Pages
- Home
- Ian Walker's New Society Articles
- 2023 Read
- 2023 ReRead
- 2023 Audiobook
- 2022 Read
- 2022 ReRead
- 2021 Read
- 2021 ReRead
- 2020 Read
- 2020 ReRead
- 2019 Read
- 2019 ReRead
- 2018 Read
- 2018 ReRead
- 2017 Read
- 2017 ReRead
- 2016 Read
- 2016 ReRead
- 2015 Read
- 2015 ReRead
- 2014 Read
- 2014 ReRead
- 2013 Read
- 2013 ReRead
- 2012 Read
- 2012 ReRead
- 2011 Read
- 2011 ReRead
- 2010 Read
- 2010 ReRead
- 2009 Read
- 2009 ReRead
- 2008 Read
- 2008 ReRead
- 2007 Read
Friday, December 19, 2014
Seeing Red:The Chic Charnley Story by Chic Charnley (with Alex Gordon) (Black and White Publishing 2009)
Friday, May 09, 2008
Mixing Footie and Politics (1)
I can't stop myself. I'm compelled to ask. Is it possible that Chic Charnley was named after 'Sunny Jim'?
Surely Jim Callaghan wasn't a household name when Charnley was born in '63? The Labour Party was still in semi-permanent opposition but, on the other hand, it was also the year that Hugh Gaitskell died and Jim Callaghan stood against Harold Wilson and George Brown for vacant Labour Party leadership position (coming third in the first round, and thus being eliminated).
But how does a family in Glasgow end up naming their sprog after a Labour politician, born in Portsmouth, but who was representing a Cardiff constituency at the time (FA Cup final alert)?
It's not so much the novelty of future footie players being named after Labour politicians of the day; it's more the outlandish notion that there were Gaitskellites in Glasgow in the early 1960s. I thought it was just the late John Smith and the late Donald Dewar on their political tod at the Glasgow University debating society.
Btw, this is (possibly) the start of a new series for the blog. Yeah, I know that I've missed the boat with the harebrained idea of a 'Mixing Footie and Politics' theme to go alongside with 'Mixing Pop and Politics' and 'Do They Mean Us?' threads, but the blog sub-heading must count for something.
I just know that I'll never top this old blog post on Paul Breitner (or even this post on Anarchist footie) when it comes to mixing footie and the fun stuff.
Image courtesy of Riot Ink blog.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
C'est Chic
Weekly Bulletin of The Socialist Party of Great Britain (38)
Dear Friends,
Welcome to the 38th of our weekly bulletins to keep you informed of changes at Socialist Party of Great Britain @ MySpace.
We now have 1211 friends!
Recent blogs:
World hunger: A global problem Terrorism and political violence Political ideas in Africa
This week's top quote:
"When that crisis comes the great act of confiscation will be the seal of the new era; then and not till then will the knell of Civilisation, with its rights of property and its class-society, be sounded; then and not till then will Justice - the Justice not of Civilisation but of Socialism - become the corner-stone of the social arch. (E. Belfort Bax, Concerning Justice, 1887.)
Continuing luck with your MySpace adventures!
Robert and Piers
Friday, February 22, 2008
Masterchef
David Moyes gets all lyrical when singing the praises of last night's hat-trick hero Yakubu Ayegbeni:
""the way he sent their two for a pie and a Bovril was terrific," said Moyes of the striker's turn inside two Brann defenders . . . " [Everton 6 Brann Bergen 1]
Chic Charnley was unavailable for comment.