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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 20

Publication:
The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Monday November 16 1970 reassures protection of our vital interests threatened, they should surely I do not believe that the Soviet explore this and not dismiss it naval presence, with its poten- out of hand. Pressures, can It is the ease th H6 CS manufactures co fi? "f8 a herself all arms normally see that the Simonstown Agree- required for purposes of interment which gives assurance of nai security. Further, the South valuable support for the Royal African Government are fully Navy this vital area, aware that any arms we may remains effective. suppv would for the speclfic Fears have been expressed and sole purpose of defending that any arms we supplied the sea routes. These routes might be misused by the South are vital for South Africa's African Government either to trade as well as our own.

Even lp HEATH has assured the Archbishop of Canterbury that no decision will be taken on arms for South Africa until all consultations have been completed. He adds that the Government reject, and condemn apartheid. The assurances are given in a letter to Dr Ramsey on November 11, just before he left for South Africa. The following are extracts from Mr Heath's letter The Pit strike crumbles in Yorkshire and South Wales Archbishop on arms sales were it possible, I cannot believe working of internal economic BY OUR OWN REPORTER The miners' unofficial strike crumbled In Vorkshire over the weekend and in SOVltW too, the call by mlliiani union leaAers io eoninme tke stoppage is tiKGiy to ne ipniea at mans Olt tfte 40 YovfeMffe $tts wMcb were at a standstill oa Friday, 24 should be working normally today. The Doncaster area, Cardis today, will have to con-where the strike started, is ffi ShetatiM still the most militant of v0te to reton.

the regions' four sections. jn Staffordshire, there will After the North and South be a return to work today by Yorkshire miners' panels the 450 strikers at Woistanton lisH vntort tn rphirn tn colliery, near Stoke-on-Trent. Had voted to return IO The airman of the strike com-work, the Doncaster panel mittee, Mr W. Aatiken, said: decided to continue the We will await the outcome of stoppage. The unofficial the national ballot.

Those who i dld not Jln the strike will not pickets committee in be victimised. No retaliation Doncaster plans to send will be taken against them." out pickets today to the At Pleasley colliery in Derby-pits restarting work. shire, 700 miners will i lt return to work today but wall In South Wales, the C(mtinue to operate a ban on miners at South Celynen, Mon- overtime. They were the only mouthshire, and about 130 men miners Derbyshire to go on employed at Llyfm sundries strike and the pit lost 8,000 tons washeiy plant in Maesteg, during the stoppage, decided yesterday to go back, A eeottish deletes similar decision has been taken 1 meet in toburh today to wLViFinS 2 a'dy incurred loss of over Wales and Monmouthshire are tons ofucoal. 0nly four expected to follow their '11 t.

all in Ayrshire of the 34 human values to which we 71 srrnrh rninnrtanw ara tn 5 tTT 1 UuPh' IS SoUth 35 l1 rS tu l. within and that they can best be promoted through contact! ana dialogue, ana tuiougn tile marching to Whitehall for WhUe the South-east of Eno-laTirl i p-nin through a period ot aonormai ramtan, skiers were out on the Cairn- gorms at the weekend, about sport. Mr Jim whhh in director of a ski i first class nf thp snacnn nut nn i- 1 ovppiiont tnoi. snow was excellent, hut visi bility was limited by heavy mist. A man was chareeii with Ski-ing in a month early the Cairngorms members enforce apartheid, or against auuui neignoours.

m. uiesB icars are nui, we Deueve, well founded. South Africa her- sett nss oitereu to conclude non- aggression pacts with her neigh- bours. If other countries in Africa feel themseiv es Cenotaph yesterday. AYCUUCi KUDy, LlMWMl had drifted out to sea in a lifeboats had searched the area all night.

At Wallasey, two men umped an3 being swept out by an ebo tide. Michael Pollard, of Liddell Road, and Eric Prince, of Adcote Road, both of Liver pool, managed to bring the child ashore on the promenade after a buffeting by the waves. In Cornwall, rescue services resumed their search of Trebar-with Strand, near Tantagel, for the body of a 19-year-old geology student, who was swept off a rock to his death in a stormy sea late on Saturday. He was Mr John Duncan Leww, of Wolverhampton, who was with a party of Bristol University students on a field studv on the beach. The North Yorkshire moors near Whitby had their first snowfall of the winter yesterdayan inch covering which quickly melted and Carlisle recorded 13 degrees ot frost, the coldest night since the beginning of April.

Showery bur a little warmer San down ShankTln Ventnor Poole Swanaoe, Weymouth Exmouth Telgnmouth. Torqusy Falmouth Pcnince, Jersey Guernsey INLAND SCOTLAND LerwFck Wick Stornoway. Klnloss Dycc Tire Ltuchors GUigow Eikdalcmulr .66 7 45 i. .50 7 44 .38 3 46 8 4C .01 4ri ') ') 4 or 4'i 01 JT IO 50 8 8.5 8.4 1 I jI ri .01 OX 4 39 .141 pl 6 43 pds .02 6.3 .15 4 39 Sleet 2.2 7 45 Dry 6 43 6.9 6 43 7.7 5 41 l.K NORTHERN IRELAND 1 last 4.5 04 7 45 lots Manchester Airport lleatlnne for 1i lirs. entJiEig 10 p.m.

BST SATURDAY (6 6C minimum S3 dF. (0.90: n-DP' rat at mum 4 (5 5C minimum 30.9F. (0.6O: rainfall, nn. swn-Oiine. 7.6lir.

SUN MOON BST Rlss CM an Chester) 7 03 pa Sets 12 42 pm La-vt Quarter XoembeT 20 12 13 a.ro HIGH WATER TIMES BST BST Lotirion BnJ 4 12 a m. 4 32 o.m Lserpool 1 31 u.nt. 1 49 DlacVpool 27 a m. 1 45 ni. LIGHTING-UP TIMES Llenpool 45 ni.

to 10 ii m. Jrici es-itrr 5 42 m. 8 a ihcn Uihl n-sjwQ ik eln. PAGEOS A 01.42-0l.5fi 40E 04.4-04.56 SW 0W Lcavo Iipo disquiet you expressed to me rolatRd tn vnnr mnooi-n musr reidtea IO lour concern Over the nratonf -nncitinn rt hlLk Pnfafnritv Wh Af ht nmmnr, prmfnrf common tu we oeueve cnat if mose Jewish ex-servieemen Fears of loss on a rarev concert THERE is only a fortnight to go before a Festival Hall concert that has cost the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra 5,000 to put on, and whieh will include two rare works yet only 150 worth of tickets have been sold. We have tried to liven things up, but, frankly, it seems not worth the effort," a spokesman for the orchestra said yesterday.

"We could put on a concert of the so-called popular classics and fill most of the seats. By presenting two rare works we stand to lose a fortune." The two works being cold-shouldered by the public are Stravinsky's ballet music "Persephone," and the first London performance of a piano concerto by the British pianist John Ogdon. The ballet music brings to London Yvette Mimieux, who will act as the narrator. She lists lion taming, and ballet (lancing as her fioobies. Tiiere is no question ffie concert's tong tailed off," said fhe spokesman, but it "will certainly make us think again.

It would be nice if some of the people who critioise our programmes turned up for this one." University news MANCHESTER Dr J. D. A Miller, of the department of chemical engineering at the Institute of Science and Technology, has received a 1,065 grant from the Royal Society for research into new ways of producing edible protein. The work is part of an international effort among scientists to overcome world feeding problems by developing edible proteins from a variety of sources, ranging from pond algae to moulds grown on industrial effluent. SHEFFIELD Dr Brian K.

Morns, senior lecturer in English at York University, has been appointed to the chair of Knglish literature from next October. He succeed Professor William Empson, who has retired after 16 years in the chair. PR officer to appeal Mr Eric Potts, aged 50, who was dismissed, a monili ago as public relations o-GTieer to 1-t South Cheshire hospitals, is to appeal to the Manchester Regional Hospital Board against the decision. Mr Potts, a former Indian Army officer, of Mourrayfield unve, wiuaston, near Kant-wich, was dismissed after com plaints hospital staa of "rudeness." He said the charges were trivial and unfounded. 3 rise claim A claim for a 3 a week rise and guaranteed minimum earn- inss of t6 10s for 8,000 textile workers in various parts of the country has been submitted to the Silk Industry Joint Industrial Council.

inai mey would wish io imperii ooin ineir luiure supplies, ana our naval cooperation, by divert- ing naval armaments supplied by us to purposes which we and the whole world would t)8 lound. to condemn." By DENNIS BARKER Dr Donald Schon, this year's Reith lecturer, said last night that the threats to the idea of the stable State, were now greater than its ability to cope and that man would have to KM ways of adapting more quickly out loss of his self-respect. In later lectures, it is anticipated that he may say how. In his first lecture on BBC radio last night, Dr Schon said that people tended to believe in the constancy of certain central aspects of their lives. We institutionalise it in every social domain.

We do this in spite of our talk about change, our apparent acceptance of change, our approval of dynamism. Language about change is for the most part talk about very small change." Belief in the stable state served primarily to protect human beings from apprehension of the threat inherent in change. The degree of threat presented by change depended upon lis connection to selfr identity. Less real But Dr Schon suggested that what was apparent in our own time was "the extent to which the threats to the stable State now exceed our various strategies for defending it." Throughout our society we were experiencing the actual or threatened dissolution of stable organisations and institutions, anchors for personal identity, and systems of values. Most important, the stable State itself had become less real.

He quoted the inbalance between the product-based consumer society and the requirements of public systems like transportation, housing, and education as being one example of difficulty. The growing dissatisfaction with the position of powerless minorities was another. Dr Schon suggested that the increasing speed with which change was getting through to the public (the steam engine took 150 to 200 years, the Laser beam eight to 10 years) had removed the normal means by which people adapted to change. Around fthe world LUXCUT1.ME REPORTS Temps. C.

F. Amsterdam 5 6 43 Athens 5 IS 64 Barcelona 13 35 Qillast 5 41 Bitgradt IB 64 Berlin 6 43 fJlarrMr Jr 1 1 5 1 rmpj. C. F. It 1 3 7 45 lh 6L OtlO Pari Rome R'aldjway i tnenie Venice Vienna Aiacclo 15 54 IO sr DlacKpool nonam 5 41 11 52 uorceux It Alexandria 1 J.

lit. uristoi AFfliers Beirut Boulogne Bud a nest 15 S'J Brut els 17 (.3 ft 4t Circuit 7 45 6 43 43 5 41 5 41 9 48 11 6 43 27 63 -1 30 7 45 4 39 4 39 8 46 I 17 63 6 45 Co to one Cophageri Dublin Edinburgh Florence Geneva Gibraltar GlasDow Guernsey Innsbruck Inverness Jersey LltbDn Caublann in f.r 53 Corlu 17 6 Dtbrovntk If. f.l Faro 1 la Frankfurt 7 rt Funchal 1 ot Helsinki It 1 34 Istanbul 16 61 Las Palmas 21 70 Locarno 5 41 Luxor 2ft 82 Milan 7 45 Nicosia 5 2170 Oporto 12 54 Praout 8 46 Rivklavlk So 1 34 Rhodes 20 6B 5trasbaurfl 6 43 Tangier IS 64 Tel-Aviv 21 70 Tunis 6 20 68 Luxemb'rfl 3 37 Madrid 13 55 Majorca 17 63 Malasa 18 64 Malta 23 70 -Chester 4 39 Moscow Fn 1 34 Munich 5 41 Naples 15 59 London NrwcastT 2 3S 1 Wirnw Nice 15 59 Zurtch 46 6 45 cloudy dull Dr fair: To. lo. II iini), mm; Kt The Guardian 164 Deansgate, Manchester M60 2RR.

Editorial 061-832 7200, Classified Advertising 5 061-832 9191. Telex 667871. 192 Gray's Inn Road, London W.C. 1 Editorial and Advertising 01-S37 7011. Teles: 22895.

PiHIiJjhx bv Guard lan Xcvipaj)crs Uil 192 Graj inn HojJ. London 1. anil 164 Dianqatr. Man-, chf-tfr MftO aUH, and primal bv thnn 1E2 DiMsa.ste. Maothester MOO 2R-So.

38. 671, Monday. Nov, IS, 1970. Threats facing stable state i fnmac rafnoi. than Km ncti-n S5-- IS the "citiu.

icjeu miu cgu- demn the system of apartheid, The Government has an in- escapaole responsibility for the their Armistice service at the Betun fln? flUtf fiTQ lUCliea snow fell in many parts of pe0pie died when two cars collided in a gale on the Isle Sandown, Isle of were rePtrted from other yesterdav In v-uujiai Anglesey -i a voune airman's uuuy was oody was washed up on the each near Valley. Senior Aircraftsman Eric Bannister, aged 18, of Mercer nolice investigation team, which vesteraay, continued making inquiries atter the arrest was made. in the two incidents, Miss Leonora Adderley, aged 62, of Ossington Walk, was taken to hospital with serious facial fractures and shock. A little later, Mr William Slater, aged -of Sale Road, was taken to hospital with a throat wound, Uoon.Htiv.1Sj Bridling- (acton Whllstable Heme Bay SOUTH COAST Folkestone Hastings Eastbourne Brighton Worthing Lltttchampton Bonner Sandovrn Shankltn Vcntnor Bournemouth Poole Swnage Exmouth Wymouth Teronmouth Torquay Pcnaance Jersey Guernsey INLAND Ross-on-Wyt 43 5h 9 48 8 47 8 47 9 49 1 t)) si ii 1 02 4S I 47 i jj i i)K no it 4 Wi -r. JO 7 44 72 1 2 53 It pin 20, 8 id pm Su 47 pell 4 1 9 19 pin 9 49 Sli atn 4-8 3 47 H.

Til t9 11 52 Sh SCOTLAND wkk storndwav' 4 3n II atn (, 4-, -h pm 5 41 Mi th. pm zr, 5 11 7 45 pds Dvc Ti3 4. a Glaioow NORTHERN IRELAND Bellist 7.1 .01 7 45 Sh pm Reports for 24 hours ended 6 pm yesterday: Sun- Max. Shine Rain temp. iVeatiiM WEST COAST hr.

In- 'Ua) BlackDoal Morecambe i.t 5 Southport 7 6 43 5 7 .04 ft Jfi Wis 5 1 ,06 pds 5 0 04 4S Colwyn Bay mnaucno Anglesey Weston -s-M are ltlraeombt Newquay ScJIlv Isles EAST COAST Scarborough Bridlington -Lowesiott cracion 3 6 .10 -1R Ints 8 0 .12 9 48 3.2 .04 12 54 5 2 5.0 i i 5.9 .1 6 43 pits 6 42 am 8 4fi Sti 7 45 tl "Irj' 43 7-t-l WnliuabtC Hn Bay SOUTH COAST Hasting I EvIbOurnt BriMOn I Worming Liliteromptort 7 44 7 44 Soulhea burglary and attempted murder launched an intensive house-to-last night. This followed two house inquiry in Wythenshawe still in irst By IAN BIJEACH, Motoring Correspondent In Blackpool this evening the remaining drivers in the K-C International Kally of Great Britain wui get ttieir first proper sleep, before" driving on to Wales, since Friday night. To some observers, it might seem that 50 hours or so with no more than a nap taken in equipment-crammed, crowd-surrounded cars is asking for trouble, and in a lot of cases they would be right, for It is certain that many of the 60 cars that had dropped out by the stage (the number grew to 66 as the surviving 130 cars fought through forest stages in the Highlands, later) were crewed by very weary drivers. But the strain on the cars shows more dramatically. In Bathgate yesterday afternoon, many ears were having to undergo in precior? minutes what a garage would justifiably quote as a three- or fOUr-tffiy ib.

Welding tackle and chain were aiming trie massive tool stock beine used by the works-entered teams to repair or patch up the damage sustained during the night on special stages in North Yorkshire and the Border Country. Icy roads The weather has lived up to the standards set on previous rallies: since, the start from London on Saturday morning, drivers have 'had torrential rain, fog, snow, and ice to contend with. In Scotland, brilliant sunshine and dry conditions on the low roads yesterday quickly gave way to steel-hard ice on foothills approaches and snowpacked tracks through the forest sections. The first significant casualties of the rally took place during such a section in the North Riding on Saturday niEht. Ove Anderson, driving an Alpine Renault and suffering from overheating, spun on a long special section and was hit almost immediately by Tony Fall, driving a Datsun.

During the next few hours, similar retirements were many, ana changes in the lead positions TOUSlillU, DWreWL OiUilnlUtt uu Aberfeldy the northernmost point of the route only one of the leading 10 cars stayed the same position. Of these, only Roger Clark remained (in ninth position last night) to keep up British hopes in his-Escort RS1600. The rest are inevitably the Scandi navians Makinen, Kailstrom fLancia. Mikkola (Ford) Blomovist (Saab), and Palm (Ford) with only minute seDaratine them all. Biorn Waldegard, for Porsche, dropped out with a damaged gearbox soon after leaving the Bathgate control- Makinen, in the lead driving another Escort twin-cam (which seems to be a spectators favourite, too), was having carburettor trouble, but reported to be pressing on towards the Lake District Spares The amount of equipment and spares carried for the manufacturer-sponsored crews quite phenomenal the cavalcade of service vehicles that follows them, with hundreds of tyres and wheels, spare engines and transmission parts, and electrical spares, reinforce any sceptic's view that a major rally success for any given model has little to do with the family saloons that bathe in ihe reflected glory.

But it is a fact that the manufacturers who take most trouble to support their teams are often the ones who 'have a reputation for reliability in' the bread and butter 'products. Even with ttie advantage tnat this support gives to the works entries, retirements are dvouois tionately no fewer than those of private drivers, many rf whom have dozens of helping nanas trom trienas service cars, and who invariably push their cars less hard. But that's a relative statement: all the drivers who stay the course WEATHER example. Only 12 against Mr Reg Davenport, secretary of the South Celynen colliery, said that only 12 of the 400 miners were against going back to work. I have always felt that the attitude of the South Wales union executives has been unreasonable in demand- ing strike action," he said, They are leading South Wales miners into destruction, and it is about time that common sense is applied." A delegate conference of SoutlTWaies miners at Forth-cawl on Saturday decided to ure members to stay ouf in their campaign to get a 5 rise.

an tfis area ssesutSYs council of the union, which meets in To remind the British Labour movement of overseas comrades in prison for their trade union activities, Mr Bob Edwards, MP, general secretary of the Chemical Workers' Union, yesterday sat' for thTeequarters of an hour in a oaroea wire cell outside Labour Party headquarters at Transport House, Westminster. The demonstration marked the opening of Amnesty Inter- national's ''Prisoner of con- science week," devoted this vear to a campaign intended union branches and trades councils for the release of imprisoned trade unionists. In a report Issued yesterday, thf BritSh sectiony of the movement says that although a a no details ot rneir cases some countries, even tne names of the men prison are impossible to establish." As examples, it picks out, cases in 11 countries: Spain, Portugal, Greece, Kenya, Chad, Antidote to inflation Continued from page 1 refusmg to help firms which get into difficulties as a result of granting excessive wage increases. This was made clear yesterday by Mr MauriceMacmillan, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, in a speech to Sussex Young Conservatives. But its inconsistencies were also pointed out by Mr Enoch Powell, who reminded listeners to the BBC's "World this Weekend programme that the 42 millions being paid by the Government to Rolls-Royce would go "straight to making possible the continued cycle oE wage claims and wage toeases." Mr foweu was, in effect, making the same point as Mr Macmillan namely that the Government must cease to finance inflation.

But he went further, arguing that it was nonsense to blame unions for doing their job in seeking higher pay. They would eo on until firms were unable to pay. They will certainly go on this week, at least. On Thursday, 120,000 electricity supply workers are" due to receive a reply to their claim for rises between 20 and 30 per cent And on Friday, 250,000 ancillary workers in the National Health Service expect to be oiterea increases at least vSlKXJ! the local authority workers. Peter Jenkins, page 11 500 TU Scottish pits were not affected by the strike last week, 'which involved 15,500 men.

are still determined to continue the struggle, said Mr David Bolton, vice president of the Scottish NUM. Officials of miners' and crafts- men's unions yesterday held joint conferences in Edin- burgh, Crossgates, and Ayr to discuss the organisation of a ballot later this week on the NOB's improved pay offer. Miners at Dawdon, County Durham's largest pit, have decided to stay on strike, but their colleagues at Easingtan and Vane Tempest are retui'-i- ing to urcrK, Tti I5TO men at Westoe. second Jaicest in the county will flratle today whether or not to stay out. South Africa.

Gabon. Mexico. Brazil, Paraguay, and Indonesia, Vtourtn communist states, actum as "transmission belts" for decisions of the party and there- fore not coming into conflict wiui oiner organs, rne oesi of our knowledge no Soviet or other East European trade unionists are imprisoned aV.s.e i activities." But officials of the sh sectlon acknowledge Qamed for what in other trade UH10I1 activities. Hw Bratisii sectioi is con- centrating on three prisoners 1 Mareelino Camacho, leader PSL, SMS i in or in prison Mr Ochola Ogayo Mak'anyengo. once secretary-general of the Kenya Petroleum Oil Workers' Union, detained from 1966 to 1968 and again since October, 1969.

Body found may be missing man By our own Reporter Police believe thev have found the body of a man who was lost at sea about a month ago while fishing off Fleetwood. A body found during the weekend near Heysham is believed to be that of Mr John Dawson, aaed 42. of Lodee Close, Lymm, Cheshire, who did not return trom a tisrung expedition with bis daughter and nephew. The body of the daughter, Anne, 14, was washed ashore a few dajrs later, but the nephew, Michael Dunn, aged 12, is still missing. Accident post plan Leaders of police, fire, and ambulance services in Lancashire are considering setting up all-purpose emergency stations near motorways, to reduce the time needed to reach road accidents.

The first multi-service station could be on the M6 at Chartiock Richard, near Chorley, A fire brigade spokesman said: "We are looking very deeply 'into the possibility of putting a high-speed emergency vehicle at a police station. This where somwae may be trapped, arid it could tben be supple. mented by the usual turnout" separate incidents wytnen- snawe during tne weesena when an elderly man and an elderlv woman were badly injured. Earlier, a police spokesman said it was believed that the two attacks, which occurred on Saturday nigttt within fifteen minutes of each other, might be connected, But a special A DEEP DEPKESSION will move from the South of Iceland towards N. Scotland.

Associated troughs of low pressure will advame K. across the British Isles. Some E. districts will he dry at first but cloudy weather with periods of rain will soon spread from the W. to all parts Brighter weather with showers will reach most W.

districts by the afternoon, and it will become mostly dry in the E. at night. Temperatures will be rather higher than of late, though there will be snow over high ground in the N. at first. W.

Midlands, Channel Islands, S.W. and N.W. Ennlsnd. Wales ar.d Monmouthshire. Like District, isle ot Man Ckwtiy with min, hcxy, in pJorcs tint becoming bnulitcr lai er.

wllh vtiovot uEml rrini C. sflronci to tnk 1cj ctjUI. m-tYinmiH 1'JC (54F.1. London, 5 Central S. and E.

En gt And AnaUa. and E. first Lnt iiolh cloudi vatti period--. o( rain. bi-cotinuO dn nJntu, with clear jiiKruk wmJ Iresh or etronjl ccrino W.

loss cold, maximum IOC. 150 Cent. and N.E. England. Borders.

Edinburgh and E- Sec lion Aberdeen I. Cent. Hlohlands. Mostly clouill i th periods oi rain and snow over hilK at first, "(cor poiicnis cening ami with tlJiti-d mJioirs, vvlnd fri-sh. or strong iering cold, ouxJmuin 3C Glasoow area, N.

Ireland- Cloudi. with ml a at first, brighter littw. ultli sinners wind taring trr-Ji or mtodo, lest cold maximum IOC. S.W. Scoiland.

Argyll; with ram ntr ami hlpet or wow ocx lulL- ond tTintH interviLi later. nmi rcnnfl SW srrcn'i lo oole: les. cold, maximum (5011. Moray Firth area. Ca It hunts.

N.W PL-riOtls oi mln. some yiou 011 hlllv ma-rlmupT 9C. C4SF or rrrn, Itvs mi-viniuni 7C, (45F.K Outlook. Rather cold and changeobie mVx sjiowcrs or tonrer oudrlteks ol rain, miou at fames in the mostli o-ver bllli SEA PASSAGES S. North Sea, Strait ot EnaUih Channel tE.l: Wind eerin9 strong to gale; rain at ttnt islhlllty inorlerato to poor, rough c- "iS iv A later Miiblllrj moderate.

becoming uiod sea cry rouih. Around SSrotaSn Reports for 24 hours ending 6 pjn. Saturday: San- Max. shine Rain tcn'D Weather WEST COAST br. In.

(dai Douglas Morccamtie BJjckpool Southport Corwvn iv Lljn3udno Angleseif 6 32 p)s .02 5 41 cun .02 4J Fg 7 44 '-h Din .15 7 Ji -Ji im Q2 9 43 Si lim 3,5 0.9 1 5 5.0 xiion i-naare Sclllv lsl EAST COAST Scarboroush 2 7 .55 )l 6.6 .17 E3 48 Mi 0.1 .23 44 Sh pm THE nave to drive very nard and achieve feats of manoeuvre and performance that would scare the ordinary motorist out of his wits. With three more days to go one rally championship the RAC rally championship for British drivers has already been settled. The new title-holder is 25-year-old Will Sparrow, from Tamvorth-in-Arden. Warwickshire Motoring, page 12.

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