Wednesday 29 August 2018

Developing a new vision




 
On Wednesday August 22nd, 2018 the second procedure to remove cataracts was completed at the Sunderland Eye infirmary and although the inserted lens appears less strong than the first, the overall impact is that I can now see without external glasses more clearly since childhood when an emotional being memory is of vivid colours and which was lost until approaching my eightieth year.  This I believe has improved my vision and perspective and with these my understanding and strengthening the ability to interpret the received information.
On Friday morning I had a haircut at my favourite barber(ess) who in the four years since serving the local community has become something of an institution because of her personal attention and skilled work. I mention this because I could clearly see my face in the mirror and her work, having waited for one other client to finish and two others to be attended. I could also read the text on the wall mounted TV and view the comings and goings in the adjacent car park which used to house a multi-purpose centre for those with a range of disabilities and which included a chapel with an adjacent bar with large screen TV. The Bishop of Durham who once held service commented on the advantage of being able to then move into the next room where a pint  was pulled for him.
I also mention the haircut because on the bus from the present Interchange station in South Shields to that in Sunderland I noted a significant number of barbers and hairdressers in the town which I do not recall from seeing before and this was confirmed when I commented on my observation to the present partner of the barber(ess). Across from the Sunderland Interchange is the very impressive Sunderland College  which offers students  courses in hairdressing and barbering and other personal services including full body massage. There are published price lists for the public to use the services and where haircutting is also available at the Hylton Campus. Among the surprises when I checked is the information of the College’s involvement with the Blue Square training centre at Bolden, in South Tyneside. I was also interested in the published information on the City Bistro within the new centre which offers a fine fining experience at £10.95 lunchtimes 2 courses and £12.95 for three with an early bird theatre option from 5.30 to 6.30. A sample menu is published.
Before the procedure enjoyed a standard English breakfast, which included a round of toast with a spread and two cup of coffee for just over £4 at the Wouldhave, Wetherspoons, close to Morrisons supermarket and the present Metro Station. I emphasis  the present  Metro Station because we are likely to lose the present end of platform opposite  the Wouldhave entrance  when the new town Metro centre entrance with both lift and escalators is opened  adjoining the new bus station and for which a vast area has been cleared of redundant buildings. The end of line buildings and for the former coal line down to the former docks is being developed and extended both to accommodate parked overnight trains which provide for early and later trains than  now. I am unsure if this is where the new Nexus Training Centre is to be built which promises an additional 80 jobs to the town centre. There was also good news this week when a flyer posted in the letter box announced another low cost store is opening, billed as a department store and will use the former Marks and Spencer’s Building which confirms that along with Woolworths and more recently British Home Stores the town has lost three most well-known of its High Street stores and which were the mark of a town being a town, although in fact the addition of British Home Stores was only a more recent development when a small group  of stores was added to one side of the Asda development which in town moved from the building which became Morrisons close to where I live on a site part way down the hill, close to one end of the Metro station and the Wouldhave.
There is a published plan to cope with the retail market as it has developed and the changing balance of the community which over decades has improved from one of the most socially deprived areas in the Queendom with some 80% of housing rented, predominantly social and provided by the local authority to where every opportunity is being taken to attract new individually owned domestic properties which together with the universality of car ownership, good main roads and the public transport system throughout Tyne and Wearside means opportunities to gain employment across the region and where the traditional heavy industries of coal mining, steel making and ship building have been replaced by car manufacturing with Nissan at Washington now within the Sunderland local authority area, and dramatic developments in service provision particularly further Education and Health,  and  with service centres such at  the BT centre on the riverside here in South Shields, close to the National Centre of the Word, the former Customs House cultural and art centre, and the passenger ferry across the Tyne where the biggest of the ocean travelling holiday cruise ships now regularly docks for a few day’s stay to enable passengers to visit the shopping, entertainment and historical attractions of the region. On my way into Sunderland by bus for the procedure I noted that what had been one of the two large departmental stores in Sunderland and remained vacant for several years is being converted into premium student accommodation as Sunderland University and the City College expand. The other which occupied buildings on two sides of one end of the High Street became the public Library and Wilkinson’s, now Wilko.
In order to cope with the closure of the traditional department stores, there is also Binns, and some chain stores selling shoes to chocolates also abandoning our high street, the local authority has encouraged the supermarket and the low cost store with some success  as  local residents can chose between Morrisons, Asda and Tesco, together with two Sainsbury local conveniences stores and one Local Tesco. There is a Morrisons at Jarrow within the local government Borough and a Tesco Walmart at Bolden and in addition to Asda at Hebburn a new Aldi is being built. The Aldi in South Shields has been extended as has one of the two Lidl’s. There is also Iceland close by the Aldi and Farm Foods at the  Nook. Home Bargains which offers brands at discount is on my route in and out of the town to Newcastle or Durham, or when making visits to the recycle centre at Middlefield’s , or  more frequently when taking one of the two routes to the Cineworld Cinema at Bolden. I recently bought from Home Bargains a broom for £2.50 for clearing the fake grass at the back which I had purchased from the B and M store which moved from close to  an off High street car park to the vacant two floor building occupied previously by British Homes stores part of a new development with Debenhams and Next.
I am a regular user of Morrisons which is within walking distance  but involves a walk back up the steepest part of the hill on the last bend of the River Tyne before it joins into the North Sea.
I use the Morrisons as my day to day store but home deliver from the  north Sunderland Sainsbury’s because of their regular £6 and £8 discount vouchers for spending only £40 a delivery which can cost as little a £1 midweek or late at night. On Bank Holiday Monday evening some £45  of produce cost £32 because in addition to a general discount voucher there was one for failure to deliver the previous Sunday night and delayed to Monday, and another for a price comparison difference. It is not clear if the increase in the  value to the general voucher offering  a 20% reduction for three weeks is to do with the tie up with Asda Walmart.  I sometimes use  the Tesco in South Shields or North Sunderland  close to the Stadium of Light and that at Gateshead by the Metro interchange on the site of the  former iconic car park used in the  Get Carter film, as I can park the car in the lower level car park before taking an escalator to the Vue Cinema, or the Metro to Newcastle City Centre. The Tesco general voucher is usually 10%. The Lidl chain also stocks Iberian Foods including large jars of Queen Olives, at Christmas hard and soft Turron and on my last visit I failed to resist some almond biscuits although the packet, remains unopened. The two  local branches also stock Norwegian smoked salmon with a mustard and dill sauce.
The local Wetherspoons is used as a meeting place socially in the mornings for men who like an early drink, and by women for a chat. Some including couples come for the Breakfast and the unlimited coffee. On my recent visit I noted  a change in the Chicken club menu which is available from midday through to 11pm on Wednesdays with six main chicken options and seven of drinks for the one price of £6.49 The significance of the menu is the detail available for the calorie conscious so the main chicken dishes ranges from 1169 calories for ten spicy chicken wings to a plain grilled chicken breast at 304 Cals but all served with coleslaw. There is a choice of three sauces 51 to 106 Cals and sides  with 82 for salad or chips 597.  In addition to the six alcohol to soft drinks there is also the option of unlimited hot drinks. Until  about a year ago unlimited filter coffee of varying quality and warmth was available here and in other pub restaurants of the chain  until 2pm but the Wouldhave was one of the earliest to be converted to the latest six drink option self service machines which I first discovered in the branch across from Victoria Station in London prior to taking the bus to watch the final of 50 over innings cricket competition at Lords in 2016.  The unlimited hot drinks option is now available  throughout the day. Another feature of the chicken club menu is the options to  go for combo additions such spicy coated prawns 2.60 or half a rack of ribs at £3.60 or adding sides such as onion rings  or corn on the cob. I occasionally call in for one of the Curry Club options  although on a weekend visit recently I noted a manager’s curry special deal  at £3.60 to which a drink is extra.
I entered the Wouldhave around 11.25 having called in a Morrison’s for a copy of the Daily i and an early edition of the Gazette, the oldest local newspaper which is now printed with the Sunderland Echo although it retains a small editorial office opposite the Town Hall. I also got extra cash to cover a taxi if required on the way home. The front page headline in the ‘I’ was the welcome news that new improved prostate treatment has been approved for use in the National Health Service
The paper, as did others, announced that a documentary feature by Peter Jackson the Director of Lords of the Rings and the Hobbit will be shown in cinemas direct from a special showing from the London Film festival in October. The film will use existing but restored footage enabling soldiers who participated in the Great War talking of their experiences. The film print has been coloured and shot in 3D as well as 2D a copy will be broadcast by the BBC  and also given to every secondary school. The world relay will include a session with Peter Jackson chaired by Mark Kermode.
Two Saturday’s ago, I attended the Custom’s House on the Tyne Riverbank, a performance of a new play which closely follows the first series of When the Boat Comes In by the South Shields born writer James Mitchell who also created the important Callan series which brought Edward Woodward to international attention. James Bolam plays the pivotal character Jack Ford who survives the Great War as a Sergeant with distinction and becomes a friend of the Seaton Family in the fictious town of Gallowshields. The series which commenced in 1976 became so popular that 51 episodes were created over a five year period and for under £30 I bought the four series  on 3 DVD’s. James Bolam went on to perform in the Likely lads and  two of my other favourite series, the Beiderbeck Tapes  as a school teacher with a passion for traditional jazz and blues who becomes caught up in a mystery adventure  and which I have  added to my wish list,  and more recently as one of the original members of New Tricks which lasted for over a decade. I was sceptical how about 51 episode condensed into a two hour work, but this has been achieved brilliantly in a faithful way to the original production together with impressive stage craft including sound to recreate trench warfare and the pit cage, by concentrating on the first third. The work was received by nearly sell out audiences at this small Theatre and merits a West End Theatre and a nationwide tour.
I tend to book up will in  advance for my visits to local theatres so as to ensure an end of aisle seat as I attend on my own.  Presently scheduled is Our Finest Hour at Newcastle City Hall in September, followed by an Evening with Simon Reeve at the Sage and then  in October Miss Saigon at Sunderland’s Empire. I have  made fewer visits this year to live performances and disappointingly missed a musical about the life of Cilla Black at Theatre Royal Newcastle because of Beast from the East. Next month I discover the Nature of the Beast, the Beast in question is the left wing politician Denis Skinner who comes to the Customs House for a showing of a film on his life and some questioning.
After what has become an annual event in the New Year, in January I enjoyed Ray McVey’s tribute Glenn Miller Orchestra accompanied by the Polka Dot Singers and the Swing Time Jivers at the Sage, and the annual must attend visit of the Ellen Kent Opera company performing La Traviata and Madam Butterfly on successive January nights at Sunderland’s Empire Theatre. In February there was the Tribute group Money for Nothing with Aled Williams as Dire Straits Mark Knoffler from  Whitley Bay at the Sunderland Empire Theatre and a disappointing highly talented Bill Bailey at the Civic Hall.
The show which had everyone rocking in the Aisles was the return of Washington, Co Durham born Bryan Ferry at City Hall in April. Eric Burden, born Newcastle, and his present group of Animals, returned to City Hall for the second year in succession but this time without an opening band and performed well but I felt his voice is in decline. Also, that month Sheridan Smith at the Sage lived up to expectations whereas the poorly attended Adele tribute singer show Someone Like You at the City Hall in June was a revelation and it is not surprising that Katie Markham is endorsed by one of our greatest singer songwriters of all time. Later today or tomorrow I must review what shows are planned over the next six months including on my next visit to London in October. My only show in the capital this year was on the special day trip to see Absolute Hell at thr National Theatre on the south bank of the Thames as part of research about the reality of Soho  in the three decades immediately after the war.
Similarly, the number of live shows relayed to local cinemas attended has been less than previous years, in part because of my deteriorating sight, but mainly becoming more selective in my choice. There has been one Opera, Louisa Miller with Placido Domingo relayed from the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. I went to this  previously unknown to me opera because one of  great opera singers  of all time was performing  and despite his  years his voice shows no indications of decline. The opera by Verdi was also a revelation.
The most unexpected relay was the interview with Bruce Dickinson of Iron maiden where I will comment further. I also enjoyed the interview with Michael Caine after a showing of his film about the 1960’s- My Generation.  Both he, Bruce Dickenson and John Cornwall, better known as Le Carre, the previous year, had some important things to say about the world and Britain today. It is disappointing the extended interviews with individual personalities intended for TV which Michael Caine mentioned have not appeared and I will check if they are included on the DVD. There was one live talk show attended locally at the Word  when South Shields born,  and Mirror assistant Editor and journalist Kevin Maguire was interviewed by a local radio personality. In 2014 I advised Kevin, the Mirror and former policeman Clive Driscoll who brought to justice two of the Stephen Lawrence killers of an issue  which led to the Mirror dropping from online record an article and Clive also amending his planned autobiography. I remain unclear where Kevin stands in relation to the position and politics of Jeremy Corbyn.
Nor have I been to the Stadium of Light for a football game to watch Sunderland, or St James Park to watch Newcastle and plans to go again before Winter cold sets in were put on hold with  Newcastle appearances and  two of Sunderland on Sky. I did visit St James on a very  weekend for the Dacia Rugby League Magi weekend when seven games are played, four on Saturday and three Sunday for the price of one inexpensive ticket and where a reserved seat only cost £39. Ominous Newcastle’s castle cup game at Notts Forest is also on Sky Wednesday where I assume they will lose to concentrate on Premiership survival.
Nor was there a trip or London to watch Durham at Lords, or the Oval, or to Nottingham,  or to watch England in a Test or  any Women’s  cricket game although there has been much watching on TV with the Indian Premier League, and recently the English version of the 20 over each side game in addition to the Test matches and the Ladies Final’s day at Hove on August Bank Holiday Monday. Although Middlesex joined Durham in the second division of the County four day game we will only play at Lords if both sides remain in the division  in 2019 which at present looks the likely position and Surrey are romping away at the top of the first division with Notts looking good for a top three place. With Sussex strong for promotion there is the extraordinary possibility that Lancashire and Yorkshire are relegation possibilities. I made one visit to the capital for the final of the 50 over  each side at Lords where Hampshire one of hate teams because  of what happened when I visit for 20 20 finals Day and which is also why I do not support Warwickshire. The only other team which I do not wish well is Lancashire for the way their pitch in South Liverpool behaved in the year when all county games were play there  while the cricket square at Old Trafford was reversed. I did attend the 50 over game between England and Australia ay Durham’s Riverside ground at Chester le Street in June  but had to miss England’s Innings as the car ceased to function on arrival and a tow back to South Shields was required during the interval. This proved an expensive breakdown where I was without the vehicle for two weeks while a new central electrical control unit was found and fitted by the appropriate car deal which also required a second car tow between repair garages.
I have been disappointed with recent choice available at the Cineworld multiplex chain and paid more attention to what was available on Sky, and in particular the Talking Pictures channel where two recent showing of films first screened in 1943 reinforced  the use of government sponsored or national interest cinema for propaganda purposes. The first film was biographic of the prolific writer of fiction, non-fiction, poetry and few plays, the former adventurer and journalist, Jack London. The film alleges that when he became the only journalist to make his way from Japan to Korea where the Japanese were conducting a brutal war against Russia he came across a commander who was open about his country’s ambition not just to conquer Asia to ensure its population could be fed but this would also involve removing the threat which the USA posed, allegedly declaring in 1904 it might take fifty to a hundred years before they were ready to  achieve their objective. The attack on Pearl Harbour occurred two years before the film was screened.
The Demi-Paradise is a British contribution to Anglo Russian relations after Hitler launched their attack which resulted in the death of 20 million  people and the subsequent Russian retaliation in which the men were shot, and the women raped.  The Demi Paradise is a quaint film in which Olivier stars as an amazing accent English speaking Russian  engineer to ask a specialist marine company to make a propeller for a new generation vessel. The head of the company is played by Felix Aylmer and who dines and wines and, tries to get the Russian to play golf with other members of the board in order to assess the character of the foreigner who uses the  visit to paint a picture of England and of Lords and Ladies, of middle class pageants and musical halls, of Speaker’s corner at Hyde Park and of a unique sense of humour. The working class are excluded and the whole purpose of the film is to persuade the British public that helping Russia was essential to the survival of Britian and its Empire, which it was. Jack London, an Atheist was also a very early socialist trade unionist and there is a Lake named after him in Russia as well as monument in the USA.
Both films are soft propaganda vehicles compared to the present ruthless and   unrelenting campaign to smear Jeremey Corbyn as anti-Semitic because if his misuse of Zionism in a seven minute participation in a conference on the subjugation of Palestinians against rthe expressed terms of the 1917 Balfour declaration and that of 1926 which promised the creation of a state for the Jewish people in Palestine but also the protection of the rights and position of the Arab population who comprised 95% of the population.  It was not after WW2 that the present Jewish state of Israel was founded, and it is necessary to understand what happened in Nazi Europe to appreciate the insecurity felt be the older generation of Jewish people  because of the atrocities committed against them and that of the Israel as a state because of the open threat of some Arab controlled states opposed to the continuation of Israel as a separate. Reaching a permanent settlement particularly over the future of Jerusalem appears to have become impossible.
Just before Parliament’s summer recess the government of Mrs May nearly fell because of divisions within her own Cabinet and Party over Brexit, the political and economic future of Britain’s relations with the rest of Europe and for once unit within the Parliamentary Labour Party with the exception of four hard line Brexiteers. The public admission by members of a hard Brexit group of Tories led by the aristocratic  right wing Mogg that they will replace May by former foreign secretary Boris Johnson if she pursues the present plan and makes any further concessions appears to have generated an alliance between the Tory Party together and the Corbyn hostile members of the PLP and some trade union leaders of a Corbyn led government coinciding with the likely extension of  support for him in the next month with the election of  supporters to the increased membership and power of constituency parties on the new Executive Committee coupled with the likely decision of the Party conference to introduce  the re-selection of  Labour candidates by constituency parties prior to every General Election.
Those members of the PLP who have continued to be openly hostile to the policies espoused by Jeremy Corbyn  and his supporters have  understandably become concerned about their political futures and these various elements having come together to create  the perfect political storm which will engulf the nation over the next two months and where it would be foolish to predict the outcome, given the political and public divisions on a  number of issues which exist although to a major extent manufactured through the use by vested interests of mainstream  and social media.
Unfortunately, the coming to power of Donald Trump in the USA is exacerbating the situation as political discourse degenerates into the sewer of smear and lie.  The reality of being a backbench politician and the “price” required to become a Minister is was portrayed in the resurrected 1961 film No Love for Johnnie which I did see in theatre at the time but have since forgotten how good it remains with an extraordinary cast led by Peter Finch and Johnnie Byrne with Stanley Holloway, Mary Peach, Donald Pleasance, Billie Whitelaw. Hugh Burden. Rosalie Crutchley, Mervyn Johns, Geoffrey Keen as the Prime Minister, Paul Rogers, Dennis Price, Peter Barkworth, Fenella Fielding, Derek Francis, Conrad Phillips and Peter Sallis as an MP. I bought the book  an edition from 1959 and the DVD.
Another important film in the German language is The Resistance shown on Sky a week ago which covers rhe comparatively few Jewish individuals who managed to survive in Germany  with help throughout WW2 and often with help of individual Germans who risked the immediate extinction of themselves and their families in doing so. Suite Francais shown on BBC two in March was about the relationship between French woman and an educated German composer turned officer in wartime France. The novel was written during the occupation but remained in family suitcase for more than half a century.
The documentary special screening of Scream for Sarajevo in April on the Iron Maiden Concert in the city and the return of Bruce Dickinson and band members to the country reflecting on the impact on them and who managed to attend and survive the siege is an important reminder of the continuing struggle of oppressed ordinary people to survive horror. In July I experienced the film  Renegades on Sky, set in Sarajevo in 1995 where a team of Navy Seals disguised as journalists capture the Serbian General Milic wanted for war crimes and given three days leave. They use the time to find 25 tons of gold ingots on their way from Paris to  a safe location during WW2 in  1944 and  are now at the bottom of a damned lake. The unit succeeds and with the help of their commanding officer half the £300 million recovered is returned to the French government and the rest goes to a local partisan for the rebuilding of her country. The unit also contribute theirs in a feel good ending. I found  An Ordinary Man a nasty film released in 2017 with Ben Kingsley as a wanted war criminal (Sarajevo era) protected by supporters who has a relationship with young woman employed to clean the flat where he is moved  and who is not what she seems to be. I still do not understand the point of the film.
In Harm’s Way screened on Sky in May was one of the  last  WW2 epics in Black and White with John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, Dana Andrews and Henry Fonda among a host of major stars and the genuine differences  over tactics and personal rivalries and ambitions that occur in war as they do in peace.  In May the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. Also, in May Defence of the Realm on Talking Pictures is political thriller on the cover up of a crashed nuclear  carrying bomber at an American airbase in the English countryside.  In the mid 1980’s I did a Drug Advisory Service visit  when a USA Bomber had buzzed the market town flying upside down with the crew high on drugs, so since then I have to accept that what is fiction may mirror reality.
A resurrected film from wartime 1943 is Since You went away  shown on Talking Pictures with Claudette Colbert, Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotton and Shirley Temple  centres on what happens to families and loved ones when the men are called into wartime national service. The film has several overdone sentimental moments but given the circumstances when it was created it stands the test of time. Even more sentimental is the 1941 wartime drama about marriage break up and musicians down on their luck called Danny Boy when David Farrer as the musician falls on hard times with his school age son.
The most interesting, surprising and challenging film was shown in June, The Day After which I cannot recall having previously heard of. The film  made for USA Television and aired in 1983, shows what happens when the two super powers of the day decided to launch waves of intercontinental nuclear missiles at each other and follows the impact of this on local citizens, including those with responsibility for  security at a rocket base which goes into lockdown without them. The film reminded of my week at the National Civil Defence college
The Monument Men, a Sky film in June, previously seen in theatre also had a host of stars with George Clooney directing, Matt Damon, Bill Murray John Goodman, High Bonneville and Kate Blanchette on the search for and protection of art stolen by the Nazis I based on a 2008 published novel which looks back on events on channel Island during the WW2 occupation when some residents turned informers to further self interest than just to survive.
A different  kind of film to be mentioned in this context of the impact of economically advanced nations on the poorest was another Sky Screened film The Pirates of Somali which led to be buying the book of former would be investigative Journalist who helped the USA administration to understand what was really happening and change government policy .
In July I saw again the Sand Pebbles viewed in Theatre when first screened in the early 1960’s and  at least once on TV since. The film set in the  civil war  of the 1920’s which was lead to the emergence  of China as a single state and stars Steve McQueen who falls for missionary played by Candice Bergen with Richard Attenborough as shipmate who falls for young female hostess which echoes of the transformation of  Madam Butterfly into Miss Saigon.
For the record since March I thought Red Sparrow very interesting and the Greatest Showman brought back memories of taking family members to see Michael Crawford in Barnum at the London Palladium.  The Greatest Showman film is an improvement on the stage show because of some great music and its important message on diversity.
Mary Magdalene is a serious film which disappointed. Ladybird on the relationship between a rebellious teenager and her daughter  received Oscar nominations and merited the Golden Globe best picture award. Tomb Raider was fun.  Other films  experienced in March were City Lights (Sky) about which nothing  is recalled and Baby Driver on Sky.
April remains memorable because of the Cineworld D Box experience in Newcastle for Ready Player One a film about Virtual Reality experienced through Virtual Reality. The Avengers Infinity Wars was 3D fun with a great ending which heralds a part II. The Leisure Seeker with Donald Sinden and Helen Mirren remains memorable because of advocacy of the independence and rights of elders.  Happy Birthday Tony Simpson on Sky is a charming film about a young man in the wrong job and relationship who finds himself and the right girl at a west country music and lifestyle festival. Girls Trip with Queen Latifath was not funny as a supposed comedy. I have no memory of Going in Style on Sky
In May the latest episode of Star Wars was much enjoyed in Imax 3D. I paid attention to the latest Planet of Apes series on Sky having watched a cinema screening forgetting to bring 3D glasses and also affected by the cataract deterioration. I also paid close attention to Deadpool 2 as I had to the first in series but failed to get most of the humour and the references to other films in genre. I  enjoyed Atomic Blonde the USA made spy thriller  with Charlie Theron which begins in the days before the fall of the Berlin Wall which divided East and West Germany.
The ability of someone disturbed or with deliberate intent to ruin someone in a public position was the subject of the 1959 drama Serious Charge in which Anthony Quale played the accused, an unmarried vicar. Sarah Churchill is the accuser in a film shown on Talking Pictures. The Criminal with Stanley Baker remains an important film which provides insight to prison life in the 1960’s. There is a music score by Johnny Dankworth and his band and the cast incudes Sam Wanamaker, Jill Bennett, Rupert Davies, who became Maigret, Patrick McGee and Patrick Wymark, both who died when at the peak of their careers.
Few films about sport last the test of time. Night of the Grand National is more a detective drama from back in 1953 with Nigel Patrick, Moira Lister, Beatrice Campbell, Betty Ann Davies, Michael Horden and Leslie Mitchell. I also enjoyed a young Gordon Jackson in Floodtide 1959, the story of small family father who is determined to follow his ambition to work in ship building design and marries the boss’s daughter and revolutionises shipbuilding. John Laurie and Jimmy Logan are among the cast.
Rise of the Foot Soldier on Sky proved a dreadful film with gratuitous violence and  sexual exploitation which I watched because the subject was based on a true story and involved a notorious member of the Inter City football associated violent gangsters  which I directly encountered and wrote to clubs and politicians about in the 1970’s and 1980’s.
In June the epic adventure was Jurassic World which was the least successful of the genre this season. The all-female Oceans 8 cast was a clever fun film with  big office characters such as Helen Bonham Carter, Cate Blanchette and Sandra Bullock. The singer Rihanna also participated in a traditional caper stealing valuables from a highly protected security system and in plain sight. I have no recollection of seeing the 2014 film The November Man in theatre  until shown on Sky and which has Pierce Brosnan int he main role, based on a novel series of the same name and with a contemporary international spy plot.
July was a mixed month for memorable cinema visits and films watched on TV apart from one of the films of year, Mamma Mia! Here we go again. I think this is even better than the original film based on the stage show for two reasons. The  story and the way presented is deeper and requires attention as it switches constantly between present and past and secondly, because of the dramatic intent the film becomes emotionally engaging and satisfying and this all before the Abba songbook. The film includes all the main characters from the first feature and a new group of actors who play the cast as their younger selves; in this respect Lily James as the young Donna is brilliant. Cher also excels as Donna’s mother and Andy Garcia as the Hotel manager Fernando and Cher’s long lost lover. The hit song of the film is My love,  My Life brought tears to my eyes. For the first time I went to see a film for a second time the following day.
A two hour documentary on the challenged life of Witney Huston was experience in one of studio theatres at the Cineworld in Newcastle which is undergoing significant refurbishment with half the main theatres closed. This film, as those at the Tyneside film theatre, were experienced during the very hot weather. Sicario 2 Soldado provides insight into the power of Mexican drug interests and their capacity to corrupt and control the institutions of the state, particular the police and internal security services.
I was disappointed by Hotel Artemis other than a stela performance by Jodie Foster in a mature role. Mission Impossible Fallout lived up to expectations because of the antic of forever young Tom Cruise but the series should have been titled Missions Incredible or Missions unbelievable. It was experienced in 3D. I was also disappointed with All Night Long packed with modern Jazz musicians but with a poor story and poor acting. (Talking Pictures)
I enjoyed Christopher Robin which features the characters created in the Winnie the Pooh bear books and begins in a sad and dark period for Christopher Robin and for Pooh bear which I wondered about the impact on some of the younger children in the theatre. There was a similar reaction last year to Goodbye Christopher Robbin when seen in theatre and recently shown on Sky films. I have seen Hobson’s Choice at least once before on TV and may well have seen in theatre just before leaving school although I was preoccupied with revising for G.C.E’s at that time. I saw the film again on Talking Pictures during the first full week of August. Charles Laughton plays the dominating and conventional father of the time and a very young John Mills the unassuming employee who is taken up as a husband by the eldest of three daughters played by Brenda de Banzie. A young Prunella scales plays a sister. Richard Wattis courts one of the sisters and Raymond Huntly and John Laurie have  minor roles.
 A fun film was the computer generated Incredibles 2 which features the lead  character becoming a stay at home dad while his wife and mother saves the world. A good film with lots of ludicrous moments is the Spy Who Dumped Me as August drew to an end which one suspects is the first of another  couple of episodes as two long-time friends who tell each other everything become caught up with spy treachery from both sides of the Atlantic. 
Because of the dearth of films, I wanted to see using Cineworld unlimited, I ventured to the Tyneside film theatre three times, although the first visit was to watch the World Cup semi-final game against Belgium. I went to see First Reformed because of the role of Amanda Seyfried which contrasted with that enjoyed in Mama Mia, Here we go again. The film has an end which I did not see coming although then thinking over the film the clues are there. Ethan Hawke as Minister in a Tourist church puts in another outstanding performance. I also enjoyed the slow paced, The Bookshop at the Tyneside Film Theatre which is narrated by Julie Christie who I saw twice at the Birmingham Rep 1963-1964 when I attend a  child care social work course at the University. The film has one of my favourite actors in a supporting role Bill Nighy. The film is sad and depressing.  
The Equalizer 2 with Denzil Washington conjures mixed emotions  because vigilante justice can never be justified. Th return of a child to mother in the USA from Turkey, the reunion of a  Jewish brother sister in their old age softened the inevitable prolonged killing sequence at the end as Washington achieves vengeance on his former associates who have turned to private enterprise and killed his friend and former government agent played  Melissa Lo because she proved a loose end as she investigated one of their assignments in Paris. A poor choice in August was Kill Order on Sky, but the ancient biopic the Dorsey brothers reminded of the era of the swing bands and had a cameo role for the Pianist. The two  brothers played themselves and convincingly portrayed the reasons which led to both managing separate orchestras and not speaking for a time. They started out together in 1934  with Glenn Miller among the band members. Among those who also performed with them was Mildred Bailey, Bing Crosby  with vocals Jack Teagarden  who I saw at rteh Grand Theatre Croydon in the 1950’s, Bunny Berigan on Trumpet and Ray McKinley on drums. Jo Venuti played the violin. Paul Whiteman also played himself in the film as did Helen O’Connell the vocalist. I did not know before  that Elvis Presley first performed on US TV on their show in 1956.
The final film experienced in August at the Cineworld Newcastle is memorable for the events before and after as well for the film itself. The film is Alpha.
I was already on the Metro train from South Shields to Newcastle when I realised I had misread the time and could find  penalty fine notice as I was consequently short by five minutes of the payment required  as a consequence.
I had well planned the day but then found I needed a pair of new black shoes. The plan was to put in an order for more eye drops at the same time as arranging a dental appointment to replace a filling before doing some shopping at Morrisons. I decided to switch from a brown shoes outfit to the black shoes which needed a good clean and then I noticed that the leather at the top had split, another indication of the improved vision. We have only one shoe store left, when there were three, a branch of Clarks,  who do a broad fit, so I went there and bought two pairs, one for best with laces, and the other more expensive even with a 20% discount which has a cross over Velcro strap and even with this the bill came to £100.  I  then called in for some fruit  at the greengrocers under the Metro station entrance as what they sell is not only cheaper but as recently discovered of better quality than from Morrisons.  As I drove back from Morrisons the short distance to home the warning light  for petrol came on and I remembered I had forgotten to fill up on my way back from the cricket on Friday and looked at the time, misjudged by the hour and  rushed in to put the food away, go to the loo and get to the station hoping the petrol did not run out.  I took the car slowly to the nearest garage when I got back so there was a double sigh of relief!
 The rate at rthe Metro station car park is 1 a minute for the first hour and then 80p an hour. Although as I arrived a car parking warden  was on her  travels I decided not to tempt the fates an put in £1.40 although I was just 5 minutes short of only needing an hour. This is car where I had got a penalty notice on return from my day trip to London to see Absolute Hell at the National because the parking fee receipt had blown over but rescinded on appeal. If a warden did return to check  just before six when parking becomes free, then having paid 1.40 and not 60p as I had nearly done may have made the difference.  I would have paid any fine even though and all I needed to have done was to wait in car for five minutes to pass before paying the fee, but I had rushed because the train was in and I assumed I had only an hour to get to the theatre, get my ticket and find my set before the performance commenced.
I could have  experienced Alpha in 3D at Bolden,  but I would have had to have sat among the 4D seats recently imported from the Cineworld at the Borough. It is just the sets without the other effects now available at the specially constructed theatre in Newcastle.

I saw the film  in one of the screens at the Newcastle Cineworld which has been refurbished with  leather  reclining seats but the thing which I found best is that they have put in short steps, two per row instead of one, and the row letter is on the step as a little light so can be read if the screen is dark.  I wanted to see the film Alpha in 3D where there  is one showing a day in Newcstle otherwise I would have attended later in the evening when parking in South Shields is free. For six weeks after the Great North run in September the station at South Shileds will be closed  for some line straightening as the construction work for the new Metro station entrance, Nexus Training centre Metro train and bus depots gets even more underway.  This may explain why the platform exit opposite the Wouldhave was open but use of the combined bus and Metro ass did not work and therefore came up void at the Newcastle exit  and required human assistance to open the exit gate,
Alpha is a fictional account of how the wolf evolved into man’s best friend, set 20000 years ago when a young hunter survives a bad fall after being given up for dead and befriends an injured wolf. The film uses subtitles as the language of the tribe is said to be unidentified prehistoric !  There was also a row over the statement no animals were harmed because it  has been revealed  that 5 Bison were killed. The photography and acting are brilliant. The film is currenty15th in British Box office charts with Mama Mia and Incredibles 2 leading the way at over £50 million in today to date.
On TV the important George Gently, series came to end as did the Detective on a North East beach reminding of the cult film Get Carter when Michael Caine is also assassinated. The final two part episode was recently repeated. There was also an all too short new Inspector Montalbano Saturday Night Foreign production series of two episodes on BBC TV Four. The episodes   are more serious and darker than previously and with less attention to his love of food. The Young Morse series Endeavour of six episodes ended in March but with the promise of a sixth series next year. The fifth series saw the amalgamation of Oxford City and County to form the Thames Valley in 1968 which also covered the counties of Berkshire and Buckinghamshire and a strengthening of storylines against the Oxford City and County black cloth. I make time  to see the original Morse and Lewis series.  In the same level of excellence was a new series of the Bridge was broadcast and which had rthe autism spectrum detective Saga Nostram released from prison because of new evidence suggesting reasonable doubt that she had murdered her mother. It is her unique way of looking at information which brings results.
A series which surprised and emotionally engaged me more than anticipated was Unforgotten where  the third series of episodes 13 to 18 sees another female detective  breakdown from the horror and clinical detachment of the serial murderer of adolescent girls following sexual assault. The programme communicated the terror they would have felt and the lifelong impact on their families. There  is also a clever switching between possible murderers from a group of four men who shared a new year holiday home with their families at the time of the murder of a victim found during motorway repairs in London. It emergences  that one of the men was falsely accused watching child porn on his computer which destroyed his  job and family and nearly wrecks the second opportunity to find love in  a new relationship. A second of the group is murdered following false social media accusations and the  third secretly believed his son was responsible blighting their relationship discovered this could not be so and begins to rebuild the fractured relationship. Nicola Walter the senior detective is  joined by Sanjeev Bhaskar for the third series and both face domestic challenges in addition  the stressful daywork. Her father is showing the early signs of dementia which he is resisting, and she also faces pressure from her siblings and the character played by Sanjeev is approached by his former wife  who is seeking reconciliation. He consults his daughters who are satisfied with the status quo. DCI Cassandra Stuart and her father become reconciled.
Moving from Police detective work to those with a political and security interest. The successor to West Wing, Madam Secretary provided another must see series which came  to an end in June with all the indications of move to become Madam President. I watched over one day the new 8 episode series of Deep State with Mark Strong as a former MI6 assassin  who in effect blackmailed to return to active service and all today with a British USA plot for  respective governments to take a hard line over Iran and achieve  regime change. The problem is that for over a decade mark has ked a new life in France  with a French wife and their two children and during the course of the series she learns not only of his former role and the nature of  his actual work, torturing for information in addition to killing declared targets but she finds out about his get wife and son who has followed him  into the service  Behind the regime change machinations is an international company using its cash and power to place people in the security services and in government . At the end of the series Mark does a deal with the ambitious  would be female head of the CIA ,in which h appears to gain peace for himself, wives and children as she moves to thr CIA chief’s desk. However, she tells her global corporation employers that Mark has become a useful asset. Hence a second series next year.
The first two episodes of an impressive new series on BBC 1 the Bodyguard  stars a young man with issues following assignments in Afghanistan who has joined the Mets special protection squad and, on a train,  journey taking his two  children back to his estranged wife… not clear why the train journey he stops  the wife of a terrorist detonating. This brings him promotion to protect the hard line divorced Home Secretary who is listening more to MI5 that the Mets Anti-Terrorist  Our Friends in the North Gina McKee. The domestic situation intensified when he learns that his wife  has commenced an affairs with the individual staying overnight although we are yet to be introduced.
Then the situation becomes complicated after the Bodyguards witnesses the hard line approach of the Home Secretary who is accused by the Chief Whip of plotting to replace the Prime Minister and he attends a meeting of Veterans for  Peace when he meets someone from the Unit in Afghanistan who does not understand his willingness to protect Home Secretary  who is among those enthusiastic about British involvement in Afghanistan and  who are also seeking an extension of powers to keep under surveillance and monitor communications and social media. Attempts to assassinate the Home Secretary and blow up the school which our hero’s children attend are foiled. I became less enthusiastic when the Police commissioner want our hero to spy on rthe Home Sec and he contacts for them and eh embarks on a sexual relationship with the politician. More significant was today’ suggestion on social  media that Jeremy Corbyn and Sadiq Kahn had been the targets behind van attack outside a Mosque. This does not come as a surprise and it was good to see the additional security measure that the Durham Mines Gala this year after I warned appropriate interest about the situation last year.
There are echoes between  our hero in the Bodyguard who suffers Post Traumatic Stress from his Afghan experienced and the Terrorist Hostage taking  Danish  thriller Beneath the Surface shown in episodes in March. The head of the counter terror operation also suffers from PTS from being a hostage in Syria for a year. The interaction between politics and big business was the subject of the second Belgium 10 episode series Salamander also on BBC TV four in April and May. Earlier shown in February and March was the  second eight episode Swedish series Modus, billed a psychological thriller features a criminal psychologist and profiler with an autistic daughter who in the first series witnesses a contract killing. In the second the female president of the United States goes missing on an official visit to Sweden where she previously lived and has links. I was less impressed with the third series of Our Girl, the British drama about a female medic attached to an active unit working in crisis zones around the earth world although it had some important and emotional engaging storylines and individual moments. I was more impressed with the first part of the third series shown as four episodes focussed on Nepal after the earthquake than I was with the eight episodes  featuring two new tours in June and July.
Much of my TV watching from March to July focussed on Politics real with the divisions in the Tory Party over Brexit leading to resignation of David Davies and Boris Johnson from the Cabinet over the personal approach of the Prime Minister and her number 10 team while Dominic Greve, Anna Soubry, Sarah Wollaston and other attempted to push May and the party closer to accept a Customs Union and possibly a second referendum. They also used the significant support in the House of Lords and pro continuing membership supporters in rthe Labour and other Parties.  This was matched by the increasing open hostility and bias in the mainstream  media towards Corbyn’s leadership, especially when it became evident he was likely to strengthen his position on the Executive Committee and through Parliament back up by roadshows on democracy and policy making and targeted social media activity. I spent many hour monitoring debates in the House of Commons live, usually recording PMQ’s, similarly BBC, Sky, ITN and Channel four news at 7pm, reading the Guardian and Daily Mail only which are free, reviewing social  media information and comments and checking on What the Papers say on BBC and Sky misnomers as they are in fact what individual journalist need to say to reflect their biased interests. I also watched Newsnight selective and the dread Politics shows when Andrew Heil has control.
There has been a continuing sense horror over the antics of Donald Trump and his overseas lack of diplomacy and integrity especially re North Korea, Iran and Russia and his tendency to falsehood, then deny and blame  his enemies shows no abatement. His visit here had amusing aspects  as clearly H.M was clearly not amused. I watched rthe Wedding of Prince Harry and Megan  with great joy over  the calculated establishment attacking Wedding service, immediately noting that the tabloid press commenced to  sharpen their knives towards Megan. I was in London and in the Mall just before the impressed anniversary of the formation of the RAF   and was impressed by the fly past.
The two events which more than any others mark out the nature of British politics and rthe end for fundamental changes have been the horror of Grenfell and the failure of the system to prevent and then cope and the Windrush Scandal where the Home Secretary appears to have been required to take rthe Gall to protect the fragile position of the Prime Minister. The new Home Secretary sounds good and put on a brave show  at first of being his own man before Party and Civil Service pressure appear to be clipping his wings. Whereas Javid appears thriving his rival Chuka (Umunna) is denying plotting to lead a new centre breakaway Labour party.
The Latest series of Long Lost Family continues to offer great emotional nourishment in relation to my own search and struggle  recognition who my father was and the failure of the Bishops of Gibraltar and Malta to acknowledge my submission and follow up letter is open to a wide spectrum of interpretations.  Overall, Who do you Think you are, appears to be running out of personalities with great heritage stories but rhe biggest surprise was the episode on Culture Clubs’ Boy George and his connections to a leading  executed Irish rebel.
Sky continue not to be able to justify holding over the remaining episodes of the brilliant series Game of Thrones from this year to next. Mt radio listen is becoming non-existent other than dail doses of Classics FM or Smooth radio, sometimes both. Only now and again do a devote a Friday afternoon to the Film Review with Mayo  or Kermode and even to  the always entertaining Saturday morning Five Live do you have red or brown sauce on your sausage sandwich show. I did manage to listen back to back to the serial the Corrupted which touches on the interaction between London’s crime gangs, corrupt police and politicians and has Margaret Thatcher buddy with a major financially supporting criminal. In complete contrast I am presently listening to book at bedtime Jaws which I think is better than the film and takin nothing from the film of Peter Benchley’s book. In between there was an Icelandic saga featuring a  feminist who destiny has only commenced to unfold.
In terms of other events I was able to make a family visit in March after the Beast from the East prevented the original first and  London visit in between. The weather since has been glorious and after a recent dive to normal  it has got better today  but I write on abandoning a cricket visit  as soon as  Durham commenced to collapse all out for 125 and their opponents have made a good start so far.
The most important event for me even more important than being given the opportunity to see world anew is private and therefore not for public reference. In relation to the new vision I decided that I needed to do better with  the required drops and  general eye care  so on my last visit to  the Cineworld at Bolden, I called in at Asda bought the latest in cotton wool, small round pads and some baby skin wipes (not seeing any other antiseptic wipes for body use). I almost rubbed the recently done eye at one point but stopped myself doing it in time. Used an eye patch provided again over the two night and noticed that it takes a few seconds for the eyes to work when I wake and need the stronger of the reading glasses I bought for  very small print.
I will discuss if I should have an optician test and prescription lens arranged for September operation evaluation.  I will  get some  good sun glasses for driving.
The mentioned threat of another parking fine was only the latest in my forgetting my age and tendency to have memory freezes when faced with an emotional or unplanned or unexpected situation. I had been having problems using my Sky remote control and put off doing something about it until Fridays semi-final game with Sussex when having set to record the game for viewing our hoped for success. Just before setting it was the remote which froze so I quickly Cheech that one was in stock at the nearest Argos and paid on line for quick visit and collect. I had also failed to get to essential items on my visit to Morrisons made after the haircut and been too lazy to immediately return,
So , I decided to return to Morrisons before going on to the riverside, collect the remote from Argos and buy the two missed item on the way back. It was noticeably colder with the hint of a forecast rain shower so I put on a light pakamac with hood  but did not fasten as I walked through the  store towards the downward escalator and holding the printed information sheet with the  collect item number in one hand and the walking stick in other when  my attention was drawn by a couple to the fact that the down escalator had been closed,  again, for repair. What I should done is then button up the pakamac before leaving the store and going down the outside slop into Ocean Road and onward  to the Argos r of the   rod parallel to  the High Street immediately opposite the relocation of the B an M store. Instead the cold wind and spits of rain meant that I only attempted with great difficulty to fasten the pakamac, outside the Fitzpatrick public House and having done so could not find or immediately remember what I had done with the sheet with the collect number. I knew it had not been left at home and wondered if it had been left in the car, but did not feel this was so, and the only other possibility, or so it seemed is that I had let the paper slip when in the Morrisons store. It was only when I started on the upward escalator that I remembered and checked the pocket that I located the information sheet, but it was too late to get down and as stated the reason why this had happened was that the downward escalator was not working  so I had to go back to the car park entrance to the store an then back down the slop to the side  and pass the Kirkpatrick pub without stopping and then  having collected the remote take the escalator  back into the store to do the shopping before setting straight off for Chester le Street River.   This is not however the end of this story!
l managed to  get to the car park closest to the main entrance to the ground  before the gates opened but found there was a fair queue at the main gate. I noted one of the regulars always there to ensure an end seat in members balcony was at the ticket desk for as he told me later he had left the ticket at home in rushed  retain his place in what was expected to be a good crowd, an where  his ticket purchased was checked but he had failed to get  his end of aisle seat.  Someone aged of me in queue reserved his place. I managed to get a different end of row seat, the last available as had been the position the previous Friday when because of weather here was no play.
To begin there was a great atmosphere and the best crowd for an evening 20 20 even though the Membership had to pay £10  in advance for their ticket. A Family of two adults and children had to pay £40, children were admitted free irrespective of the number accompanying asnd there were many more children of all ages than before. Although it was early and knowing the rush there would be during short interval between innings I bought a fair sized cheeseburger with bacon for £5 (£2 with chips at McD’s) a good chat with immediate neighbours in the front row and those behind. Those behind were regulars and said they would be there to day which I planned before seeing who batted first, Durham when Durham were put into bat again and were all out for 125. So, I stay home on a nice day and write this.
Last Friday the weather cleared and although it got cold later, it became a very pleasant evening. The club and the ECB made the occasion a special one so in addition to the  hot sequential gas flame boxes  on the pitch side before the balcony which go off in rotation  for every four or six  hit  there were also firework attachments which went off as the game commenced. The game also got off to a great cricket start with Durham and Stokes hitting the bowlers all round scoring  over 60  in the first five overs and then Stokes was given out LBW and people who were watching at home on Sky started to phone to say he should not have been given out.   In fairness the two  usual opening batsmen and Collingwood were then quickly out. The young spin bowler who  replaced  Rashid for Sussex was as good as was their other spinner  and the runs stopped  down to four an over and they were  quickly out if they tried any big hits. The atmosphere dropped, and everyone knew we had not got enough runs by a margin. Hopes rose with a wicket in first over of the Susses innings and then soon after but after that it quickly became evident the game was  lost. I was not alone in making an early retreat and  when I arrived back I needed some hot soup.  It was then having unpacked I knew I had left the new Sky hand set in the car. I also remembered I had not stopped for petrol.
I decided to try out the little microwave saucepan with lid and guessed three minutes which proved hot enough and put the lid back on to take  back to living work room. The soup was good. I put on shoes again and wrapped up in a coat and made by way back to car. I found the new Remote but was not inclined to go for petrol, forgetting the issue until making my way to the Metro station carpark yesterday. Fortunately, the new one worked first time, so I stayed up till very late catching up TV  but  did not watch the Durham game  and playing  free patience games while I waited for the hosue to warm up a little. And switched the heating system on for the first time is a couple of months.  I thought I had got a cough before cold again so  had one of three little matured Scottish whiskies, a family present, kept for such a situation. I sipped slowly without adding water or ice. It did the trick as on waking if there had been making of a cold, it had been kept at bay, for now.




Sunday 5 August 2018

Life changing new perspective


Two weeks ago my world changed for the better as immediately after the first of two procedures on my eyes I was able not just  to see without the use of glasses for distance, including for driving, but to see in a way which I can best describe as high definition in vivid colours and helped by the light of a Mediterranean sun, not experienced since visits to Greece, Italy, Spain and Southern France. The treated eye quickly overcame the other which meant I could immediate drive although as, yet I do not trust the car to travel distance since its costly breakdown which took it off the road for two weeks.  The  positive aspect is that I used public transport and to walk distance from necessity.

It remains a struggle  learning to adjust to physical old age, but I remain inspired by the effort of the young people witnessed during the 2012 Paralympic games. Bouts of self discipline are not good enough and sustained effort remains a challenge.

I am also revising what I have written over what has become a week,  instead of a day, to consider another orchestrated assault on the Corbyn leadership of the Labour Party, although this is not to minimise the issue of racism in relation to Jewish people which  is sometime conflated with the political actions of the state of Israel. I will speak further on this and on the procedure to remove the debilitating cataracts.

I have need again to record my day. Cryptic references in a pocket diary do not provide triggers for good remembering later  and I no longer keep up the online daily events on Microsoft since the format was changed. I am doing  this in  three forms although for how long I can maintain the discipline required remains a good question.  This also applies to my daily diet and to move my weight down from below 17 stone to at least below 16 and half by the autumn annual diabetes check so that the blood sugar will also be down and not require medication.

The first form of record keeping is by hand as I attempt to write in such a way that I can read  back, and hopefully others may if anyone comes to do so if the material is not destroyed on my end of self-aware physical consciousness. Secondly, there will be the stream typed, printed and retained within the artwork volumes including that to be regarded as confidential with the parameters of the lifetimes of anyone mentioned, and thirdly an edition part of the Google blogs, and in this instance part of a blog about my most recent two visits to London and the rediscovery of the remarkable coast line here in South Shields and Whitburn  and on to Seaburn and Roker in Sunderland.

I begin the look back with the day visit to London on May 22nd.  I was confronted with the deterioration in my left eye when I attempted to read bus numbers on arrival outside of Kings Cross station on my way to the National Theatre for a revival of a musical play about the life in a Soho club during World War II,  or “The War”,  as it will remain known to me from my direct experience of the bombings, the  over 140 V1 and V2 rockets which exploded in the Croydon and its airport  area where we lived close by in Wallington.

Time has become intermingled with distant and recent past and the present,  as  I concentrate on my personal and public records of the months between going to Birmingham to successfully participate in a Home Office  arranged child care course leading to the Central Training Council in Child Care recognition as a trained office, and ending on my first day as child care and court officer for Oxfordshire Children’s Department over a full year from the autumn of 1963 to the autumn of 1964.  The book is about my origins and how I became an extremist activist according to the principles of Satyagraha and then in 1987 was invited to become an ad hoc Inspector of Social services by the Department of Health signing the Official Secrets Acts as the means of helping to establish the new Drug Advisory Service.  The focus is on the difference between coincidences and connections.

For this work  and which  must be document and record based  given the shortcomings of memories from over fifty years ago, I am going through all the paper records I have kept in a miscellany of  boxes or processed as part of the Artmanjosephgrech 101 project. This task in relation to those  on the second floor of my present home will completed later to day

This writing commenced at ten past ten  on Monday July 30, 2018 and it is now 11.20 on August 5th. On that first day I had already completed the defrosting of freezer and returned the remaining frozen items from the two most recently purchased cool bags. After a light lunch at midday the intention was to go to the nearby  Morrisons for a refill . I was up early at 7 completing just over 7 hours on the sleep apnoea breathing machine. This has become my daily target after five years of use although on a day to day basis the range is between five and nine hours with going up to bed more often around 1am. In preparation for the eye procedure I decided to change  the face mask as the straps of the full face mask crossed just below the eyes. Fortunately, there is new  half face mask which avoid fitting directly  into  the nose which used to become regularly blocked. This is more comfortable and seems more effective in directing  air into my lungs. Staff at the Newcastle could not have been more helpful. Understanding the new car parking arrangements at the Freeman’s was a problem and I begin to understand the three levels of traffic  flow being planned at Silverlink  from the Tyne Tunnel and which seems to be taking years.  Fortunately, the road works at Heworth have been completed and  after a recent visit to the Tyneside Film theatre I did a brief tour to see the new developments at Hebburn with  housing being on the former Reyrolles site and a major development underway at the Mountbatten centre.

I watched episode three of the Unforgotten the latest police drama serial on ITV a week ago in which the conspiracy between four men  pretend they were not involved in the murder of a teenager whose body was discovered when motorway road was being worked on in London where the four men had lived within half a mile in the Holland Park area of West London. I arranged to see the film Hotel Artemis at the Bolden Cineworld at 20.50 the only showing of the day something  which before rthe cataract removal I would not have been able to do because the bright lights of oncoming traffic  affected me greatly.  The film was a disappointment. I found it boring although it was good to see Jodi Foster in the leading role.

My day visit to London had been on Thursday 22 May 2018 travelling standard class  in the quiet coach B of the 8.25 from Newcastle arriving 11.39 at cost of £36 65 with an elders Travel Card, the price of first class ticket which would have included an English breakfast and drinks had I  consider making the trip some six months before. I left the car in the Metro station car park at South Shields paying the fee of £3 for the day, only to find when I eventually arrived back that because of the wind the ticket had reversed, and penalty ticked had been issued.  This was later cancelled on submission of the purchased ticket which had blown over as I closed the door. I had to pay the single fare of £3.40 to Newcastle because my Metro pass become valid from 9.30.

I travelled back on the 19.30 and decided against the provided seat in the crowded quiet coach and found an unbooked table for four in the end coach although I was only alone for a short while when three ladies in their finery which included the latest inexpensive fashion in head dress, one hesitates to call them hats, arrived from attending an afternoon tea party at Buckingham Palace and one sat on the aisle seal seat opposite with her two companions on at adjacent table until another seat became vacant and  she was able to join them. They departed at Durham City where there were  members of St John’s Ambulance service and where in the 1990’s I had undertaken an assessment for a grant on behalf of her National Lottery Charities Board. By coincidence yesterday morning as I was going through boxes to find documentation required for my book for publication of the events in 1963 and 1964 I came across one of the manuals provided by the  NLCB. At 11 I shall return to going through the boxes, reorganising the contents into new boxes according to subjects, deciding   which I will keep here  at the house for subsequent processing into the artwork project  and ready to be placed in a self-store. This  reminds that I need to prepare a brief letter to cover the contents of a posting, so  I will end the present writing.

The purpose of the day visit to London was to see a revival of play by Rodney Ackland-  Absolute Hell. Ackland had made his name with several West end productions of his own plays and adaptations of work  from Proust and, Walpole and to Somerset Maughan. As a screen writer he had been nominated for an Oscar for the script the 49th Parallel. His 1950’s-  work The Pink Room attempted to provide an entertaining but accurate picture of life in a Soho club of which several had become notorious because of what went on and who went there.  My interest in Soho was initially because I had become a regular visitor to traditional jazz clubs soon after I left school in 1955 and then over 1960 1961 had visited and worked casually at the Partisan Coffee House which was accommodated on the ground floor and basement of the building  which housed the New Left Book club, and which is now only known for the building next to Private Eye.  Last year I had made  a another day trip on a Saturday to see an exhibition of photographs and posters of the Partisan, having in the morning visited the  site of the ten  coffee bars, restaurants and club which by friend Ann Haldane was said to have visited  before  her continuing unsolved murder in Dean Street Soho in October 1963 despite being directly witnessed by some 20 people according to police testimony at the Inquest and who reported some 70 individuals were around her as she died and they arrived. She had died across the road from  notorious night club patronised by film stars, artists, political and social  leaders while a witness  provided evidence from another known for decades because of  gay debauchery, alcohol and substance abuse.

On the evening of August 1st, I watched Murder in Soho on the unsolved murder of the internationally famous British Boxer Freddie Mills, a murder which occurred in 1965  less than two years after that of Ann and therefore much of the context of the programme is the same in terms of the description Soho as  a battleground between different crime gangs and that  many of the police  who operated  were open to financial inducements to look the other way or present events in way acceptable to others and this included  the institutions of the state.  The 90 minute programme is excellent as  it went only as far as the available information, recognising that because of the  death of almost everyone involved at that time who could make a significant contribution it is unlikely the truth can be now established other than that he was murdered and did not commit suicide and that he was not involved in the murder of a number of prostitutes which appears to have become believed  because of a book written by a former criminal. However, the senior investigating officer stated that Mills was never a suspect nor was the vehicle he drove listed among the thousands that were known to have been in the Hammersmith area. There is Wikipedia article on the Hammersmith murders which lists the various suspects and the books that have been written. The programme did not deal with the allegations that have been made that Mills was bisexual and a sadist and this aspect conflicts with the memory of their father by his two daughters and step son.

It is known that Mills came from a poor background and showed talent as a prize fighter  before WW2 joining one of the touring boxing booths where professional fighters took on members of the public and fought other professionals. He became British Champion and continued to participate in professional fights as a serving member of the RAF regiment,  although participating in the freeing of Europe he did not box for  year before a professional fight in 1945 for the World championship in which he was ill equipped but captured the national imagination.  He then gained the world title against all expectation and became the first personality with a following beyond those interested in professional boxing.  He was then able to reinvent himself participating in television shows such as the Six Five Special with Pete Murray who appeared in the programme looking his present age.  Mills also appeared  as an actor in a dozen films including two of the Carry On series. The programme suggested that his bouts of depression could have been caused by brain damage from the fighting and/or by having to adjust to losing his celebrity status over time.

Mills also opened a Chinese restaurant before Soho Chinatown, as it is known to day, developed  and which he converted into a  night club patronised by criminals as well as personalities, getting into financial difficulties which has become the main reason for his murder. The programme reviewed the possibilities of a contract killing by the Krays, the Richardson’s, one of whom appeared in the programme, and the USA Mafia who  were attempting to move in  on London at that time, and this was suggested by one former associate on camera and during a meeting with the Mills son in law. Motives included the failure to pay protection and a threat to talk to Fleet street about what was going on if the club was not provide the finances necessary.

The programme also explained that Mills had married the divorced wife of another boxer who had a son, and that extraordinarily Mills, his new wife, her ex-husband and son had spent the official honeymoon in South Africa together. It was the son in law who found Mills in the back seat of his car at the back of the night Clun . His daughters who remember  their father with great affection said he had kissed them good night at bed time, saying he was looking forward to seeing them in the morning. Evidence  was produced from experts involved at the time and subsequently who explained that Mills had been shot in the eye with it open something which suggested murder and there was no previous example of someone taking their life shooting  themselves into an open eye. The evidence has all the hallmarks of either exceptional police incompetence aided by a coroner, or deliberate cover up. At least the children were brought some consolation by the belated  induction of their father into the British Boxing Hall of Fame although there is no physical Hall  in the UK as with the crime infested rest of Boxing there are competing world  Hall of Fame as there are World Titles. There are several parallels between the  unsolved murder of Mills and that of my former friend.

The original 1050’s play,  the Pink Room had some twenty characters in the style of a Chekhov drawing room, conversing about religion, politics and life, their hopes, ambitions and relationships. Unsurprisingly its realistic but bleak outlook was at odds with the post war optimism generated by the Labour Government despite the years of continuing austerity which included rationing and the ongoing black market  together with the London based Festival of Britian which had seen the South Bank of the Thames development commence.  The critics and the national media were not impressed by the preoccupations of  individualists with the time and money to pursue hedonistic self-interest and the work failed. Terence Rattigan lost £3500, worth over 100K today and is said never to have spoken to the author again

I am not surprised  the  work failed at a time before the so called kitchen sink drama became fashionable in some London theatres such as the Royal Court with the plays of Arnold Wesker. The Readers for the Royal Court  thought the play I had submitted of interest and asked to see what else I had created which at the time I had not. Arnold Wesker also became a Member of Russell’s Committee 100 and contributed to the group of ex-prisoners  group I chaired for the Prison Reform Society and which published  inside Story 100 ideas for Prison Reform which achieved some positives outcomes and a meeting with then Prison’s Minister the Home Office and a debate in the House of Lords which I attended on the floor of the House with Jane Buxton (Lady) and Margaret Turner who wrote Gate Fever which has had something of a revival in terms of books about prison conditions for women in Britain.

The National Theatre production was of its usual high standard and reflected the manners and morals of those who frequented Soho’s private clubs in the war time era. But, and it is a big But, this is not a great work and I had hoped for a higher level of social discourse.  In this  respect I must compare the writing that of the Happy Prince , the recent film with  limited screening written, directed and starring Rupert Everet in  the role of Oscar Wilde from his release from prison to his death in Paris. Which I experienced  on my weekend visit to London at rthe end of June. I cannot wait to buy the DVD and the film script if that becomes available. I thought the writing was better than any of Wilde’s individual plays and very funny. I saw the film  with a small  mixed band of others at a  Sunday lunch time showing  at the Cineworld West India Docks.

I arrived early having set off on what I had  hoped would prove a less  Mediterranean hot day experienced at Lords on the Saturday and with the intention of visiting the Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts. 

It had also been my  intention on arrival at East Croydon Station to take the first train to Victoria and then the Victoria Line to Green Park, but it was crushed standing only so instead I boarded the non-stop train to London Bridge and the Jubilee line back to Green Park. This provided the opportunity to look all-round the almost completed new London Bridge station which is now on three levels.  The Platforms are all  first floor level like most platforms at St  Pancras although there at three different station areas and access points at that station. At London Bridge there is a vast platform area with access down to the lowest level from the individual platforms or from the end of the platforms to the main concourse with retail outlets and  an exit on the west side by the Shard.  At the lower level is a long arcade of  retail  and food outlets still in development before reaching the Underground station. At St Pancras there are two entrances within the concourse to Underground because of the number of lines  and a separate stairway escalator lift entrance to the Crossrail Thames Link trains.  Despite the splendid Hotel façade to St Pancras, the euro tunnel and  domestic high speed trains in addition to the  Midlands Nottingham standard trains.  London Bridge  now has the feel of  one of the great modern stations  of the world although my knowledge is only from the television.

On arrival at Green Park station I joined the main volume of people who headed directly into Green park and alongside the park to  Buckingham Palace for the Changing of the Guard  provided by the RAF regimental band whose 100 years was to be celebrated the following weekend. I then managed to find a shaded seat in St James Park to eat a late breakfast sandwich and fruit thus abandoning the idea of going to the Summer Exhibition. I have known Green Park since 1959 where I spent a month attending a four week sales training course in Berkeley Square and which I headed on the list of successful participates. In rthe summer of 1964 when walking from the Norwich bus station to Norfolk County hall where I was on a three month work placement experience with the Children’s Department, I met the person who had finished second when he stepped into the street before me from a restaurant where he had lunched with a local agent having become the Training manager for the company  covering Southern Britain.

At Canary Wharf on Sunday July 20th I entered the shopping centre by  the Waitrose supermarket where I bought a bottle of Pepsi Max and then found a seat in the  concourse  to drink and gather my bearings before making my way to the Cineworld and  relaxing in a comfortable chair on the ground floor on my own and reading the Ghosts of Spain Giles Tremlett’s important  book on  why the majority of the population have drawn a line between themselves and the reality of the horrors of Franco’s Fascist tyranny. This contrasts with the openness of the German people about their past.

At the end of the film I found the quietest room in the Ledger Building Wetherspoons which  was full in its main area for the televised world cup game. I had a triple Chicken feast and Carlsberg for £12.50. I then intended to make my way back through the shopping centre and  Jubilee line to London bridge and East Croydon  but on reaching Canada Place found that the  Innings of England’s Women Team against India in the 20 20 the way competition with New Zealand was being shown on a  large screed the other side of the fountains.   Without the sound and unable to read the score I had to rely on others watching to establish the position and then spent a very enjoyable hour while children played in the fountains with parental approval and supervision until a security guard  decided to put their enjoyment to an end.

England after their usual slow start in the competition won the final game comfortably, unlike the final of 50 over an innings one day  World Cup final which I had experience at Lords last year which proved one the great exciting finals  ever seen at the Home of Cricket.

Because of  deteriorating eye sight, I have not been to see much cricket this season, but this changed with the acquisition of a pair of powerful but heavy binoculars and,  although later than usual, I had  managed  purchase seats in the Mound Stand under cover and on an aisle for the Lords one day final this year between Hampshire and Kent,  two southern teams after Nottingham, Surrey and Yorkshire had all missed out. I decided in advance to support the Kent Spitfires, having enjoyed visits to watch Durham at Canterbury and Maidstone, just as well as I was surrounded by  Kent supporters in substantial numbers. It was the first visit to Lords of the man and his male companion the next seats. They  had also travelled by bus from Victoria Station but were unaware of the Wetherspoons Willow Walk on the other side of the road from the bus stop. Last year it boasted as being one of  a handful of pubs that had exchanged the  unlimited filter  black coffee machine to one with options of white,  flat white,  black decaffeinated and Latte (I think). The breakfast coffee deal here is £2 more than that at the Wouldhave by Morrison’s in South Shields where they also now have one the new coffee machines.

Kent were considered the underdogs and early on it became evident why as the  bowling attack was unable to take a wicket until 136, the second at 193 and the third at 270 and three of the opening four batsmen scoring over 70 with Rossouw 125 and Northeast not out 75, steering the  closing overs to a total of 330 for 7. Kent were never in it after that and all out for 269 at the start of the 47th over. Although I was sitting in the shade, it was hot and a feature of Lords this year is the provision water taps built into the side of two stands in each side of the ground. I had to find a coffee cup having not brought a plastic bottle or drinking cup with me.

Sadly, this will be my only Visit to Lords this year because although Middlesex and Durham are in the second division together, they are only playing one game at the Riverside Chester le Street.  I timed my departure brilliantly at the 45th over arriving at the bus stop coinciding with a bus to Victoria station and then finding a  train to Brighton waiting with  a seat available before its departure  minutes available.

I have previously written of my journey to London on the Friday and back home on the Monday. On the Friday evening my usual haunt for meal, The Wetherspoon’s, George was full to bursting so I made my way to other Wetherspoon located in what used to be the Grants department store where  there was  only a limited  menu available (The Milan bar) and  enjoyed  burger, chips and a non-alcoholic drink.

My car was out of action for two weeks with a failure of the electrical control unit which occurred as I arrived England’s I day game against Australia at the Riverside and where this year members were  not only banished to the indoor  cricket centre where free instant coffee or tea was provided  but we could not purchase seats in the members balcony. I was joined at one of table by two lecturers at Durham University one of whom had cataracts removed replaced by reading lens fitted which meant he continued need glasses for distance including driving. Fearing the worst when I had tried to move the car around to face the right way for a quick departure, I watched the first 50 years, and then returned to the vehicle and contacted my emergency breakdown service and was then quickly contacted by a local service  who arrived within 20 minutes and hoped to get the vehicle started. Appreciating the problem was a more serious one I was taken with the vehicle to outside  the garage which had only recently serviced the vehicle a month before.

On Monday July 30th I continued with the sorting of papers, documents and records on the second floor work with a score of boxes some of which will be amalgamated if additional contents to make an individual box is not established. I have been through each box individually and then processed initially some new material which included  a number of conferences papers and reports which I will go through at some soon.   I prepared a salad for lunch,  then wash and shave etc before going out for the freezer restock. The post included a £7 voucher if £50 at  was spent at Tesco  which was useful as a credit card statement from Sainsbury Bank also arrived which included the £720 for the new central electronic unit which kept my car off the road for 2 weeks.

It was 5pm after a quick cup tea and a chocolate dessert treat from  the  monster shop expedition which also enabled a journey along the coast road from South Shields to Seaburn where there is a Morrisons petrol garage where I fill to  just below £30 to enable a card swipe before going the large Tesco where rhe sub total was £75, but I paid only £57/50 because of the £7 discount vouchers and other offers with  in effect a free bottle wine and side dish for two is free as part of the “10 fine dine deal.   I have already enjoyed 2 Indian curries with rice , onion bhaji and naan for £4. On return and after the dessert I enjoyed the prepared prawn salad  sitting out at the back before posting a letter and going to the local morrisons for a water melon, cherries, roast potatoes, potato wedges and a pack of frozen chicken breast (for £5.50) much better value and more convenient that the cook in a  bag chicken I had set to purchase for Sunday which I have as  a roast and then break up and create curries, pasta and stir fry’s.  Total expenditure was just over £100 for the day and set up with main meals for a month! I am enjoying the first of the chicken breast pieces later this evening with roast potatoes and mini corn on the cob.  On my visit to the Freeman’s before the cataract procedure I had visited the on the way Sainsbury for petrol and to return their recently delivered frozen vegetable packs which were being recalled by all the supermarkets because of a dangerous potential contamination.

I then did not feel like further writing so watched the local news on both ITN and BBC learning that there was  some flying in the Sunderland air show on the Saturday before the hailstorm  and a little on the Sunday although the only indication it was going on from the vantage of South Shields was a Sea King  rescue helicopter and the sound of a  jet plane. I had not left the house until mid-afternoon and the continuous light rain end with patch of blue along the coast. The grass looked fresh and damp but very green despite the drought, so I kept to the paths as descending the hill through North Marne Park. I could hear Atomic Kitten but noted the absence of  the usual number of cars parked along the length of the park. Crossing, Ocean Road which leads from the Metro and bus stations and into South Marine Park I noted the absence of motor vehicles usually tail to tail, and of walkers  to the sea front, and the park was almost deserted instead of the hundreds usually enjoying  the small steam train which circles the boating lake, who sit outside the café who picnicking, crown the two safe play areas  or occupy all the available provided seating. There appeared to be  two or three  couples outside the café,  but all the seat was vacant.

In Bents Park where the four free concerts are held each July there appeared to be under 5000 people compared the 20000 said to have crammed in the previous Sunday for the Fizz which includes three  original members of the European Song Contest winners Buck’s Fizz  plus the addition of Bobby McVeigh who were followed by Scouting for Girls. Moreover, I was able to find a seat by another elder  who I discovered was also an outpatient at the Sunderland Eye Infirmary. On Wednesday I discovered the tickets for a Bucks Fix show at Newcastle City Hall  in the 1980’s and must to see if  a programmer was purchased.

A slight rain occurred  so I decide to make my way to the covered  Walkway by the Amphitheatre, my original purpose, where the Bright Street Swing band were performing two sets between 3.30 and 5.30. I saw a former colleague who had become a Councillor and Mayor and was also a member of the same Labour Party ward, so we talked  about an event at the last Council meeting which attracted the attention of the Shield’s Gazette. I also gave a wave to the Council Leader who appeared  outside the  event control office. The numbers were low because the event is free.  People do not travel if the weather is poor and leave if they are not entertained. For rthe past two years or so it is possible guarantee a seat  close to the stage with the purchase of a £5 advance ticket. I would have like to have stayed for Heather Small but had not come prepared for continuing wet. I arrived as the  Swing band ended its first set so had a chat with a couple who were visiting from Durham City. I stayed for whole of the second set which included  favourites such as Stomping at the Savoy and a  more recent work Fat Cats, created out of anger at the Bankers.

Before the cataract removal and when the car was out of action I walked from the house as far as the Sand Dancer which I once visited at least once a week in the 1990’s for an evening meal around 5.30 and watched the cross North Sea ferry depart the mouth of the River Tyne from  the birth on the north bank on its way to a European Capital city, presently Amsterdam on a daily basis. The previous regular sailings to Bergen in Norway have been reduced to a special sailing at Christmas time. The big change on rthe river time is the establishment of  births for luxury  large cruise liners just across from where Ocean Road and the High Street reach the river by passenger ferry crossing to North Shields. People still come to view the arrival and departure of these giant sea going townships bring visitors to Metro Gateshead and Newcastle Shopping centres, the Newcastle nightlife and to see  the remains of Hadrian’s wall.

Following the cataract removal, I made the same journey  from my home through the parks and then the promenade walk continuing to the Water’s Edge which became Mango’s at the Water Edge and a major development providing a range of food, sport bar activities and a separate Fish and chip sales bar for those visiting this end of the mile long wide and dog free sands.  Alas this development is closed .

My usual walk is to  commence from North Marine Park where the open grass from the roadway where my home is located provides  an uninterrupted view out across the mouth of the River Tyne. Occasionally, I turn left and into the tree and hedge walkway passing the  safe children’s play area  going down the steep steps to Ocean Drive  where there is the Yacht Club, the Little Haven Hotel and the “Conversation” artwork by Juan Manoz, 22 sculptures each a quarter of a ton and then  along the sea wall promenade to the pier which is one mile in length and completed in 1895 before climbing the steps back to the grass bank or continuing to the Ocean Road end of  the Park and back. Less often I will continue at rhe high level to the River entry control centre and to one of  two pub restaurants remaining open and then back to where I live passing the  Arbela Roman Fort  which was the supply fort for Hadrian’s Wall on the north bank and where there are free tours during the summer on Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. On Sunday August 12th  enthusiasts can participate in Gladiator training for £39.

I have not walked the pier this year or had a meal at one of the two Italian food restaurants since the cost of a three course meal, soup or potato skins, pizza or pasta, ice cream or coffee was £3.95, and it is has now risen to £5.95.   Usually I turn right on the grass bank and descend through the various walkways before crossing the road  into South Marine Park or continuing down to the sea front and the Ocean Amusement Park  on the other side of the Best Western Sea Hotel alongside the  Westhovian Theatre and the still new to me indoor leisure centre with its tradition lane pool ,  the separate large leisure pool and separate  training pool, fitness centre,  sauna and jacuzzi.  When I first arrived  to work for South Tyneside in 1974 there was a plan to build such a centre and it was  another  forty years before the plan was realised!

On recent walks I have crossed the road early and walked into the park to where the pathway meets the  small steam train circuit around the boating lake with its small island  ducks and the diminished number of swans for nesting. Because of the good weather it is unusual to find a vacant seat  at weekends  but last Sunday  I appeared to be alone apart from a few enjoying afternoon tea in the distant café set back from the lake. The train had not been brought out for its two circuit rides for £1.50 a participant and no one was playing  in either safe play areas, one for  the younger children and the other for the older and adventurous. There is a similar indoor facility as part of the Dunes Centre which is located on coast sea side of the promenade. In addition to the play area there is the Sambucco, one of the Italian style restaurants previously mentioned, a separate restaurant and bar which also now serves Carvery meals on Sundays, indoor bowling, billiard table and arcade amusements. 

Five years ago, several millions of European Euros were spent transforming South Marine park back to its original Victorian splendour as  detailed maps  had been stored together with lists of all the plantings and their locations, designs for the bandstand and of the walking ways. The Park rise steeply towards the town centre and taking this route provide splendid views out to sea back across to North Maine and Across to North Bents park which is used for major events and where 20000 people can be accommodated. The adjacent caravanning and camping centre have also been transformed with large and luxury fixed lodges. The vast areas between the caravan site, Gypsies Green and the New Crown Hotel (now a Marston’s, and I must check to see if it is the same 2 for1 menu at rhe White post on the road from Doncaster  to Nottingham just outside Farnsfield been  divided  between the football pitches and for summer  overspill Parking. It has also been a couple of years since I walked through the Amusement Park to the first in the beachside roadways and where immediately behind the Amusement Park is the all year round football and net ball courts and the skate board adventure park. The Amusement Park is now  limited to one main entrance for safety and security reasons. The to sit in fish and chip restaurants, (the Blue Marlin is one) together with the restaurant along and separately from  the Sea Hotel offer fish and chips at just below £7 for eat out and which appears to have become standard although  more inexpensive that the fish and chip bars away from the  promenade area apart for Coleman’s in Ocean Road where Foreign Secretary and one time local Member of Parliament, David Miliband entertained a Tony Blair cabinet. This national prize winning restaurant is usually packed despite  the greater cost as is its separate take out centre. Even, more upmarket is the sophisticated Colemans Seafood restaurant now on the foreshore at Gypsy Green. There are very mixed views expressed about the food and staff at the Sand Dancer these days, but it is very popular with the younger  clientele as  a place to sit outside with friends and drink  and for one of the twice a week live music session.  I have never visited the Rattler which has a railway carriage, built on bar and function room together with ownership of the car park, and has always been dog friendly. The special offer and  displayed menu have disappeared but there is a notice  that the unlimited vegetables carvery has also arrived here and last Sunday there was the sound of live music from the function  room as I passed early evening. Similarly, the special offers and outside displayed menu has gone from the new Sundial which is now part of  the Dunes undertaking. This used to be a well patronised family special offer restaurant but also appears to be aiming more up market and twenties something clientele. There was a good local band playing outside  for an hour  on a   Sunday evening after the end of the Services support day and where this year I missed the honour parade of bikers and scooter groups. It is important to underline the need for the sea front businesses to make enough during the summer weekends and school holiday to survive over the Winter. 

Despite the London pressure to destroy the local Council and its services by the Tory government, everything has been done to attract visitors by the provision all year round facilities, upgrading the parks but most of all by developing and maintaining the beach since it was able to buy out the contract to remove sand which the dreadful Progressive Council sold off during their brief years in control before I arrived with the reorganisation of local government. Much of the funds have come from the European Community Social Fund and another grant was obtained recently for  a makeover of North Marine Park like that at South Marine and  where added has been some artwork of interest and value as there is  now along the promenade also on the riverside which I shall leave to another day.

It merits underling that the beach is one of the best in the UK always with parking available across the coast road  or beach side most weekdays

The  weather  has been mixed, yesterday it was  very hot  but with a good breeze at Chester le Street Riverside for the vital 2020 cricket game between Durham and Northants who they  crushed after  losing the toss and made to bat first with a total of 170 demolishing  the visitors because of having Iran Tahir rthe short game specialist originally from Pakistan but now for South Arica and where he finished  the evening 4 wickets for 14 runs. This take Durham to the top of rthe 20 20 Northern division with a straight winning run of 5 games which they may not be able to keep up tonight at Worcester.    Last Saturday with Ben Stokes in the team they had an excellent win against Nottinghamshire just before a great hail thunder and lightning storm as I drove hone missing out the final balls for the 7 wicket win. The unexpected wins were a bonus as I watched cricket for the first without glasses in seventy years. Alas Durham lost a very close game at Worcester  less than 24 hours later, but Ben’s four wickets helped achieve an unexpected win again India in the first Test at Edgbaston which is close to where I spend an academic year at Birmingham University 1963/1964. As I never  tire of reminding a met schoolboy Ben with his father when he was brought to Durham from Cumbria where his Australian father worked as a Rugby coach, to participate in a Durham Summer school. We had a conversation about the sacrifices parents make to support  the ambitions and dreams of their children!

The cricket highlight of the week was the rare 20 20 game between Surrey and Middlesex at the Oval when there was  an unbelievable display of power batting by individuals from  both teams. The Irish batsman for Middlesex made 109 from 58 balls to set Surrey a target of 222.  The Australian Aron Finch who opened for Middlesex hit 8 sixes and 11 fours for his 117 not out from 52 balls and was supported by Roy who scored 84 from 37 balls with 7 sixes and 7 fours.  Surrey reached the required total in 16 overs and with the loss of only 1 wicket.

I first noticed a change in vision quality on a family visit to the Midlands a year ago because of a sun shining bright I had lowered visor and noticed this brought a  clearer definition. I also seemed to be more affected by the lights of oncoming vehicles at night. In the autumn I attended a comprehensive Diabetes review and mentioned the change so that an addition photo was taken of each and  the formal result passed to the GP indicated that Cataracts had developed in both eyes which required reporting to driving licences where the key issue was the ability to read vehicle number plates. I therefore made an appointment with an optician and  was provided with a new pair of distance glasses. My existing reading glasses remain good although the nature of sight meant that I could read without the need for glasses if the page was held closely.  I advised driving licences and received written permission to continue driving. I also made an appointment with my newly assigned general practitioner from the large practice which has taken over the single practice of the GP to whom I was assigned when moving to live in South Shields. Based on what I disclosed he said that further deterioration was within a wide band of six months to six years. It was not until March on another family  visit to the Midlands that I appreciated the extent of deterioration in my left eye.

By then I had come to appreciate that the partners in the new practice together with the individual GPs employed, published the areas of expertise and interest, including one partner who combined Diabetes with Ophthalmology, so I enquired, and I was told that I could make an appointment, and took the first date available which was early one morning. He immediate referred me to see a consultant from the internationally recognised  Eye Hospital at Sunderland and I was invited to a full assessment at an outpatient clinic held in South Shields.  Procedure in the left eye was recommended and because of the resultant difference between the two eyes, the second eye should be treated a month later. I was then advised of  the two dates in July and August.

I was repeatedly reassured about the success and impact of the procedure, but the large print information booklet provided listed the potential complications and their occurrence. Since childhood I have tried to avoid hospital based treatment having persuaded by care mother to bring home from a hospital while waiting for  my adenoids and tonsils to be removed. When many decades later my care mother was admitted to hospital and died three weeks later in circumstances which led to three years of going through the then separate complaints machinery, my anxiety returned although this then contrasted to care my birth mother received during the last weeks of her long life at 100 years.  Despite the reassurances and that the procedure would take 30 minutes at the maximum and that the odds for  complications were comparatively small, I remained anxious until the day before when a conversation with a woman on the check out at Morrison was most reassuring. 

I also appreciated the support given by being driven to the Infirmary arriving in good time for the schedule 2pm appointment and it was not long after that I was called and sat in a chair which later was  lowered so I could lay flat for the procedure.  My existing glasses were measured to establish the  replacement lens required and the eyes numbed. The process clearly explained, and I found  myself surprisingly relaxed.   Afterwards my companion was invited to join the arrangements for discharge and self-administer after care. I  have never been good at remembering oral delivered information and stopped attending lectures at one point unless there was opportunity  to make notes at a pace which meant I could read back what I had written  After collecting the  two kinds of eye drops, one for three days and the other three times a day for a month, from thr pharmacy at hospital I went out into bright sun light and was emotionally affected by the  sharpness  of the vision and the brightness of coloured. Although the  right eye has remained at level first problem detected a year ago if I place one hand over the treated eye the colours are significantly less bright in addition to distance  vision. I did not experience after paid or headaches, so the pain killers purchased proved  unnecessary.

Getting the drops in the eye has been difficult because I now need  close work  lens for the  treated eye which obviously cannot be used when the drops are needed. This afternoon when I went to collect the prescription for the ongoing treatment I discovered there had been a mix up in communication but fortunately a doctor was in attendance and the receptionist arranged for the prescription to be authorised and communicated to the adjacent  pharmacy so I was able to collect so that if the original supply runs out over the weekend, the replacement  is ready.  I am looking forward to the second procedure in three weeks.

I have left until the end, progressing from important and everyday personal experience to an issue which affects everyone in the UK, the power of the state, the establishment institutions, our future position in the world, our political  stability, economic development, and the nature of democracy individual freedoms, particularly what can be said in a public way including interactive discourse. When a consensus among those with existing power is threatened, the natural tendency is to take measure to defend and this involves more control and less freedom although in the more sophisticated and developed states the swing can be violently to the right or the left.

The UK is a special instance.  It is only since the General Election of 1945 and the Atlee Labour Government, when in decade of war brought austerity the nation was prepared collectively to accept several social changing development in economic management, education and social welfare and care.  This was achieved without altering the basic structure of state with its heredity  head of state who combines the role with head of the Protestant churches  with the English Archbishop of Canterbury  dominant and the Anglican Bishop also influential beyond all other religion in the Upper House of Lords. In post WW2 Britain several issues have threatened the foundations of the British way of doing things. The first was the rebellion of Catholics in Northern Ireland  against the tyranny of some Protestant Unionist who openly boasted  of using whatever government money came their way to retain power and keep Catholics out any form of meaningful power. The combined efforts of a USA president and a Catholic leaning Tony Blair brought about and end to the blood shedding on the streets of  the offshore island “province” and on the mainland island, but the tribalism involved is deep rooted with the current dominant protestant political party keeping the minority conservative party in power.

 The decision to devolve power to the National Parliament of Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales had led to significantly different outcomes with that in Northern Ireland dependent on the two leaders from opposite religious divides striking a working relationships  which developed into friendship and mutual respect. The ability to strike a new balance has proved impossible so far and the prospects are not good. The Protestants fear a Jeremy Corbyn premiership. 

In Scotland the Nationalists prospered because of a conservative tribalistic power holding Labour party and the failure of the independence referendum led to a huge power balancing in the British house of Commons in 2015 with 60 members reduced in 2017 because of  the effective  leadership from the Tories in Scotland and the re-emergence of the Corbyn left. The next General Election should see a reduction in  Tory representation and an increase in that of Labour.   In Wales the position  remains different with a centrist Labour leadership in control of the Welsh Assembly and strong anti-Corbyn Members of the House of Commons with Stephen Kinnock, the son of  the former Labour leader and the curious, in the sense of odd leadership contender against Corbyn when the majority of Labour MPs, in the House of Commons passed a vote of no confidence and forced a leadership election. 

Corbyn’s astonishing  and unexpected personal performance in the 2017 General Election created a situation which the hard core of opponents within the PLP cannot accept and are now mounting guerrilla offensive through fear they will deselected in the event  another General Election as the power balance shifts away from the PLP back to the Trade Unions and the constituency parties with the enlarged membership.

Underlying all these issues remains the power imbalance between men and women and where there has been slow change despite a female  head of state. Mrs Thatcher was also a traditionalist and anti-feminists at core. There was progress during the Blair years despite the main offices of state being held by men, but because of Blair centrist management of  new PLP members there was no emergence of a socialist leaning  woman Member, Mrs May has also successfully alienated former  and current women member of her cabinet on both wings of the Brexit and Remain wings of the party.

The emergence of Jeremey Corbyn appears to have been  a mistake following the failure of Ed Miliband at the 2015 General election on the left defeating his centrist brother for the Party leadership who opted to create a new  life in the USA but be suspect with one eye on a return should the opportunity arise.  David was an excellent Member of Parliament for South Shields and when he telephoned for my support in the 2010 leadership election I commented that it would be excellent for the town and region if he became successful, following on for Tony Blair at Sedgefield. This was not about policies but the politics of power and directing resources to a region and local community which has always suffered being  at one extremity of England, and which became worse  with Scottish devolution and the need to prevent the break up of the union, the national interest and the greater good combined. On a different basis I welcome his  work to minimise the damage of Brexit and unlike some political colleagues I do not get upset because  earlier this  year he shared a platform with the  Liberal Democrats leaders Nick Clegg and Vince Cable and Tories such as Niki Morgan and Sir John Major. On September 28 he will be in conversation with Sir John Major at Harton Academy sponsored  by the Port of Tune Authority, I would have applied for seat if I was not already going to the Civil Hall in Newcastle for a celebration of Our Finest Hour.

I also understand and share  his sympathy for the position of Israel  not just because of what happened to  those of Jewish beliefs  under Fascism during the last century but because of the history of their persecution. Only recently when having my DNA checked for confirmation of Ancestral origins  was I surprised to find a small percentage of Ashkenazi  Jewishness and during the two years. But as  the statement from Jewish groups from  around world the world explains in today’s Independent newspaper (August 5th) explains opposition to  all those who criticise Jews for being Jews is not the same as criticising a Government of the state of Israel for its policies and behaviour towards a state of Palestine where the majority of  present members of the Hosue of Commons voted for the British government to recognise. The present government of Israel  knowing that Jeremy Corbyn will recognise Palestine as an independent state appears to have mounted a campaign to prevent this happening, even if it means interfering in the internal political business of British  democracy,  albeit by firing up those within the Parliamentary Labour Party opposed to Mr Corbyn and his policies and from self-interest.  Because the future of the Tory Party, the Lib Dems in England and the Scottish nationalists together with the Protestant hard liners in Northern Ireland  is also threatened by Corbyn in the next general election,  a perfect storm of pressure is being created during the Parliamentary recess with several objectives all of which are against the immediate and longer  best interests of the majority of the British people. Their  most pressing concern is that with the likelihood that the ballot for nine members elected by the membership to represent them on the National Executive this will not only reinforce Jeremy’s position as leader but will herald action to make the Parliamentary Labour Party  also reflect the interests of the Membership as it has become.

The most significant issue directly affecting the future welfare of everyone in the UK is to leave the political structure of the European Economic Community about which the majority of the eligible voting population agreed but retain membership of the Common market and Customs union. This  should split the right wing of Tory party to join up with their  obnoxious counterparts in the UK and Europe. Jeremy and the Leadership also need to work tirelessly to prevent those on left who put ideology before the interests of  people now from gaining dominating power within any government. The conditions are good for a substantial shift in the power structure as it was in 1945 when against expectation Atlee and a socialist leaning government came to power against all expectations and in economic conditions far worse than Britains position to day. In this respect the approach of the Corbyn Shadow government has been sound as is understandable the position of those who want to retain the status quo and to achieve this by a second general vote if it cannot be achieved within parliament.

The gloves have come off and to mix metaphors, people are beginning to show their true colours, Predicting the outcome would be foolish. I do not rule out the Prime Minister succeeding in getting the rest of Europe to agree the substance of the Chequers plan from fear the alternative will be worse and then find it is unacceptable for  very different reasons to a majority in the Commons and an overwhelming majority in the Hosue of Lords. What happens then is the issue with calls for a National Government, a new centre Party, a General election, possibly with mandatory reselection of Labour Members of Parliament beforehand, with a significant number of present PLP members standing as independents or in some form of loose alliance.

Now to get on with research and record keeping but with one eye also on the European competitions being held in Scotland and with the Athletics during the week at Berlin.