Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Blog Page 1855

International students’ visa regulations revised

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The government has released a revised set of visa proposals which aim to curb the number of foreign students in Britain by around 100,000 a year.

The coalition believes that the new proposals offer compromises on their more stringent original plans, which were met with hostility by universities nationally. Home Secretary Theresa May said that significant changes were necessary to combat abuses in the system and to reduce annual net migration.

The measures, which will be implemented from April, will include alterations to the post-study work route and restrictions on which students can bring dependants to the UK with them. There will be tighter regulations for private colleges wishing to sponsor overseas students, in order to prevent enrolment at bogus colleges.

The concessions offered include scrapping the plan for an arbitrary cap on student migration and allowing some students to stay in the UK after graduation. Revised measures will enable students with the offer of a graduate-level job paying at least £20,000 a year to stay on to work.

Additionally, whilst there will be tougher English language requirements in place for those who wish to study in the UK, universities will be able to introduce their own tests for potential students.

A spokesperson for Oxford University said, ‘We welcome the proposals regarding the changes to the student immigration system and are satisfied that our serious concerns were listened to carefully by the Government.

‘The changes announced will ensure that we continue to attract the most intellectually able international students to Oxford and that students will still have the opportunity to take up graduate level jobs after completing their studies.’

Nevertheless there remains opposition to the proposals. Colin Jackson, OUSU’s International Students Officer said, ‘While some of the more egregious proposals (requiring that students physically return home to extend their stay, not allowing universities to vouch for students’ ability to speak English, etc.) have been done away with, the tone – and more importantly the effect – of these proposals still belies what I see as hostility towards international students.’

Clare Joyce, an American PPE student, told Cherwell, ‘It is important to remember that there are already many obstacles for non-EU students seeking to pursue their studies in the UK … The ability to attract the best and the brightest, regardless of their home country, to Oxford, is a substantial part of what keeps Oxford globally competitive in an age where that competition has become more intense than ever.’

Similarly, Vartan Shadarevian, a first-year student at University College, said, ‘International students on graduation, by virtue of their degree, are some of the best educated immigrants in the country. They pay much higher international fees, and throughout their time of study pay living and accommodation costs, pouring huge sums of money into the British economy … foreign students represent the most welcome form of immigration, and treating them as other immigrants is an ill advised, ill thought-out policy direction.’

 

Review: Cause Celebre

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The Terence Rattigan centenary celebrations continue with this revival of his final play, 1976’s Cause Celebre, taken on by director Thea Sharrock, fresh from last year’s acclaimed production of Rattigan’s After the Dance at the National Theatre. The play centres on the true story of 39 year old Alma Rattenbury, trialled in 1935 alongside her 18 year old lover for the brutal murder of her older husband. The case attracted notoriety due to the age difference between the lovers, which came to outrage the public even more than the murder itself. This controversy is what much of the play spins on: it allows for the introduction of a sub-plot involving Edith, called upon as forewoman of the jury for Alma’s trial, whose social and sexual repression and morally upright nature make her so prejudiced against Alma from the start that she fears she will be unable to give her a fair trial, such has the taboo sexual liaison obscured and problematised the issues of guilt and innocence.

The two principal female parts are portrayed masterfully. Anne-Marie Duff is a wonderful Alma, oozing sexuality, danger and wicked fun from her very first appearance, sashaying downstairs in satin pyjamas to meet the rough and ready builder’s son George, who has come for an interview for a servant’s job. For much of the play we are unclear over whodunit, and despite the knowledge that Alma has seduced a teenager and probably murdered her husband, I found myself warming to her inexplicably and rooting for her, a sentiment echoed by all around her, from the initially stern prison warden to her team of frustrated lawyers. Meanwhile Edith, in many ways a twin to Alma, both suffering marital problems and consumed by love for a teenager (Edith for her rebellious son Tony, Alma for George), is played brilliantly by Niamh Cusack, whose gradual transformation throughout the play follows our own oscillations in emotion and attitude as the dramatic court case is played out before us.

Much of the action occurs in flashback, which often works well, for example as the scenes of the murder are played out in the midst of the trial. Yet this does me

an that some relationships are not fleshed out, most notably the relationship between Alma and George upon which the whole action depends, which is described to us more than it is shown. This use of flashback and swift changes in focus do however allow the play to work on many levels which come together euphorically near the end, although the second half, focusing on the unravelling of Alma’s story, rather forgets about the subplot of Edith’s relationships with her son and ex-husband, which is left unsatisfactorily hanging. The action is fast paced and extremely exciting; throughout the interval I found myself desperate for the curtain to rise again and the trial to continue. There is also much humour alongside the intense tension, particularly provided by the excellent Nicholas Jones as Alma’s beslippered, rule-bending defence lawyer, who almost steals the show.

The play’s strengths lie in the range of human emotions and relationships expressed in this play. Its exploration of the themes of justice and morality are ever-relevant, despite the play’s 1930s setting, with its stricter moralities and the threat of capital punishment looming large. Although not one of Rattigan’s better known plays, this spectacular production with outstanding performances is in itself a cause celebre.

 ‘Cause Celebre’ is at the Old Vic, London, until 11 June

Shark Tales Episode 4

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In the last installment of Hilary term, Barnaby Fry asks Wednesday night revelers to take sides on important issues such as the ideal male urine receptacle: cubicle or urinal.

Nuclear over reaction?

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Ten days after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake hit Japan in the early hours of Friday 11th March, the events at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear power plant are still dominating headlines. Though clearly not a trivial event, the plant in Fukushima is not (and never was) a threat on the scale of the Chernobyl disaster and, in my opinion, the reporting of it as such shows serious flaws in the way science is reported in both the British and foreign media. 

As a brief overview, the Fukushima plant is comprised of 6 boiling water reactors, which use the heat generated from nuclear fission to boil steam, which then powers electrical turbines. The reactor core is comprised of fuel rods, which contain the material that drives the nuclear reaction, surrounded by water acting as a coolant. In the case of reactors 1,2,4,5 and 6 in the Fukushima I plant, the fuel rods contain pellets of enriched uranium, though roughly 6% of the rods in the 3rd reactor also contain plutonium. Underneath the reactor lies an arrangement of control rods, comprised of elements that can absorb neutrons such as Boron, which can be inserted into the central core of the reactor to slow the reaction down, or stop it entirely.

This is exactly what happened automatically at Fukushima after the earthquake, and the successful action of the control rods is one of the most important reasons that comparisons of this accident with Chernobyl are flawed. At Chernobyl, fuel rods had been withdrawn from the reactor core in order to maintain a suitable power level for an experiment which was being run. This led to overheating of the reactor, which could not be effectively shut down upon reinsertion of the control rods due to serious design flaws in the reactor. For example, the use of graphite tips on the control rods which initially sped up the nuclear reaction due to graphite’s effect as a neutron moderator: it feeds neutrons back into the nuclear reaction in a positive feedback cycle. In most modern power plants water is used as a moderator instead. As the water boils due to the heat generated, it turns to steam, which does not feed neutrons back into the reaction. This slows the reaction down, and inhibits the generation of heat in a negative feedback loop, making Fukushima much more stable than Chernobyl.

This water is what caused the explosion at the 1st, 2nd and 3rd reactors. As temperatures rose in the reacting vessels, it is likely that some of the alloys containing the nuclear material split, allowing the radioactive elements to react with the water, splitting it into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen was vented to the top of the reactor building where it exploded, blowing the steel roof off the reactor. It is important to note, however, that the concrete containment vessel surrounding the reactor vessel was not breached, though some damage was suspected at unit 2. No containment vessel at all was present at Chernobyl, meaning that as the graphite in the fuel rods set alight, the fire could spread radiation into the atmosphere.

However, some radiation was released in these explosions. To quantify the amount, the unit Sieverts (Sv) is used. This measures the amount of radiation absorbed in joules per kilogram, multiplied by a weighting factor for the radiation type and the biological tissue absorbed into. What a Sievert measures and the effect of different levels of absorbed radiation have been the source of most misunderstanding and the least well explained factor in the disaster. Pretty much everyone receives at least a few milliSieverts just from being. Indeed, eating a banana increases your radiation dose by about 0.1 microSieverts (μSv), which defines the standard for the banana equivalent dose (BED) that is used to highlight how much background radiation we are exposed to on a daily basis.

After the second explosion – on March 15th – a rate of 400 mSv/hour (≈0.1 mSv/s) was detected at the site of the reactor. This is a large rate and would lead to radiation sickness in an hour or two, however, this was a spike that lasted less than two hours, after which the radiation levels for the remainder of the day decreased, and roughly 12 hours after had fallen to less than half a milliSievert. Though it necessitated the raising of the dose limit permitted to workers from 100 mSv to 250 mSv, this level, which has generally remained the upper limit, equates to about 80 mSv if you stayed non-stop at the power plant from the occurrence of the earthquake until the time of writing (two weeks). However, this does not mean the plant is utterly harmless. Some greater leaks of radiation will occur due to the need to vent steam and a few days ago 3 emergency workers were hospitalised after being exposed to roughly 170 mSv by stepping in contaminated water, suffering from beta ray burns. Overall 20 workers have now been injured at the plant, though half of these were due to the explosions last week.

Though there are potentially still some health risks posed by the plant due to contaminated food and water, these risks should not be overstated. Radiation limits have always been set extremely stringently, for instance, the milk produced by cows in the Fukushima prefecture contains radioactive iodine-131 at five times the legal limit but on a typical Japanese diet, drinking solely this milk for an entire year would come out to about 1-2 μSv. It is also worth remembering that, whilst there may be a case against building nuclear power plants in regions that frequently suffer earthquakes, this was the fourth largest earthquake since records began and was over 5 times more powerful than the plant was built to withstand. Even then, the backup generator the plant had was only destroyed by the tsunami produced from the quake.

In my opinion, the Fukushima earthquake is an endorsement of nuclear power and, whilst a review of safety measures may well be a sensible choice, Germany’s choice to shut down all reactors temporarily seems to be a massive overreaction. In addition, the media, which not only provided woefully inadequate explanation of the mechanism behind the power plant and how radiation dosage is measured, suggested Japan had been ’48 hours away from another Chernobyl’ and suffered a ‘nuclear nightmare’ has done little to inform the public of the pros and cons of nuclear fission power.

The Universal Sigh

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To celebrate the physical release of their latest album The King of Limbs, Radiohead have published a special edition newspaper called The Universal Sigh. It was given out on Monday 28th March in a few specific locations around the world and was distributed in London outside Rough Trade East, a predictable location that was, annoyingly, just a bit too far from where I live. Still I trekked the distance in order to be part of yet another publicity stunt from the band.

Once in the queue, I had difficulty explaining to myself why the hell I was there but decided to block out all sensible thought and just wait patiently for those three sheets of paper I so desperately wanted. After about 15 minutes of queuing it became apparent that Thom Yorke himself was distributing the newspaper – what joy! I finally had a reason for being there – this was his chance to apologise for blanking me on St Giles a few months ago when all I wanted was to praise him for his incredible music.

People were getting frantic, arms waving and brandishing iPhones and cameras – everyone wanted a piece of Thom. Only a few moments away from meeting the Radiohead front man, I had convinced myself that I would be decidedly unimpress

ed by him and say something about our brief encounter in Oxford. Instead, I withdrew into my shell and managed to mumble a \’thanks for this man\’ as he handed me my very own copy of The Universal Sigh. I failed to stand up to the musician, but I knew that wasn\’t the last time I would see him.

The newspaper itself is an odd melange of poetry, lyrics from The King Of Limbs, and short stories from acclaimed writers such as Jay Griffiths and Robert Mcfarlane. The centre spread is a jumble of lyrics and slightly scary imagery that extracted nothing more than a sigh from my being. Even though I was slightly unimpressed with the actual product, it is a testament to the creativity of this band who are always pushing the boundaries of their music as they involve their fans and keep them second guessing. It\’s definitely one for the collection box.

Don\’t beat yourself up if you didn\’t manage to snatch one up. Visit the website instead (http://theuniversalsigh.com/) to see pictures of devoted fans all around the world who queued for hours for free paper and ink. Not sure I\’ll be telling the grandchildren about this one.

 


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Oxford win the Truelove Bowl

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Oxford reclaimed the Truelove in style with a convincing 6-3 victory over Cambridge at the Troxy in East London. Looking for their first victory in three years, the Dark Blues produced a performance which one alumnus described as ‘a technical master-class’.

First up was David Lee, Oxford’s featherweight from Corpus Christi, who showed plenty of energy and heart but was overcome by a raw yet powerful John Lacy. Faraz Sayed, the Oxford lightweight, was unable to even things up as he lost a majority decision to Nim Sukumar in a hard-fought and extremely close bout. With nerves starting to show in the Oxford crowd, Oliver Harriman of Hertford, with his unconventional southpaw style, sought to redress the balance. It did not take him long – 20 seconds, in fact – to brutally knock out his adversary Elliot Chambers with an overhand left. The Dark Blues sensed a comeback. As Harriman got Oxford off the mark, the crowd found its voice. The Cambridge boxer thankfully regained consciousness after several minutes of anxiety.

Fittingly, it was Oxford Captain Josh Fields of Pembroke College who evened the score, demonstrating his experience and class by winning a unanimous decision against a spirited James Phillips in the Welterweight division. With the Cambridge crowd beginning to fall silent, Andy Ormerod-Cloke, in his first ever bout, defeated the skilful Rich Simpson to give the Dark Blues a 3-2 lead before the interval. Oxford celebrated, but there was plenty of work to be done. Last year’s Varsity match – they led after five bouts only to lose 5-4 at the death – played on every boxer’s mind and Oxford were sure to maintain their focus after the break.

After a short interlude, Steffen Hoysemsvoll sought to extend his side’s lead further. However, against Chris Webb, the former Cambridge captain, Hoyemsvoll narrowly and somewhat controversially lost out in a split decision. Current Cambridge captain Ssegawa-Ssekintu Kiwanuka, looking to build on his victory at last year’s match, came out guns blazing against Alec Ward of Christchurch. However, Ward remained composed throughout and produced a technical master-class to put Oxford one win away from victory. Ben Morris of St. Hugh’s and Andrei Akhvleidani of Oriel, both extremely powerful boxers, provided two technical knockouts to seal a 6-3 Oxford victory which sent the Dark Blue crowd into a frenzy.

Fields, clearly overjoyed at the victory, said, “I am proud to have captained such an incredible team. We have trained so hard, and every performance this evening showed how prepared we were. I’d like to thank the coaches Des Brackett and Dave Mace for all their hard work this season, and, of course, all the boxers who have been magnificent throughout the year. The Truelove Bowl is back where it belongs.”

 

Oxford women triumph on the water

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Oxford\’s women and lightweight men triumphed over Cambridge in the Henley Boat Races on Sunday, ending a memorable weekend of rowing after Oxford\’s men won London\’s Xchanging Boat Race.

Nicole Scheumann, a Lincoln graduate student and captain of the college boat club who rowed for Oxford this weekend told Cherwell, \”We knew that Cambridge were a tough opposition this year, and that it would be a hard fight to turn around the predictions for Boat Race Day.

\”The crew and coaches were extremely focused over the last weeks, and we kept pushing every session…Arriving first at the finish was a huge relief!\”

The Dark Blue women were also helped to victory by Natalie Redgrave. whose father, five-time Olympic gold medallist Sir Steve Redgrave, was cheering from the sidelines. After the race he said, \”I\’m really proud of her. She\’s got the ability to go to a higher level.

\”It\’s funny because she has always been adamant she wasn\’t going to row. But when we found out she started rowing we were pleasantly surprised.

\”Her mother started rowing at university and in two years was competing internationally and at the Olympics – so we have high hopes for her.\”

The 6\’2\’\’ Pembroke medical student was lured into rowing in Freshers\’ Week, although as she explained, \”I was never going to row, what Dad does; I was never going to do medicine, what Mum does. Now I\’m doing both.\”

Natalie\’s godfather, four-time Olympic gold medallist, Sir Matthew Pinsent, was also at the race to cheer Oxford on, having led the veterans\’ boat to victory over Cambridge on Friday.

Whilst Cambridge\’s Blondie boat beast Osiris in the women\’s reserves race, and also won the lightweight women\’s race, Oxford\’s lightweight men held out in a close-fought battle.

Sam Albanie, a third year Mathematician at Lincoln, said, \”After a strong start, we grimly fought off Cambridge all the way down the course as they lifted the rate and pushed back at us. It all came down to the last twenty strokes, and we hung on to win by a canvas\”.

Oxford\’s triumphs come as Oxford first year Constantine Louloudis has said that he has not yet ruled out taking a year off to compete in the 2012 Olympic Games.

The Trinity student is to row at the trials for this year\’s Great Britain team on April 16th in a coxless pair with Cambridge Blues rower George Nash.

Louloudis has said that he has a \”huge amount of respect\” for his former opponent.

 

Out of Oxford – 3. Exercise!

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Students among \”anarchist\” breakaways from TUC march

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Students were prominent among those who attended the break-away \”anarchist\” march on Saturday, while the official TUC organised anti-cuts protests were taking place on Saturday.

While a peaceful march along Whitehall to Hyde Park was taking place, a few hundred people quickly broke off from the march to stage their own independent protest.

Roaming through Piccadilly, Oxford Street and Trafalgar Square, the self-styled \”Anarchists\” were immediately distinguishable from all other protestors due to their red and black hoods and flags, and their drum and bass sound-system.

Scotland Yard has claimed that the violence of this ‘mob\’, who smashed windows, threw paint and attacked police officers, \”could not have been more markedly different\” to the official TUC (Trade Union Congress) event. Even campaign group UK Uncut, who were protesting against alleged tax avoidance by many big businesses, and occupied luxury grocery store Fortnum & Mason, sought to distance themselves from the ‘Anarchists\’.

Many iconic London landmarks, including the Ritz Hotel, Trafalgar Square, and Oxford Street\’s Topshop, were the target of attacks.

Despite this, out of the 201 people arrested by the 4,500 police on duty on Saturday, 149 of whom have already been charged, 145 of the arrests were reportedly made on the basis of UK Uncut\’s occupation.

At the official rally in Hyde Park, set to be the largest public protest since the rally against the Iraq War in 2003, speakers ranged from TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber, to Labour party leader Ed Miliband and Tony Robinson, who played Baldrick in Blackadder. Many made personal comments about government ministers, with one speaker even calling for \”Nick Clegg to go to the naughty corner\”. Some at the march also called for a General Strike or a mid-week protest.

Protestors commented that the atmosphere in Hyde Park was totally different to the ‘frontline\’ spots, with orderly queues for the portaloos and Hare Krishnas handing out free food. The crowd was noticeably older, including a large number of women and the disabled.

Despite the large attendance, many student protestors observed that the rally felt relatively empty, and noted a \”lack of energy\” compared to the student-led protests against the raising of tuition fees and cuts to higher education earlier this year.

Charlie, a recent-graduate from Edinburgh University, asked \”Is this it?\”, whilst Laurence, a young student photo-journalist, said, \”This just couldn\’t be more different\”.

Many students were torn between staying at the peaceful rally, and joining the more \”exciting\” clashes at various other locations. Some even decided to slip away from the protest, and join friends to watch the Oxford Cambridge Boat race.

With Business Secretary Vince Cable stating that the Government was \”listening\”, but \”not going to change the basic economic strategy\”, the full impact of the anti-cuts march is as of yet unclear.

 

Always snip, snip, snip, eh, Mr Osborne?

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Interest payments – oh lord, what a quagmire we have here. The little five percents make the world go round. You wouldn’t be reading this without it. Oxford wouldn’t exist. It would be devoid of Daddy’s city money and most of its endowment. Yes, interest payments are positively festooned with joyfulness. Except – and Philip II would agree with me here – when you’re the one paying them.

When governments borrow money they have to pay back the interest on the debt. The more they borrow the greater the payments. And so Osborne, when he rose Gladstonily to make a less Gladstonily hour-long sermon on tax, had in mind to cut the debts to cut the payments. And to cut the debts he had to cut public spending. Or make the economy grow.

Not that you’d know that from the left-wing papers. These normally inestimable bulwarks of good sense have converted to a particularly virulent form of lunacy when confronted with The Oz. They are unable to understand that the Tories do not wish to permanently reduce public spending. Thatcher didn’t. Reagan didn’t. Osborne won’t. It is impossible to reduce the size of government spending in the long term. Saturday’s protestors in London also fail to grasp this – most of the cuts they protest against were planned by the Labour government. There is a consensus on the issue, blighted only by spin, propaganda and fudge.

So in focussing on cuts people are missing the point of this Budget. It’s a business Budget. The aim was to increase growth by bolstering companies. Hence the cut in corporation tax. This Budget has the Tory stamp on it. There was only one obvious Lib Dem concession – to raise the level at which people have to start paying tax. Otherwise in the end, it was helping businesses, with a bone to the tabloids chucked in. This – the fuel subsidy – is a determined snub to the environment, balanced, I suppose, with the investment in a green bank.

But these were merely sidelines. By investing in business subsidies and tax cuts the Chancellor’s pulled off a brilliant ploy. He hopes to avoid the heavy state investment needed to boost recovery by simply getting the private sector to do the job for him. From a right-wing perspective this is excellent. People are set free to grow businesses AND the economy improves. It is actually a brilliant idea, spoilt only by the fact it might very possibly not work at all.

Anyway, this won’t be the storyline. Cuts will dominate for the next few months, probably the next few years. However, it gives an idea of the Osborne strategy. This intriguing little man is the Ringo of the Tories – somehow essential, but it’s hard to work out exactly why. He is, we’re told, marshalling legions of followers for a leadership fight. This budget does not just determine the future of the country. It determine who will succeed as Prime Minister. And for millions waiting for the axe to fall, that is more important than they might think.