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Aubrey Jones was born in Merthyr Tydfil the oldest son of a miner
father and a teacher mother. He was educated at the local Cyfarthfa
Castle school from where he won a scholarship to the London School
of Economics. He left the LSE with a first class honours degree, as
well as the Gladstone memorial prize and a Gerstenberg award for
postgraduate studies. Shortly after leaving the LSE he joined the
Times, departing his desk in Berlin just days before the outbreak
of the Second World War. On return to London he served in the War
Office and army intelligence, finally seeing theatre in North
Africa and Italy. At the end of the war he returned to the Times
but soon tired of journalism and took a post as assistant to the
director of the British Iron and Steel Federation, eventually
becoming its director. He was first elected to Parliament as an
unlikely member of the Conservative party in 1950 and appointed
first, Minister for Fuel and Power and then Minister of Supply
under successive Conservative Prime Ministers. But Macmillan's
re-election in 1959 saw him return to the back-benches and
reinvigorate his industrial experience. From that time he was
convinced that the UK should join the European Community, as it
then was. He also took a strong position in support of
technological development, believing the country would benefit from
a Government policy encouraging closer cooperation between military
and civil technology. When Harold Wilson won the 1964 election for
Labour he and George Brown, surprisingly, picked Aubrey Jones to
become chairman of the newly formed National Board for Prices and
Incomes. He was selected for the role from a dozen names as the
only candidate acceptable to both the TUC and the CBI. The decision
to take the job saw him give up his Conservative seat and face a
wider rejection by the Conservative party. George Brown told him
there'd be a peerage at the end of his chairmanship of the NBPI but
that was never Aubrey Jones' goal. Instead he returned to industry,
taking up various directorships in the UK and he later spent time
abroad, first consulting on reforming the civil service for the
military Government of Nigeria and then acting in various
consultancy roles for the Government of the Shah of Iran until just
before the revolution in that country. Upon his return to the UK
Aubrey Jones sought to return to the House of Commons. He fought
and lost the 1983 General Election in the Birmingham constituency
of Sutton Coldfield for the Liberal Alliance. He later joined the
Social Democrats and eventually the Liberal party. He firmly
believed there was a role for the State in civil society, more so
than the politics of the Conservative party would allow. He also
passionately believed that, with the Empire gone, the UK needed to
be part of a much larger entity to make its voice heard in the
world. That entity was, for Aubrey Jones, the European Community
and the Liberal Party was the only political party of the day,
which was firmly committed to membership of the Community.
Unfortunately Aubrey Jones ended his memoirs when he departed from
Iran but his views on Europe come across strongly in the selection
of notes and letters he wrote subsequently. It's fair to say he
would be deeply frustrated by the result of the 2016 EU referendum
and the ensuing debacle about the manner and terms of the final
withdrawal from the European Union.
The Ugly Worm is the story of a little worm who lives his life
alone and without friends until one day it began to rain and his
life was changed forever. The Ugly Worm teaches that we are to see
people not as they are on the outside but as they are on the
inside. The story demonstrates the Golden Rule and that we are to
accept others just as they are.
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