th r ou gh uncert~ ments well the freshness of Charles Burr is interesting and " Poete Maudit," which only just the story they illustrate. The readable, but " hnage And After avoids caricature in s~)ite of its wrote various fish, seagulls, etc., Image," by Peter Stone--a hecti- sense of humour, but is powerful tween OUR scattered over the pages are cally .rushed guided tour of English all the same, to " Out of the nsually satisfying in them- book illustration which manages to Depths " which is technically sick Alo-eri~ mention " Punch," The Folio unto death in places: selves, but in fact all they do Society, Blake, Picasso, Aleuin of " And also the dull cancerous fear the rea is fill up spaces that were York and many other wonders--is In our bones ,of being left with The gc 0WN TRUMPET blank in previous "Icari." too general for anyone who is Nothin~ to think about but our already interested, and assumes too Bodies and how ugly they are." Januar Surely the layout and typo- much for anyone who is not. But in spite of all its faults, the impasse. The last week of term, and it would be graphy needs ~o be thought The poetry is a very mixed bag cur.rent " Icarus " is sensational in natiom cut afresh and as a whole? as usual. Neither of Brendan Ken- terms of value for money.--G.S. unwise to write on a subject which would wean people’s on talk interest too far away from parties, the Ball, tickets and sunshine. More than that, it would be impossible. So, progress rather than a magnifica- The having plunged recklessly into the Hist. affair, Trinity and LETTERS TO THE EDITOR tion of dust. small pr ireland (an editorial favourite for years), and Secondary I’m screw I won’t be around next his defit Education, we offer no apologies for writing about ourselves 3, Trinity College, able disease of self-importance. year to see how Mr. Newcombe the oth~ this week. Dear Sir, And Mr. Newcombe insists that makes out, if he can manage to Algeria " Trinity News " is nearly 10 years old. It was founded, Here I have been for nearly five either we are heartless or trough- lift his sandalled mind .out of the should years spooning apathy into the way of high-pitched maniac in the words of one of the original members ".... because ing around in apathy. Maybe we who \va~ coffee of my ennui, when last laughter. But maybe I would just T.C.D. (that is, the Miscellany) was just a string of bright their fa, Thursday Mr. Michael Newcombe’s are not interested because the tin- go back to my oblivious siesta ... the~ young names." In all fairness, it is obvious that Trinity toothy letter marches up, climbs pot, mayfly, sniffy affairs of the again, pull my sombrero over my And eh needs a newspaper, as opposed to a weekly concentrating into my awareness and stamps Hist. don’t really matter. Maybe bland Welsh face, and let someone taurant on news comment. Regular readers may remember a con- around there spreading incredulity some .of us have life in roughly the else swat the flies. .days de fusing correspondence earlier this term evolving around and satiric laughter at surely the right proportion. Maybe stone of Yours, etc., colons m.ost conscientiously daft load of Hugh Gibbons. "Trinity News," a sum of money, and the S.R.C. Nothing us are ill at ease, and looking for describe codswallop ever published. T~" "- I" 0" very conclusive emerged from all that, apart from the fact ±~IpHn~ Mr. Newcombe’s homely sense of odd diff~ that "Trinity News " is quite independent. Each Chair- fun has run amok, and as cham- they do man is entirely responsible during his term of office, there pion of the virginity (misplaced) other F: are no powers behind the throne, and apart from a normal of his society, he hat flung the slight e~ gauntlet across the fried bread and distance respect for the laws of the country and of the university, bacon of female aspiration. Turn- A career Algiers, he may print what he chooses. A change of approach and ing a correctly blind eye on the proved ] attitude is discernable from term to term. 20th century, he shows the un- between This situation is not quite as commonplace as it sounds. shakeable confidence of Canute Menta!12 In other, much larger, universities the S.R.C. very often wearing waterwings, and argues is what it’s is a hun on the lines that we shouldn’t join Apart sponsors or dominates the newspaper. It also appoints the the Common Market because il staff, and the newspaper is usually the only weekly in the Sala,,1 ve wasn’t mentioned in Magna Carta. blood cut" Truly he is, as Edmund Burke university. One weekly version of opinion and news is one blanc produced by one ~latively restricted ~’oup of people, who threw out, "not me~ely a chip off worth was as 1 are in turn subject to a semi-permanent administrative the old block; he is the old block Telegrapl itself." This progenitm’ of a long policy. There is, in fact, a perfect monopoly, incorporating penalty i: line of Burkes also said that "the If you divide the population into two groups-- most of the disadvantages of monopoly. David Butler, in men, 8s age of chivalry is gone; that of O.A.S. is a " Trinity News " article this term, pointed out the dangers s.ophisters, economists and calcula- those who take T[-I~ TIMES and those who don’t in Fra which can arise. tors has succeeded." But then there --you find this: those who don’t take THe TIMES " Herald’ " In provincial universities the S.R.C. usually controls were no women in college iu h:s suit. In .day, only gentlemen. are in the great majority. Those who do are either the student newspaper, which endlessly ~’inds away with not in a~*:~ And now his society is wan a’..wt at the top in their careers, or are confidently pictures and headlines of the tiny doings of some bureaucrat to the in low with ostriehitis, and the incur- headed there. would w¢ manque." general f There is no suggestion here of self-satisfaction. THe TIMES both by its seniority in experience eanee of " Trinity News " is a newspaper for, and completely run by and by its incomparable prowess as a modern total ig~ Trinity students. Any member of College can join the staff, newspaper, naturally commends itself to success- f~ ctors, and any Chairman can make of the paper exactly what he-- l~ast. TI or she--decides. ful people. There is no high level conference, no d :~:cripti( (.’eckbm’~ board meeting, no top executive’s private office graph," [ 1~L~:;~i~N~4~l~t~[~f~E~]~]t~i[~L~J~1]~J~E~d1~1r~H~1~N~ri~H~H~H~u|~q~L~H~i I I I,~ ~ All Leading Makes into which THU TIMES is not apt to be taken. hiacctlra( " in Stock. logic; a] Union of Students in Ireland : This choice of a newspaper by people who get 43 DAME STREET, DUBLIN " ---- CALL- e:u’iier a AIR- on is indisputable.* In which of the two groups nqent in _-- DUBLIN--NEW YORK (out 27th June; returning 24th Sept.) Brown’s Salan sm =- £55 Return. By Aer Lingus Boeing Jet. do you place yourself? b~g for of 139 STEPHEN’S GREEN = AIR--- b,fore hi LONDON~PARIS (Single) ...... £4 7 6 -’- --" LONDON--MILAN (Single) £10 17 6 _-_ LONDON--COPENHAGEN (Single) ...... £8 12 6 =" LONDON--BARCELONA (Single) ...... £11 12 6 Press LONDON--BASEL (Single) ...... £7 2 6 Read ~" LONDON--OSLO (Single) ...... £12 7 6 -" Relia] LONDON--DUSSELDORF (Singl’e) ...... £5 13 6 -~ This I =- LONDON--MUNICH (Single), etc ...... £9 12 6 -" f;t~specte( SURFACE-- LONDON--COLOGNE (Single) ...... £3 16 6 THE TIMES !~l’ess ag LONDON--MUNICH (Single) ...... £5 19 6 ~. LONDON--HAMBURG (Single):"etc ...... £5 6 6 -" pondents DUBLIN--LONDON (Return) ...... £4 13 9 _~ * STUDENTS AND THE "nl~ES : As a student c~fii:.ial g -" ... £3 5 "- you can have ~I~ TIMES for 2~d. Write for g MUNICH--ROME ...... 6 the tone MUNICH--ROME ! Connectionse from ... £3 5 6 =" details to the C/rcu!afic.n Manager, TIlE TIMES, i~portan . MUNICH--ATHENS~ London at Munich ... £6 2 6 Lomllm, E.C.4. the niece Vacation Jobs For Lady Students--Earn up to £14 weekl:y. i-,, not th ~,~I l t l Ill 1!i Ill I LISUlII 111 | 11 | II l~II IIII III IU l lillll | H |ll Ill Ill In Ill IJ |ii I II Ill BHIH I [I I If | I I IIII l l lllllllll II B Illll II IIl II~IIJlIUlII l l|ll|~l~~ ) me to an attempt to remedy long stand- command against the F.L.N.) and d note ing welfare, educational and medi- without being consulted in the negotiations. ¯ "Good THE PLAGUE HITS PARIS (2) cal deficiencies, and a close convic- co-operation with the Moslem o COn)e population was effected in exchange Une Feuille Morte for protection in the name of ’Gerald of the West, and the verdict after To understand this action you hanks Last term the author published the first part of " The Plague Hits Paris." Algerie Francaise. By May 1958 it must try and understand the fana- Jouhauld’s condemnation to death looked as if the chances of success tical conception of honour in the e poe IT} This article develops the theme, and takes into account events that have seemed a foregone conclusion. But were more than a possibility, and French army; in particular among y in the taken place in the country more recently, particularly the Salan trial. Maitre Tixier-Vignaneour accepted the coup of 13th May that brought those branded by captivity in Indo- Throw ’" General de Gaulle to power seemed (The author’s name is withheld for censorship reasons.) the defenee brief from a personal China and a practical experience a much to General Salan and his successor, of Communism--it was often all !t, con- hatred of de Gaulle -- "il est General Challe, to be the means to they had left. This group which ~ith an l’expression d’une eertaine fovme cc, nfi~ma this promise. But in spite includes Godard. de Saint-Marc and line. l de la malediction divine . . . clove of ratifying the principle of Argoud ave convinced that AlgeYia Wlfite’s Algerie Francaise, the Gaullist chez los jesuits et un kdpi de is a key-stone in the defence of the ed, but "Le real qui est dans le monde vient presque toujours de l’ignorance, government began the disengage- West against Conmmnism, and ge n u i n e g6ner~l sur le ergne" -- and he ment of the unsuspecting army their military aim of O.A.S. is to oey " is et la bonne volont6 peut faire antant de d6g~ts que la m6chaneetG fought the trial for the personal with a secret re-orientati.on of maintain by fear tim European in- for the satisfaction of exposing the si elle n’est pas 6clair6e." (Camus). Algerian policy. It was not until fluence until and after Autodeter- era, the nmchiavellian character of Gaullist after his retirement that Salan ruination; they have learned to climax polities, and not as a partisan of really understood the change in distrust de Gaulle, and to achieve to read NE has the impression in France these days that O.A.S..or a friend of Salan--whom policy that had been slowly their aim they are prepared to go true of he hardly knew. The verdict which m’ystallising, and it was his succes- t.o the bitter end. But before dis- Touch " o history is being made, that one is living in the midst caused so much blood pressm’e sor Chal!e who made the first pro- missing them as a bunch of mad :ance at found Salan guilty of all five test with the putsch of 1961. cranks -- .remember some of the starm~a. of vital events, but the speed in which they foilow charges; guilty of treason, promot- Finally the government’s determi- people associated with them: M. ows him ing civil war, and common murder; nation to negotiate with the F.L.N. Bidault, former P.M.; Marshall n’S Con- one another and the reaction of different political parties as enough to kill any man if you hold rebels without consulting the Euro- Juin, over a dozen generals includ- lg from they take up new positions, leaves one breathless and still with capital punishment. But it pean population .of Algeria pro- ing two former commanders-in- which was precisely the weight of the dueed O.A.S. chief in Algeria, and a great num- rough uncertain as to the future. Much has happened since I last extenuating circumstances t h a t ber of officers in prison or hiding, nly just saved his life; the defenee had most of them sane balanced men. of its wrote and once again I must be careful to .distinguish be- proved that Salan was deliberately Perjury--or Honour And remember their medals. As )owerful tween a purely personal despair at the bloody mess in misled by de Gaulle as to his real In taking control of O.A.S. and the most decorated officer in France of the policy in Algeria; and it was a holding himself responsible for all and after 40 years of loyal service, flly sick Algeria, the daily political verbiage in the newspapers, and judgment of motives -- a crime its subsequent acts Salan took the Salan represents personally the passionel--rather than of his acts. next logical step in his career; it nmjor part of French military ous fear the reality which is somewhere underneath. It is not easy. This is a straight judicial con- was the same step that de Gaulle activity since 1945; and each medal with demnation of Gaullist policy since made after the fall of France. is for an unpleasant job well done, t our The government official who showed me round Algiers in 1958. Take one single fact: On There can be no outward compari- rather than a glorious victory. g are." January was shot last month, and the earnest Moslem 24th October, 1958, de Gaulle wrote sons here but I suggest that the (One cannot forget the Croix-de- ults, the to Salan that Alggrie should re- inner motives of conscience and Guerres parachuted into Dienben tional in nationalist who stood me a Phoenix at Blida, and insisted main franeaise; yet two months honour are the same. " Je vous Phu .... ) Perhaps, one should --G.S. previously his representative had remets ma vie, pas mon honneur," also remember that he belong to on talking about Huxley’s Countel?oint, is .dead. O.A.S. begun talks with the G.P.R.A. on said Petain, and Salan said the the promotion of 1918, that saw a cease-fire, and its future political stone thing. And in making this two world wars and has had to agnifiea- The hairdresser in this the English public gets what it position. So it is both credit to step Salan had no illusions about witness "un Empire transfmTner wants ov what it is given, but cer- the French judicial system, and a his ultimate fate: he expected like en peau de chagrin et puts s’envoler small provincial town gave me sign of de Gaulle’s real weakness tainly it ought to do more than all the leaders of O.A.S. to be comme une feuille morte au vent und next his definition of the Moslems that such a verdict can still be caught and shot. Like many de l’histoire." But his rebellion is thank heaven there is one stable passed. This is all dead ground officers he had had to make the essentially the final re~aflsion of an eweombe the other day; his cousin in Frenchman left--he spent the war now, but it may serve a useful painful decision between perjur:: army that sees itself disowned by mage to Algeria told him and he purpose here to remind people that and personal honour; on 3:lay 13th, the people, betrayed by the politi- in England you know--or to feel survival in French politics requires Lt of the should know. They are people slightly sick about the O¯A¯S¯ 1958 he had formally promised the cians, and forced to abandon ".... maniac stamina, a realism unimpeded by Algerian people that Algeria would ceux dont il a Ia charge." O.A.S. Occasionally the Beaverbrook press moral glasses, and the art of say- oald just who wash their feet and then remain French. He could not is the positive counterpart of a their faces in the same water finds 40 blood-drained European ing yes and no together. Which is accept that de Gaulle sl-ouhl have malaise that has its roots in the ~s siesta ... they’re not even civi!ised. corpses in an Algerian knackers, why English politicians must keep negotiated secret peace terms with passive nmss of the people; in over z]2y but that is not enough¯ There is on their toes and the Liberals the rebel govermnent while nomi- other words the plag~m. I have someone And the chef at the res- should stick to the Boy Scouts, if nally supporting Algerie Francaise, said no~hing about O.A.S. crimes taurant where 1 eat on Sun- more to it than that on both sides, England is to join the Common and that the army should have mMnly because if a "moral respon- days described the Algerian and it is time that people woke up Market. been tricked into making this sibility" exists in this war it no colons as a Fabian might to the fact that General de Gaulle policy possible; and he could not longer exists in the minds of the ibbons. accept ttmt a French department F.L.N., O.A.S..or French Army, but describe the Anglo-indians of is no longer the burning light of "Avec Son Sang" be banded over to what will vir- ~isewhere. This is not to condone Kipling’s day; but v,:ith the Free France, and that a clear tualiy be an F.L.N. dictatorship, these acts nor is this article an understanding of the Algerian It was unfortunate to.o for de with only paper assurances for the ; it is an attemot to odd difference, as he said, that Gaulle that he should !rove spoken must form paart of the European and l)ro-French Moslem approach a very complex disease they don’t smell the same as so warmly at his press conference hv examining some of the individual’s approach to the Corn- population (who had committed other Frenchmen. These two about the present economic and themselves in fighting under his sym D’:O :’n S. slight examples emphasise the re,on Market. political stability in France, and I can only give here my personal her right to possess an atomic distance between Paris and bomb, when this was concluded by Algiers, as the English papers opinion, biased of course after eight months of French newspapers the resigmation .of five ministers. proved last week the ,distance and a brief visit to Algeria; but National strikes, the Algerian between Paris and London. you are warned. I am not quite 1)roblem .reaching a crisis, daily MOST MODERN Mentally the Common Market convinced that Independence in its arrests, the country still riddled SWITCHBOARD is a hundred years away. present fm~ was the right solu- activists, and the morale of the tion for Algeria, but I am sure army far from good, leads me tn FOR Apart f~om anything else, the think that perhaps Maemillan and that this noble ideal has not justi- ](ennedy are right about the Salsa verdict produced a crop of fied the methods since used. It TRINITY COLLEGE blood curdling editorials that made seems to me more like a precon- French bomb. It would be wnrth- while considering here the problem one blanche for the human race. It ceived disengagement c ar r ied through at all costs. No one would of the army as embodied in the was as painful to see the "Daily deny that de Gaulle was the only Salan aft’air, as this is still an im- Telegraph" demanding the death man capable of giving this country portant factor, it is the Salans of penalty in the name of all French- the future who will control the a sense of direction, but he has French bomb. Maitre Tixier- men, as the "Tbnes" stating that given it his direction, and at the Vignaneour emphasised the differ- 0.A.S. is not sufficiently understood expense of antagonising and not uniting the democ~’atie currents at ence between the soldier and the in France! The "Guardian," w.ork in 1958. Political parties politician in the tPia!: "HeraM:’ and " Mirror" followed here have fought bitterly against " L’homme d’6tat 6cri~ sur du being led from way out in front, papier avec la plume et I’homme suit. In fact Salan’s death would d’ armes ~erit dans la poussi6re not mai.:e the slightest difference and the danger after his departure ¯ . . is precisely that of his vaunted avee son sang et ceh|i le ce~,-g to the present situation -- O.A.S. "’ trop p!ein." The mass of the dont il a la charge." (after de would welcome a martyr--and the population is depolitise and happy Vigny). general failure to grasp the signifi- to see the General at the hehn; Despite its romantic imagery mere interested in le sport, los this quotation still sumn:aPises the cance of the verdict, as well as a prochaines vacances, et le cofit de core of the military problem, and total ignorance of some of the vie. Yet it is still there, and the m.ost import:mr factor in fictors, is disturbing to say the though sceptical of all official in- Salan’s career: the relation of the least. Then there was the Joycean £ormation (ti~e latest attentat Army to the Nation. The soldier is not merely a civil servant, he d:scriptien of the trial by Claud against .de Gaulle is s’~id to be by kind ~u.rangement with the Police, has the nmral right to lcuo’,v who Cockburn in the " Sunday Tele- oP O.A.S. -- it has almost immu- and for what he is fi~’htina’; other- graph," a nasty piece of calculated nised itself (on the surface any- wise he is a p,~et’ce:lar)’. The inaccuracy with little fact and no way) against the excesses m moment this confidence is lost tho Army becomes a double-edged h,.- Two STC Cordless switchboards were installed at Trinity logic; and finally there was an Algeria). " Oh ca! c’est tout pourri." And that is that. The stlument and no lon°er the arm of College in April 1962: one for a blind telephonist employed earlier article on Capital Punish- most striking result of the endless the State. The separation of the tnent in which Giles Pla~ffair had Prrects, the massive conditioning Army from the Nation dates during daytime and the other of the normal type for night- 8alan sentenced to death and wait- by radio, television, official infor- latterly from the period of war in time use by a sighted person. The special switchboard uses Iudo-Chiua. Here it was the victim iJjg for the guillotine a fortnight mation, seizure of books, magazines vibrating plungers set into the surface of the switchboard to and newspapers, and censorship in of succeqsive weal( governments at before his trial. Algeria. is the emotional reaction home, an antiquated staff system provide fingertip indication, instead of lights. to O.A.S. which helped to win the commanding from Paris. a bad The Trinity College Private Automatic Branch Exchange b:st referendum. I: mean win. pppreciation, and a natim~_ that Press Agencies Blackmail perhaps, but the alter- he’.or really accepted the war. The caters for 200 telephone extensions, some of which have native to de Gau!le was O.A.S., lesult: a humiliating defeat. The secretarial systems attached, and 15 exchange lines¯ Reliable ? and the people reluctantly cho,~a following 3’ear it moved to Algeria, de Gaulle. Note the reluctance, where it was ordered to fight a STC Telephone Systems cover all communication require- This proves what I have long because not to realise the strength counter revolution and to win the ments- from a simple point-to-point intercom to a 2,000 suspected: the danger of news- of the political opposition and the Moslem population to an intevra- papers relying on the services of a unwilling support given to him is tmn with the Metropole; though line private exchange. Algeria was already a department. !n’ess agency, that foreign corres- to miss the significance of the Salan verdict, and the ~haky Certain units conscious of the Pondents accept too easily the future. reason for their defeat in indo- ..qraudard Telephones and Cables Limited official government line, and that Cl, ina reoroanised themselves to meet the F.L.N. on an equal foot- TELECOMMUNICATIONS ArID ELECTRONICS the tone of some articles is lnore 10ST. STEPHEN’SGREENNORTH- DUBLIN2. TEL 71181 important than the facts--that is Salan Misled inK. with tactics suited to the sew The trial was desio’ned to be a conditiens. 6216G the nicest thing one can say. This routine affair, carefully over- P~trol action and subversive i,~ not the place to wonder whether sh-Mowed by the President’s tour ,rand’are went hand i]: hand with p -ofile :

hair down, met hordes of slobber- HiS year’s Secretary of his "t’ink." Chris has also been a Once upon a time, nearly arrived and everyone went out into regular member of the Cricket XI the night. ing unab!e-to-stand-upables and the T Trinity Week is Chris two weeks ago to be precise, for four years where his fluent and g su: Same day, years later, Everybody rest of the evening was swamped Lea and the post could the Naismith’s had a party in hardly have been filled by a stylish batting has been an invalu- Castle Park. We were de- went to Mount Ararat to the fourth in oblivion by the lotus-like effect ~1-eg~ of true gin. more industrious or likeable able asset to the side. Remarkably lighted to be welcomed with a annual barbecue of Messrs. Telfer, enough he was a member of the prec hug and a kiss before going Elyan, Guimless and Lyons. And a Last Monday, Simon (Money- person. He has probably con- bags) Morgan and partners took tributed as much to the or- winning Leinster Cup side last by the out into the marquee to be good night it was too. Fires roared, year--a unique "double" in College over the Four Provinces ballroom ganisation and participation observed by all those early jazz band blared, Christine Harold and a rarity in Ireland. His other " Trinit Barry played bridge with Charles to run a twist competition. With- in College activities as any birds who huddled and whis- sporting interests include squash It soug pered in groups and clutched Russell and others. Robin Clapham out a doubt it was a resounding other person now at Trinity. success in the manner of his pocket Chris was born in Birming- (where his favourite match is undergt their worms. It wasn’t long and Jackie fried sausages, but Tony against Guinnesses away), tennis Godfrey and James Stitt ate them parties. And no doubt, too, he ham in 1940 and having been before the band started play- (social other than serious), shoot- are sati ing. Rosemary and Leslie (i.e. the sausages). Ivor McElveen made lots of lolly which goes to educated at Solihull School in pay for his Mediterranean holiday ing (bad) and golf (where his 24 work ; began to make themselves and John Cleeve kept a fatherly handicap is a fair reflection on his eye on most people but they didn’t this summer. It is good to see heard (as usual), Marion Hall style). their re see Joe Boultbee---or Noel B.-K. or such initiative and ambition in one dropped spoons, Hilary Twis- Although sport has taken up a Jane G. either! Noel Jameson so young but your column believes to earn terington twisted and Nial good deal of his time in College and Penny fought. Chris Lea made the acquaintance of Dina he will one day grow up and For realise what an absolute ass he is Chris has been able to devote his disappeal~d but was found Wood and Mark Deverell was seen time to other activities. Last year College ¢ with Jenny Grange, but who was being. But then, perhaps he will many hours later asleep on a he was Secretary of D.U.C.A.C., a addition Johnn’y Watt with (too dark to take over the running of Trinity doorstep. Quiman Sick left post which involves a lot of arduous One early. Sybil Ennis stayed on tell); and fliona Pilkington? Ball next year and win the aceo- add to ( Mister Osgood Noon got tight ladies of all; and what about work and he was inst.rumental in and crooned, Meriel McHugh the introduction of the bar in the questions looked lovingly at Peter and very nearly killed himself by organised totalisators at next falling over the edge of the moun- Trinity Races ? Pavilion -- to which we are all Ther Whiteside, Shirley met Mr. eternally grateful. He was elected tain. Peter Bunbury thought he’d Went to No. 10 on Tuesday, the Six Naismith, Jill East, ever a to the Council of the Philosophical been invited to a dress dance and where Paul Leppard and John the inter lady, danced sedately onwards Clapham entertained a hectic Society last year having previously came suitably clad but Rodney of them and, before we knew it, the nautical singing-chorus (or muM- delivered a paper on " China " for Ging knew better and brought Ca-tholics clock struck midnight. We ca! sailing-crew, whichever you which he was awarded the Society along his drinldng cap. The sun prefer.) Gingerly raising the atheists. passed out unnoticed. silver medal in 1960. came up and sleepy bodies hoisted sherry to our lips and watching the fact 1 Last Tuesday, John Clarke and people’s elbows in transit, we heard Behind this veil of responsibility themselves and made off, to swim that he Brian Glass at home in 36 with Charles Jordan shouting (possibly which appears to surround him in Killiney, so they say. animal grunts of pleasure) and cross-sect wine and cheese for everybody. Big Chris has a mischievous nature to Andrew Whitaker fed Little Mary On Friday, Sally Maclffie, Chris scuttled to shelter in the lee of which those who lived in Botany Twer Rahilly and Graham Jones pro- Ursula Staines. Walter Bivens with cheese-sticks in a large arm- (wearing a rather smart red rose) 3~any of Bielenberg talked duced large quantities of high- Bay last year and the parties will chair, Chris tried to muscle in on Peter Vernon Photo by D. Harman i1~terest, octane gin and martini in Liz no doubt testify. He also has an 1.oudly about Glengariff with an Hunt and Diana, but couldn’t. Chris questions rooms. Harry Carson-Graham was Havilland had to dash out for some eye for a pretty girl, but after inebriated (?) J.D. Chris James CHRIS LEA being a firm advocate of blondes Thirt there of course and wanted to know Players tipped, but soon made up met that delightful lady called for the lost time, and Gay Morgan for years his view on the gentle- very larg Joyce and your column passed out why Nick O’Brien wore a scarlet Warwickshire came to Trinity stood quietly smiling; eooh Two man’s preference now appears to was unan again. Then Thursday brought carnation in preference to his usual incredibly scruffy characters in in 1958. He is now in his final College poets and literati to No. green one. After several drinks corduroy coats left early .... year reading Honors History be less biased. As t~ What of the future ? Well, Chris 6 for the annual "Icarus" get to- Linda Crammond decided she was In conclusion, we take leave to --a subject which he enjoys. the majo~ gether. Dick Eckersley gsn’ated not yet in a fit state to become a wish our many readers an enjoy- though he has yet to rise to has been teaching at King’s hard all t Hospital for the past year and he and poured out his potion. blood donor and all the while Tigga able week-end, an eventful vaca- the Second Class bracket. intends to remain teaching in The , Raf Nicol talked about barbecues Day, Bobby Clmnce and Zaz tion and a jolly merry Christmas, His spm~ing achievements in College are many and varied. He Dublin for another year before concerts, with Sebastion Balfour, Mike Nes- Shaekleton demanded more and too. V,’e hope you have enjoyed is captain-elect ef the F.ootball going to Oxford in 1963 to read for the result bitt chased birds with no small more gin. A terrible catastrophe reading about the petty trials and Club for the coming season having his Diploma of Education. How- success and Russell Teller renewed befell Minty Crunch. Alan More- tribulations which filled our ever, at the moment he is busily his friendship with Sheila Kirwan. Nisbett, George Harris and Mario columns, as much as we have en- played for the 1st XV in most engaged in completing the arrange- Julian Reeves grinned benevolently Pampa nini circulated suavely in joyed watching and writing about positions behind the scrmn for penguin suits, dropping sinister them. (It is not my fault if you three years. He was a member of merits for Trinity Week. We wish at everyone, Penn’y Gibbon looked Films really lovely, Katherine Nesbitt hints that they were " going on " weren’t mentioned Madam. Maybe the winning Leinster Cup side in him good weather and every Concerts met David Elyan, Ian Dunlop later. ~olm P. (see above) let her you didn’t go to any parties.) 1960 after which he was awarded success--he certainly deseyve it. Parties Society Meetings Dances Plays Debates .. The ques IN. F//J. UP- mnd ’WAY day papers students re~ 3 weeks in ing polls. Sunday p 96; " The ( Express," dent," 21; 12; " The ] Weeklies: trated Lon Economist,’ 15; " Time man," 12; ’ Tide," 5; ’ Ten read fifty n,o w, Sunday Pal that those v Usually re~ those who read anothe l,n additk tioned, the~ Inous rang hobby inter~ " If you t electi.on in land to whh it ? brought (for (a), 4 Gael, 8 La~ na Poblacht didn’t kno~ interested o all rotten." / In Engla " \~1 I need have A/’ az ng’ BP Ene ol : BP TWO STROKE- Oil l 7ero /Te -a, and Twooi/g S [o/

your travel J IN IN THE JET STREAM SPECIAL OVERSEAS DEPTS. is our business and get your Travellers’ Cheques are available for advice and assistance at AGENCY LTD. and Foreign Currency through any BFLFA~T Waring Street and Donegall Place IIEWETT’S TRAVEL LOI, JDOr’,!DERRy D’OLIER STREET, DUBLIN 2 branch of the Bank. DUBLIN College Green and O’Connell Street P/’o.c ,73570 ~ t/.cs" I~q),,~c Dubh, " ~d DUBLIN AIRPORT (Estd. 1902) o,o.o, FESTIVE CRICKET f’INAL TIF Athleties - " ’--- li - ,~,o we are, bang in the middle (h~.,,dbye to all his many followers, ]L~ICC nammers DOW The past week has seen a turn of Trinity Week and Epsom Week. ~oth staff and under_graduates. very m~ch for the worse in the ~" ~ " ..... , ]nose pas~ zew years nave peon ~o-morrow Js t)aks zmv ann ~ne . . ~ ~ fortunes of the Athletics Club, T HE annual match in College Park between Trinity and ..... ~ . :~ .. ~ . ~ extremely pleasan: ones ano per- k~olonel has no neslsauon m otter- hal)s an old man will be permitted J C Boucher’s XI got Trinity Week off to a good ~eh~th l~stt~ed~e/~d~YElOStant.... , ~ the / " " . . . . in~ West Side Story as a confi.dent a few moments quiet reflection on DIX! Saturday were beaten into third start by producing some festival cricket in perfect selection for that classic. This what has been. hat was the position by Donore ~d Crusaders weather conditions. Although Trinity were a little lucky to chestnut daughter of Rockefella Colonel’s first winner? He thinks HEI m me ueorge v. ~yan ~ropny, ...... appears to be an even better bet that Crudwell, now unf(~rtunately 111 which the Club have won for ,Ol{l OUt Ior a araw in the ena 1[ was inelr most impressive than this time last (lead, was his first for this pa;f~r. several years. In these meetings, performance this season, and some of the individual dis- year. For his female fans--and Successes have followed in a steady however, Trinity were badly hit by there are plenty of them--who like stream since then. He has always injuries, and absenteeism owing to plays are certainly worthy of note. long odds, perhaps Lady Dissenter enjoyed Cheltenham and has exams. from France will give them some always given sound advice for that Having beaten the rest of the Larry Warke won the toss and Moving the ball slightly off the e.w. fun. To-day Vienna tries for most popular meeting. Last A.A.U.E. last year, D.U.H.A.C. on a very easy paced wicket elected seam he bowled Pratt and Lewis the Coronation Cup and the Colonel summer, Sweet Solera was a con- came down heavily on Wednesday to bat. Hughes, whose howling with two fine balls. Wickets expects the 5-year-old to win. fident selection for both Guineas last, to a team that got maximum th.roughout the match was always tumbled steadily and the energetic Paddy Prendergast runs Cipriani and Oaks and obliged at 4/1 and points in the 100 yards, 880 yards, hostile, tireless and accurate, was Hughes was unlucky not to get but clients ave advised to wait 11/4. During the , memor- T] mile, 3 miles, long jump and pole unlucky not to get a wicket in his more of a fair share of them. The until the Eclipse Stakes for this able coups were registered with vault, and that gained first place in first over when Pigot was dropped visitors declared at 123 for 9, one. Pollingfold has an engage- Granville, on several occasions, in the slips. Runs came steadily Evans returning his best figures ment in the Carshalton Stakes and Limeking (8/1), Last Link, Nar. the 220 yards, 440 yards, hurdles, might well get placed. ratos (100/7) and many more. To the relay, javelin, shot and discus. despite bowling changes and the this season of 7 for 50. fall of the first two wickets for 50. This left Trinity to get 143 ,runs For the future, there are a few give his last term a resounding In this meeting, Shillington could 2-year-olds who ought to visit send off the Colonel gave Abermaid ’ not compete, owing to injury, and Harvey and Lewis hit the ball hard in just over an hour and a half, and adventurously and but for and the challenge was met gamely. England shortly and win. En Tor for the 1,000 Guineas and that Lunde and Snow had to retire after some good fielding the score might Koes to Ascot, no doubt accom- sweet grey daughter of only one event each. Middleton and Terdre, making amends for the obliged at 100/6. well have been more than it was. first innings drove, cut and de- panied by Silver Tor and Prince Scott gained 1st and 2nd places in After lunch Warke and Lewis Tor, and should do very ,,-ell. Both The dreaded moment has now the high hurdles, after three false flected Bernstein at will to keep and 129-8 dec. (Evans 7 for 50); the scoring at well over Whistling Wind and Royal Indis- come; the Colonel is in his final starts, the former equalling his C(~rkman lifting him over mid- a run a cretion will win for P,rendergast paragraph and for once in his own College Record of 15.7 secs.; minute. Unfortunately nobody wicket for one enormous six. Only could stay with him and wickets and if Royal Challenger is sent eloquent career, he is at a loss for Francis won the 440 yards in 50.4 Hughes was able to contain the over one and all are advised to be words. All he can say is to wish secs., and Russell was the only fell continuously. Rice took over flow of runs and during one in- Terd.re’s mantle when he was on him. all his many followers good racing man to clear 5 ft. 10 ins. in the spired piece of fast bowling he hit bowled by Bernstein but all was in And now, the time has come for and may they always be in the tote Tt high jump; S. A~sten made a use- the stumps twice to remo~ce Lewis vain. The game ended with Wicks the Colonel to say good-bye-- winning queue. ful debut for the Club in the 100 and Warke and beat the bat and Rice holding the fort until Where 1 yards, 220 yards, in the relay. several times more. stumps were drawn. Apart from these, however, perfor- Dean , , Warke declared at tea at 283-9 J. C. Boucher’s XI, 283-9 dec. that ym mances were not high, though it is with the obvious intention of trying and 128-8 dec. (Evans 7 for ,50); probably true to say that had to win by an innings. That they Trinity, 269-6 dec. (Rice 87 not, THOMPSON’S D.U.H.A.C. been at full strength did not was largely due to some Parry. 60, Guthrie 59) and 92-9 they would not have lost by more magnificent batting by Rice, than 10 points. Guthrie, Parry and Labbett. (Terdre 37). ¯ BUTTERCRUST" BREAD BC Once again Trinity felt their Trinity lost Terdre early on but losses on Friday and Saturday in Parry and Guthrie, after surviving The 1st XI had an encouraging AL WA YS APPETISING Above the George V. Ryan trophy; this somewhat perilously Bernstein’s win over Old Belvedere last Satur- News f[ meeting is open to all the Dublin early overs, began to drive and cut day. In a high scoring match the Clubs, and is one of the highlights with undisturbed effort. Their home side scored 164 and Trinity of the A.A.U. season, always being parternership of 109 lasted for only passed this total with only four Bakery: very keenly contested. Once again, 80 minutes but it was packed full wickets down. Guthrie batted in a HO good hurdling by Middleton and of exciting batting. Guthrie, after splendidly aggressive style, hitting Jamestown lid., Finglas, Dublin Scott, who came 1st and 3rd in passing his fifty, was caught for nine boundaries in his total of 47. the highs (Scott also came 2nd in 59 and Parry batted until the close Other good scorers were Lea (not Telephone: 34143617 Seniol the low hurdles), Russell’s triple of play not out 52. out 53) and Rice (not out 43). jumping, a fine 880 yards by On the second day the weather Old Belvedere, 164; Trinity, 165- to 6 Da Toomey, and Lunde; 1st place in was again peerless and before 4 (Lea 53 not, Guthrie 47, Rice 43 forget t the high jump, were features of a lunch Rice and Labbett entertained not). rather uninteresting afternoon. the spectators to one of the most Last Saturday in College Park "H.F.’s.’ Francis performed strongly in the heartening batting displays of the the 2nd XI were a little lucky to 220 yards and Lunde and Snow season. Parry, Anderson and Lea win against Pembroke in a game came 2nd and 3rd in the javelin. soon fell but Labbett joined Rice that ended excitingly in the last Perhaps the outstanding perfor- and for over an hour they domi- over. Against defensive bowling mance of the afternoon came from nated the bowling. Rice, powerful and fielding Trinity scored very Whittome in the mile, although he if not elegant passed his first fifty slowly at first but hard hitting Many only gained 4th position. Sticking of the season with wristy drives innings by Clarkson and Inglis in Hodg~ with the leaders throughout, he and pulls while the stylish Labbett helped to push the score to 132. gTaduatc covered the distance in 4 mins. 16.7 gave us a lesson in correct cricket. The visitors started well and were secs.--1.8 secs. outside his personal Rice declared at lunch for 269 at one stage 113 for 3, but some enlarged best--with a 62.7 see. last lap, and for 6, being 87 not out himself. good bowling in the later stages by problem he should improve on this time be- Obviously only a sporting declara- Inglis and Clarkson tied them down fore the Athletics season ends. tion by Boucher’s XI would allow and wickets tumbled as Pembroke Educatio a result to ensue. Again Hughes attempted to get the few remain- Meantim and to a lesser extent Parry ing runs. They lost their last seven bowled well and aided by some wickets for 17 laans and Trinity untidine~, The 99th anniversary of the splendid fielding the batsmen could won by 3 runs. score only slowly. Evans replaced College Races was held in Trinity, 132 (West 39); Pem- Panw and had immediate .results. glorious weather. The highlight broke, 129. of the afternoon was the fine performance of our female Tennis visitors from Ballymena. International Maeve Kyle won a good 220 or 25.2 sees. and Mary Peters recorded a personal best in COLOURS MATCH the high jump, clearing 5’ 4". " Fain would I climb, yet fear I Ireland, but nearly took a lengthy In the Invitation 880 yds. the ex- to fall," scratched Raleigh on pected battle between McLemt and second set off him. Swerling with Elizabeth’s window-pane, and this Borotra-like agility swm~ed the Clifford fizzled out and Trinity line reflected the rather tentative net and won the first set against man Paul Toomey came a very approach adopted by Trinity in the creditable second to McLean in 1 the gangly Kennedy with some Colours match, which they lost 3-6. beautiful tennis, but was then min. 53.6 sees. This was a disappointing result as slammed Your correspondent unfortunately off the court under a \\ there was distinct possibility of a pounding f~’om the latter’s big missed some of the earlier events Trinity win, despite the fact that serve. Sprawson never really got owing to a vital engagement at U.C.D. were putting forward the into his stride against the graceful Epsom, but he did see G. Flood same team as has won this match Geary, who played a stylish game, and Brendan O’Reil~y performing for the past two years. The catas- gtM Rebate Plan well in the 2 miles and high jump but, unlike Lolita, contrived to win trophe was the singles, out of as well. Williamson looked too respectively. which Trinity emerged at tea 1-5 short of practise to have much The Walk was again great gas down, the only winner being chance of beating the Leinster and with a furlong to go, Colonel Mackeown at number six, who number two. Trinity, however, won May was observed to be offering played very well to win an even for Students... 20/1 against W. Young. As on two of the three doubles with match in the third set. Hunt some harmonious play, and ou.r so many previous occasions, the played a captain’s game and was Colonel was proved right -- W. dominance in this sphere gives us unlucky not to win when only one a good chance for the Irish Univer- |or journeys !o the Continent, Young being disqualified. M. Smith point off a victory, but was baffled sities Championships, which are walked extremely well but, to use by some scintillating passing shots racing parlance, he was carrying composed entirely of doubles and from a tenacious opponent. Avory take place at the end of June. Hear, Middle and Far |asl, ..~ several pounds overweight in the faced one of the best players in shape of a ban-the-you-know-what *oster. Air/ca and South America LUNCHEONS AT D.U. BOAT CLUB Metropolitan Laundry ANNUAL REGA’ITA Ray’s Restaurant FRII)AY AND SA’I’IrU.DAY INOHIOORE ROAD TILL 7 P.iVl. m THE WORLD OVER L~u.(lerers and Cleaners ISLANDBRIDGE Fair Beside River alSO at KLM 5 LOWER LEESON STREET ROYAL DUICN REGATTA DANCE AIRLINES 48 UPPER DORSET STREET CLUll H()US!’~-6 -