Friday 22nd August 2025
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Balliol JCR donates to ‘Toilet Twinning’ charity

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Balliol college JCR passed a motion on Sunday pledging to twin one of their loos with another block of toilets in a developing country. The JCR agreed to donate £240 to the clean sanitation charity Tearfund, as part of their ‘Toilet Twinning’ scheme. The College voted on the money specifi cally going towards the building of a toilet block in a displacement camp.

Balliol’s decision to twin its toilet follows a similar one taken by Hertford, who already run the scheme. The Toilet Twinning project aims to provide clean water, basic sanitation and hygiene education to the poorest countries in Africa and Asia, in the hope of improving toilet facilities and preventing the spread of disease.

Balliol JCR member Richard Ware, who proposed the motion at the College’s GM on Sunday, told Cherwell, “it is ridiculously easy to provide adequate sanitation: there will be a number in the Balliol bar loos to text to donate to a loo providing charity. Do some good when you poop.” The JCR motion stated “everyone should have access to clean, safe sanitary facilities” and “Hertford are currently making us look bad.” Balliol College will receive a certifi cate to put up in the chosen loo confi rming its participation in the scheme. Toilets taking part also get a photo of their twin latrine, and GPS coordinates of where in the world it is.

The motion suggested providing a ‘donate now by text’ number in the bar toilets which college members could use to donate directly to a toilet charity.

Ellie Rink, from the Toilet Twinning charity, said, “I am absolutely delighted that Balliol College has pledged to raise enough money for a School or IDP camp. In fact, I challenge the college to raise enough to twin all the toilets within its premises.”

She added, “If diff erent colleges are pledging to twin their toilets it would be great if they could all work together towards a greater goal.”The charity also runs a ‘Toilet Twinning University Scheme’ that encourages university-wide fundraising to twin as many toilets as possible.

Balliol College’s Charity reps Rivka Shaw and Sophie Conquest told Cherwell, “We were really pleased that Richard brought the motion, and that it was decided that a toilet block would be built in a displacement camp, which follows on from Balliol’s recent eff orts regarding the Refugee Scholarship.

“As Richard said in the General Meeting, it’s also a good way of generating further charitable donations as when people see the ‘twinning’ certifi cate they will hopefully be inspired to do something similar.”

According to Toilet Twinning, there are currently 2.4 billion people in the world that don’t have access to hygienic toilet facilities.

In twinning the toilet nearest the College bar with one on the other side of the world, Balliol College will help to build toilet facilities where access to clean water is limited. Since its creation, the scheme has helped to build 64,187 toilets around the world.

Toilet Twinning describes itself as a “simple, quirky way to solve a serious problem.” The charity funds “the work of international relief and Tearfund. This combination works together to prevent the spread of disease. With better health, men and women discover the potential that lies within them to bring transformation.”

Academics need freedom of movement post-Brexit, former minister says

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Former Universities Minister Lord David Willetts proposed that the UK government ought to fi ght for academics and students to be given freedom of movement within the European Union.

Speaking at the Times Higher Education World Academic Summit, he told the Times, “It’d be great if we had a real priority given to the movement of academic staff , we’ve had the chancellor talking about how important it is that bankers can move easily between the City and the EU, it’s equally important that researchers can move easily between Britain and the EU.”

This news comes amid speculation that vacancies in UK Universities are failing to attract applicants from Europe post-Brexit, according to the Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce).

Madeleine Atkins, chief executive for Hefce, told the organisation’s annual meeting last Thurasday, “Vacancies are not attracting any serious interest from Europe or indeed elsewhere. People who have been off ered jobs have now turned them down on the back of the referendum vote.”

Lord Willetts further argued that funding currently provided by the EU’s Horizon 2020 framework needed to be maintained, adding that whether or not this would be possible would all depend on the currently ongoing Swiss negotiations.

He stated, “We then need to have some very creative thinking about how we can continue to work alongside the EU. That could involve directly joining Horizon 2020, it could involve running a parallel structure alongside it… there are several different ways we could remain linked to the EU of which direct budget contributions to Horizon 2020 are only one.”

Commenting on Willett’s proposal, a spokesman for Oxford University told Cherwell, “Access to European streams of research funding and the free movement of people within the EU have been of huge benefi t to Oxford, allowing us to be at the forefront of life-changing, pan-European research projects and to attract the top European talent to our world-class university. We know the UK government is working hard to ensure British universities are not disadvantaged by Brexit, and in the meantime there is no immediate change to our ability to take part in EU research and innovation programmes such as Horizon 2020.”

There is currently debate as to whether the UK should remain part of the EU’s research programmes, which would include European Research Council grants. However, it has been suggested that this would only be permitted if the UK is to continue with free movement of people, something that Theresa May has indicated is unlikely.

However, Willetts was not wholly negative about the consequences of Brexit, “although I was a Remainer I think that there are some things that become more possible post- Brexit. For example, there are areas of research where there were very signifi cant restrictions because of EU regulations. Attitudes to GM and restrictions on GM crops, approaches to nanotech, restrictions on the use of data that would’ve made a lot of social science hard to conduct.”

He proposed that the British academics ought to seek closer ties with other parts of the world in order to ensure that international collaboration would continue. He stated, “As well as links to the EU look at strengthening links beyond the EU, what more can be done with China, with the Commonwealth, with the Gulf, with the US and Canada.”

Brexit has also impacted undergraduate student applications to British universities in recent weeks. UCAS have announced statistics from the 15th October deadline for Oxbridge and medical courses, revealing a 9 per cent decline in the number of students from EU countries applying.

The chief of Universities UK, Nicola Dandridge, blamed this decrease on the delayed announcement about funding for EU students until September 6.

The full impact of Brexit on applications will become clear after the January deadline next year, after which 90 per cent of applicants to undergraduate courses will have been recieved.

Before the referendum the academic community was overwhelmingly in favour of remaining in the EU. One poll of scientists by the journal Nature estimated support for Remain at 83 per cent, another for Times Higher Education putting it at 90 per cent with 40 per cent of those working in UK higher education saying that Brexit would make it more likely that they would leave Britain.

Marco Pierre White to open restaurant in Oxford

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Marco Pierre White, Michelin star chef and restauranter, has announced he intends to open a second restaurant in Oxford.

The restaurant will be a ‘Steakhouse, Bar & Grill’ and will join the Marco’s New York Italian on High Street. The new enterprise will be located in Jury’s Inn, north Oxford and is scheduled to open early next year.

White commented “I have always had a fondness for Oxford, and was keen to expand my off ering of restaurants here so that diners can experience the Steakhouse, Bar & Grill too.

“The Steakhouse, Bar & Grill will off er diners a diff erent kind of experience to the New York Italian, serving some of my all-time favourite British dishes including roast rump of lamb a la Dijonnaise and pork belly Marco Polo.

“My restaurants are not stuffy or pretentious; instead they are about enjoying your evening, with excellent food and drink in luxurious, relaxed surroundings and quite simply having a good time.”

The new restaurant is a component of a franchise deal made between his Black & White Hospitality company and the owners of the Jurys Inn hotel. The Marco Pierre White Steakhouse, Bar & Grill, will serve English and French cuisine. This will be White’s seventeenth Steakhouse, Bar & Grill in the UK.

The General Manager of the Jurys Inn hotel Chris Broderick commented, “We are absolutely thrilled to be launching Marco Pierre White Steakhouse, Bar & Grill in Oxford, and the spacious newly refurbished hotel showcases the prestigious restaurant beautifully.

“Oxford diners can now experience the full beauty of Marco’s cooking through two of his most popular restaurant ventures, and we encourage guests to pop in and join us when we officially open our doors early next year.”

Marco Pierre White and his Michelin star franchise has become a global brand. White is considered the first ‘celebrity chef’, of which there are now many. When he was awarded his third Michelin star at 33, he was the youngest chef to have accomplished the feat at the time.

However, the restaurant has not been welcomed by everyone, particularly vegetarian students. An Oxford student in support of the ‘Less Meat More Veg’ campaign, told Cherwell, “the restaurant will undoubtedly be popular and serve good food. I don’t want to discourage people from going there if they’re big meat eaters, but I don’t agree with it on ethical grounds.”

Minty Eyre, a second- year student who serves as Christ Church JCR Food Rep, said, “This is excellent news. It’s always good to see new quality restaurants opening in Oxford. For a city this size, the selection at the moment is actually quite limited.”

Marco’s New York Italian has been contacted

Lightsaber battles come to Oxford

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Lightsaber training lessons arrived in Oxford earlier this month, based on the lightsaber battles of the Star Wars film franchise universe.

Jordan Court has practiced the sport for 18 years and has worked hard to bring lightsaber combat to the UK. He commented, “It is becoming an international sport, there will eventually be an Oxford regional tournament. Becoming an Olympic sport has always been the idea.”

“It is a combat sport but the techniques are designed to be safe. There may be visual similarities but the techniques have been designed to be safe. As you progress you are able to use complete styles. No matter what your approach is you are making progress on the way to competitions which is what makes it such a compelling sport.”

“We have a real variety of reasons that people get involved. Some because it’s lightsabers which calls to people who have always wanted to use that weapon. Some get involved because they are looking at doing something new or a taking up a different sport, some just because they like Star Wars, we take all sorts… In Oxford we have only been open for a couple of weeks so there are five members but we have more people showing interest all the time.”

Trial classes are currently being held on Fridays in Oxford, however those interested can email [email protected] for details of the timings and locations of the various sessions.

Lightsaber Combat was first founded in Italy in 2006 and it has since spread to nine countries including Britain, where there are 90 members nationwide.

Billy Nuttall, a Magdalen second year and Star Wars fan, was delighted by the news. He told Cherwell, “Who hasn’t grabbed a stick as a kid and pretended it was a lightsaber? Apparently now those sticks light up, make noises, and can be used in bona fide martial arts classes- what a time to be alive.”

OxFolk review: ‘The Ties that Bind’

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There are few folk bands that give such an impression of a slick, well-formed sound than that of Mawkin—an impressive feat due to their self-professed ‘DIY ethic’ and their unabashed, raucous energy. Their latest album The Ties that Bind, released in 2015, is a culmination of this celebrated chaos—the first few tracks hit with such power that the listener is left almost audibly bruised by the punch that their songs pack. But with more listening, it’s clear that Mawkin’s music has an impressive finesse and finish- each track is artfully crafted and carefully chosen. From the jazzy swing of ‘Jolly Well Drunk’ to the soft singing on ‘Searching for Lambs’, The Ties that Bind really gives the listener something back with each re-playing.

Mawkin’s aim of ‘modernising traditional folk material’ through their powerful energy and riveting performance comes across forcefully in this latest album- each track seems to offer a distinct breath of fresh air into the traditional songs used. However, one can’t help but feel this is a band that is still very much knowledgeable about its roots in the folk tradition: the album ends with a beautiful, staid interpretation of ‘Young May Moon’ with Nick Cooke’s soft melodeon solo accompanied by David Delarre’s skilful guitar and James Delarre’s fiddle which manage to softly keep time and playfully, gently twist the tune to reveal new angles within the music. Compare this to the absolute torrent of energy and boisterous music-making of the opening track ‘I Can Hew’, where vocals join with Lee Richardson’s pounding, rollicking drumbeat to create a controlled madness that drives the song along, and one can perhaps comprehend the sheer amount of fun and variety on this album. Indeed, critics have suggested that their varied collective on instruments and styles make them the rightful inheritors of Bellowhead’s now vacant place in the folk music repertoire: after listening to this album it is clear Mawkin have huge stage presence, and have the potential to perform fantastic live sets. Mawkin even supported Bellowhead on the band’s 2016 farewell tour- suggesting we may be hearing a lot more from them in the future.

The wide range of musical influences within the album is explained by the band’s background—with each member an accomplished musician in a variety of areas, it’s no surprise that ‘The Ties that Bind’ contains fascinating echoes of other genres. Richardson’s background in dance music, and Cooke’s earlier performances with Kate Rusby and False Lights, can perhaps be felt in the already-mentioned jazz swing of ‘Jolly Well Drunk’ and the stormy fiddle solos in ‘The Frenchy Set’—or perhaps that’s just my imagination. That’s the thing with this album- you are left never quite knowing what to expect next, with Mawkin’s music reflecting an eclectic, tightly-honed and powerful style that leaves the listener wondering what on earth is on the next track. Long may it last!

Mawkin are playing at The Jericho Tavern, Oxford

Thursday 27th October, 7.30pm, £7 discounted ticket for students.

Tel: 01895 311775 www.wegottickets.com/event/370231www.thejerichooxford.co.uk

 

Sir Tim Berners-Lee to join Oxford computer science department

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The inventor of the World Wide Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, has taken up a professorship at Oxford University’s computer department, the University announced Thursday morning.

Berners-Lee, who will become a member of Christ Church, graduated from Queen’s College in 1976 with a first in Physics. He created the first successful communication between a Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) client and server in 1989. His work in creating the internet earned him a place in Time magazine’s 100 most important people of the 20th century.

The dean of Christ Church, professor Martyn Percy, said, “We are delighted that Professor Sir Tim Berners-Lee will be joining us. As one of the most significant innovators and scholars of our time, his work with us here in Oxford will continue to consolidate our standing as the world’s top university.

“Christ Church also intends to appoint a new associate professor in computer science to enhance our collaboration with the department, and hopes to offer at least three undergraduate places per year in the subject.”

Head of Computer Science at Oxford, Professor Mike Wooldridge, said, “Few living individuals have changed our world as profoundly as Tim did with his invention of the World Wide Web. We are delighted and honoured to welcome Tim back to Oxford and are tremendously excited about what we will be able to do together in the years to come.”

In his role at Oxford, Berners-Lee will predominantly carry out computer science research. However, it is unclear as to how much time he will spend in Oxford, given that he is also a full-time professor at MIT.

Cherwell Careers Guide 2016

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On October 19, Cherwell published a 16-page careers guide, with advice on how to find jobs after graduation, testimonials from Oxford graduates, and other useful tips for anyone concerned about life after Oxford. Click here to take a look.

Statement Pieces: Oli Williams’ tattoos

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I had never considered getting a small or simple tattoo, and despite the validity of personal reasons for tattoos, it was never a factor in my choice to get one. Mine had to be big, bold, colourful and showy. The fact that I got my first one the day after I finished school and two weeks before my first A-level exam was not so much my way of marking the moment as simply the most convenient time to not wear socks and shoes for fourteen days.

I had spent the last six months of school fantasising about tattoos and poring through online images of dragons, birds and phoenixes, as well as imagining just how cool I would feel with a tattoo. It would be a surprise, a party trick. Most of all it would be an expression of individuality and guts. What made the prospect of getting one even more exciting was the knowledge that none of my friends or family would have ever dreamed that I would do it.

For my very first tattoo I got a feather, taken from an image of a phoenix. I got it tattooed across my right foot, and having it certainly made me feel powerful in the way I hoped it would: I had become unpredictable and divergent, and I finally had the ability to make people second-guess who I was.

One yearfoot-tattoo into university, I realised one tattoo was just not enough. Although my foot tattoo was beautiful and impressive, I needed something that would blow everything else out of the water. So, I decided that afterI had finished my dreaded Classics Mods exams, I would go full-phoenix on my leg. And no, the design was not a lame, cliché way of me saying I was rising from some sort of exam-ashes; it was simply the design I had been in love with since school.

Both of my tattoos are based off exactly the same pictures from Google Images, and I chose the designs for no more complicated, supposedly deep a reason than that I simply found it aesthetically extremely pleasing. This big project was a test of my patience, as I had to get the black outline done during the Easter vacation and then let it heal over the entire summer term before going back and having the colour put in. This also meant I had to spend nearly three months with an enormous, incomplete tattoo around my right thigh.

After easily my most narcissistic move to date, I am now going into my third year at Oxford with having spent up to £770 on permanent changes to my body for the sake of being aesthetically admired. Ultimately, my tattoos “mean” nothing at all. Unlike some people who have a more sentimental outlook on such choices, I got my tattoos so that others would look at the parts of my body that I am pleased with and want attention to be drawn to. You may well decide to call me boastful, two-dimensional and vain. You’re right of course—but then again, my tattoos are better than yours.

Student mental health-care shows how the national crisis ought to be approached

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Earlier this year The Guardian announced that 78 per cent of students who completed their survey reported having experienced a mental health problem, diagnosed or undiagnosed, within the past year. YouGov conducted a similar survey, finding that one in four students has a mental illness, with this rising to one in three for females and up to 45 per cent for LGBT students.

In Oxford, where neglecting mental health in favour of high achievement is normalised, many of us do not need statistics to tell us this. There is the expectation of a mid-term crash represented by ‘fifth week blues’, the all-nighter as a standard occurrence necessitated by workload, the pressure to work 6–8 hour days. I was shocked to hear of a friend who was warned by a tutor that they should expect “to drown” under their workload.

Whilst there is more to be done to offer adequate levels of support to students experiencing mental illnesses, a wide range of valuable student-led initiatives exist as part of a collaborative effort to combat the crisis. From the volunteers at Nightline to the JCR and MCR Welfare Reps and networks of peer supporters, we all know someone involved in student mental health.

Unfortunately, the stereotype of the professional social worker that many people seem to have is of someone who turns up, has a cup of tea and a reassuring chat with their service user, and promptly leaves. The reality is very different; mental health social workers offer vital support to people experiencing mental illnesses. They do this by building meaningful relationships and representing the needs of their service users by working with medical professionals for the most suitable outcome.

This is exactly the kind of holistic approach that is valued as a way of addressing student mental health. Why is it so overlooked as a meaningful and worthwhile career outside of the university bubble? Eating disorders, depression, anxiety, OCD, bipolar, schizophrenia, and a whole range of other mental health illnesses do not cease to exist once we are no longer students.

Think Ahead is a new two-year graduate scheme aiming to get top graduates involved in mental health social work. Their tagline is, “Most people know someone who’s had mental health problems. But not everyone knows someone who can make a difference. Could you?” Many have the potential to make a positive difference to the national mental health crisis that the UK is experiencing, but many ignore the opportunity to pursue this as a career, confining our efforts to our years in Oxford but not beyond. Top graduates need to apply the remarkable work they’re doing for the student mental health crisis to the national mental health crisis too.

Wednesday Weltanschauung: Burkean Conservatism

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It is a great irony that Burke, a reforming politician and perennial challenger of the abuse of power, ended his life as the most famed reactionary in Europe. In many ways, the apparent dichotomy between Burke, the defender of the American Revolution, and Burke, the most well-known opponent of the French Revolution, exemplifies the startling and paradoxical conclusions of his thought. For the greatest irony of all is that the French revolutionary philosophy, which emphasised liberty to the exclusion of all else, was least able to maintain those freedoms. Thus Burke’s attempts to curtail royal prerogative and his critique of revolutionary ideology were part of the same struggle for liberty against tyranny.

For fatally misunderstanding the nature of man and human institutions, the revolutionaries would destroy the very frameworks which best-preserved freedom. Burkean conservatism, therefore, turns the philosophical assumptions of the Enlightenment (and modernity) on their head. It presents a vision of humanity as fundamentally and ineradicably flawed, and only liberated by the institutions and norms which the revolutionaries believed were at the heart of man’s oppression. Human reason is not perfect, but fallible and inadequate to the task of creating a new and better world from scratch. Comprehending the Humean dictum that reason should be the slave of the passions, Burke sought to articulate a more holistic conception of human motivation, encompassing the value-systems and diverse desires that really drive action. For, man was not, as the revolutionaries had him, an atomised and selfish individual actor, but a communal being surrounded by the rich texture of social life, embedded within the local loyalties and interpersonal relations.

From this new conception of human nature, arose a new vision of social institutions as the sources of practical knowledge and the foundation of moral order. Understanding that calculation alone could not create a unified polity, he emphasised the importance of emotion, ‘the moral imagination’; that, ‘to make us love our country, our country ought to be lovely.’ According to Burke, a decentralised civil society, the local, devolved loyalties of the ‘little platoon’ and an interlocking system of communities, are a stronger foundation for liberty than the tyranny of an all-encompassing state. Since the state represents aims and hopes that cannot be realised in a single generation, the transitory social contract of Locke is re-imagined as a transcendent institution, a trust between the living, the unborn and the dead.

Religion, for Burke, was not an irrational and backwards force, but the creator of values and the consecrator of state institutions. Just as importantly, Burke discerned that proven institutions which had stood the test of time are more likely to be effective than the abstract constructions of fevered imaginations. Traditions, similarly, are what countless generations have found useful and are, therefore, a valuable means through which knowledge and norms are transmitted. As Popper was to later point out, these traditions create regularities in social life, and are a better guide to the complexities of reality than unaided human reason.

Therefore, the prioritisation of the practical over the impracticable and the particular over the general are central to Burke’s philosophy. As Oakeshott writes, conservatism ‘is to prefer the familiar to the unknown, to prefer the tried to the untried…the convenient to the perfect, present laughter to utopian bliss.’  Politics, therefore, should not be the pursuit of abstract and unrealistic principles, but a gradual process of reconciliation and reform that is close to the real and immediate concerns of the people. It should be made congruent to a pre-existent institutional and social framework, improving systems of government whilst preserving the stability necessary for evolutionary growth. Utopian objectives, constructed by fallible human reasoning, usually result in destructive and unintended effects. Civilisation, fragile, contingent and constantly threatened by the darker undercurrents of human nature, is risked when practical political reform is disregarded to build ‘castles in the air’.

As a new generation of iconoclasts and ideologues seeks to tear down established institutions and norms, attacking everything from religion to the nation-state, and leaving only a vacuum in their place, Burkean conservatism has never been more relevant. In the face of the anomie, atomization and instability brought about by these reckless assaults, this philosophy offers a political alternative through which the excesses of capitalism can be humanised; a means through which compassionate communities and new visions of higher ideals can be re-forged. As the Western world now seeks to reform its political and economic course, it is this vision of human possibility and renewed social value that should be the future of conservatism.