Saturday 7th June 2025
Blog Page 2272

More CCTV for Cowley

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Four new CCTV cameras, costing around £96,000, are to be placed along the Cowley road, in problem areas recognised by the City Council. Cameras will be placed at The Plain, opposite Princes Street, near the public toilets in Manzil Gardens and at the end of Magdalen Road. The camera at Manzil Gardens is welcomed by the staff at Premier Lettings, who work opposite the site where a  man was found dead on Saturday, February 16. Manager Jo Soden hopes that “CCTV will act as an additional deterrent” to the heightened police presence in the area.

By Sophie Pitman

Video Investigation: Visiting Students

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Cherwell24 investigates the extent to which Visiting Students feel integrated in Oxford University

The Real Dark Materials

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Rhian Holvey takes us on a tour through physics and fiction, dark matter and dust. 
 

Philip Pullman’s ‘His Dark Materials’ trilogy is undoubtedly one of the most popular and controversial fantasy series on the current market. It is a story about a girl, Lyra, from a parallel universe and a boy, Will, from our own. The series is wide-ranging and covers many themes, including religion, love, humanity and even concepts from modern scientific research. Perhaps the most obvious of these theories is that of parallel worlds; but in fact the core concept of the trilogy, even its title, points to another: Dust, shadows or dark matter.

 

Dust

The concept of Dust is introduced almost from the very beginning of ‘His Dark Materials’. It is first mentioned when Lyra hides in the retiring room and hears Lord Asriel giving a presentation to the Jordan College scholars. In it he shows a ‘photogram’ (slide) in which a special solution has been used to show up a glowing collection of particles falling down upon a man and it is these he identifies as Dust. An explanation of this is given later on. When Lyra enquires as to what these particles are, she is told:

 

"Dust is what makes the alethiometer [Lyra’s truth telling device] work…. You’ve heard of electrons, photons, neutrinos, and the rest? They’re called elementary particles because you can’t break them down any further…"

 

This idea is built upon in the second book (‘The Subtle Knife’) when Lyra visits Dr. Mary Malone, a physicist researching what she calls ‘shadow particles’ or ‘dark matter’ in the University of Oxford. Mary has been using a machine to research the strange phenomenon and is surprised to find that Lyra’s visit proves conclusively that the particles are conscious.

Although there is no evidence that any such conscious particles exist, dark matter is a real field of research and interesting parallels can be seen between the books’ description and reality.

 

Missing Masses

Dark matter was first postulated by a Swiss scientist, Fritz Zwicky, in 1933 due to his studies of the velocities of galaxy clusters, but no further evidence was found until the late 1960’s, when Vera Rubin was studying spiral galaxies. The force acting on such a galaxy can either be described by Newtonian gravity or centrifugally; the equations for both are shown below:

 

                               G.M(r).m                                                    mv2

Newtonian gravity:  F=      r2              Centrifugal force: F= mrw2 =   r

 

Where M(r) is a function of mass with distance from the galaxy centre (r), m the mass of a single star, w the angular velocity and v the linear velocity.

 

As the forces are equal, these equations can be combined and, after rearrangement, the linear velocity can be given as a function of the gravitational force and M(r):

 
   

 

                       

Thus, as r increases, a point is reached where the mass outside this radius is negligible, i.e. M(r) ~ MT (or the total mass of the galaxy) so the velocity is expected to taper out as it approximates to (a constant/ r)1/2. This does not occur since most stars orbit at the same speed. The simplest solution to this problem is to assume that there is a significant proportion of mass outside the containment area. In some cases, more than 50% of the mass of the galaxy must be within the relatively dark galactic halo.

These masses cannot be accounted for by observed bodies and are only detectable through observation of galactic gravitational forces. Hence the name ‘dark matter’ as, since it does not emit or reflect electromagnetic radiation, it cannot be observed directly. This gives the first parallel with the Dust of Pullman’s novels, for it is invisible to the naked eye and can only be detected or observed by use of special equipment such as Mary Malone’s machine in Oxford or, later, the amber spyglass.

So how does dark matter interact? There are four known forces: gravity, electromagnetism, strong (that which holds nuclei together) and weak (that which governs radioactive decay). We have already ruled out electromagnetism and dark matter’s gravitational effects have already been discussed, leaving strong and weak forces. Strong forces, however, have too short a range: 10-15 m. Thus, weak forces give the best chance of detecting dark matter.

 

The Nature of Dust

The exact composition of dark matter, even the question of its existence, is still being debated. Many suggestions as to its nature have been proposed, from ideas wildly different to Dust to models where the leap is not hard to achieve.

To begin with models unlike Dust, it has been suggested that astronomical bodies that do not shine could be responsible for the undetected masses in galaxies. The main entities in this group are brown dwarfs: stars which never got large enough to achieve hydrogen nuclear fusion. These “stars” can have up to 80% of the mass of our sun but are also very dense, having powerful quantum effects which make them a good candidate for dark matter. Other bodies include normal planets (which are difficult to detect even when eclipsing their star), clouds of non-luminous gas and black holes. These are collectively called MACHOs -MAssive Compact Halo Objects – an acronym invented mainly to match the similar WIMPs discussed below!

These entities seem to fit the bill for dark matter, as they are suitably massive whilst being undetectable by electromagnetic radiation. However, planets and asteroids are not favoured as a model for the missing matter since planets like Earth are not heavy enough to account for it. Black holes are and though they remain undetectable by light, as this cannot escape, large ones can be detected by the tumultuous activity at their limits, thus rendering them an unlikely explanation.

Another theoretical candidate for dark matter is a new type of elementary particles called WIMPs (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles) which, as the name suggests, have mass but interact primarily by weak forces and not electromagnetism. Dust is frequently described as an elementary particle in the trilogy and certain of their properties (their smallness and presence throughout the universe, even their penetration of matter) suggest WIMPs as the “real” counterpart of Dust. The smallness of WIMPs is overcome by proposing that many of them exist, and there is often talk of “clouds” of such particles which normal matter moves through unimpeded.

Neutrinos in particular have been proposed as a candidate for dark matter as they are uncharged and found in b-decay (i.e. have weak force interactions). The issue with this theory is that for a long time neutrinos were thought to have no mass and thus could not be responsible for the gravitational effects on galaxies. Relatively recent studies on the neutrinos released from the b-decay occurring during fusion of hydrogen to helium in the Sun indicate otherwise. It is possible, though difficult, to detect the neutrinos reaching Earth and it is found that the quantity is a third of that expected. There are in fact three types of neutrino: electron, muon and tau neutrinos of which the Sun produces the first, and these are the ones detected. If the neutrinos have mass, however, it is possible for them to undergo neutrino oscillation, converting them into the different forms. This is thought to be the reason for the neutrino deficit, as two thirds are converted into the undetected types and thus neutrinos must have mass.

However, the theory of neutrinos being the missing mass in galaxies is not widely accepted as they cannot pack closely enough at galactic centres due to their repulsiveness. They also move too fast and thus would not clump together to encourage the formation of galaxies.

Other forms of WIMP have not been ruled out. In the process of trying to construct a unified theory of electromagnetism and weak forces, a postulate known as supersymmetry (one first used in 1973 for early string theory and subsequently applied elsewhere) was used. This theory suggests that for each boson there is a “superpartner” which is a fermion, e.g. photons and their partner photinos. This theoretically doubles the number of particles known, but it is thought that partners may be much heavier than their counterparts and thus would require much higher energies to be created. This heaviness makes them favourable candidates for dark matter; a particular example of such a postulate is the neutralino which would be heavy and long-lived as well as being weakly interacting. These particles would be able to pass through normal matter and thus would be hard to detect. Experiments would require high sensitivity as information from the detection of dark matter must be removed from background signals due to normal matter. This draws another parallel with ‘His Dark Materials’, as the amber spyglass made by Mary Malone can still see normal matter while making the eye sensitive to Dust, converting its image somehow into light (an unlikely candidate for a detector outside of fiction
ue to the seeming dependence on electromagnetic radiation!). Current experiments on the detection of WIMPs show conflicting results and thus the question of whether this is dark matter remains unresolved.

 

The Future?

Despite the fiction of Mary Malone, in recent years a new theory of dark matter has been proposed by researchers in the University of Oxford. They propose a dark matter particle too light to detect or clump together but which can collide with denser dark matter in galaxy centres. Such a collision would, in theory, produce pairs of electrons and their antiparticles, positrons, which would move off at high speed until annihilation and production of a high energy photon beam (gamma rays). The interest of this theory is that such beams have already been detected coming from the centres of galaxies, but research is too early to draw conclusions yet.

The fact remains that dark matter is still a mystery and that any or all of the theories could prove in some way to be correct. It may even be possible that future research will disprove the existence of dark matter entirely, attributing the “missing mass” to modified gravity or quantum effects. Or perhaps, however unlikely, it may be revealed that dark matter is conscious, as in the case of Philip Pullman’s elusive Dust.

Oxford Police to wear cameras in helmets

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Police across Oxfordshire are to be issued with cameras which fit into their cycle helmets or can be worn on their shoulders.

After a successful pilot in East Oxford, it is expected that the entire county’s police should be fitted with the Body Worn Video Recording Cameras (BWVCs) by the summer.

According to a report by Thames Valley Police, the cameras are necessary to capture evidence of antisocial behaviour and should therefore lead to increased detections of street crime. It is also possible that the video cameras will lead to more guilty pleas in court and fewer complaints and assaults against officers.

PC Mike Ellis, anti-social behaviour co-ordinator for Thames Valley Police, said "Once they have been delivered to us, we will spend time training officers in their use. We hope to finish this process by summer."

70 cameras will be bought at a cost of more than £1,000 each, 25 of which will be used in Oxfordshire. The total cost of the new equipment will run to £90,000.

Darwin’s crabs hauled onto the net

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A collection of crabs obtained by Darwin on his famous voyage aboard HMS Beagle has been made available online by the Natural History Museum.The new database is part of an ongoing effort to digitize the museum's catalogues, and contains images and details of 40 different taxa.The crustaceans were collected while Darwin was sailing on his five-year journey 1831 – 1836, which led him to develop his theory of natural selection. The crabs were just one type of the vast array of organisms he collected, and upon his return found their way into the collection of the zoologist Thomas Bell. Darwin and Bell became immersed in cataloguing the Galapagos turtles, and the crustaceans were apparently forgotten.The University of Oxford recovered the collection in 1862, which has been kept in the Natural History Museum ever since. The new database of images can now be viewed at
http://www.oum.ox.ac.uk/database/zoology/darwin.htm
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Great Novels: The Portrait of a Lady, by Henry James

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Mesmerizing and provocative, Henry James’s 1880 novel, The Portrait of a Lady, challenges us to be unmoved by its contents. It is a story about difficult choices: how to make them and how to live by them. Making these choices is Isabel Archer, James’s self-aware and self-assured heroine. Only someone as self-possessed as Isabel could read this story and not be acutely influenced by it. 
The story’s charming opening line might rival that of de Maurier’s Rebecca or Orwell’s 1984 for the title of “most memorable”, were the book better known: ‘Under certain circumstances there are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea’. This Wildean, Brideshead-esque introduction anticipates a fairy tale conclusion. After the death of her only remaining parent, Isabel is plucked from her modest American home and brought to England by her wealthy Aunt. Isabel’s path seems paved to “happy ever after”, except that James does not write stories of this kind. The world which opens before us, following this cheerful beginning, is one of conflicts: the American vs. the European, the individual vs. society, the individual vs. himself. This is James’s territory. Opportunity after opportunity befalls Isabel. Wealth, marriage, and happiness are never beyond her reach but their cost is high. The offers she receives are all, in part, attempts to possess her. So Isabel is repeatedly faced with the same choice: should she forfeit independence for the chance to be happy or should she deny herself this opportunity to remain in control of herself? For Isabel, temptation comes in diverse forms, from the kind-natured and ailing Ralph to the deliciously mysterious and free-spirited Osmond. Suffice to say that Isabel’s yielding to temptation, when she eventually does, proves cataclysmic.   
This story is not one in which much happens. The Portrait of a Lady is a psychological study, written by a man whose brother was a psychologist at a time when that science was in its early stages. Isabel travels, but the journey which the story records is primarily one of the mind. James allows us to travel parts of it with her. At times, we are held at a distance and on these occasions Isabel appears confident in her decisions. At others, we enter Isabel’s head and what we find there is struggle and turmoil. At these moments, we feel the story growing dark around us, everything fading save Isabel’s thoughts. Conditioned in this way, we do not balk at the story’s sensational moments. Rather we feel them deeply, for the story’s characters and for ourselves. 
Isabel is both indisputably of her time and, equally, she belongs here with us. She is an example of “the new woman”, emerging out of the Victorian quagmire and, yet, she remains a potent character still. The questions with which she is faced are timeless. Even now we might ask whether it is possible to remain an autonomous individual and, at the same time, to fulfil the desire to share our experience of the world with someone like us. Even today, for good or bad, we feel the inverse of this desire: the essential primacy of the individual and fear of opening ourselves up to others. by Ceri James

College football, 7th week

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Queen’s 1-4 St. John’s 
After recent losses to Pembroke and Corpus/Linacre, St. John's ensured that they would stay in the promotion race on Friday, beating The Queen's College 4-1.  On a windy day, John's exploited the conditions to score four goals in one nineteen minute first half spell, before holding on against an improved home team.  
The conditions precluded the flowing football both sides would have rather played.  The powerful wind, blowing toward the Queen's goal, prevented keeper Martin Bourne from exerting any control over his area.  The flight of balls hit into the box could not be predicted, and it was from such an incident that John's took the lead with the game's first real chance.  Jamie Bell's corner from the right was caught by the wind, and delivered past the Queen's’ defence to Mike Newland at the far post, who headed in.  After a four month lay off with a knee injury, John's captain Newland has scored in both his games since his return, having never scored before.  Five minutes later, however, Newland missed a header from the same source.   
Queen's' attacks were spearheaded by Will Riley, who succeeded in getting into good positions but not in beating Alex Berend.  Minutes after Riley shot wide, John's broke to double their lead.  Dave Parsons took possession down the right hand side, getting to the by-line and pulling the ball back to the near post.  Tom Froggett's late run was not picked up and he slid in to score. 

A similar counter-attack five minutes later saw Joel Gregory release Matt Evans-Young in the left channel, who slotted home his fourteenth of the season. The fourth goal of John's nineteen minute scoring spell followed soon after.  Newland's long ball out of defence found Evans-Young, who held the ball up and played to Gregory to slam home from only a few yards out.  As with the other goals, Bourne failed to dominate his area and he was replaced by Paul Billingham at the interval.  Just as importantly, they brought on Blues midfielder James Kelly, along with the athletic Alfie Enoch upfront and the sprightly Alex Edmiston on the left wing.  Kelly impressed in attacking midfield, spotting and making passes in a way that Queen's failed to before his introduction.    
On the hour mark, Kelly pulled one back for Queen's, picking the ball up in John's half and advancing to twenty yards from goal before curling the ball into the top corner.  The final thirty minutes had a strange atmosphere: St John's played like a team with less than a three goal cushion, and only Andy Bottomley's aerial threat looked to pull Queen's back into it.  Twice he went close with headers as Queen's gained the advantage John's used so well in the first half.  The game slowed down as John's looked increasingly secure, and the silence on the pitch was in stark contrast to the shouts of those watching Torpids just yards behind the pitch.  An uneventful conclusion saw St. John's take all three points to climb to second in the league.

Next up: Shoplifting, live from Sainsbury’s

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I’m sure raiding a private house is a bread-and-butter matter for most police forces.

This week police searched German postal service head Klaus Zumwinkel’s office and house after acquiring evidence that he had hidden billions of pounds in the tax haven of Liechtenstein. Zumwinkel has now resigned from his position.

The novelty, though, was one feature of the raid that marked it out from most. ZDF, one of Germany’s publicly-funded TV stations, covered the operation live, with cameras peaking through the Zumwinkels' now famous green and white garden fence at his Cologne house.

This is a new type of TV reporting. Live sports events or scheduled political events are one thing, but covering a police operation live, as though it were a film scene, raises questions. Couldn’t the suspect benefit from being able to follow the police’s actions live on the telly? Doesn’t this mean the TV station must have been colluding with the police? (We know they were “tipped off”….) And, if they were, isn’t this the definition of biased reporting — siding with one party, thus giving the other less favourable treatment?

ZDF’s editor-in-chief, Nikolaus Brender, defended the network’s actions, saying they would have failed in their duties as a news broadcaster if they had not acted on the tip-off.

A fair thing to say, I guess. But should TV stations be allowed to turn police operations into action movies? Doesn’t this say a lot about our voyeur culture today?

Maybe next Sky News Active will let us flick through live CCTV pictures around the country so we never miss a murder or theft.

Photo: Holiday snaps of Cologne (top) and Liechtenstein. Can you blame Herr Zumwinkel?

Rice and peas politics

Pakistan have managed to sort out a coalition already, but Germany (the country of efficiency, apparently) still can’t do anything as civilised as that. Almost a month after the regional elections here in the state of Hesse, the parties still can’t decide who to work with, so we now have no one officially running this state of six million people. Nonetheless, the clap trap’s quite fun. They have some great terms for different types of coalitions, based on the colours of the different parties. A Christian Democrat/Social Democrat coalition is “black-red” (not very exciting); Social Democrat/Greens is “red-green” (ditto). It gets better though. Social Democrats, Greens and Free Democrats is a “traffic light coalition” (red, yellow and green). And the best: Christian Democrat, Greens and Free Democrats is a “Jamaica coalition” (black, green and yellow). The Germans are clearly more creative than you thought. Now if only they could stop coming up with names for their government, and actually start forming one…

Just words?

No, this isn’t about Obama. David Cameron got into a spot of bother over a Tory press release describing Labour’s policy of school visits to Auschwitz as a “gimmick”. But one French-speaking Swiss man, Pierre Mirabaud, chairman of the Swiss banking association, has received as much flak — for comparing the German authorities’ methods of acquiring information about Klaus Zumwinkel’s tax affairs to those used by the Gestapo. It seems people are more interesting people’s choice of words than what they actually mean.

A new type of abolitionist

More elections! Hamburgers are voting today. Davids Medienkritik (a blog about the German media, but mostly in English) thinks Social Democrat candidate Michael Naumann said he wanted to “abolish children” in this clip from a TV debate. Any German speakers out there willing to disagree? I think he actually said he wanted to abolish “children fees” (whatever they are…).

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Feral Beast will appear every Sunday

Rent-A-Bike Scheme Could Be Introduced to Oxford

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The Oxfordshire County Council has pledged £100,000 to pay for a study on the feasibility of launching a rent-a-bike scheme to resolve traffic congestion.The study is planned to start in April. If it is deemed plausible, Oxford could soon have its own low-cost, 24-hour rent-a-bike scheme as those already launched in several European cities, most notably in Paris last July; perhaps as soon as before the summer 2009.The scheme will involve setting up a network of bike stations at key points in the city, including the train station, Westgate Centre, park-and-ride sites and city hospitals.Although the plans are at their embryonic stage, council chiefs hope a credit card-payable rent-a-bike scheme would take a significant number of motor vehicles off the city's roads. They say they want to make any scheme cheap and convenient.County council cabinet member for transport Ian Hudspeth said, "Congestion is a difficult area to quantify, but we'd hope it takes a significant number of cars off the road.

"It will also help to declutter the city and enable us to remove some of the bike racks there, which can be quite unsightly. There would have to be a small charge for bike rental but we want to make it as cheap and convenient as possible rather than having something unwieldy that wouldn't work," he added

The Parisian rent-a-bike scheme that was started last July recorded more than seven million bike trips by the end of 2007.Chairman of Oxford cycling campaign group Cyclox James Styring beamed at the possibility of such a scheme. He said, "I think it's great news. I'm certain there would be uptake from both tourists and city residents."

"Even people who own their own bike will probably use them as there are some places in the city where you don't want to leave an expensive bike," he added. "In cities that have introduced these schemes, it's extraordinary how quickly bikes take over the landscape. Some cross-city journeys are complex on a bus because they run on exact routes, but bikes are great for commuters because you can literally go anywhere you want."
Last year Oxford University announced its own plans for a bike loan scheme in the city for its staff.

Blues Athlete of the Week: Tom Froggett

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Club: Oxford University Cricket Club 
Role: Wicketkeeper 
College: St. John's 
Degree: 2nd Year Maths 
 
How are preparations for the summer of cricket coming on?  
Being a summer sport, the training at the moment isn't too strenuous.  We have a weekly squad session at the indoor school at Iffley, which is always a good laugh, and the odd individual session as well, but it's not until next term that we'll get onto the Parks. 
 
Are you excited about it?  
Yeah definitely.  There were a couple of well-attended fresher trials in Michaelmas, and it seems like we've got a really good intake this year.  Add that to the fact that nearly all of last year's Blues are around again this year, and we look to have a really promising squad for the summer. 

What was it like playing at Lord's last summer?  Are you hoping to do the same this year? 

Without wanting to wheel out a load of cliches, playing at Lord's is something any cricketer wants to do.  More than anything, it was just a really good day out!  Playing in front of a thousand or so people, or whatever it was, was a little bit different to an old man and his dog, which is usually your standard crowd back home.  It was a massive privilege for us to use the sort of facilities you normally only get to see on TV.  Obviously it would be great to get the chance to play there again, but, as with everyone in the squad, it's just a case of working hard this term and performing well when the games do come around in Trinity. 
 
What was your best performance in Blues cricket last year? 

Well to be honest I didn't really have much to do, so I'd have to say my best performance was polishing off the potato soup, Thai chicken curry, then cheesecake during the lunch interval in the one-day Varsity match at Lord's.  Being such a prestigious establishment, we were all hyping up the catering prior to the lunch break, and it certainly didn't disappoint. Either that or, in the words of our coach, "showing a bit of true Yorkshire grit" on my way to scoring a very dull but determined twenty-odd not out in our low scoring first innings in the four day Varsity match in Cambridge. 

Do you play much college cricket? 

Apparently St John's left the college league a few years ago, and since then have established links with a number of Old Boys and touring sides who have some, usually very tenuous, connection to the college.  I think the college team plays about fifteen of these games each season, plus Cuppers, and I played a fair number of those last year.  They are a good opportunity to get some practice in a fairly low-pressure environment, and you can usually rely on the Old Boys teams to offer you a few big scores and post-match free formal halls in equal measure. 
 
What level did you play at before university?  Are you hoping to carry on afterwards?  
Before I came to university I'd lived in Yorkshire all my life, so I played all of my junior cricket in the Yorkshire leagues.  I played a bit of age-group cricket for a few regional sides and as I got older I played a couple of seasons of open-age league representative cricket, but certainly never got anywhere near Lord's until I came to Oxford!  I've played for the same club back home since I was about ten, so after university I'll definitely be turning out every Saturday at Field Lane (Wakefield's more glamorous version of Lord's) for them. 
 
Who's the best cricketer you've ever played with? 
 
Sam Loxton. 
 
Is there a particular player you admire, or would compare yourself to? 
 
Geoffrey Boycott, for being an arrogant, self-centred egotistical Yorkshireman.  

Do you sledge much on the pitch? 
 
Not so much in Oxford…I'm not sure the more educated types really understand my particular brand of humour, so I tend to leave most of it to the more eloquent and lyrical members of the side. 
 
What's the best piece of sledging you've ever heard in university sport? 
 
What happens on the pitch stays on the pitch! 
 

Who has the best banter on your team? 
 
I don't know about 'best', but for 'scary and distributingly brilliant' banter it's definitely James Macadam.  In the Varsity match last year we had a former Test Match umpire in charge: someone you'd think could handle most of the hot air and crap chat that comes with a big game of cricket.  Macca was fielding next to him and after about ten minutes of his chat, the umpire walked halfway across the ground, mumbling and grumbling, to watch from a different, safer position. 
  
What does it feel like to see your name in Wisden? 
Obviously very proud, particularly as it ought to silence my dad's claim to being the only cricketer in his family to get his name in Wisden (but only as one amongst thousands in the school cricket section!).  Hopefully there will be a repeat this year!