Is it PotG?
Thrifty non-licker
We'd been out boogeying in town earlier in the evening but had long since grabbed the kebab and gone home to bed.
Several months later, the Queen was due to stay at the Grand Hotel in Eastbourne. Again dad searched it but this time, the dog found a "device" in a toilet cistern....which turned out to be a fake, possibly planted by the press as a "test"
And her Uncle Holidayed with AdolfHe comes from (London)Derry, where family values are still very divided. He chose to play for Ireland rather than Northern Ireland, so obviously has very strong beliefs.
After all, our late Queen shook hands with McGuinness in 2012.
Nowadays they would need to wait three weeks for it to be shipped from chinaMy dad worked for a company that supplied forensic coveralls, gloves, dust masks etc to, among others, Sussex police.
I remember being woken up by the sound of the phone in our hallway ringing and shortly afterwards hearing my dad drive away from the house.
I didn’t know at the time but it was about 4:30am and the call was the police HQ at Lewes, asking my dad to go and open up the warehouse because they were sending a fleet of police vans to collect loads of PPE-type stuff.
I didn’t say I agreed with it, just his reasons for believing it.And her Uncle Holidayed with Adolf
Re the tweet, and I know senior figures within the club felt the same, it was ill advised, think it by all means, but when you play for the team in the City where people died, maybe not?
Then again at 60 I’m not one of the millennials
Certain explosives (jelignite for example (scuse spelling) smells of almonds and used to be used to train the dogs. Things have probably changed a lot in the last 40 years though.That sounds weird. I test would involve placing a device that smelled of explosives so I'm not sure how the press would do that. Hiding a device that just looked like a bomb wouldn't be found by a dog.
I'm not aware the club did anything. There is nothing in the programme for Barnsley. The Barnsley game was when the new North Stand roof opened. (I was at the game but have no recollection if there was anything related to the bombing).Does anyone remember what the club did to mark the event? We were away to Oxford the next day, but at home to Barnsley the following week?
Best man at my wedding and good mate was Simon Webb, also a Fireman, based IIRC at *Preston Circus* and on watch that night.Fred Bishop, the fireman famous for Norman Tebbit uttering the words ‘get off my bloody foot Fred’, lived round the corner from me in Arlington Crescent, Coldean.
I don’t think that was the point of it. After 40 years there isn’t much new stuff to tell. What it did for me was to remind me of events, characters and re enforce my views.Started my first proper job in Black Lion Street on the Monday, this happened on the Friday. All I really remember was I wandered along the seafront at lunchtime, couldn't get very close obviously, but could see the huge hole in the hotel.
I thought the documentary was a bit poor really. Didn't tell us anything we didn't already know.
That’s because it was first broadcast 20 years ago.I thought the documentary was a bit poor really. Didn't tell us anything we didn't already know.
A man of action, willing to put the good of the country above the law*.Pretty sure I'd never heard of Airey Neave before this documentary. He was the Tory MP killed by the car bomb just before the 1979 election. I'm currently reading D-Day by Antony Beevor and he only got a mention today in the chapter about the liberation of Paris. Bizarre. Apparently he was also the first British POW to escape from Colditz.
I don't think so. The copyright at the end was 2024.That’s because it was first broadcast 20 years ago.
He’d been a national hero - taken out by a coward.Pretty sure I'd never heard of Airey Neave before this documentary. He was the Tory MP killed by the car bomb just before the 1979 election. I'm currently reading D-Day by Antony Beevor and he only got a mention today in the chapter about the liberation of Paris. Bizarre. Apparently he was also the first British POW to escape from Colditz.