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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 21
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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 21

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The Guardiani
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London, Greater London, England
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21
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THE GUARDIAN Saturday September 7 1991 ARTS, PERSONAL 21 Michael BilBington has a few words to say on the matter of that new show just opened at the Shaftesbury Be there or be encrusted? stars Hi lookdowio. Hugh Hebert while Wilder pretends to abandon scenery and props, he still carefully employs them. But my hunch is the show's best feature is that big, bare stage. Kinda moving to see figures etched in space. Cheap too.

Yankee dandy name of Robert Allan Ackerman, who's no slouch, has directed this cracker-barrel show. Picked up some pretty fine mimes. That Miss Jemma Redgrave is mighty, affecting as Emily when she sits on a ladder in the moonlight: guess she might climb a few ladders of her own before long. Clean-cut youflg sprig called Robert Sean Leonard plays her partner: reckon as how he could cut the nig in them new-fangled moving pic-tures. But' what tickles me is all-' those mummers called John: Rowe, Normington, Rogan.

The Good Book tells us there was once a man sent from God called John; from the casting-agency it would seem. But it's that bie Alda fella the shire. Shows us a coupletf families living cheek by jowl. Young George Gibbs falls for Ins purely neighbour, Emily Webb. They get hitched.

passes on. Then comes back to Earth for a day but hot-foots it back to the cemetery asking why us humans never realise life while we live it Guess there ain't no answer to that One thing's for sure. That Wilder ain't no Bert Russell. One moment he's telling us life is plain ordinary: preacher-feller sums up human cycle of birth-marriage-death and says "Once in a thousand times it's interesting." But little Emily later waxes poetical about the beauty of human existence. Don't quite know which to believe.

Also reckon there's something a bit swollen-headed about Mr Wilder. The Stage Manager guy offers to bury the play "so people a thousand years from how will know a few simple facts about us." Don't wanna sound like one of them carpin' critics, but reckon they might find out a helluva lot more from Huck Finn. Still, that Mr Wilder has some jim-dandy notions about staging a play. Keeps reminding us we are in a the-ater: But his reputation is made more by the way he is (or was the programme has been taken off by the new liberal regime in the city) allowed to follow police to the scene of crimes and stick his microphone under the nose of bleeding bodies, shaking hostages or confessing murderers. His scorching criticism of officialdom and ferocious pursuit of hot stories like murder give him the aura of a Hero of Glasnost, First Class.

But there he is-after a prison siege in which hos tages were taken and allegedly tor- hired, and militia have shot the two prisoners. Nevzorov is there before the doctor, asking the semi-conscious man what he's got in his stomach. Answer: a bullet from the Black Berets. His word for the prisoners is translated as his praise for the militiamen is unstinted None of British television's "according to police or reluctance to accept any other uncorroborated evidence on a blood-stained incident In another programme (from January tins year), he reports that the regional party committee was setting up a faction against the Democrats. "But there are no grounds for joy.

Politicians' don't care about order or the people. They just want to dance on their opponents corpses." It's the word 'joy" in this context that makes you pause before applause. In this mode, Nevzorov seems less like a ha ORNIN'. Name's Billington. Just moseyed down to that there Shaftesbury The-ater for first night of Our Town.

Written back in 1938 by American fella called Thornton Wilder. Regular hullabaloo down at the-ater. Out in the Avenue God's bright stars were doin' their old criss-cross in the skies. Down in the lobbies some of his lesser stars were also criss-crossin' for the sake of the cameras. Heck of a first-night hubbub in the stalls too.

Fella name of David Land bustles up to me and so help me says "Gets more like a Jewish wedding every day." Best line of the night Anyway, you good folks want to hear about Mr Wilder's little drama. That's the one where the Stage Manager strolls on and offers a few homespun thoughts about birth, life, love and death. Fella from Stateside, Mr Alan Alda, plays this. Nice guy. Though, dang me, kept won-derin' why he pulled on his pipe all evening without ever smo-kin' it Reckon also as how some of his notions sound a mite bid-fashioned.

Says at one point "Almost everybody in the world gets married." If you ask me, not all the couples in the stalls quite went along with that Not a lot happens in Our Town. Guess that's kinda the point. Mr Wilder says we're in Graver's Corners, New Hamp- Old Red Lion Rosalind Carrie 16 Words For Water EZRA POUND'S anti-American broadcasts during the second world war cost him 12 years in a mental asylum, and this first play from Billy Marshall-Stoneking is set in his private room, immediately prior to his release. Pound believes he is under perpetual scrutiny through a one-way mirror, and we become his invisible spectators, peering at him bent over his typewriter between', white-tiled Walls; reams of upfijtfis il Obituary: Henri de Mi OU do not think of Jools Holland as the ET of television but his pro gramme The Happening (C4) is extra-terrestrial for sure. It orig inally came oeamed from tne outer space into which BSB has disappeared to dock in the maw of Sky.

On the first night of BSB's belated and lugubrious launch, I sat virtually alone in the echoing atrium of its ludi- crously pretentious and palatial HQthinking that if anything much survived, it might just include this pastiche After an, Houana reputation was made on Channel 4's The Tube, a fame not entirely dependent on his reputed off-the-cuff on-air trailer for that show "Be there, or be an ungroovy fucker." But aside from that in format if nothing else, it is music hall for the Nineties, a repackaged version of The. Good Old Days whose chairman over many years was Leonard Sachs, with his fantastic feats, of ver- nacular verbosity, which Hol land mercifully does not ape. The Good Old Days came from the crusted City Variety -Theatre in Leeds, The Happening comes from the equally crusted Astoria in Charing! Cross Road: It always seemed perverse to bounce this cheerful spit and sawdust ambiance to us via satellite. And now nere it is back on earth. Where we are still, teleyisual- ly, up to our frozen wastes in the cruel empire.

One of the oddities of this week's Leningrad season on BBC2 has been past examples of Alexander Nevzorov and his nightly news programme 600 Seconds. It is 10 minutes of tabloid television journalism. Nevzorov appears denim snirt and blade learner jacket The first programme snown tms weeK Began witn him donning a matching black leather glove to wave before the camera a grotesquely mutant chicken; other specimens had started a scare about radioactive poultry. He went on to a story about machinists on the Ruchi state farm who had been ordered to tend cattle, and then outrageous Dressganged to the ceyeals. Thbse in the fields, not ytiboipJ than Thornton Wilder's play? PHOTOGRAPH: DOUGLAS JEFFERY loed St Petersburg crusader for truth, more like the Sun rising in glory oyer the Neva Stul.

Hearts And Minds in the same season brought one superb documentary by the Leningrad director Yun snev- chuk, filmed in a third-class railway carriage on a night journey. It was a marvel of un-showy technique linking brief tableaux, rich in light and deep shadow, with snatches of con-, versation that have been disconnected from the images perhaps to preserve anonymity in the earlier days of glasnost Simple statements that together present a powerful sense of the sad discontents of the people. These anonymous Russians come across as a people riot specially conscious of being repressed politically, out weary of being downtrodden and de- prived of human growth. Each statement individually is no more than a private moan, a momentary beef, Collectively -tWare the cry of a natitpz2 eeeeeeeeee) Around Britain Report for the 24 hours ended 6 pm yesterday Sun- Temp shine Rain 'C Weather Yestewtoy1-weather Around tho world Explorer of the though I guess them good honest souls as paid up to 19 smackeroos for a ticket knew that already. Old American cuss called Na than once pointed but that etry pegged along two clothes lines above his head.

Marshall-Stoneking is himself a poet, and clearly he is more comfortable with Words and thought than with the psychology of dramatic confrontation. His play is essentially a provocative exposition of Pound's intellectual and philosophical stance, delivered via encounters with a traditional Freudian psychiatrist and an adoring young student Conflict there is, but it is the conflict of ideas not individuals: the psychiatrist's conformity, the student's blind optimism, the poet's dark vision of a civilisation in collapse. Madeleine Wynn directs and, despite the weakness of the two female characters, she has created a convincing and stifliiiE world in which poetry antf moaejA aeagnions oi m- Lubac France e'est Petain, et Petain e'est la France." The Jesuits teased the cardinal by remarking in public, "today Gerlier e'est Lyon, et Lyons e'est Gerlier." For they were with the Resistance, working for the clandestine paper Temoignage Chretien; and the treatment of the Jews of Lyons by Klaus Barbie opened the eyes of Gerlier Fourviere, where the Jesuit theologate was, hosted many Jews who were put into soutanes and taught to make the sign of the cross. De Lubac once told me how Emmanuel Mourner, founder and editor of Esprit, came to say farewell when the Gestapo forced him to leave Lyons. The four hours tiefore his train left Perrache he spent in the library calmly working at his Treatise on Character.

"Not bad with de Lubac: reluctant cardinal folks will come to see. Don't want to be a niggling old sour-puss, but! feel he's a sight more interestin' than Mr Wilder's show, which looks down on small-town folk from a great height Some American joker says he was once told that Wilder wrote with one hand tied behind his back. Made him wonder if the hand behind his back was bis writing hand. My sentiments too. Have a nice day.

nacy are disturbingly Tom Georgeson as Pound grows in stature from an uncertain beginning to a figure of considerable power, exuding a charisma that repulses even as it attracts. Jane Wymark is suitably brittle and anxious as the psychiatrist, vastly overshadowed by her brilliant patient, and Susan Lynch carries a nice pitch of eager adulation as the student, Betsy. She plays a pivotal role when she brings Pound a book on an Australian aboriginal tribe, the Wangena, together with a drawing of a face without a mouth. It is the Wangena who have 16 words for water, who speak when speech is necessary and who are silent when it is not As the poet comments, "the Aborigines know who they are. Our civilisation is faith the Gestapo on his heels," said de Lubac, "quelle admirable sang-froid!" But he didn't much like Mounier's left-wing politics.

Surnaturel (sic), his first postwar book, was a more speculative work about whether salvation was "in nature" though not "of nature." It got him into trouble with the Vatican, and after the 1950 encyclical Hu-mani Generis he was silenced for a number of years and forbidden to teach. He was most scurvily treated and not even allowed to live in a house with a decent library Instead of railing at his fate he wrote a Meditation on the Church. He was presented as an example of how to suffer at the hands of the Church. What he said in private was another matter. To escape further theological censure he turned his mind to Oriental religions and wrote Aspects Of Buddhism and The Encounter Of Buddhism And The West He appreciated the good in non-Christian religions and saw them, in patristic terms, as a "preparation for the While respecting religious differences, he believed that Christian faith "summed up the entire religious experience of In this he anticipated the doctrine of the Second Vatican Council (1962-65) which restored his reputation, Paul VI greatly admired his work, and he could have had ah important role as peritus or expert at the CouncilBut he had no capacity for intrigue, committee-work bored him, and he marvelled at Work, an appointment which recognised his primary interest although he also made valuable contributions to the training of youth and community workers.

In 1984 he returned to the US as Visiting Professor at Rutgers University, New Jersey. More recently, abandoning an initial scepticism about the European Economic Community, he worked assiduously to develop links between the University of Ulster and European social work educators. Derek was a demanding and energetic teacher, who conveyed his commitment to his students and demanded that they display similar; commitment to their clients. His stu- 27 81 30 86. 16 61 28 82 35 85 31 SB F- 26 79 28 82 25 77 18 64 TH 28 82 .24 75 18 64 29 84 29 84 19 68 17 63 19 68 28 82 30 as 61 18 64 25 77 25 77 17 63 15 59 27 81 29 84 23 73 18 64 25 77 14 57 26 79 27 81 20 68 25 77 25 77 28 82 17 63 9 48 fl 28 82 25 77 14 57 23 73 20 68 25 77 .28 82 28.82 25 77 27 81 27 81 Alan Alda interesting Beaminster Mick Martin The Fiddler And The Golden Store IT IS not often that review tickets come with the advice to "bring your But then, Theatre Of The Heart, formed in 1986, and nearing the end of a three-year residency in West Dorset is unlike any other theatre group I have seen.

The company is committed to redressing the balance between man and his environment and using a mixture of professional and community performers, each of its all-weather shows relates directly to the physical the nonchalant freedom claimed by the young Swiss theologian, Hans Kttng, which he contrasted with his own harsh treatment only 10 years before. By now his best work was behind him and, like others who helped shape Vatican he veered to the right without ever quite succumbing to its more extreme forms. He genuinely admired Pope John Paul II, having talent-spotted him in 1967 and writing a preface to his book on marriage. That may be why he accepted from John Paul the cardinal's hat that he had refused from Paul VI. But he insisted that he should not be ordained a bishop before being made a cardinal (as is the Roman custom).

He was a traditionalist in the sense that he regarded the first thousand years of the Church as normative, and considered cardinals a very new-fangled and slightly embarrassing institution. In 1960 Cardinal Pierre Gerlier did the Jesuit ordinations in the basilica of Lyons where two Ecumenical Councils were held. At lunch on the hill he welcomed Henri de Lubac back to Fourviere for the first time in a decade: "I want to say what a great pleasure it is to see him back here in his rightful place, from which he. should never have been removed." Loud and prolonged applause. Robert Myddloton Henri Sonier de Lubac bom February 20, 1898; died September 4, 1991 dents appreciated his concern for their personal and professional development his honest appraisal of their work and his dry wit which made contact with him so enjoyable.

He was deeply concerned about standards, both academic and professional, and the need to support trainers in their work with students and newly qualified staff. This interest was reflected in a research project in which he was heavily engaged, right up until the day he died, concerning the processes involved in practice teaching and learning. Derek was well known as a man who, although no stranger to taking a principled stance, never bore grudges. He was a loving family man, a generous and hospitable host Sheila Dwyor Derek T. Carter, born May 28, 1934; died August 19, 1991 hrs in (day) 10.5 7 18 sonny 7.6 13 20 Sunny pm 7.1 15 21 Sunny pm 8.7 11 18 Sunny 10.3 10 19 Sunny 10.2 14 20 Sunny 10.4 13 21 Sunny 10.5 8 16 Sunny 11 19 Sunny' 10.6 12 19 Sunny 11.1 16 22 Sunny 7.8 13 22 Sunny pn 10.4 9 14 Sunny 8.6 11 16 Sunny 10.0 13 17 Sunny 95 14 17 Sunny 8.8 13 17 Sunny 5.5 .01 12 18 Sunny pm 12 19 Sunny 7 21 Sunny 14 20 Sunny 11.2 15 19 Sunny 11.8 .01 14 19 Sunny 11.0 14 19 Sunny 10.8 15 21 Sunny 13 21 Sunny 9.0 14 22 Sunny 8.6 14 21 Sunny 8.6 15 21 Sunny 7.5 15 21 Sunny pm 7.8 15 21 Sunny pm 7.0 16 20 sunny pm 7.2 14 21 Sunny pm 8.0 14 21 Sunny pm 6.7 15 22 Sunny pm 7.8 14-22 Sunny pm 7.0 15 22 Sunny pm 6.7 15 20 Sunny pm 8.1 14 22 Sunny pm 8.7 14 20 Sunny 8.7 16 20 Sunny 8.5 18 22 Sunny 6.5 13 19 Sunny pm .14 21 Sunny 10.2 21-Sunny 10.3 15 21 Sunny 10.4 16 21 Sunny jestically beautiful setting with considerable imaginative skill.

My concern, however, is that in so doing she neglects the ba-. sics. The story is haphazardly and often obscurely told. It lacks focus and dramatic intensity and offers little opportunity for us to engage with the characters as individuals, as opposed to one-dimensional legendary or historical figures. At times there seems some danger of the performance slipping towards theme park cliche.

This important reservation should perhaps be set within the context of the show's desire to speak to and involve a very specific local community. But for the outsider, with or without wellies, this unique theatrical event is consistently spectacular, sometimes magical, but never very dramatic. Until Sunday. Details 0308 862807. 69; Prof Sir Brian Pippard, FRS, 71; Sonny Rollins, saxophonist, 62.

Tomorrow: Anne Diamond, television presenter, 37; Jean-Louis Barrault, actor, 81; Prof Sir Derek Barton, FRS, organic chemist 73; Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, composer, 57; Michael Frayn, writer, 58; Stefan Johansson, racing driver, 35; Sir Denys Lasdun, architect, 77; Lord Maude, 79; Geoff Miller, Derbyshire and England bowler, Jack Rosenthal, playwright, 60; Yves St Martin, jockey, 50; Prof Ernst Sondheimer, mathematician, 68. Another Day September 7, 1832: There were two men talking in the coach, of the middle class, who talked without ceasing, and were very eccentric characters One said he had no objection to being dissected, but the greatest possible horror of being laid in cold earth; if it happened that his family had not got a vault, he should have left in his will that he should be buried in a church or dissected. The other man said that his father had spent much time fishing, and had left a direction that, as he had derived much nourishment as well as pleasure from the fish at Chertsey, it would be but fair by the descendants of those fish that he, in return, should become their food, and therefore that his body should be consigned to the river! (Leaves From the Diary of Henry Gre-ville: Smith Elder, 1883) context in which it is staged. The Fiddler And The Golden Store is performed, on Little Warren' HL'l (a mile south of Beaminster), known locally as Plague Hill in reference to the creation of a burial pit at its summit when the neighbouring village of Mapperton was wiped out by the plague, and its graveyard was full. The piece depicts the coming of the plague, and interweaves this with the story of a local woman's pursuit of illusory gold.

This is promenade theatre with a vengeance, as you are led upwards and around the summit of the hill, stumbling upon pockets of action in dells, pausing to watch scenes played out on ridges high above your head, and passing imposing tableaux vivants in the copses that cling to the hillside. So far, so stunning. Director Morna Watson exploits the ma- Birthdays Sir Harry Secombe, (above) the singer, comedian, charity fund-raiser, ex-Goon and morale booster to British troops from the Gulf to the Falkland Islands is 70 tomorrow. Other weekend birthdays are: Today: King Baudouin of Belgium, 61; Max Boyce, comedian, 46; Malcolm Bradbury, Professor of American studies, University of East Anglia, novelist 59; Lord Cheshire, OM, VC, 74; Dianne Hayter, chief executive, European parliamentary Labour Party, 42; Ella Kazan, author, film director, 82; Joe Newman; trumpeter, Death Sir Ravmond Brown, who has died aged 71, was amused that an industrialist of his seniority should have been a friend of the Guardian. But when the facsimile techniaues this newspaper pioneed came into their own in 1974, he saw, as chief executive and managing director of Muir-head, the challenge of speeding material electronically between Manchester and London.

We still use his machines today and miss his many enthusiasms, not least for racing and the Guardian Classic Trial. Brown was a formidable He founded Racal Electronics with 100 and was for a time Harold Wilson's chief arms salesman the television series Power Game was rumoured to be based upon his life. It was a considerable achievement for a. who started as a tea boy, aged 14. Aiacdo Algiers Amsterdam Atfuww London Los Angeles Luxembourg Madrid Malorca Malaga' Malta Manchester Bahrein 'Barbados Barcelona Beirut' Melbourne 'Mexico City 19 'Bermuda Biarritz Bkmtogluun Bombay' -Miami Montreal Moscow Munich Nairobi Bristol Naples Nassau New Delhi Newcastle New York Nice Oporto Oslo Paris.

Budapest ftajfM Cam Cape Town Cardiff Casablanca Chicago Peking uopermaoen rmui inuar Prague. Reykjavik Rhodes Rio Da Jar Riyadh uonu 'Dallas 'rtenvM Or 10 27 Dublin 21 37 27 22 24 31 7 23 20 27 28 25 30 33 IS 22 27 15 15 29 13 23 DubrovnHc Edinburgh Faro Florence Salzburg Seoul Frankfurt Funchal Geneva Singapore aiocKnoKn Strasbourg. Sydney TwuUMr Gibraltar Helsinki Tel Aviv Hong Kong Innsbruck Inverness Istanbul Tenertro Tokyo' Tunis. Valencia Vancouver Venice. Jersey Jorjurg Ksracni Las Palmas Warsaw WMtilnnlnn Lisbon Wellington Locarno uncn CIOUOY.

uiu)ut r. ion ry, "vyi iiotii rain: SI, sleet: Sn, snow; S. sunny; Th, thunder. (Previous day's readings) Sun and moon SUN RISES- 0621 1934 0501 1847 SUN SETS- MOON RISES-. MOON SETS- MOON: New 8th SUN RISES 0623 1932 0625 1905 SUN SETS- MOON RISES- MOON SETS MOON: New 8th Ughtlng-up Today Belfast- 2002 to 0643 194a to 0629 1944 to 0833 1957.

to 0834 .193410 0623 194810 0829 1945 to 0625 1941 to 0628 1950 to 0644 1941 to 0631 1942 to 0635 1954 to 0636 1932 10 0625 1943 to 0631 1943 td 0627 .1939 10 0628 Birmingham- BTOJHH. Glasgow-London Manchester- Newcastle- Nottingham- Tomorrow BetfasU. Birmingham- unaioi isgow-idon Manchester Newcastis- Notpni ajor roadworks otuM, uae HSTi HawaneMri contraflow MM: restrictions JlfWII, contraflow JfrJS MN two lanes Darttord Tunnel approach J2 fan and tout, moo: amrmm on Circular. Staples Comer and Nesoden underpass. A1IT lleeen lane closures.

llssiwaMnii contraflow Uphook end Hlndhead. Atafurrayi traffic Hants on Eastbourne Rood, South Goostone. Air tusaan reetrlcrjons at and AotJta J7-JS (Hp road closed J7. tunanIMm J1M3 contraflow. UB Msevjeettl end Woicsalan aHpa dosed el J6, A6 KloistoreMrai Hestrtcttone at Market KarDorougn.

WeaidWeIMAf.ralon otMm nrifM RMfrfetlMM J3PJ41 ISaa restrictions Mitchell to Carland bynMjietL Holt contraflow J9-06. M18 contraflow J3M Mil contraflow J42-J43. MM Oreossr llaai- eheeten rostrictlona airport link. Road Information compiled and suppHed by AA Roadwatch. Today HENRI de Lubac, one of the best-known, and certainly best-loved, theologians has died at the age of 95.

John Paul created him a cardinal in 1983: he bought his expensive robes but never wore them after his first and only consistory. Paul VI had tried to make him a cardinal in the 1970s, but he refused point-blank. Instead, his younger colleague and fellow patristic scholar, Jean Danie-lou, became the statutory Jesuit At 87, de Lubac caved in. Though a patristic scholar, the Fathers of the Church were only his starting point His early books, Catholicism and Corpus Mysticum, belonged to this genre, but made a contemporary point about the "social nature" of Catholicism when the false collectivisms of Nazism and Communism haunted the European mind. He was behind the change in the Creed from "I believe" to believe'1.

The Drama of Humanistic Atheism traced the progress of atheism through Feuerbach, Comte, Proudhom, Marx and Nietzsche, towards whom he acted as a kind of father confessor. He had a characteristic phrase about the need to "passer par" these authors that is, to take what they have to give, and then move on. During the war Lyons, where de Lubac taught at the Institut Catholique, became the intellectual capital of France. The Cardinal Archbishop, Pierre Ger-lier, used to say, "Today la Derek Carter DEREK Carter, professor of social work at the University of Ulster, has died. After national service he read history at Cambridge and mental health at the London School of Economics before working as a psychiatric social worker in Deptford.

He was one of the group of tutors and practice teachers trained by Dame Eileen Younghusband to staff the new Certificate in Social Work courses established in the wake of her Report. Derek taught the "Younghusband" course at Barking College and so began a long and close association with Dame Eileen and the National Institute for Social Work Train Understanding Aspatrla Birmingham Bristol Buxton Leeds London Manchester Newcastle Norwich Nottingham Plymouth Ross-on-Wye CAST COAST Tynemouth Scarborough Bridlington Cleethorpee Skegness Hunstanton Cromer Lowestoft Clacton Southend Margate Herne Bay SOUTH COAST Folkestone Hastings Eastbourne Brighton Worthing Uttlehampton Bognor Regis Hayllng Is Southsea Ryde Sandown Shsnklln Ventnor Bournemouth Poole Swanage Weymouth Exmouth Telgnmoutri Torquay Salcombe Falmouth Penzance Isles ofScllly Jersey Guernsey WIST COAST St Ives Newquay 8.2 Saunton Sands 9.6 llfracombe Mlnehead 7.1 Weston-s-Mare 6.4 Southoort 9.8 12 23 14 24 17 20 16 20 12 22 12 20 12 20 11 20 13 17 Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny pm Sunny pm Sunny Sunny pm Sunny Sunny pm Blackpool Morecambe Douglas WALH Anglesey Cardhl Cotwyn Bay Prestatyn Tenby SCOTLAHO Aberdeen Aviemore Dunbar Edinburgh Eskdalemulr Glasgow Kimoss Lerwick Leuchais Prestwick Stornaway Tlree Wick 7.7 11.9 10.1 8.2 63 9.6 14 21 Sunny "14 21 Sunny pm 15 19 Sunny 9.4 12 19 Sunny 11.2 7.5 10.7 8.8 10.1 8.2 11.9 6.8 8.8 11.1 11.7 6.4 12.1 2 18 .2 20 10 15 7 18 4 18 10 20 4 19 6 14 5 18 9 19 6 15 11 17 1 18 Sunny Sunny pm Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Belfast 8.8 14 20 Sunny Reading not available. High Udos Tooey London Bridge 0122 Dover 1100 Liverpool 1109 Avonmouth 0704 HullJ 0568 Greenock 1235 Lelth 0211 DunLsoghalre 1123 69 1348 65 2321 02 2328 12.7 1927 7.1 1839 3.4 5.3 1442 4.0 2337 69 65 133 7J 5.5 4.3 London Bridge-- 0217 7.3 1437 7.2 1141 .6.7 Liverpool 1164 9.6 Avofmouth. 0755 13.4 2013 13.8 HulL 0840 7.6 1918 7.5 Greenock 0029 37 1318 3.5 0257 5.6. 1526 5.7 DunLsoghalre 1205 .4.1 WmUmt PtMVMat, pag 34 Ulster ing, now the National Institute.

In 1967 he studied for his Masters at Columbia under Bill Schwartz who subsequently made many trips to Britain and Ireland where social work especially groupwork was to benefit from Derek's wholehearted commitment to its establishment and Schwartz's determination to develop skilled confident practitioners. In 1972 he became Professor and Head of Community Studies at the then New University of Ulster in Deny. Later when social work became a joint department with social administration Derek Carter moved to Coleraine and became Professor of Social.

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