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Registered Charity No.

1028085

Supporting educational initiatives and projects in Nicaragua


www.santarosafund.org

SRF NEWS No 50
November 2017

th
50 EDITION
A celebration of 50 issues of the Santa Rosa Fund Newsletter.

In the following pages in this bumper edition 12 pages instead of the usual
8 we present a selection of events from the history of the Santa Rosa Fund,
events that have been recorded in previous newsletters.
SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 1
1988
The Santa Rosa Fund sprang out of a 1988 visit to Nicaragua made by two of the current trustees, June and
Martin Mowforth. These first three photos come from that visit when June was asked if she could promote a
school twinning link between the school she taught at in
Plymouth, Southway School (now closed), and a school in the
Barrio Santa Rosa of Managua, the capital city of Nicaragua.
The school in Managua was then known as the Escuela Ernesto
Ch Guevara and was
typical of schools in
Nicaragua at that time
in its poverty, lack of
equipment (150 chairs
for over 700 pupils), a shortage of teachers, the dedication of its
teachers, and buildings not fit for purpose.

In Southway School,
teachers and pupils
collected school materials and stationery to be sent out to the
school in Managua. These were dispatched by air mail which
incurred high postage costs, and so fund raising became an
important part of the voluntary work required to maintain the
twinning link.
Virginia Gmez Hernndez (then headteacher),
Modesto Flores (still teaching at the Santa Rosa 1993
School) and June Mowforth in 1988.
When June left Southway School at the end of 1993, it was clear that a separate organisation would be
needed to drive the link; and so the Santa Rosa Fund was born with 14 trustees invited to manage the Fund.
Registered charity status was gained in late 1993.

The Funds first two newsletters were produced in


1993 and its remit was broadened to cover support for
any educational projects and initiatives in Nicaragua
and to underpin its support with the general aim of the
alleviation of poverty. Over the course of the next few
years the Fund began to support street childrens
projects, local libraries, youth centres and other specific
initiatives in different areas of Nicaragua.

The Funds supporter base also increased enabling us to 1994 in the centre of Managua: very young children left
provide small amounts of financial assistance for to fend for themselves
specific educational projects operated by organisations
and bodies other than the school in the Barrio Santa Rosa in Managua.

1996
Despite a long campaign by parents and staff at the Ernesto Ch Guevara School that lasted for two years
and filled the Nicaraguan newspaper and TV headlines on several occasions, the Nicaraguan government of
the day forced the link school to change its name to the Santa Rosa School in return for refurbishment and
repainting of the school.
SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 2
1997
In 1997 a group of trustees and supporters of the Santa Rosa Fund organised an education tour of Nicaragua,
and, amongst other things, made visits to two organisations which supported street children, Casa Alianza
and the Quincho Barrilete Association. Since then the Fund has offered and provided support to both of
these organisations which still have programmes protecting street children in Managua.

1998
Hurricane Mitch strikes Central America. Its worst effects were felt in
Honduras and the north and west of Nicaragua with around 20,000 people
killed. The single worst incident caused by the hurricane, in which 2,100
people were buried alive, occurred in north-west Nicaragua, an area where the
Santa Rosa Fund supported a number of projects and initiatives. A flank
collapse of the Casitas Volcano created a mudslide or lahar (shown in the
photo on the right) which destroyed five villages and their inhabitants.

One of the new settlements set up for the survivors and others in the region
made homeless was Villa Espaa close to the town of El Viejo. Through the
Berriz Sisters base in El Viejo the Fund was able to channel significant aid
for the building and staffing of the pre-school that was built in the new
settlement. The pre-school was a crucial development as most of the 110
families re-housed in the settlement were headed by women who as well as caring for their children also
needed to go out to work. In the early years the pre-school was the only facility in Villa Espaa where they
could leave their young children in safety.

Thus began the Funds long-lasting relationship with the Berriz Sisters in El Viejo. Their work involved
social and educational projects especially with the youth of the Cosigina Peninsula, and they spent little if
any time trying to convert people to their religion as they were more concerned about the poverty people
suffer during life rather than the riches people might experience after life. They were and are sleeves-
rolled-up nuns, and they took what is called the option for the poor.

1999 and 2000


The Funds first two volunteers worked at the Santa Rosa School in 1999
and 2000. Tania Rodrguez and Polly Wilding (shown here with teacher
Marta Elena Gadea and pupils) each spent a few weeks there as assistants
and teachers of English.

2000
Despite broadening the assistance sent to the country to include other
projects and initiatives not associated with the original link school, in 2000
the Fund delivered its 100th box of educational materials to the Santa Rosa
School and celebrated the event with a 100th Box Party for its supporters in
and around the Tavistock area.

The Fund continued to assist the Berriz Sisters with their many
educational projects, especially those involving the re-settlement of the
victims of Hurricane Mitch.
SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 3
2001
In the year 2000, the Nicaraguan government decreed that all schools should have a library within the next
five years, but failed to allocate any resources for the creation, building and supplying of such facilities. The
Santa Rosa School drew up plans for a library, but needed almost $4,000 for its building. As it happened at
the same time, the Santa Rosa Fund received a substantial donation from the Memorial Trust Fund
established for Ben Dalton, a young surgeon who had been killed whilst travelling through various countries
in Africa. The trustees of the Santa Rosa Fund allocated these funds towards the building of the library and
applied to the British Embassy in Managua for the remaining monies
required for the building. The application was successful and the then
British Ambassador, Harry Wiles, visited the school in August 2001 to
sign the agreement to build the library with the headteacher of the school,
Virginia Gmez Hernndez see photo.

And so the Ben Dalton Memorial Library was built, and it was
inaugurated with the visit of another Embassy representative (Gary
Scrobie) to the school in November.

2002
Mayra Caldern, a secretary at the school
(shown on the right), undertook training in
library reference systems and was paid a small monthly stipend for managing
the library on top of her normal job as secretary.

In July the Santa Rosa Fund launched a special


funding appeal for funding for books and
equipment for the library aiming to raise around 500. In fact, 1,160 was
raised as displayed on the front page of our November 2002 newsletter.

In 2002 the SRF suffered the sad loss of trustee Norna Beadle who died in
her sleep after a long illness. She was one of the founding trustees of the
SRF. An appreciation of her life and contribution was given in SRF
Newsletter No. 20.

2003
In 2003 Jacky Rushall, a teacher at High Street School in Plymouth, approached the Santa Rosa Fund
having received a grant and sabbatical leave to participate in
education overseas with the possibility of establishing a link between
her school in Plymouth and a school in a less advantaged part of the
world. The result was Jackys visit to the tiny and remote community
of Los Pozitos in north-western
Nicaragua, a community with only 16
families, but without electricity. With the
help of the Berriz Sisters, the community
was building a small school room to replace the earlier leaking and derelict
school room shown in the photo on the right with Jacky amidst parents and
pupils from Los Pozitos. The photo on the left shows the children gathering
water for the building works on the new school room.
SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 4
From that time on, and particularly with Jackys help and insistence, the Santa Rosa Fund has provided
substantial funding to ensure the continuing education for all the children of the village, but it is worth
noting that a few children and parents opt for their children to accompany them in their subsistence work in
the fields rather than going to school.

2004
In yet another decree the Nicaraguan government stated that within five years all Nicaraguan schools should
have a computer suite and also offer pupils the possibility of learning IT skills which was obviously a fine ideal.
But in typical Nicaraguan style the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports (MECD) offered no suggestions
about how the schools should pay for such a facility or how teachers should pay for the training they would
need in order to teach computer skills. Moreover, at that time the MECD was paying absolutely nothing to any
of its schools for materials or anything above and beyond the pitiful salaries of the teachers, and there seemed
no hope of the government providing any funds to support its decree.

While the trustees of the Santa Rosa Fund were mindful that we should not be funding activities and functions
which the government should be providing, we were also aware that the Nicaraguan government, in common
with many other Third World governments around the world, was under unbearable pressure and blackmail
from international financial institutions such as the World
Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) to reduce
public spending on services such as education and health.
After much discussion, the trustees decided that the younger
generation of Nicaragua were just as deserving and needful
of computers as their peers in the UK, and it was clear that
Nicaraguan youth were as keen as those anywhere else in the
world to participate in the technological revolution of the computer age. Accordingly, the SRF trustees decided
to initiate a new Mini-Fund to support the provision of computing
facilities at the school, and edition 24 of the SRF Newsletter featured the
headline to the right.

Also at the end of 2004, the Santa Rosa Schools headteacher Virginia
Gmez Hernndez (shown left) was awarded the Nicaraguan Ministry
of Educations trophy for Excellence in Management.

2005
By 2005, each new edition of the SRF Newsletter was carrying news not just of the original link school, but
also of the Quincho Barrilete Association and other street childrens organisations, educational
developments in Villa Espaa and other settlements set up for the victims of Hurricane Mitch, youth centres
in the Cosigina Peninsula and other educational initiatives run by the Berriz Sisters, the Cosigina
Primary School, and of the schooling of the children of the village of Los Pozitos.

2006
In January 2006, several of the SRF trustees paid a visit to Nicaragua (at
their own expense) to visit the projects that the Fund had begun to
support in previous years. It was an exceptionally useful visit for the
trustees to gain first-hand experience of these projects. Unfortunately for
Lorna Legg, she returned to the UK with a broken ankle after an
encounter with some very slippery tiles. The photo shows her leg well
plastered and being tended by Liz Light, a resident of Managua and the Nicaragua Solidarity Campaigns
woman in Managua who helped our tour group enormously.
SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 5
Later in 2006, we learned that our funding
application to the British Embassy for funding for
the purchase of computers for the Santa Rosa
School had been turned down. The Embassy,
however, agreed to donate two of its computers to
the school, one printer and several accessories, and
to pay for the purchase of two new computers.

In September 2006 all the new equipment was in


place, the school had partitioned off half of the staff
room as a computer laboratory and an inauguration
ceremony was held. The room was named The
Friends of England Computer Laboratory as seen here. Gill Holmes who lived in Managua at that time
served as a kind of computing trouble-shooter for the school to call upon when inevitable computing
difficulties occurred.

2007
The school year at the Santa Rosa School began with a visit by the British Ambassador Tom Kennedy,
shown here with pupils in the Ben Dalton Memorial Library,
along with the headteacher Virginia Gmez Hernndez and
librarian Luz Marina. Bruce Callow from the embassy wrote to us
that the Ambassador said that it was a very special experience for
him and he was impressed with the school and glad that the
embassy could be of help to support the good work [the Santa Rosa
Fund] are doing. Gill Holmes (who lived in Managua and often
acted as the SRF representative in the 2000s) was at the school
during the visit and remarked that she thought that it made a lasting
impression on Tom Kennedy.

The Santa Rosa Fund paid for courses in the use of computers for many of the staff members of the Santa
Rosa School, but there was some dissatisfaction with the courses and the type of training in particular the
element of hands-on learning was very limited. So in July the Santa Rosa Fund sent four volunteers to the
school (at their own expense) to give one-to-one computer training to members of staff. At the time,
Managua was suffering major cuts in electricity and so none of
the new computers at the school were working during the
volunteers stay, but not to be outdone the volunteers took
everybody to a local cyber caf where electricity was flowing.
Alistair Williams, James Watson, Doug Specht and Rick
Blower are seen in the photo with some of the trainees. They
spent a month on a one-to-one basis with numerous members of
staff and the training programme was deemed a great success.
We learnt from staff feedback that they would welcome more training from
volunteers in the future and that they would have liked the training to last for
two months.

The sad news of the year was the departure of headteacher Virginia Gmez
Hernndez from the Santa Rosa School who resigned due to ill health. Until
that time she was the only headteacher that the Fund had known and had
been the instigator of everything which we had managed to do at the school.

SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 6


A full appreciation of her work and her exceptional dedication were given in the SRF Newsletter No. 30
(Nov 2007).

2008
2008 saw the appointment of Mara Elizabet Aragn Roa (shown
here reading the SRF Newsletter) as the new headteacher at the Santa
Rosa School. Mara had been a teacher at the school since 1987 and
took over as head at a time when school rolls were rapidly increasing as
as a result of parents no longer having to pay monthly school fees for
the purchase of educational materials. Mara remains the headteacher of
of the school to this day (November 2017).

In 2008 the Santa Rosa Fund began to support an educational project on Managuas waste dump La
Chureca a location often referred to as hell on earth. The Los Quinchos Centre, based inside the dump,
provided a place of refuge for 30 40 children who scavenge through the rubbish to find items of value. At
the Centre they get lessons, a hot lunch and social and medical support. For those without a family it also
provided a place for them to sleep before starting work the next day. The SRF provided its support through
the Wales Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign which was the main organisation supporting the centre.

Kids at the Los Quinchos Centre Beneranda and Mara preparing lunch at Los Quinchos

2009
In 2009 volunteers Sue and Ken Martin from Somerset spent two months at the Santa Rosa School
teaching computing skills to members of staff at the school. Before retirement Sue had been an IT advisor in
the Somerset Education
Authority, so her skills
were especially valuable
and relevant. On the left
she and Ken are seen with
deputy headteacher
Claudia Ramrez, and
on the right Sue is with
teachers Perla Serrano
and Gloria Solrzano.

SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 7


The Funds support elsewhere in Nicaragua included assistance to the Germn Pomares Pre-School, the
Rosario Mayorga Primary School in Villa Espaa, the Villa Espaa library,
the El Viejo Youth Centre, the education of the children of the village of Los
Pozitos, the Quincho Barrilete Association and the Los Quinchos project on
the La Chureca municipal dump.

Sadly in 2009 we lost SRF trustee Gill Gorbutt who died after a long battle
against cancer. An appreciation of Gill (shown right) and her life and work
appear in SRF Newsletter No. 34.

2010
Again the support given by the Santa Rosa Fund broadened whilst maintaining two crucial aims of the Fund:
namely, to support education as a means to alleviating poverty (in the long run), and to assist in such a way
as to empower beneficiaries rather than to make them feel like recipients of aid.

The Funds programme of providing volunteer trainers in


computing at the Santa Rosa School continued with the
arrival in Managua of Amy Haworth Johns and Rachael
Wright from the UK and Karla Solis Espinoza from the
USA. Karla is a former pupil of the Santa Rosa School who
moved to New York at the age of 12; she gave essential
assistance to Amy and Rachael (seen below with one of her
trainees). Amy and Rachael, however, took their training one
step further than earlier volunteer trainers by taking on small
classes of
pupils, a
popular and
welcome
move.

Amy is now
a trustee of
the Santa
Rosa Fund.

2011
In October 2010, we received a request from the Berriz
Sisters for $3,500 for the purchase and installation of a
floodlighting system below a new roof just built on the
games court of the El Viejo Youth Centre. We had to
disappoint as the funds we had raised during 2010 had
fallen short of our usual amount for the year. In fact, we
also had to reduce our annual contribution to the
educational programmes run by the Sisters from $7,000 to
$5,000. But in our previous newsletter, we had put out an
appeal for the required amount from any individual
supporter of the SRF who might happen across such a quantity of money.

SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 8


Amazingly, it happened. At the time of receiving the SRF Newsletter, one of our
regular supporters (who wished to remain anonymous) was on the point of
making a decision about how to use the funds from the estate of her brother who
had recently died. She responded to the newsletter appeal, and the amount
required for the installation of the electrics below the roof was duly transferred to
the Sisters account in Nicaragua.

In 2011, as a result of the SRFs article about the Quincho Barrilete


Associations attempts to deliver a little
extra care, attention, protection and
education to some of the younger street
children who inhabit the dangerous The small-scale floodlighting
alleyways and streets of Managuas in the El Viejo Youth Centre
Eastern Market, our anonymous donor
also felt moved to donate 1,000 for the improvement of the
classroom facilities see left which these children used as a
refuge.

2011 was also the year when the Fund made contact with
the Little Cob in Matagalpa in the north of the country.
The Little Cob was run as an after-school school by
Dominique Olney who had been a language teacher in
Plymouth before retirement. Activities at the Little Cob
included reading, drawing, painting, mask-making (see
photo on right), jewellery-making, other handicrafts,
homework from school, mathematics, music, and many
others, depending in part on what skills Dominiques
volunteers could offer. The SRF later gave small amounts
of funding towards the purchase of materials for this really
valuable extra educational facility for the children of the
neighbouring barrio.

2012
Although the Santa Rosa Fund had known about Casa
Esperanza (Hope House) in the town of El Viejo for some
years, 2012 was the year of our first formal link when some
of the funding we provided to the Berriz Sisters helped to
finance the work of this day centre for people with special
needs. Coordinator of the work of the house is Zeta (shown
standing in the photo on the right). This is extremely
demanding work and Zeta has the energy to fulfil the role,
although she has and needs the assistance of a number of
Nicaraguan school students. The Fund was pleased to be
able to support this initiative.

2013
One of the Funds 2007 volunteers at the Santa Rosa School see page 6 was James Watson who in 2013
returned to Nicaragua via an epic journey to Central America without flying. It is a reflection of the value of
SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 9
the experience that the Funds volunteers have in Nicaragua and we hope it reflects on
the Santa Rosa Fund too that many of the volunteers either return to their volunteer
opportunities or wish to do so. James account of his return to the Santa Rosa School
and elsewhere in Nicaragua occupies the first half of the SRF Newsletter No 41. Later
in 2013 the SRF held an Information and Volunteering Night in Tavistock when
most of our volunteers attended and gave short presentations about their experiences.

2014
SRF Newsletter No. 43 contains various reports from the Funds
partner organisations in Nicaragua. In particular it gives an
update on the
Little Cob, and
especially the
antics of the latest
volunteer to help
out in Matagalpa,
Kit Lambert,
shown on the right.

The Quincho Barrilete Association also featured more


prominently in the Funds support during 2014 thanks
principally to the Roger Buck Bequest. The bequest came
to the Fund through the Miles family, keen supporters of
the SRF, whose two daughters Katie and Sarah were
volunteers with the Berriz Sisters and have raised
significant amounts for the Fund.

The bequest came at an opportune time as the Fund had


received an application from the Quincho Barrilete
Association for assistance towards the cost of school
retention packs for the street children and abused children
who they care for. The packs are required for the kids to
be able to attend school and include a selection of the
materials they will need for lessons. Quincho tries to
normalise their lives by getting them back into school
not an easy task when their previous normality has been
through living on the streets or in an abusive family.

The bequest also allowed the Fund to support three other


valuable educational projects in the west of Nicaragua, run
by organisations new to the Santa Rosa Fund.
First, the Amigos de Holanda Community Centre needed help to keep open the El Viejo library,
used by many children in the town.
Second, the Council of Women of the West [of Nicaragua] had applied to us for funding a series of
workshops in vulnerability reduction for women in various barrios of the city of Chinandega.
Third, the Fund was also able to support the Xochilt Clinic in its running of a number of workshops
on Sexual Health and Reproductive Health training for people in a number of barrios in the town
of El Viejo.

Additionally in 2014, for the first time, the Santa Rosa Fund Newsletter was produced in colour.

SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 10


2015
Numerous Santa Rosa Fund supporters made their way to Nicaragua during 2015.
They included David Pickles and Russell Hawe; but the real glutton for punishment
was former volunteer Amy Haworth Johns who returned to continue her volunteering
from 2010. Amy spent much of her time working with the children at the Little Cob,
but also visited most of the other SRF-supported projects and initiatives as well as
other projects new to the Fund. Her reports appear in SRF Newsletters Nos. 45 and 46.

2016
For the Santa Rosa Fund, the news that dominated 2016 was not the arrival of Donald Trump on the global
scene, but the imminent withdrawal of the Berriz Sisters from the NW region of Nicaragua. The
Berriz Sisters is an international order of nuns that works in many countries in four
continents of the world. In recent years they have been
experiencing a reduction in the number of novitiates to the order
and had come to the regrettable solution that their missions had
to be rationalised. Accordingly, their operations in Nicaragua
were to be withdrawn and that meant that the Santa Rosa
Fund would lose one of its most valuable partner organisations
in the country.

The front page of SRF Newsletter No. 47 shows (L. to R.)


Sisters Ana Lourdes, Abdona and Paulina, all of whom
were essential to the support given by
the Fund to the many projects within
the NW of Nicaragua. We should also
not forget the support we received
from other Berriz Sisters in previous
years Rosvia, Liliam, Carmn
Laura, Ruth, Rosario, Ana Noemi and
Mara-Jos (shown right), who was crucial to our first links
with projects in the region.

The Berriz Sisters who worked in Nicaragua had taken the option for the poor. They did not spend their
time evangelising; rather they were sleeves-rolled-up nuns, a remarkably impressive group of people
with whom it has been a privilege for the Fund to work alongside.

Throughout their time working in the region, the Berriz Sisters had
worked closely with a Dutch organisation called the Amigos de
Holanda, the organisation that had first invited the Berriz Sisters to
assist with their work in alleviating poverty in the region.
Fortunately for the Santa Rosa Fund, Amigos de Holanda stepped
into the breech left by the withdrawal of the Sisters; and so the
Funds partners in this region of Nicaragua are now Amigos de
Holanda, in the persons of Cristina Pasos (administrator) and
Mara Lucila Cuadra (coordinator), shown here. Mara had
formerly been one of the Berriz Sisters.

SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 11


And now, 2017
As our last newsletter explains, although the Santa Rosa Fund has managed to maintain its annual income at
more or less its regular level (measured in pounds sterling), over the last two years our ability to send funds to
Nicaragua (in US dollars) has declined because of the drop in the value of the pound. In fact, at the beginning of
2017 our contribution to projects in Nicaragua was about US$3,000 less than in previous years. Needless to say,
this is a significant drop for some of the projects which require just small inputs of money.

For instance, it has meant that we have been unable to assist two projects which have sought our support. PASE
is an organisation of Professionals for Social and Business Transparency (featured in Newsletter No. 47)
which attempts to educate about the causes and problems of the epidemic of chronic kidney disease suffered
especially by sugar cane workers in the west of Nicaragua. The RUACH Foundation cares for adults with a
variety of severe disabilities in the town of Juigalpa in the centre of Nicaragua. Because of the need to meet our
core commitments, the Fund was unable to assist either of these very deserving organisations and causes.

But there have been some positive developments associated with the projects that the Fund supports.
Bill Dalton, father of Ben Dalton, after whom the library at the Santa Rosa School
is called, discovered the Santa Rosa Fund for the first time and it is our and his
hope that he will eventually visit the Santa Rosa School in Managua to see the
library for himself. (See 2001, p.4.) Bill is shown right.
With the use of SRF funds Amigos de Holanda have managed to keep open the El
Viejo library (Newsletter No. 48) and to manage the Casa Esperanza centre for
people with learning and physical difficulties see 2012, p.9. Cristina and Mara
Lucila have made their first visit to the remote village of Los Pozitos, on our
behalf see 2003, pp. 4-5.
At the Santa Rosa School, under a programme called Una Computadora Por Nio [A Computer for Every
Child], the Fundacin Zamora-Tern (a private business-dominated trust) has teamed up with the BanCentro
(a major bank in Nicaragua) to provide every primary-aged child in the school (1st to 7th grade) with a
personal computer 416 mini-computers to be precise. This does not mean that the Funds annual support for
computing at the school is redundant, but it may well have implications for the level of funding we provide to
the school. This is clearly a matter for future consideration by the SRF trustees, and will be the subject of an
article in the next newsletter, after which we shall invite comments from our supporters about this issue.

Renewal of support
As usual at this time of year, we invite SRF supporters to renew their support for the
Fund with our oft-repeated assurance that you can be confident that a high proportion
of the funds you provide over 90% - are delivered to the beneficiaries in Nicaragua.
We do not have employees and we do our best to keep administrative and newsletter
costs to a minimum.
Please ignore this message if you already have a standing order to the benefit of the Santa Rosa Fund.

SANTA ROSA FUND CONTACTS www.santarosafund.org

Chair: Pete Mayston, Rose Cottage, Tuckermarsh, Bere Alston, Yelverton, Devon PL20 7HB
Tel. 01822 840297 Email: mayston@waitrose.com
Secretary: Pat Blower, 4 Glebelands, Exminster, Exeter EX6 8AR
Tel. 01392 823646 Email: r.blower@btinternet.com
Treasurer: Pat Mayston as for Pete (above)
Twinning links representative: Rick Blower, 4 Glebelands, Exminster, Exeter EX6 8AR
Tel. 01392 823646 Email: r.blower@btinternet.com
Membership secretary: Martin Mowforth, 51 West St., Tavistock, Devon PL19 8JZ
Tel. 01822 617504 Email: mmowforth@plymouth.ac.uk

PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER BY DART PRINT, TAVISTOCK

SRF Newsletter No.50, November 2017, page 12

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