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        Wednesday May 1st 1pm - Multiple 
          Independent Meet-up Points 
 This year sees us return to the traditional place of Mayday celebrations 
          - Mayfair in London. Mayfair is the area bounded on the north by Oxford 
          Street, on the east by Regent Street, on the south by Piccadilly & 
          on the west by Park Lane. Now one of the most opulent and cloistered 
          areas in the capital, full of luxury pads, exclusive shops, fancy hotels 
          and national embassies, it takes its name from the fair which was held 
          every year from 1 May for 15 days until its suppression in the mid-18th 
          century. Mayfair was once a teeming hotbed of fun, frolics and freedom 
          for the working masses, in what is now Shepherds Market. Circus performers, 
          magicians, pagan priestesses, vagabonds, alchemists, nomads, witches 
          and outlaws made merry in the mossy lanes and shacks to celebrate the 
          over-turning of the elitist and prohibitive class system they were increasingly 
          subject to - if only for a short time.
 
 After having been transferred from Haymarket in 1686-8 the May Fayre 
          soon became notorious for riotous and disorderly behaviour and in 1708 
          it was abolished, only to be revived again with similar results. Building 
          on the site was probably the most effective way of permanently suppressing 
          the fair and by the mid-18th century almost the whole of modern Mayfair 
          was covered with houses.
 
 Mayday falls slap-bang in the middle of the week, so make sure you have 
          the day off work, school, college or university. Call a strike (you 
          know it makes sense), phone in sick (or well!), bunk off, but do whatever 
          it takes to be on the streets of Mayfair on Wednesday 1st May.
 
 Mayday in Mayfair
 
 Mayday in Mayfair will be a fluid, spontaneous and exciting return to 
          the Mayfayre, happening everywhere at once, without a fixed starting 
          point or finish. Four separate but intertwined elements of Ye Olde May 
          Day will take place. There is no advertised starting point to the celebrations 
          due to police tactics of containing movement by violently imposing cordons 
          for hours on end, which resulted in the entrapment of thousands in Oxford 
          Circus last year. We can't allow this to happen again! We all need to 
          take the initiative in Mayfair. So create your own fun events, play 
          your own games, come with friends, join with others, generate your own 
          street party/performance/pavement picnic, everyday-reality-subverting-situation 
          - above all  This way our festivities will not be crushed.
 
 
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 Post Gothenberg, Tony Blair labelled all anti-capitalist protesters an 
        'Anarchist Travelling Circus'. Well, The Anarchist Travelling Circus is 
        coming home to Mayfair!
 
 A mobile, spontaneous, and collective performance full of jesters, jugglers, 
        minstrels, show girls, gypsies, pagan sorcerers, ring masters, ring mistresses 
        and clowns - reclaiming the roots and culture of mayday! Fancy dress, 
        a sense of humour and the guts to shake lose and inhabit new characters 
        and roles; the true spirit of circus culture - is the order of the day.
 
 
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       A vibrant and luminous celebration of the imminent death 
        of capitalism; a celebration of the new world waiting to be born; a resistance 
        in remembrance of those incarcerated and murdered by capitalism; and a 
        manifestation of our defiance as a movement to be labelled 'dead' by the 
        state, media and politicians the world over post September 11. 
 Following the tragedy in New York and continuing daily tragedies inflicted 
        by the war on terrorism the world over, many people, resident citizens 
        and "aliens" have been terrorised and attacked - the state whipping 
        up a climate of fear to justify its new racist and authoritarian legislation 
        and actions. We say: DO NOT BE INTIMIDATED. Bring your fear, bring 
        your terror and exorcise it on the streets of Mayfair. Dress all in black 
        or white. Don the mantle of death with skeleton or ghost masks. Coffins, 
        tombstones - fluorescent a la the Mexican day of the Dead or blacker than 
        black props and garb - you chose.
 
 
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 A rambling, co-operative gigantic game with balls that reclaims the UK's 
      precursor to football - gameball - in a carnivalesque way. Gameball was 
      a mass multi-sided festival of play, enjoyed in villages throughout the 
      country in the 15th and 16th century. The objective of gameball was to keep 
      the ball (or pigs bladder as it was then) moving from one end of town to 
      the other. In the 17th and 18th centuries, people often called gameball 
      get-togethers with the aim of pulling down the fences around enclosed land 
      - common land "privatised" by the gentry, the state and private 
      landlords. This year's version of gameball has many balls and inflatables 
      (bring them with you), with the main goal being to keep co-operating, moving 
      and having a jolly good time. Handballs and bounces allowed. Anything goes! 
      Our goal is a new world! see 
      gameball page>>>
 
 
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 Mass bicycle (or wheel barrow/horse and cart) rides are a traditional part 
      of mayday celebrations today as much as they were in the past. Villagers 
      and townsfolk often took to the streets and lanes, together, in a show of 
      leisurely strength and solidarity. Got a pair of wheels? - be it a bicycle, 
      rollerskates, a wheelchair, a shopping trolley, or a skateboard - join in!
 find out more about mayday critical 
      mass>>>
 
 
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    |  | For Mayday in Mayfair to be a huge success we all need to 
        prepare. Make costumes, banners, flags, placards, whistles, claxons and 
        musical instruments. Get hold of inflatables, balls, nets and other props. 
        Make food and bring it to share. Look at a map of Mayfair and consider 
        the possibilities. Contact us for leaflets and stickers or produce your 
        own. Spread the word. Get together with your friends and form an affinity 
        group - a group of people you know and trust who will look out for each 
        other on the day. Above all get planning as Mayday is fast approaching! 
        
 There will be many other autonomously organised actions taking place 
        on Wednesday May 1st.
 These include:
 
 B.A.R.F - a Breakfast Against 
        Routine Fit-ups outside the WOMBLES trial at 9am, Horseferry Rd Magistrates 
        Court, SW1.
 find out 
        about B.A.R.F>>>
 find out why the Wombles are on trial>>>
 
 and a Soho 
        Carnival called by Sex Workers Pride which meets at 5pm, Old Compton 
        Street.
 
 For details of these and other actions that we know about see the:
 MAYDAY AUTONOMOUS ACTIONS PAGE>>>
 
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