Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 November 2014

Random Cuttings - Kenya Crime, Witches and Gold (1998)

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This was Kenya on 10th October 1998. Kenya had, and still has, the death penalty for murder, treason and armed robbery but no-one has actually been hanged since 1987.  In East Africa the traditional belief in the powers of witchcraft is widespread and witch hunts continue to result in police action or, more frequently, the murder of suspects by the accusers. A Kilo of pure 24 carat gold - free!. For the life of me I can't see the catch, but there must be one. Mustn't there?

Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Random Cutting - Nelson Mandela (1962)

23rd October 1962
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Although Mandela was initially committed to non-violent protest, he co-founded the militant Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party in 1961, in association with the SACP, to carry out a sabotage campaign against the white apartheid government. In 1962 he was serving a five-year sentence for inciting workers to strike and leaving the country illegally, when he was charged with - recruiting persons for training in the preparation and use of explosives and in guerrilla warfare for the purpose of violent revolution and committing acts of sabotage; conspiring to commit the aforementioned acts and to aid foreign military units when they invaded the Republic; acting in these ways to further the objects of communism; and soliciting and receiving money for these purposes from foreign sympathizers. He was convicted of conspiracy to overthrow the state, and sentenced to life imprisonment. He served 27 years.

Sunday, 8 June 2014

Live Aid (1985)

The Mirror dated Monday July 15th 1985
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Live Aid was a pair of pop music concerts held on July 13th 1985, one at Wembley in London and the other at the JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, organised by musicians Bob Geldoff and Midge Ure to raise money for the famine in Ethiopia that had been going on since 1983 and took 400,000 lives.
The concerts featured the likes of Status Quo, The Style Council, The Boomtown Rats, Adam Ant, Ultravox, Spandau Ballet, Elvis Costello, Nik Kershaw, Sade, Sting, Phil Collins, Howard Jones, Bryan Ferry, Paul Young, U2, Dire Straits, Queen, David Bowie, The Who, Elton John, Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Paul McCartney, Four Tops, Billy Ocean, Black Sabbath, Run–D.M.C, Crosby, Stills and Nash, Bryan Adams, The Beach Boys, George Thorogood and the Destroyers, Santana, Madonna, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Neil Young, Eric Clapton, Tina Turner, Bob Dylan, Keith Richards, and Ronnie Wood. I watched it on and off all day and of course recorded some of it on VHS video.

Wednesday, 23 April 2014

Big Game Hunters in London (1910)

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If murdering wildlife is your thing then Frederick Courteney Selous is your man, or he was until, rather ironically, a German sniper shot him in 1917.


Sunday, 11 August 2013

Queen's Silver Jubilee

Daily Mirror dated Wednesday June 8th 1977
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1977 marked the 25th year of the reign of Elizabeth II. She actually succeeded to the throne on 6th February 1952 but the main Silver Jubilee celebrations were held in early June.

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Idi Amin seized power in a military coup in Uganda in 1971 and declared himself President for Life. His regime was notorious for its horrendous human rights abuses and by 1976 Britain has severed diplomatic ties and closed its High Commission.  Amin didn’t get to London and the 1977 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting. In April 1979 he was deposed and he went to Libya and then, later, to Saudi Arabia, where he died in 2003. 

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On May 23rd 1977 a train was hijacked at De Punt in Holland by 9 South Moluccan terrorists. At the same time 4 others took a hundred children and some teachers hostage at a nearby primary school. After a 20 day stand-off, on June 11th, Dutch Marines attacked both the train and the school and 7 of the hijackers including Hansina Oktoseja were killed.  

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The 1977 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting at Gleneagles, Scotland, lasted from June 8th to 15th. Africa, particularly Rhodesia, South Africa and Uganda, dominated the agenda.

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In 2008 the UK Kennel Club listed the top 5 most popular dogs as Labrador Retriever, Cocker Spaniel, Springer Spaniel, German Shepherd and King Charles Spaniel. What’s wrong with the Great British Mongrel?

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Lester Maddox was a restaurant owner who used the publicity for his eatery to promote the continuation of black/white segregation in Georgia. He gathered such a following from working-class whites that he entered politics eventually becoming State Governor in 1966. Proving that real people are less like stereotypes than fictional characters, Maddox was reasonably progressive on many racial matters. While in office he backed prison reform, an issue popular with many of the state's African Americans, he appointed more African Americans to government positions than all previous Georgia governors combined, including the first black officer in the Georgia State Patrol and the first black official to the state Board of Corrections. After unsuccessfully running for Presidential candidate he abandoned politics.

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According to other online resources it was actually Christchurch in Cambridgeshire, not Dorset, and the ancestor of President Carter that went to America was Thomas Carter Sr, who settled in Virginia. Thomas’ great-great-grandson Kindred Carter moved to Jimmy Carter’s home state of Georgia in the early 1800’s.

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Interesting story but yet another lousy ‘pun’ headline. The story has nothing to do with motorcycle stunt riding, which might have justified an Evel Knievel reference.

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My parents used to pay 1 shilling (5p) a day for my school meals and they were awful. Not my parents – the meals.

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The word ‘hero’ has been devalued over the years by applying it to anyone who happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, but to consciously put yourself, like unarmed policeman Keith Harrison, between an intended victim and a man with a loaded shotgun is true heroism. 

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Viv Richards, a West Indian cricketer, born in Antigua, so famous even I have heard of him. Apparently 241 not out is a good score.

Sunday, 14 July 2013

Rommel Launches Big Blow at Americans

Sunday Graphic dated Sunday April 4th 1943
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Big blow or not, a couple of days later (April 6th) the Italians and German Afrikakorps were defeated at the Battle of Wadi Akarit and by May 13th the German and Italian forces in Tunisia surrendered to the Allies.
Erwin Rommel was well respected not only by his own men, but, surprisingly, by his counterparts in the British and American armies. In 1944 he was involved in a failed conspiracy to overthrow Hitler and was forced to choose between being tried, convicted and executed along with his family or committing suicide. He chose suicide and was buried as a Nazi hero.

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Benito Mussolini had been politically insecure since the war in North Africa had started to turn against the Axis powers in late 1942. Unrest at home with strikes, inflated food prices and an unwelcome German army presence along with the Allied invasion of Sicily in July 1943 led to the Dictator being ousted and arrested. Unfortunately this didn’t mean that the Allies could just walk in and take over. There was another year of bitter fighting before the Germans were cleared from the country. 

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No trains, no petrol for cars and no extra buses, but apart from that, have a good Easter Holiday!

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70,000 children cannot be traced! Why isn’t this front-page news? Are they really lost or just not in London anymore? Are the ones ‘drifting back’ part of the 70,000? Were they ever found? Are they still out there? What is this snippet really about?

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Maybe this is where the 70,000 lost children have gone – to Lord Woolton’s agricultural holiday camps.  Lord Woolton became the Minister for Food in 1940 and it was because of his management of food rationing that on the whole the British people all got a fair share of what food was available. He even had a pie named after him, though I doubt you’ll find one in Tesco’s these days.

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This was a common type of wartime news item; quoting increased production figures to boost moral; rather in the style of the USSR Agricultural 5 Year Plan updates that peppered Russian news in the Communist era. 

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‘Failure to comply’ to the Nurses and Midwives Order 1943 was ‘punishable by fine, imprisonment or both’ Civil liberties? You must be joking – we’re at war, Love.

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In 1940 the clocks in Britain were not put back by an hour at the end of Summer Time i.e. not reset to GMT. From then until 1945 clocks continued to be advanced by one hour each spring and put back by an hour each autumn, so for these summers Britain was two hours ahead of GMT and operating on British Double Summer Time. Note the reminder on the front page.

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After World War I, Sir Percy Robert Laurie KCVO CBE DSO had been a Deputy Assistant Commissioner and an Assistant Commissioner in the Metropolitan Police. He retired in 1936 but was recalled in 1939 to be Assistant Chief Constable of the War Department Constabulary and then the Provost-Marshal of the United Kingdom until this little problem got in the way. His conviction was later quashed on the basis that ‘he had simply made a mistake’.

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King Feisal (or Faisal) II of Irak (or Iraq) succeeded his father just a month shy of his 4th birthday. He was murdered during a coup in 1958.

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Orson Welles' ‘Citizen Kane’ has been long regarded as the best film ever made by those that should know, so it is interesting to see it referred to, along with his second film ‘The Magnificent Embersons’ (sic), as ‘badly received by the British public’.
Johnny Weissmuller (as Tarzan) and Maureen O’Sullivan (as Jane) had made 6 movies for MGM, but when this Tarzan-meets-the-Nazis propaganda flick was made at RKO Maureen bowed out. In the plot Jane is on holiday! She never returned to the jungle. Johnny did 5 more Tarzans plus 13 Jungle Jim films and a TV series.
‘Colonel Blimp’ has a well deserved reputation as a clever satire.  

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Scientists and MPs plan Britain’s post-War future based entirely on the ‘inexhaustible supplies’ of coal – oops! At least they correctly predicted the ‘electrification of the railways’.

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There must be hundreds of authors who were household names in their day, but who are now all but forgotten. Rex Beach was an American novelist, playwright and Olympic silver medallist water-polo player (1904 St Louis) who spent 5 years in Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush and wrote several very popular novels in the Jack London idiom. His second, ‘The Spoilers’, was filmed 5 times. After the death of his wife he committed suicide in 1949.

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A lot of the older papers (1920’s-1930’s) I have blogged have had episodes of fiction serials in them, which I haven’t posted because 1 day’s excerpt of a story would be pointless, however this paper has this complete short story written by Wing-Commander (later Group Captain) Leonard Cheshire who went on to win the Victoria Cross in 1944. See this post for more on Leonard Cheshire.

Sunday, 12 May 2013

QE2 launched

The Guardian dated Thursday September 21st 1967

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‘French make own Swing-wing’ probably refers to the Dassault Mirage G jet fighter of which a few prototypes were built but never went into active service.

The ailing Lord Clement Attlee had been the Labour Prime Minister of the UK from 1945 until 1951 and was to die of pneumonia at the age of 84 on October 8th 1967.

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This rather pessimistic account of the launch of the replacement for Cunard’s RMS Queen Elizabeth, the un-imaginatively named Queen Elizabeth 2 (or QE2), reflects the widely held opinion that this was a very odd time for Cunard to be investing in a new trans-Atlantic ocean liner. Air travel was now the preferred way of getting to America as it was faster and relatively cheap. The QE2 went on to serve Cunard as a passenger liner and a cruise ship right up to 2008, having been converted from an oil-fired steamship to diesel electric engines in 1986. 


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The ‘Soviet Scientist’ story is about Vladimir Tkachenko, a 25 year-old Russian who had been doing research at Birmingham University. When he boarded a plane bound for Moscow on the 14th September the British police and Secret Service agents pulled him off because they said he was being taken back to the USSR against his will. The Russians then claimed it was Britain that was kidnapping the scientist and a diplomatic row broke out which was calmed by Tkachenko being allowed to board another plane for Moscow on the 19th.

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This was the era when everyone wanted to go to Art School, go on anti-Vietnam War demos, smoke pot, take LSD and then become a World famous pop group member. Science? Heavy, man.

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For years the Liberals were the party that was there to vote for if you didn’t want to endorse the Tories or Labour because they would never get into power and, whichever of the other two parties won, you could say, ‘Don’t blame me, I didn’t vote for them.’
Jeremy Thorpe was the Leader of the Liberal Party from 1967 until the scandal that ruined his career in 1976. See this post for details.

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The Vietnam War dominated the UK media and the Political scene throughout the late ‘60’s, despite it being one of America’s blunders that Britain didn’t get sucked into. 


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Although it is now generally accepted that Norsemen (aka Vikings) travelled from Greenland to North America, in particular Newfoundland, 1000 years before Christopher Columbus, none of the artefacts found in Canada or the USA have ever been authentically linked to the Norsemen of that period and the Vinland of Norse sagas.

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Just one of the many changes of regional government during the Nigerian Civil War that went on from 1966 until 1970 and haunted our TV news coverage with scenes of death and starvation in Biafra.

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White Rhodesian leader Ian Smith opposed the transfer of power from Britain to the black majority in his country and issued a Unilateral Declaration of Independence in 1965. The area came back to British rule in 1979 but was then almost immediately given independence as Zimbabwe in 1980.

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The trial ended with Neville Fineberg being found guilty of the attempted murder of Wylie Roberts. 

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The dock strike lasted 6 weeks from September 18th until the end of October 1967. Jack Dash was a Communist who wanted to see an end to the ‘casual labour’ way of staffing the docks i.e. employing men day by day and only when there was work for them to do. 

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Not your usual knights-of-the-realm littered cast for this version of ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’. Robin Bailey is remembered for his portrayal on TV and radio of the dour Northerner Uncle Mort in the stories by Peter Tinniswood, Bernard Bresslaw from 15 or more ‘Carry on@ films, Jim Dale from 8 ‘Carry on’s and Cleo Laine as the jazz singing wife of band leader Johnny Dankworth.

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Editor – We need a Beatles story. How about ‘how much they earned in the last 4 years’?
Reporter – No-one knows.
Editor – So?