Saturday, May 3, 2025
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Oxford complete Varsity hockey double

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A man of the match performance from goalkeeper George Oyebode helped Oxford secure a Hockey Varsity double on Sunday.

After a 4-0 victory for the Women’s side earlier in the day, the Men’s Blues came from behind to draw 2-2 against their Cambridge counterparts at Southgate Hockey Club.

In the shoot-out that followed, fresher Oyebode was the star of the show. His pair of crucial saves in the second set of penalty shuffles secured Oxford their first Varsity win in six years.

The Women’s team retained their title with a comprehensive victory to start the afternoon off. Captain Naomi Kelly put in a commanding performance to lead her side to victory and make amends for October’s league defeat against the Light Blues.

Marginal favourites going into the game, Kelly’s side raced into a 3-0 half-time lead thanks to goals from Imogen Brown, Philippa Nicholls and a tap-in from Sophie Shakes.

Alexa Copeland added a fourth in the second half with a close-range finish at the far post, and Oxford were great value for their win.

The Men’s side went into their game without a Varsity win since 2011; an entire generation of Men’s Blues hockey players had passed through the University without tasting Varsity success.

However, after two close-fought league fixtures against Cambridge this year brought a scrappy win and an unfortunate draw, it was clear that the two sides were evenly matched.

Indeed, Oxford started the better of the two teams, with good spells of possession early on in the game—it seemed as though the Dark Blues were still brimming with confidence after their recent 2-2 draw with Cardiff which sealed a promotion play-off.

Just before half-time, the pressure paid off as drag-flick specialist Noah Francis rifled a penalty corner hard and low to the Cambridge goalkeeper’s right, giving his side a 1-0 lead.

Yet the Light Blues would not go down without a fight. Soon after half-time, Cambridge pulled a goal back on the counter-attack, before an Oxford yellow saw the Dark Blues temporarily reduced to ten men.

Cambridge had slightly the better of a cagey half and looked to have sealed a win when their centre-forward bundled in from a yard out, following some dogged Oxford defending.

Despite Mark Lilley and captain Ryan Kavanagh both impressing throughout, it looked as though their efforts would be in vain as Cambridge held firm at the back.

However, a late equaliser from the impressive William Mooney—a goalscorer in every one of his Varsity appearances—meant that the game went to hockey’s equivalent of a penalty shoot-out, known as a penalty shuffle.

Introduced to the professional game in 2011, the shuffles format sees each team nominate five attackers, who start with the ball on the 23-metre line, one-on-one with the opposition goalkeeper. The attackers then have eight seconds in which to score.

The first round of shuffles saw both keepers—Oyebode for Oxford and Fergus Flanagan for Cambridge—on top form, with only one player out of five from each team managing to score.

However, in the second round of shuffles, Oxford’s attackers held their nerve, scoring each of the first four shuffles.

Having already made a commanding stop, Oyebode kept out Cambridge’s fourth effort to seal a dramatic 4-2 victory. Wild celebrations ensued as five years of pain were forgotten.

Oxford heads sign open letter for EU residency rights

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The heads of 35 Oxford Colleges and Permanent Private Halls have signed an open letter urging MPs to guarantee the right of European Union citizens to reside in the UK after the Brexit process is complete, ahead of a key parliamentary vote on Article 50.

The letter, published in The Times today and signed by Vice-Chancellor Louise Richardson, appeals to MPs just before they vote on a Lords amendment to the Article 50 bill guaranteeing the right of EU citizens in Britain to remain after withdrawal.

The College heads address members of all political parties to ask them to support the amendment, adding that Oxford University and its research would “suffer enormous damage” if academics and support staff from the EU lost their right to remain. The letter also dismisses the government suggestion that European citizens are likely to be allowed to stay as “insufficient”.

“Our EU colleagues are not reassured by a government which tells them that deportation is not going to happen but declines to convert that assurance into law”, the letter argues, before going on to note that some EU citizen academics are “already making plans to leave”.

It continues: “Many of our staff do not know whether absences abroad on research contracts will count against them. Others do not know, however longstanding their work and residence, whether their children will be able to remain in the UK.”

Notable absentees from the signatories are heads from Christ Church, Corpus Christi, Lincoln, Mansfield and St. Peter’s.

Earlier this month, Alastair Buchan, Oxford’s Head of Brexit Strategy, told Cherwell: “[Academics] are most worried about their staff, they’re worried about students being able to come, they’re worried about their staff being secure and confident and having what they need in terms of what we all take for granted in this country, which is free education, free healthcare, free social care”.

Speaking on how he would attempt to align the views of colleges heads who had spoken out against Brexit following the referendum, Buchan said: “They are very senior people, often from government, often from the civil service, often from the media and academe, and they are in a situation where they really are speaking as individuals. My job is to somehow forge a common purpose for the university.”

Jo Johnson, Minister of State for Universities said yesterday (12 March) that the government wanted higher education to remain “open to collaboration” after Brexit.

The letter aims to persuade backbench Conservative MPs to support the amendment alongside Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the SNP. The government, which is likely to be supported by a number of opposition MPs, has a majority of 17 in the Commons and has insisted that the rights of EU citizens are a priority.

Oxford University and the signatories of the letter have been contacted for comment.

This is a breaking news story. More information will be added as we receive it.

Cherwell Broadcasting visits the Oxford Lancers

This term, Cherwell Broadcasting has been taking a look at the different sports on offer at Oxford. Today, we present what we found out when we visited a training session with the Oxford Lancers American Football team.

If you would like Cherwell Broadcasting to broadcast one of your games or training sessions, please get in touch!

Cherwell Broadcasting meets Professor Chris Gosden

This week, Cherwell Broadcasting went to the Oxford University Archaeological Society event with Professor Chris Gosden, a Professor in European Archaeology and Director of the Institute of Archaeology at the University of Oxford. His latest project, titled ‘English Landscapes and Identities’, has taken five years to complete. We went along to the lecture to hear more from one of the leading figures of the discipline.

Spotlight: DFO

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If you begin something musical with the letters ‘D’ and ‘F’, you’re onto a winner instantaneously.

Consider the following— DFA, renowned record company which brought us LCD Soundsystem and Hot Chip; DFTBA, renowned record company that brought us legendary Doctor Who fan band (a.k.a Time Lord Rock, or Trock) Chameleon Circuit, and of course, DFO.

Okay, you’ve definitely seen them at that night in Cellar, or that college ball, but let’s just take a minute to salute one of Oxford’s finest live ensembles. Dot’s Funk Odyssey are continually a delight to behold live—their effortless assault on your self-consciousness to the point where everyone is up and dancing is remarkable. The 14-piece band deliver hit after hit without ever losing a sense of authenticity as they make the songs their own.

And really, each member of the band is a BNOC of their own – imagine being able to go to every college ball, every garden party—they really are ‘Mr Steal Your Gurl’.

These are the heroes Oxford needs, but doesn’t deserve. DFO, please never stop.

Oxford Revue Comedy Club

Third Week getting you down? Behind with work that you will never finish? Need some laughter in your life? If so, Cherwell Broadcasting is here to cheer you up with a video on the Oxford Revue Comedy Club. Make sure you check out their special Valentine’s Day performance on the 14th February.

Tiny words: on the art of small talk

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If you’ve ever found yourself writing an entire speech in your head before calling up to book a doctor’s appointment, or had to shoot off a quick text that actually just spent five minutes languishing in the Notes section of your phone, it’s unlikely you’re very good at small talk.

Freshers’ Week may be a struggle. What finally makes all those moments of awkwardness worth is the occasion of your first DMC with that potential best friend. All of a sudden, familiarity replaces the strain of discussing the hall menu. Speaking becomes easier again—particularly for those who might wish they had a minute to preemptively jot down a few thoughts with which to keep a dying conversation going.

Indeed, the realm of the written is often presented as an escape from a world where language feels false or disingenuous: think Matilda, the young Jane Eyre, Lisa Simpson. The concept of ‘normal’ conversation is often used in novels as a way of representing realistic interaction, and blurbs and reviews may tell us that a work manages also to illuminate ‘truths’ about those relationships that might be disguised in everyday life. In literature, the mysteries of small talk can be reimagined in ways that somehow point prophetically to deeper truths about human isolation and distance. In Adam Bede, George Eliot eloquently puts it this way: “examine your words well, and you will find that even when you have no motive to be false, it is a very hard thing to say the exact truth, even about your own immediate feelings.” Victorian realist novels such as this one are often associated with a preoccupation with everyday language, and the idea that all the possible ways in which individuals communicate must be presented in order to fully grasp the human mind.

And yet, as is often the case with lengthy Victorian novels, Adam Bede is peppered with scenes of minute behavioural detail, as well as sections of highly dramatic dialogue. Eliot chucked them in for the sake of ‘truthfulness’, yet they seem to suggest one thing about everyday conversation: it’s dull. Perhaps unintentionally, this impression is made stronger by the sharp contrasts between these scenes and the more dramatic, intentionally ‘emotional’ scenarios.

Perhaps I’m an impatient reader, and missing the point too. This is a method of realism that gradually builds up a complex network of relationships, that do achieve poignant depictions of the perils of daily interaction and conversation. But put as just incidental detail, there’s little sense of being able to really understand a character’s psychology. A wholly different concept of presenting everyday interaction is demonstrated by Alice Kuipers’ Life on the Refrigerator Door. Reading this novel, the strongest impression left is one of honesty. Here you have an entire book in the form of notes stuck to the fridge door, tracing the correspondence between fifteen-year-old Claire and her workaholic mother. It reads like one continuous conversation, constantly punctuated by afterthought : ‘Could you leave an extra 20 dollars with my allowance? Pleeeeeeaaaaaase?’ The kind of small talk that develops not between occasional acquaintances, but within the closest kinds of relationships.

It may not be the most complex or ‘literary’ of novels, yet it captures in written form an instantly recognisable way of speaking. Clearly its modern context makes it more recognisable, but through this simple refashioning of the form of everyday speech Kuipers acutely foregrounds the way in which we use routine language to leave the more important things unsaid.

Maybe the inner romantic in me does still want an element of clear fictionality in the presentation of everyday speech. Sometimes the idea of conflating emotional truth with actual spoken words seems to swing too far towards the extreme: ‘you are the answer to every prayer I’ve offered. You are a song, a dream, a whisper, and I don’t know how I could have lived without you for as long as I have.’ Thanks Nicholas Sparks, I’ll make sure to note that down. What I want, stubbornly and subjectively, is to read a way of speaking that sits halfway between my idea of everyday interaction and total fictionality. Enter Pride and Prejudice. Mr. Darcy’s struggle with his small-talking world makes him a completely relatable, socially awkward character (status as an aristocratic man in the 1700s aside). Sadly though, even Pride and Prejudice contains moments of such perfectly crafted dialogue that I think it would be impossible for me to carry it off . For now, if I want to learn anything about the words around me, there’s always The Fine Art of Small Talk, available on Kindle from £6.99.

Faces, forgotten and faded

The forgotten faces which are the subject of Christ Church Picture Gallery’s current exhibition hang unassumingly in a corridor between rooms filled with the great and grand works of the Italian and Dutch masters. Both the subjects of the portraits and the artists who painted them are unknown, their identity lost somewhere along the course of their long history. Three of the four paintings come from the storerooms of the gallery and are on exhibition for the first time in decades, offering viewers a unique chance to see these fascinating and otherwise inaccessible images.

The first and best preserved painting in the exhibition is the only one of the four to be on permanent exhibition in the gallery, where it perches high and unnoticed above Frans Hals’ famous ‘Portrait of a Woman’. Once believed to be a Holbein, the concentrated and selfabsorbed look of the sitter rather suggests a self-portrait. The intensity and prominence of the dark eyes serve to draw the viewer into participating in the meticulous observation of facial geography and the mysterious process by which a portrait becomes a depiction of inner life.

The second painting is of a wealthy, elegantly attired townsman. It has been heavily damaged and retouched over the years, such that much of its quality and feel has disappeared. Parts are blotchy and clumsily restored and only a couple of details—notably the silver clasp of the book and the shine on the gold necklace—give an impression of the quality the work might once have possessed, a quality indicated by the back of the portrait which bears the cypher of Charles I’s royal collection. One wonders about the level of sheer contingency which determines whether a painting hangs in a gilded frame in a great hall, or lies forgotten in the storeroom. One substandard retouch or unlucky accident in a history spanning centuries can consign to oblivion not only a painting, but its subject and creator too.

The third portrait, by far the most intriguing of the exhibition, is likewise impossible to attribute to a specific artist owing to years of abrasion and patchy restoration. It gives a striking sense of proximity and intimacy—one feels an immediate and personal relation to the subject staring back at the observer with an ambiguous, enigmatic gaze. The young man seems to silently address the viewer, though the nature of the address is uncertain. Dressed modestly in an unornamented black gown and cap, the young man perhaps worries for his future, or stoically accepts some misfortune.

The fourth painting offers something rather different. While the other three are conventional portraits painted on canvas, the fourth is the left panel of an altarpiece triptych for a private chapel. In it a pious father bends his knees in prayer, his two young sons flanking him in a chapel which opens onto a broad, barren landscape. It differs significantly from the other paintings in both style and content; there is an empty, detached look in the eyes of the father and sons as they gaze skyward in contemplation.

These faces are not intended to reveal something about the sitter, to demonstrate personality or status, but to serve as an aid to prayer and contemplation, showing not the sitters themselves but their standing before God. The chipped and warped frame of the painting is exquisite, its delicate interplay of gold and black reminiscent of the lush foliage in Altdorfer’s ‘St George and the Dragon’. The full triptych, including a panel for mother and daughter, as well as a central scene of the Madonna and child, must have been a magnificent sight.

It is ultimately disappointing that so few of the stored paintings are on show and that many others remain forgotten in the storerooms of the gallery. Much of the exhibition’s interest comes from one’s own speculations about the history and identities of the paintings and their subjects. Nevertheless, taken in the context of the gallery as a whole, these forgotten portraits offer a kind of antidote to the heroism and grandeur of many of the works which fill the rest of the gallery. They remind us that in between the series of towering peaks which are the masterpieces of western painting there lies a wide and wonderful array of a thousand mounts, hills and valleys, each of them a unique and valuable reflection of forgotten faces and anonymous hands.

Malala Yousafzai receives offer to study at Oxford

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Malala Yousafzai, the Nobel Prize winning activist who narrowly avoided death after being shot by the Pakistani Taliban, has received an offer to study PPE at Lady Margaret Hall (LMH), according to the Telegraph.

Speaking at an education conference in Birmingham today, Yousafzai told the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL): “I’m studying right now, I’m in year 13 and I have my A Level exams coming and I have received a conditional offer which is three As so I need to get the three As, that is my focus right now.”

She said: “I have applied to study PPE so for the next three years I will be studying that. But other than that I want to stay focussed on my Malala Fund work.”

A Telegraph report today has claimed that Yousafzai, aged 19, is likely to take up a place at LMH to study Politics, Philosophy and Economics (PPE), so long as she achieves the AAA A-level grades required for entry.

In January, Yousafzai confirmed in an interview that she had sat an interview at LMH, which she described as “the hardest interview of my life.”

Yousafzai had said she had also applied to study at Durham, LSE, and Warwick, which all make A*AA offers for PPE. At Oxford, the standard offer is AAA, in line with Yousafzai’s statements today.

In studying PPE at LMH, Yousafzai will hope to follow the path of her hero Benzanir Bhutto, the former Prime Minister of Pakistan who was assassinated in 2007.

Yousafzai has lived in Birmingham since being treated at the city’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital after surviving an assassination attempt by Taliban gunmen in 2012.

While living under Taliban rule, Yousafzai had written a blog under a pseudonym which featured her thoughts on girls’ education.

She later rose to global prominence as a campaigner for girls’ education. In 2013, she addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations, and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014.

Oxford University and Lady Margaret Hall have been contacted for comment.