Saturday 5th July 2025
Blog Page 2319

Torch-lit Holocaust Memorial March Through Oxford Scheduled for Sunday

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Oxford University’s Jewish Society and the Aegis Society , a grassroots movement against genocide, will organize and sponsor a torch-lit march through Oxford city-center for Holocaust Memorial Day on Sunday, January 27th.

The march will be celebrating the 63rd anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in 1945 – the very end of the Second World War. The commemoration walk is scheduled to begin at the Jewish Centre in Jericho at 5:45 pm.

OUSU president Martin McCluskey thinks the significance of this event is heightened after the Holocaust denier David Irving’s controversial visit to the Oxford Union last term.

“Education about the Holocaust seems even more pertinent now. For people who haven't heard a Holocaust survivor speak before, it's incredibly powerful and brings home how horrendous it was,” commented McCluskey to the Oxford Times.

Other commemorative events are scheduled for Sunday, including a talk by a Holocaust survivor at the Jewish Centre, at 4 pm. Oxford University Chabad Society will be holding a lecture on Sunday by Professor Sir Michael Howard, president emeritus of the International Institute for Strategic Studies and who was Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford. His mother was Jewish, fought in the Italian Campaign during the Second-World-War and was twice wounded and won a Military Cross at Salerno. The lecture will begin at 8 PM at the David Slager Chabad Jewish Centre on George Street.Cherwell 24 is not responsible for the content of external links

Tom’s Blog: TV Licence Totalitarian Scam Shame

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by Tom Carpenter, Deputy Editor, C24

A comment and opinion article

Imagine my horror yesterday morning when, dehydratedly fighting my way out of my room in typical, randomised panic, I stumble upon a small, unassuming brown envelope. One that bore the Tick of Terror. The TV licensors were coming.

You may have noticed that TV licensing has been getting more aggressive over the past couple of years. Although I was aware I was not prepared for the crimson, underscored caps that red-blooded their way into my attention. 'OFFICIAL WARNING' it read, 'Your address is scheduled to receive a visit from our National Enforcement Division’

The letter went on to inform me that, as there was no valid TV licence for the address ‘Staircase 15 Room 21’ and I had not ‘responded to their warnings’, the NEDs would soon be paying me a visit. I remember the ‘warning’ well, a coolly-worded letter telling me I was ‘under investigation’ and instructing me to call their (0870 – more on this shortly) number so I would kindly inform them that I did not own a television and they could kindly cease their investigation.

I did not, and do not, own a television, but I was going to do no such thing! It galled me that not only was there an apparent presumption of my guilt but also that it was my job to disprove it! To add injury to insult, the number is a revenue-raiser. A common sum for the owners of 0870 numbers to be paid is 2p a minute1. A quick look at the DFES website tells us that in 2005/6 there were 1.87 million home undergraduate students. Given this, and assuming that, oh, 50% of them were intimidated enough to call, each spending 5 minutes on the line, the Bristol-based companies collective stood to gain £93,500. These calculations are crude but they paint a damning picture. This figure only represents the money received by the company, of course – 0870 calling costs are higher and for students using mobile phones, the amount of money spent professing their innocence would have been staggering.

Let me take a moment to illustrate the tone of the letter:

“…official warning…enforcement division…as you have not responded to our warnings…this visit and its consequences…when our officers arrive at your accommodation…let me remind you that…committing a criminal offence…our officers on the ground…they will confirm the situation when they visit…”

It is a threatening whisper, a clipboard claw hammer, the smallness of you faced with peerless authority. And I don’t like it one bit. They have managed to combine the shadow of the police state with the shamelessness of the free market.

This is not the worst of it, though. The purposes and nature of these intimidatory tactics are not as bad as the means. The second letter arrived, as with the first one, under my door, not in my pidge. Presumably the college came to some arrangement where the scouts delivered them; I don’t know. What concerns me is the implication, “we know where you live”. People who have done nothing wrong are being made to feel as if it is their duty to prove it. Guilty until proven innocent. TV Licensing, contracted by a public body, has resorted to bullying. This simply isn’t good enough. Bring on the NED!

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1 http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/phones/0870-say-no#why

“Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again”

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Unlike Daphne du Maurier’s heroine, I really had been back to my abandoned chateau.

Just last week, I was back in Oxford for the first time since June, and the experience was heavily laden with ghosts of the past. I entered the Bodleian and requested books with my old barcode and password. They were brought up by the same librarians. I read them in the same seat (number 208 in the upper reading room) that I frequented all of last spring. I drank G&Ds coffee. I ate in the Covered Market. And all the while it rained.

Oxford, it appears, is slow to change. That timelessness was one of the strongest impressions I took home with me about Britain . I wrote often last year about the contrast between the sense of constancy I experienced abroad and the obsession with change I associated with my home in the U.S. That Oxford in January 2008 looks much like Oxford in June 2007 was no big shock.

What got to me this time were my encounters with friends I hadn’t seen in months. I’m generally diligent about keeping in touch and, thanks to e-mail and Facebook, I was fully up to date on all the gossip basics of break-ups and new couplings. As a writer obsessed with new media, I’d assumed the physical separation and reunion would make minimal difference.

How wrong I was. Simple and sappy as it may seem, I was floored by the depth and force of emotion I felt seeing people face to face, hearing voices live and standing in physical spaces of college quads. It was a sharp reminder of the things that—at least for me—technology can’t yet replace. So I’m curious: do you, my fellow Gen Y, Web 2.0 readers, see limits in the things that can successfully be made virtual?

Why Goethe should be banned from German degrees

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It's a health and safety risk. As Times columnist Daniel Finkelstein points out on Comment Central:

Goethe’s novel Die Leiden des jungen Werthers (The Sorrows of Young Werther) was published in 1774. And its publication was followed by many reports of young men shooting themselves. Why? It was widely believed that these suicides were copies of the death of the novel's hero. When academic David Phillips studied copycat suicides in the early 1970s, he coined the term Werther Effect.

Case closed.

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Naked Actress Parades the Streets of Oxford

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A naked actress paraded through the streets of Oxford yesterday evening for the premiere of the new Lady Godiva film.

Libby Jewson, who plays a principal part in the film, rode from the Old Parsonage hotel in Banbury road to the Odeon Cinema in Magdalen Street wearing nothing but a wig and a sash around her waist to protect her modesty.

Libby Jewson admitted that she was cold but told the Oxford Mail that she was more than happy to brave the British winter for her sister Vicky Jewson, the director of the film.

Vicky Jewson arrived at the premiere by more conventional means than her sister. She said that she had considered Leicester Square for the premiere, but having lived in Oxford all her life, felt that it would be a good thing for the city.

Lady Godiva was an Anglo-Saxon noblewoman who, according to legend, rode naked through the streets of Coventry in order to protest about the oppressive toll her husband placed on his subjects. Lady Godiva is not played by Libby Jewson, but by Holby city star Phoebe Thomas. The film is released on Friday. By Sian Cox-Brooker

Book Review: Lust, Caution, by Eileen Chang

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(Penguin Classics; translated into English for the first time)From the flashes of diamond-clad fingers at the mah-jong table of the collaborating political elite, to the complaining internal monologue of a foreigner’s ‘amah’ (maidservant), faced with ration shortages in the darkest corners of  WWII Japanese-occupied Shanghai, Eileen Chang’s five short stories are steeped in vividly involving description. At times alarmingly cynical – for example, Mr Garter’s consolation that his sleeping amah is ugly, as competent servants are harder to find than easy women – the stories are more than a comment on the political situation of wartime Shanghai at Chang’s time of writing. They explore the gritty reality of raw emotion, exposed as if from within each character’s thoughts. Although love is hinted at and aspired to, it is with dexterity that Chang handles the confused lust of a young ‘femme-fatale’, the spitefulness of the sister-in-laws of a new bride, and the humiliation of ageing wives discarded by their husbands in favour of young concubines. Chang’s real triumph is her understanding of her female characters, although it is not always with a sympathetic view that she illustrates their grievances. The title novella of this collection is sadly misrepresentative of the charming simplicity of the remaining four stories. It gives the impression of being the bare skeleton of a much longer and more intricate plot. Indeed its overly complex array of characters and spy-plot circumstances only confuse the reader, and detract from the perfection of the language used to render what is nevertheless a tale of tense emotion. It is only a shame that Chang did not expand on the intrigues of this short story to a fully explicated novel. Owing to this is perhaps the success of the novella’s adaptation for the big screen (under the same title), and the Golden Lion which it won at the Venice Film Festival.Fortunately, this is true of ‘Lust, Caution’ alone. In the other four tales of occupied Shanghai, the beauty of Chang’s Chinese metaphor is enhanced by more simple plots. ‘In the Waiting Room’ takes the reader into the lives of its patients, their various individual tales momentarily interwoven in their common wait, whilst their seemingly petty worldly woes are symbolic of a more universal intertwining of human experience. The tales are a comment on Shanghai society from every perspective: the serving classes, old Chinese money and the ‘Nouveau Riche’. However, neither this nor the translation from Chinese makes them inaccessible to the Western reader, thanks both to the richness of the descriptive language and to the delicacy with which the translators have dealt with Chinese metaphor. ‘Wrapped in layers of clothes, her white, fleshy body was like a big, solid rice dumpling wrapped in bamboo leaves.’: the language achieves the feat of conjuring a very specific Chinese image, even in the Western mind, whilst the plot introduces the reader to the complexities of, and frictions within, the Chinese social order and familial relationships. By Sarah Fleming

Blues round up – 1st week

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Women's Hockey

Despite some transport issues, Oxford eventually found the correct venue to take on the team directly above them in the league, Tulse Hill and Dulwich.  Their opponents started well, and Oxford found themselves a goal down within ten  minutes. Oxford battled back, but conceeded again at the start of the second  half. However, a finely finished goal from Beth Wild followed by a short corner  strike from Charlotte Jackson saw the Blues earn a hard fought draw against the  physical London side.

Netball

The Blues lost 30-27.  The Roos lost 28-24 in a tough match against Wolverhampton.  Despite dissapointment with the result, it was a strong performance agaisnt a physical side, with Emma Fuller drawing the plaudits with her virtuoso performance.  Only three months ago, the Roos lost by twelve points to the same opposition.  This is a real vindication for their new South African coach.  To still be maintaining a mid-table position, having only been promoted this year, is a genuine achievement. 

Women's Ice Hockey

A frustrating 3-1 defeat against Milton Keynes took place on Saturday. Having held their  opponents to 1-1 by the end of the first session, Oxford were disappointed to  have lost such a tight match.  But Milton Keynes' experience and fitness proved  decisive as they shut the Blues out after going in front. Tickets are soon on  sale at £5 for the Varsity match : 2 March at 6.15pm at the Oxford Ice Rink.
 

Coming up:

This Saturday will see Oxford Gaelic Football team take on Oxford Aussie Rules Football team in an International compromise rules match.  Expect to see the same sort of violence as takes place when Australia and Ireland contest these matches.

With thanks to Charlotte Jackson, Catherine Clark, Michelle Bannister and Tom Quinn. 

If you would like to see your Blues' results first on Cherwell24, e-mail [email protected] to see them
published online.

Concert review: Oxford Sinfonia

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Fauré, Ravel, and Stravinsky with the Oxford Sinfonia and Carolyn Dobbin
19th January 2008
 
This was an ambitious programme for a non-professional orchestra, but it was executed very convincingly indeed. Such intensity pervaded the interpretation, that one had no choice but to forgive the slight imperfections which are inevitably present in an amateur performance.
 
The Oxford Sinfonia is an amateur chamber orchestra composed of players from in and around Oxford. Tonight they were conducted by Nicholas Cleobury, a former organ scholar of Worcester College, and currently conductor of the Britten Sinfonia. Irish mezzo-soprano Carolyn Dobbin sang in Ravel’s Shéhérazade.
 
The concert opened with Fauré’s charming suite ‘Masques et Bergamasques’. Whilst it is probably not, as the concert programme claimed, Fauré’s most famous orchestral work, it perhaps should be. The suite opens with a vigorous Ouverture, which was played with more energy than many commercial
recordings. The Minuet was executed with charm, and the glorious faux-Baroque Gavotte was taken at an appropriately steady pace, revelling in its own frivolous gravity. The piece closed with the dreamy Pastorale, beautifully rounding off this delightful work. Despite occasional slight scratchiness in the high strings, this was a thoroughly enjoyable performance.
 
The next number was Ravel’s fairy tale suite Ma Mère l’Oye (Mother Goose), which tonight was presented in the five-movement version for orchestra. Although a few imperfect solos occasionally detracted from the magic, this piece was otherwise well delivered. The dazzling percussion playing in the quasi-oriental third movement (Laideronette, Impératrice des pagodes) was particularly impressive. The close of the final movement (Le jardin féerique) had a hint of Disney about it as the wedding bells chimed for the Prince and Princess: an appropriate happy ending to the more naive section of the programme.
 
To close the first half, soloist Carolyn Dobbin took to the stage for the song cycle Shéhérazade. With an impressive CV it was no surprise that her performance tonight was both musically and theatrically superb.  This performance was sometimes (but not always) matched by the orchestra, which had some tuning issues in the brass section. The first poem, Asie, was sung with a wide-eyed restraint, occasionally  breaking forth into exuberant climax. There was some beautiful flute playing in La flûte enchantée, and L’indifférent was delivered with a delicious sensuousness.
 
The ‘final hurdle’, as one player described it to me in the interval, was Stravinsky’s Symphony in C, and the hurdle was well and truly cleared. The symphony started strongly, and the rhythmic levity of the opening section gave way to a breathtaking violence reminiscent of The Rite of Spring. The
contrasting peaceful and disturbed elements of the Larghetto were conveyed skilfully, at turns playful and threatening. The Scherzo was perhaps slightly more chaotic than the composer intended, but this formidable movement was tackled with characteristic vigour. The finale was exquisite as the piece built up to a tense climax and then failed to resolve, settling into a combination of C and G chords before fading away.
 
This was an impressive concert, the Oxford Sinfonia playing to a very high standard. Their next engagement is a charity come-and-sing Verdi’s Requiem on 2 February at the Sheldonian Theatre (tickets available from Tickets Oxford 01865 305305).
 
by Daniel Trott

Video: Oxford Flood Report

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Christopher Allen, Stephanie Illingworth and Sarah Karacs take a look at the rising waters…
 

Germany’s Communist kingmakers

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The REAL election '08UPDATE: I found this Die Linke car in the street, but I'm not sure it's a Trabant. I know little about cars – do any car fans out there wish to tell me what this is? It does say Ford on the front… Coming back from work this evening, the bus I was in was overtaken by an old yellow banger with a massive flag poking out. After a closer look, it turned out be a tactically placed Trabant, the notoriously hard-to-come-by one-size-fits-all car of the old East German communist state.

And the flag – an election banner, urging Frankfurters to vote for the new boys on the block, Die Linke, the Left Party, in Sunday's crucial regional elections

In fact, new on the block may not be such an accurate description. The far-left outfit, who claim on their literature that privatisation is the theft of public property, were founded only last year. But they are the successors of a party that have been around for much longer – the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), itself a later incarnation of the Communist Party of the old German Democratic Republic (GDR). Marxist intellectual Alex Callinicos has said the party “represents a profound challenge to social democracy” (I think that was meant to be a good thing). Running the party are a former member of the old GDR’s legislative chamber Lothar Bisky, who chose to emigrate to the East at the age of 18, and Oskar Lafontaine, who led the opposition SPD during part of the Helmut Kohl era.

I tried to get a snap of the Trabi with my phone when it zoomed past proclaiming the glory of the old Communist East, but it was moving too fast. And the party, which must have destroyed several rainforests for all its mass advertising in the last few months, is doing the same thing to the political establishment too (sorry, it was late at night). By this time next week, these neo-communists might be some of the most politically powerful people in Germany.

How? Well, latest polls for Sunday’s state election show that the opposition social democrats, the SPD, are quickly catching up on the ruling Christian Democrats (CDU), and the Frankfurter Allgemeine put them both on 38% in this morning’s paper. This remarkable upturn for the moderate left has made the ruling CDU’s task of finding a majority in the house much smaller harder (sorry again). The SPD have benefited from the backfiring of some hard-line talk on crime and immigrants from the incumbent regional PM Roland Koch (CDU), which led to him being branded a racist and will have hurt his standing among the large ethnic minority community in the largely urban state. Andrea Ypsilanti, on the hand, turned out well at last night’s TV debate and look to be on an upper. The last time I blogged on the opinion polls, the CDU led by 43% to the SPD’s 32%. This could now go either way.

But, as so often with German politics, it will all come down to who can find allies to form a coalition that exceeds 50% of all votes. The centre-right Free Democrats will probably work with the CDU, while the Greens are expected to be up for an SPD-led coalition.

At play, though, is the crucial 5% rule — the minimum share of the vote a party must receive to get seats in parliament — and how this will affect Die Linke’s chances. If they reach the 5% mark, they could join forces with the SPD and tip the balance towards a left-wing coalition, giving the state Premiership to Ypsilanti, once considered a lightweight without a chance. The far-left may then be the party that holds the key to the coalition, and therefore a major influence on policy.

An editorial in Focus this week (not available online!) pointed out the likelihood that the fierce polarisation of the SPD-CDU battle would encourage votes for the centrist parties and screw up Die Linke’s hope’s of becoming Hessen’s kingmakers. If they succeed, their influence would be real. If they fail — well, maybe they’ll realise zooming up the Autobahn in a 1960s rustbucket isn’t the best electoral strategy.

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