Friday, May 23, 2025
Blog Page 1766

Council in ‘invasion of privacy’ row

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Conversations may be recorded both on the Oxford Tube bus service and in all Oxford taxis. Oxford City Council has ordered every licensed cab in Oxford to be equipped with CCTV equipment by April 2015. All conversations will be recorded once the key is turned in the ignition and will remain recording 30 minutes after the engine is turned off. The audio files will be kept for 28 days following the conversation.


CCTV equipment will not only be found in taxis: both Stagecoach’s Oxford Tube bus and the Oxford Bus Company buses use audio recording.


Big Brother Watch, a campaign group aiming to protect individual privacy and defend civil liberties, called the council’s decision “a staggering invasion of privacy, being done with no evidence, no consultation and a total disregard for civil liberties.”


Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch, commented, “It is a clear breach of the guidance issued by the Information Commissioners Office (ICO), for the CCTV code of practice says that CCTV should not be used to record audio because it is highly intrusive.

 

‘However, they do believe that it should be allowed in certain circumstances, when there is a serious issue to warrant this intrusion of privacy. We do not think there is enough evidence to justify this and therefore believe that the council has made the wrong decision.”


Pickles also stressed the fact that many people are unaware of the proposals, saying, “There has been no public consultation; nobody knows what is going on. Buses have been using audio recording for a while now and nobody knew.”

 

He noted that there are no signs on the buses saying that audio recording is being used, and that the Oxford Bus Company does not mention it under the conditions on their website.


He also mentioned loss of data as a potential risk, saying, “Time and time again we have seen that confidential information has been lost, accessed by the wrong people or used in the wrong circumstances.”


Oxford City Council claimed that the decision is purely to do with safety, both on the part of drivers, as there have allegedly been incidents when taxi and bus drivers were assaulted by passengers, and on the part of customers, primarily concerning disputes over fares. Louisa Dean, a spokesman for the Oxford City Council, stated, “Risk of intrusion is acceptable compared to the public safety benefits.”


Many Oxford students are completely unaware of the use of audio recording on the Oxford Tube buses. Michael Connolly, a first year Chemist at St Anne’s, commented, “That’s shocking. I’ve used the Oxford Tube several times – I had no idea.”

Jasmine Krishnamurthy-Spencer, another first year at St Anne’s, said, “I understand why one would want surveillance in a taxi, when there are sometimes only two people present and seeing as there have been incidents. My main issue is that no one knows about this. Every bus using it should have a sign saying something alone the lines of: ‘For safety and security reasons we are recording you. We store this information securely. For more information contact us.”

‘I want to know what they are doing with all the recordings, they need to tell us that. It won’t stop me from using the Oxford Tube, might make me watch my mouth though.’

Big Brother Watch has complained to the ICO about the policy and has written to two Oxford MPs asking them to join them in opposing the scheme. A letter has also been sent to the Prime Minister’s office. Pickles hopes that if enough people are made aware of the situation the council will be forced to rethink their decision.

The Oxford Tube bus service declined to comment on the issue.


Debating IV noise outrages residents

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Excessive noise at the Oxford IV debating competition on Saturday has led to complaints from Brasenose students living nearby. Students rang the Oxford City Council helpline as the noise escalated during the evening’s final until the results were announced around midnight.

Most affected were Brasenose students living in the Frewin Court accommodation which overlooks the Union where the Oxford IV was being held. Second year Thomas Purdy spoke of how “myself and the hundred other residents of Frewin were subjected to chanting and songs for several hours.” The noise was said to have started at 8am and peaked with “drunk whooping, clapping and cheering” in the final debate that lasted from around 10pm to midnight.

An individual involved behind the scenes at the debating competition commented that “no complaints were made directly to the Union or any of the organisers” and that “as soon as the result was announced, the planned drinks reception was cancelled because organisers were aware that participants were being far too loud and this was unacceptable.” Consequently debaters were sent home immediately after the end of the competition.

The same individual remarked that “The worst noise occurred late in the evening, around the grand final when the debaters from other institutions were most rowdy”. The traditional ‘Irish Intervention’ was identified as a considerable source of noise but, being a custom, they remarked that “I doubt there is anything the organisers could have done about that”.

The use of megaphones to make announcements throughout the day was also a decision criticised by several living in Frewin Court.

Brasenose student Tristan Puri concurred that “the cheering of the Irish the other day was very annoying indeed, especially since it was a result of alcohol” in reference to the tradition in which Irish delegates interrupt the final debate to sing patriotic songs in a symbolic protest against English colonial rule.

One debater, representing Durham University at the competition, remarked that “all finals generate quite a bit of noise” and that this was the inevitable consequence of “unlimited free gin” and around “500 people in the Union chamber” to watch the final. He suggested the noise was not unusual and it was simply unfortunate that the event is held in the centre of Oxford

The Oxford IV, which was attended by debaters from as far as Sydney and Bangladesh, is not the first instance of disturbances to Brasenose accommodation. Purdy commented that “ I was nervous about living in Frewin this year after reports I’d heard about the Union”.

The extent of the noise problem is such that Brasenose’ Dean, Dr. Christopher Timpson, sent an email during 5th week encouraging students in Frewin to complain of noise to the City Council and to inform college in order to “make vivid to the Council the scale of the problem”. Timpson added that he wanted to be “properly informed of all the disturbances so that we are best placed to raise our objections as forcefully as possible.”

James Blythe, another Frewin Court resident, said, “ the Union is regularly (several days a week) very noisy” and fellow students “have become much more annoyed, I think partly because the Union never seem to communicate or apologise or show any interest in being considerate”. He proposed a potential limit on the number of nights a week that the Union should be able to hold evening events.

Puri remarked that the problem has certainly become worse recently with “music, cheering and masses of people standing in the courtyard talking” in the evenings. He added, “if it is just a bunch of people making noise for no reason it is harder to put up with”.

Frewin Court residents have previously experienced disturbance from the Purple Turtle Union Bar, OUCA events, the Union ball and now the Oxford IV debating competition.

Oxford City Council deals with noise complaints by sending an inspector to measure the noise level, however response time is often over half an hour and even up to an hour later. Union IV organisers declined to comment.

 

Corpus names plant as presidential candidate

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There was a surprise nomination for the Corpus Christi JCR Presidential election this week as ‘Jeremy the Plant’ was added to the ballot.

Having been found on Cornmarket Street by current President Jack Evans, the plant has been attending JCR meetings and raising his profile in college until last week he secured a proposer and seconder which enabled him to stand in the election.

Jan Willem Scholten, who describes himself as Jeremy’s ‘Chief Strategist’, commented, “Jeremy the Plant has instantly made a profound impression on the JCR at Corpus. His steely resolve and stubborn yet solemn silences during JCR meetings have greatly improved the quality of the debate.” He told Cherwell that there has never been a greener candidate and that all should look out for his proposed autobiography “From Fertile Soil” in future years.

Ivan Dimov chose to second Jeremy’s application despite running for president himself. He told Cherwell, “I believe there is room for sportsmanship in the cut-throat, vindictive and backstabbing world of student politics, and I felt it was only right to support Jeremy in his ambition, despite being my competitor for the love of the Corpus people.” He indicated that he identified with Jeremy on many issues – both detest salad – so it seemed almost natural for the candidates to support each other.

Dimov also explained Jeremy’s reluctance to release a statement to Cherwell directly, “Jeremy is a candidate committed to the humane treatment of plants. As such, he has so far avoided all paper media.”

The other candidates are also taking Jeremy’s nomination very seriously, with Eddie Lundy commenting, “That he has risen so high from such lowly beginnings is a testament both to himself and the college.” He suggested that it was good for JCR candidates to challenge the accepted norms, for example that JCR committees are for humans only. He further implied that Jeremy was perhaps his biggest competitor, although he did note that “the fact that he is dying may suggest he can be beaten.”

Kezia Lock, also standing, took the nomination as a positive for the college saying it shows, “Corpus is an inclusive college [that doesn’t] discriminate against anyone or anything that fulfils the MRS GREN criteria.” Whilst indicating that Jeremy having a successful campaign would suggest “that Corpuscles have lost all faith in humanity”, she still admitted that she felt threatened by Jeremy’s campaign. Lock argued, “Little Shop of Horrors teaches us that when plants make bids for power loads of murder will be committed.”

The final candidate, Samuel Robberts, told Cherwell, “I feel I am a better communicator of ideas, and a leader of people. But Jeremy has got me in terms of reaching for the skies and blue sky thinking.” He did admit that, “There is a threat from Jeremy, he may well split my vote and cause some unexpected results.”

However, Robberts added, “Jeremy cannot win the election, he hasn’t paid his JCR levy and thus his candidature is strictly unconstitutional.”

Current Corpus President Jack Evans commented, “I think he has what it takes to be JCR President. He not only has the leadership skills necessary, he also has the vision to match it,” continuing, “I can see Jeremy taking a pretty vocal role in Prescom and OUSU council, and he’s already told me that he has his eye on the OUSU presidency in 2012 and other presidents better ‘watch their backs’.”

The other candidates did point out that the nomination of Jeremy the Plant could have a very positive effect for JCR politics at Corpus. Lock stated, “If he gets people to talk seriously about the merits of the other candidates, he’s done a good thing.”

Robberts concurred, “The fact nominations for this year are up on the last two years combined suggests that this JCR has found a balance between the serious and the light-hearted which is beneficial for the JCR.”

Interview: Noughts and Crosses

An interview with the director of Noughts and Crosses, based on the book by Malorie Blackman. The play is being performed at the LMH Simkins Lee Theatre from the 23rd to the 26th of November. Tickets are available at http://www.wegottickets.com/f/3379

The Worth Of Emotional Experience

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In a time where most western training singers, composers, instrumentalists or even conductors are set foot in a comfortable life almost from birth, it has become a cliché to talk of the young not having sufficient ‘artistic experience.’ This doesn’t signify that they are lacking in performance experience, or even in training experience, or even in strength of their instrument or imagination. But it has been an age-old suggestion that because the aged or ‘older’ are more familiar with emotion and suffering, the young are ‘too young’ to sing the role of Tosca, or to write their first concerto, or even to understand the feelings of a symphony or opera.

However much one can go round the carousel of applying this to artists and end-up getting various results and however many outcomes, it is worth seeing whether any of the most remembered, valued, talented artists were especially tainted with pain in their lives so that they could write or play. It’s legend to talk of the genius’s suffering. But why should this refer to suffering that would stem from one’s personal life? The reader or watcher associates ‘suffering’ with the tragedy of losing one’s mother or Tchaikovsky’s struggle to live with his homosexuality. Little do they know that geniuses do not necessarily suffer because they have lives that are so tragically unfair; most of all they suffer because they are geniuses.

Undoubtedly there are arguments for and against. At the age of fifteen, Margot Fonteyn had already been training in ballet for ten years. She was already under the guise of Ninette de Valois, the Founder of the Royal Ballet, and was desperate to dance Giselle. One of her biographers, Meredith Daneman, implied that Valois was cynical over Fonteyn’s ability to perform Giselle because of her lack of experience, and that it was because of this that Fonteyn’s love life began so early. At that same age she found herself a lover, the average middle-class married man, started a relationship, got hurt, and ended-up dancing Giselle beautifully, according to Daneman. But that isn’t to say that Fonteyn danced beautifully because she started her relations with men so early. Not every fifteen year-old ballet dancer who’d happened to have got herself a lover would have given to the public a sublime Giselle. Others will argue, quite rightly, that Fonteyn was ‘rejuvenated’ by Nureyev, who brought out the spark in her dancing because they were lovers. Lovers they probably were; but even Fonteyn’s closest friends had other ways of describing her ‘rebirth’ in ballet at the age of forty-two. Nureyev was a dictator with her, forcing her to change her ways of even pirouetting. The technicalities are different to comprehend for the non-dancer, but it’s well known to those watching in rehearsals that Nureyev would even ask Fonteyn to move her hip another way to ease her way of doing fouettés, or whatever was required. Love and passion are great inspirers for the artist – but they’re hardly everything.

Brahms famously lived his life in love with a woman who, some would say, was never his. He pined and indeed wrote for Clara Schumann, wife of Robert, who represented not less than a goddess to him. She was, as common knowledge goes for most, his greatest muse, and his love for her was almost boundless. He wrote that he could ‘no longer exist without her’, and of his desire to touch her, even whilst her husband – a man of whom Brahms was in awe – was still alive. Several Brahms studiers have noted even that he had a ‘Clara theme’ in several of his pieces for piano, whereby he somehow composed a musical leitmotif from attaching the letters of her name in a pattern for the keyboard. It was only reportedly when Clara at last offered herself to him after Schumann’s death that he rejected her – probably from the notion that a goddess was not to be loved in that way. But even in the knowledge of this torturous love, could it be true to suppose that his music stemmed entirely from her? Clara Schumann was in some people’s opinions a genius by herself. Schumann envied her piano mastery compared to his own, and Brahms looked at her as though she were high above his measly ‘composer’ status. But look at the pieces Brahms wrote in the earlier stages of his life. Piano Concerto No. 1 was written when Brahms was just twenty-six; already experienced in love but still at an age that many would call ‘tender’. His first Piano Sonata was completed six years earlier. It would be stupid to suppose that Clara fed Brahms’ genius. Rather that Brahms’ genius fed on her.

The misconception that geniuses are geniuses greatly because of their suffering comes from the average human being’s failure to understand the genius’s mentality. Of course not all geniuses would have the same mentality, but whatever or whoever they were, they are consciously or subconsciously aware of their artistic duty. Whether they are known perfectionists or simply feel fear before God or Fate, they realise that they have to not only give their work their ‘all’, but that their ‘all’ has to be approximately three-hundred per cent of what any other musician’s ‘all’ is. Tchaikovsky may have suffered somewhat unceasingly from his marriage to the revolting Antonina Miliukova, but his quest in life was not to break out of this marriage. He famously wrote: ‘Truly there would be no reason to go mad were it not for music’, and tortured himself incessantly over the creation of his works. He predicted that his 1812 overture would be of ‘no artistic worth’, and he wrote of his struggles on the Manfred Symphony: ‘The symphony has turned out to be huge, serious, difficult, absorbing all my time, sometimes to utter exhaustion.’

What’s almost out of reach of the average mentality is that geniuses live within themselves. Their reasons for being and highest targets in life come entirely from themselves, since they do not want mostly to be married, or have children, or be famous. They want to produce from within something that will last and something that will reach the pinnacle of artistry. Schumann once said: ‘You set a goal, which once it is attained, is no longer a goal. So you aim higher and higher. Failure is then almost inevitable.’ This is the real struggle of a genius.

Of course a genius’ life does play some part in it. According to the rules of Fate, or God, whichever way one puts it – if Mozart and Beethoven and even someone like Sibelius were born for the purpose of leaving us this beautiful, infinitely lasting music, then surely their lives have to turn out in such a way that they will eventually write this music. It’s not entirely ironic that Mahler’s Adagietto from his Fifth Symphony is for the majority of uneducated music-listeners the only Mahler piece they recognise. It was written at the peak of his love for his first lover then wife, Alma Schindler. The extent to which it differs from his other works and even from the other movements of the symphony is almost unbelievable. But it would be unfair to say that he’s a composer solely remembered for the Adagietto, since he introduced such forms to music which, though not likeable to all, set the path for its history deep into the twentieth century. It’s hard to know whether there would have been Stravinsky were it not for Mahler.

Another point to consider is that suffering and feelings of one’s private life, whether or not they boost a composer’s artistic work, have never been enough to prevent them from continuing. The death of Stravinsky’s daughter Ludmilla, also of his wife Ekaterina, and close to that time his mother, occurred within the space of approximately one and a half years. To our knowledge neither propelled him to write music nor stopped him point blank from composing. He wrote the first two movements of his Symphony in C before or in the period of these deaths and the second two after them. But judging by the composition of the symphony, can we tell a marked difference in its character midway through? Stravinsky himself denied that there was any link between the outcome of the symphony and his personal life. It may not necessarily be true – but let us ask ourselves, why should it have been?

In the non-musical field, Pushkin was writing verses aged four.  Tolstoy wrote a huge novel called Anna Karenina which is said to have been inspired by an account he read in a newspaper of a woman who threw herself onto the rails. Evidently this was nothing to do with his life. Wagner focussed his life on the creation of the ‘music drama’, and was constantly exploiting the concept of ‘redemption through love’. Could one really associate this to his private life? While there are some who make connections between his love for Mathilde Wesendonck and the Liebestod from Tristan and Isolde, it has to be said that the Liebestod deserves more credit. It’s an aria (not an instrumental piece as frequently believed), at the end of an opera of much poorer musical quality. But it’s divine. It would even be a little base to suppose that a mere woman like Wesendonck – completely disregarding her beauty or intelligence, however much there was of it – would have been the trigger for that mark of genius. This is the product of divinity.

Puccini wrote that he had wept uncontrollably at writing Mimì’s death in La Bohème. But what could this have to do with his own life? It was said to have been subtly based on a book called Scènes de la vie Bohème by Henry Murger. Another ironic fact about Puccini is that Madama Butterfly was not only inspired by a Japanese play which had nothing to do with his own experiences, but was the foreshadowing of something dark that was to happen to him afterwards. After the opera had been written Puccini’s maid was accused of having an affair with him, and, plunged into despair, she killed herself from fear that she had lost her honour in the public eye, a way similarly to Butterfly. The only work by Puccini which could possibly reflect his own experiences could be Il Tabarro of Il Trittico, written at the beginning of the First World War and sounding as gloomy as the streets of World War I Italy. The main character of it sings: ‘I’m a city girl and only the Paris air keeps me alive,’ at the exact period when Puccini himself was stifled because of limitations of travel and freedom. If this, however, can be called the opera where Puccini reveals himself, it also has to be called possibly the least successful of his operas, with the exception of La Fanciula del West. Neither have much for which we can credit them.

If opera singers were to base their performances on personal suffering they would never be able to sustain a role. How many prima donnas have suffered from tuberculosis? How many have been prepared to die for love? The general public would probably predict not many. Opera is an almost exaggerated art where the kind of suffering that characters endure onstage hardly exists in real life, or, if it does, it exists in a past or in a far away distance that is unfamiliar to our eyes. Singing these roles requires an immense love and unmoveable devotion to the music. Envisaging that one is dying gradually, and especially that one is dying so slowly that they have the time to make a full-blown confession or sing the same phrase eighteen times, it a difficult feat for the normal, well-to-do opera singer. But it’s possible.

Those who have the tendency to assume that Maria Callas was ‘great’ because of her emotional, ‘turbulent’ – or however critics choose to put it – life, would be very wrong to assume that her greatness came from the fabric of her life at all. Aged thirty-one, Callas was married to a man she did think she loved, the Italian industrialist Giovanni Battista Meneghini, twenty-eight years her senior. But he was a companion, and had never been a lover. He fell asleep most of the time and was categorically no source of her dramatic inspiration. This didn’t stop her from understanding the desperation of Cio-Cio San when she recorded Butterfly with Karajan that year. Nor does that mean that as soon as she began her liaison with Onassis she suddenly ‘knew’ what her heroines were singing about. She had known from the age of fourteen, when she sang her first Casta diva. If she grew more passionate in a role it came from her love of music – not her love elsewhere. An analysis of the chronology of her performances and studio recordings can confirm that.

So the musical genius, it can be said, does not suffer so much as we would expect. At least, they don’t suffer their private problems through their music. They suffer the creation of music and it gives them problems. Geniuses have enough on their minds as it is; serving huge, hating or adoring publics, trying to make the most of art in hard conditions, trying to feed their own prides as they do so and seeing that they please their maker – whoever that may be. Let’s not attribute the everyday worries of life to these demi-gods. Frankly, they’re better than us, and they’re better than that

First Night Review : Clytemnestra

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Conceptually, the prospect of an Ancient Greek language play is divisive. There are those in Oxford, and I probably count myself among them, who consider the idea attractive. There is plenty to whet the appetite about seeing things ‘as they were originally done’ – think Shakespeare’s Globe and you have it. Or the naysayers would have it their way; that a full-length play in a language they don’t understand is nothing short of a nightmare in which, under duress, their Classics teachers force them through the entirety of the piece, Clockwork Orange-style.

There were plenty of schoolchildren there, let me tell you.

The Choephoroi (Libation Bearers – shortened, understandably I think, to the name Clytemnestra) centres on the return of Orestes to Mycenae. Sacrificing at his father’s tomb, he leaves a lock of hair by which he is promptly identified with the arrival of his sister, Electra, who has come to make offerings at the tomb as well. There follows a lengthy funereal lament for Agamemnon and an attempt to get him on-side for Orestes’ plan; to kill Aegisthus and Clytemnestra and thus avenge his father’s murder. The first act of this translation ends with Orestes changing dress to that of a passing foreigner, through which device he will enter to palace. The second act follows his entry and destruction of the usurper Aegisthus’ house and the eventual murder of his mother. Ominously, the Furies – avenging spirits – appear to plague Orestes for his matricide.

I should like to praise all the cast for learning the Greek so well – especially the previously illiterate. It is important to put that impressive feat to one side, as that really is enough to win admiration. All of the cast were physically refined and drilled to imitate Raymond Blankenhorn’s and Rachel Beaconsfield-Press’ conception and realisation of the play in a Japenese Noh format. Jack Noutch’s catlike physicality springs to mind as something that worked particularly well in this capacity. What he had some trouble with was matching intonation with emotion, admittedly a hard task. Amber Husain was perfect in this capacity. Her speech rose and fell with fluency and even when I was not reading the surtitles I felt confident of what she was conveying. Similarly impressive was her precision in keeping time with the percussive steps characteristic of Noh performance. A special mention should be given to Helen Slaney’s nurse, who tempered comedy with tragedy well in her brief interlude.

A slight jarring note actually sprang from another such liaison. At the point when Orestes is going to kill his mother (convincingly and powerfully portrayed by Lucy Jackson) he strikes a ‘Japanese pose’ causing the audience to hoot with delight. I found myself laughing with delight at the knife wielding matricide standing in the palace door. The other sticking point in this sense was the apparition of a Clytemnestra-cum-snake figure that noodled around on stage during the funeral sequence but lacked the precise choreography so clearly observed elsewhere.

The most breathtaking thing about this piece was the production design. In its fallow moments, you had only to look at the sumptuous set to feel reassured. Paper screens, sashes, beautifully stylised columns and an imposing palace were a fantastic benefit to the play.

I hesitate to be the schoolteacher, but you should definitely see this. If not for the fact that it’s a theatrical rarity in language and frequency, then for its sheer style and conceptual cleanliness. You might even pick up some bloody Greek while you’re at it, too.

4 STARS

Rule breaking in OUSU election campaigns

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Four out of five Presidential candidates have received fines for breaking campaign rules in the run up to this week’s OUSU elections.

OUSU’s Returning Officer, Jonathan Edwards, has published a public list of complaints against candidates or their activists acting in ways that contravene the many complex rules that govern election campaigns. Some complaints have been dismissed while some have seen teams forced to pay small fines. Presidential candidates, David Railton, David Townsend, Jacob Diggle and James Weinberg have all been fined for offences committed under their names.

Had the rule breaking been more serious the Returning Officer would have had the power to enforce harsher disciplinary measures, such as disqualification or even referral to the Proctors in cases of suspected harassment.

Jonathan Edwards told Cherwell, “The three slates with presidential candidates have all had their publicity budgets reduced due to various breaches of the rules, but none of them dramatically. There has also been one candidate who had their deposit fined £10 for two very similar rules breaches in quick succession.”

He commented, “There have been more complaints than last year, but this is only to be expected with a larger number of candidates and very few of them unopposed.”

Examples of the kind of complaints raised against the candidates include incidences of activists or Common Room Presidents supporting more than one slate and mistakes or misleading statements in manifestoes.

One incident saw David Townsend’s presidential slate caught up in controversy after an email was sent to MCR Presidents which said, ‘The Oxford Student newspaper is administering a survey to assess your knowledge and interest in the upcoming elections”, although the paper had never agreed to commission such a survey. Team Townsend was stripped of 5 percent of its publicity budget for this misdemeanour.

In defence of his campaign team David Townsend commented, “Without wishing to comment on details of particular rulings, I’m proud to say that even where complaints against members of my team have been upheld, the Returning Officer has in each and every case confirmed the honesty of the person in question, even if that person did make an innocent mistake under the Standing Orders.”

He added, “no major team in these elections escaped without some financial penalty or other.”

Independent presidential candidate Alex Shattock, who is the only one not to have been fined for rule-breaks, commented “I hear that David Jamiroquai Townsend (‘The Townsinator’) has now been fined 10% of his budget, after his appeal from 5%. I completely support him on this issue and he should appeal again.”

However, he then went on to suggest that, in his opinion, Townsend had made some errors in judgement, “In many ways it is his own fault, for associating with the seedy underclass of centre-left Oxford students. I always knew Alex Harvey [an activist for Team Townsend] was a sinister character. His eyes have a kind of dead, relentless hunger to them. Once he told me that he likes his women like he likes his coffee; ‘ground up and in the freezer’. Another time he mentioned that he keeps the severed hand of a child in his left pocket, ‘just in case’. I laughed nervously, but he just stared.” Cherwell cannot substantiate these claims.

Townsend also told Cherwell that he felt that too much emphasis was put on these minor rules infringements and commented, “I think that elections should be decided by voters, not by campaign teams behind the scenes pecking away at each others’ budgets with fines for minor infractions of OUSU’s Standing Orders. The real loser in the latter situation is Oxford students, who just get a less engaged, more rules-dominated Student Union.”

James Weinberg also argued that the attention on minor rule breaking detracted from what was important in the elections and commented particularly on the difficulty of running as an independent candidate.

He said, “as an independent without agents to act on my behalf, the complaints against me consumed a lot of my time that might otherwise have been spent culturing support among the student population. Thankfully testimonies from tutors at Hertford were sufficient to dismiss the allegations against me, but nevertheless these repeated actions were clearly aimed to waste my time, and to discredit me.”

He added, “In my eyes this is completely against the ethos of a student election and epitomises the cold calculation of the slate system. I chose to run independently because I wanted people to vote for me on the basis of my policies, not on the basis of how many people from the current OUSU clique I had running round hassling the electorate for me.

‘OUSU needs to change if its to escape the kind of in-biting that has characterised aspects of this election and I hope more of those who have become disillusioned with this aspect to the student union log on to vote for that change. To be successful, OUSU needs to become a social and political hub for the majority, and I can only hope that people take the time to read what I have to say about returning the students union to its primary function of bringing students together.“

Jacob Diggle, on the other hand, remained more positive about this year’s election campaign despite the complaints raised against him and his fellow candidates. He commented, “Elections obviously have to be fair to all candidates and the rules are there to ensure that. The Join Jacob team thinks that our ideas are strong enough without resorting to underhand tactics. We’ve been impressed with how clean this election has been, and commend all candidates for fighting a good campaign.” 

Univ invests in property in town centre

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University College has spent seven million pounds purchasing a development of flats in Oxford City Centre.

The purchase of the twenty six properties, which are off St Thomas Street, mark a residential investment by the college, rather than a move to provide further accommodation for students.

Frank Marshall, Estates Bursar for University College, commented, “The flats have been purchased as an investment, to provide income to help fund our academic activities.”

Univ second year Christopher Pruijsen said, “There is nothing wrong with a college making an investment from it’s endowment – normally they take in Asset Management to do so, so this move actually saves the college on fees- and I must say it’s better that the colleges own city housing than for the private sector to do so, as this way we might be able to secure some student accommodation in the city.

‘The real problem is that the college in fact does not offer the housing to University College students, who are instead forced to move into private sector housing which is managed by often ridiculously unhelpful landlords, and which is located much further from college than the housing which the college just acquired. So turn it into accommodation for Univ’s third year students, or even better for second years, as third years really should live in college.”

Robin McGhee, a student at St Anne’s, reflected on the disparity between colleges with disposable income and those in need of financial support, stating, “St Anne’s has virtually no money at all. Our administrative staff essentially spend their lives hacking the various alumni for cash. Also, the floor of our kitchen fell in over the summer (the fact that a floor can fall in gives an impression of how dire conditions up here are) so we need to build a new one.”

Review: The Beach Boys – The Smile Sessions

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It was 1966, and Brian Wilson had high hopes for the follow up to The Beach Boys’ critically acclaimed Pet Sounds. Smile would be a concept album, further eschewing the ‘surfer’ sound that The Beach Boys had been successful with and painting a coast-to-coast soundscape of America. A sandpit was built around the piano, fireman’s outfits donned and over $50,000 spent on the recording of one track alone. Smile was going to be The Beach Boys’ pièce de résistance. It didn’t happen.

Drugs, mental illness, fights and frustration set in and the project was shelved. The tapes were cherry-picked to cobble together 1967’s Smiley Smile, countless bootlegs were produced, and Wilson re-recorded the album in 2004, but the full original recordings have now been released for the first time ever as the The Smile Sessions. “Maybe I’m just trying to look for something that isn’t there.” Wilson can be heard musing on one of the hundreds of outtakes included in the complete 5-disc edition. 45 years after recording began, is the The Smile Sessions what fans are looking for?

Wilson’s genius is clear, and the album could arguably be propped up by ‘Good Vibrations’ alone. Over ninety hours of tape were edited down to 4 minutes of sonic delight. It simmers with the sensuousness of summer, romance and youth, with a bit of Electro-Theremin and the Doctor Who theme-tune thrown in. Elsewhere ‘Heroes and Villains’ excitedly whirls along like a surreal fairground ride, its refrain rippling through ‘Do You Like Worms (Roll Plymouth Rock)’, whilst ‘Surf’s Up’ hauntingly laments ‘a broken man too tough to cry’. Other gems include the nonsensically didactic ‘Vega-Tables’ and the serene ‘Wonderful’. But The Smile Sessions sometimes stutters and stumbles, with bridge songs, elevator music and clattering cacophony.

Nevertheless, for those interested enough to wade beyond the first disc, The Smile Sessions is a treasure trove for procrastinators and aficionados, with outtakes revealing both Wilson’s quirky humour and painstaking search for perfection. The Smile Sessions isn’t a masterpiece, but it’s almost there: a tantalising glimpse into what might have been.

Review: DRC Music – Kinshasa One Two

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Damon Albarn is doing good for the world, and the product is really not bad at all.

Working in conjunction with Japanese-American hip-hop maestro Dan the Automator and over 50 local musicians from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kinshasa One Two is a strange, but not unpleasant record that seriously warrants a second listen. And most commendable of all, all proceeds head directly to support Oxfam’s work in the DRC.

The aesthetic is primarily African, with a hefty dose of more standard abstract, instrumental, mid-tempo dance music. All in all, it sounds less like Blur, and more like Thievery Corporation on an African minibreak.

The original premise is a baffling one: Albarn and the Automator flew into the D.R.C. with iPads clutched in their hot little hands, and worked with local musicians playing tomato tins. It is unsurprising that Kinshasa One Two is consequently a little bit scrappy, not least because this fusion of Afro and Beats had only five days to simmer.

The moody electronics that punctuate the release are pretty standard for a Warp release, but they often don’t quite work within the Kinshasa framework.  At times, the album seems oddly disconnected, and occasionally mired down in a bog of squeaks and beeps. Nonetheless, there are some simply superb individual points.

A particular highlight is opening dub track ‘Hallo’, a duet between Albarn and Congolese Nelly Liyemge, and the only track on which Albarn sings. While the African influence is admittedly fairly light, and the Gorillaz presence very noticeable, the result is well-balanced.

At its best, this is an excellent and well-formed mix of instrumentally driven hip hop, 1970s funk and Congolese dance music. At its worst, it’s a clumsy fudge of electronica and African beats, hastily and awkwardly assembled. All in all: an interesting and largely effective record with truly rewarding moments amongst the dross.