
NOTE. On 3rd March 1990, ten days before the trial, I served these writs of subpoena on Sir Michael Atiyah (OUP Delegate, mathematician), Doctor Lachlann Glen Black (Proctor/OUP Delegate, English Lecturer) and Mrs Ann Smallwood (the Vice-Chancellor's secretary). All handled the Delegates' papers and the first two were present at the meeting of 23rd July 1985. - A. M.
ELIZABETH THE SECOND, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of Our other realms and territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, defender of the Faith:
To: Sir Michael Atiyah, St. Catherine's College, Oxford.
We command you to attend before the Judge in Chambers, Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London WC2, on Monday the 12th day of March 1990 at 10.30 a.m. and so from day to day until your evidence shall have been taken to give evidence on behalf of the Plaintiff in the above-named cause and we also command you to bring with you and produce at the time and place aforesaid the complete Agenda papers for the meeting of the Delegates of Oxford University Press held on 23rd July 1985 including all lists of and Delegates' Notes for General Publications that were to be considered at that meeting.
WITNESS The Right Honourable The Lord Mackay of Clashfern, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, the 13th day of February 1990.
Issued on the 13th day of February 1990 by Andrew Malcolm, of 7 Southover Street Brighton BN2 2UA, the Plaintiff acting in person,
Go to the subpoenaed witnesses' affidavits: Atiyah, Black, Smallwood.
Click for the Malcolm vs. Oxford I (1984-92) Index or the Malcolm vs. Oxford II (2001-02) Index
Go/return to the Affidavits: Ivon Asquith (1), Asquith (2), Henry Hardy, William Shaw (solicitor) (1), Sir Roger Elliott (1), Margaret Goodall, to the Witness Statements: Elliott, Hardy, Richard Charkin, Nicola Bion, Goodall, to the courtroom testimony of the Oxford Six, 14/3/1990: Elliott, Goodall, Bion, Asquith, Charkin, Hardy, to the testimony of Andrew Malcolm, 13/3/1990, to the Statement of Claim, to the Case History, to the Chancery Court Judgment, to the Appeal Court Judgment.