Always quick to get the boot in.
And quick to apologise when I get it wrong.
Always quick to get the boot in.
I remember one game in the 70s where we were not allowed under the Sackville Road railway bridge and everyone was funneled over the station bridge.There was a bomb scare in the 70's whilst at the Goldstone at a long-forgotten match. My dad told me we would have to walk a different way back to the car. I was only around ten, it must have been around 1977 and I was sat in the West just a few rows along from where young Tony Bloom sat with his Uncle. Can't remember the match though I remember being very scared.
I am almost certain that was the occasion I'm remembering.I remember one game in the 70s where we were not allowed under the Sackville Road railway bridge and everyone was funneled over the station bridge.
Sure that was a bomb scare.
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Here we rarely do bomb scares. We do a lot of bombs though. 287 crimes involving explosives just in 2019 makes us world leaders (outside of war zones) in that department I think.
Almost a thing of the past now?
Two from yesteryear stick in my mind.
The first was in the spring of 1981 when the British Davis Cup Tennis Squad were preparing for a tie at the Brighton Centre with a training camp at Worthing Leisure Centre (?)
With team skipper Buster Mottram being a fully paid up member of the National Front it was never going to go down well with a large Young Socialist membership at the nearby Worthing VI Form College.
A now sadly departed NSC’er, then a hotheaded left wing 17 year old student took it on himself to ring up and utter those immortal words “The Nazi C***’ Mottram’s got 30 mins to get out”.
Needless to say the place was evacuated, and the Worthing Herald got a front page lead they hadn’t expected.
The other was the inaugural Gulls Dinner at Chapmans on a Monday evening in January 1989, fresh from the plane crash front cover on the Saturday.
They were just putting the prawn cocktails out when someone phoned the pub and told them we had 30 mins to get out (must have been the norm in the 1980s)
Had we offended the IRA in the previous issues?
Obviously not, because in a drunken telephone rant years later the late Greg Stanley revealed it was him on the phone that night and not Gerry Adams.
No doubt some on here will view this thread as either pointless or offensive but I have to say writing it has been therapeutic.
In the very helpful latest Mental Help thread on NSC I’ve made no secret of the fact Ive recently found myself in a dark place, thinking about and recounting these two perhaps bizarre events has brought back a lot of really happy memories, and I find myself even smiling typing this.
My 1981 17 year old student friend, was at Chapmans that night, as was Roy Chuter, Stuart Ashby, Paul Welch, John Vinicombe and Tony Millard. Now all sadly gone but never forgotten.
As stated in the other thread if you are struggling this Christmas please don’t be afraid to ask for help, by the same token all of us please look at our contacts lists on our phones and think ‘who would love a call?’ and then make it, and make more than one.
Take care
Things have moved on,you don't get bomb scares any more just people blowing themselves and
others up, how times have changed for the worse
Regards
DF
Back in the 70s I was visiting a pal in London. We were in a big shop in Oxford Street (can't remember which) and I was trying on a beautiful leather jacket. No way could I have afforded it (I think it cost the equivalent of about three month's rent!) but boy, did it fit beautifully!
Then the alarms went off, and we were all being hustled towards the doors. So what did muggins do? Yes, you've guessed - instead of keep walking with the crowd, I took the bloody thing off and hung it back on the peg before exiting ...............
Back in the 1970s there was a bomb scare on New Year’s Eve at the Top Rank Suite in West Street. Everyone in side, around 2,000 people, were evacuated. When the “all clear” was given around 3,000 people went back in as there was no way the door men could verify tickets.
I remember too that there was also a bomb scare at one of Terry Garigan’s last shows at the Dome. Probably not the IRA but more likely anyone from thousands of offended Sussex residents from Whitehawk, Worthing, Hove, Burgess Hill……….