Reach 41,472** Readers Across Oxfordshire

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Reach 41,472** Readers Across Oxfordshire Readership oxfordtimes.co.uk Media information Introduction Celebrating its 150th Birthday The Oxford Times is the leading weekly newspaper in Oxfordshire available to purchase on a Thursday. It has consistently won awards for REACH the quality of its journalism, contains the county’s leading property and jobs platforms as well as a separate weekly 41,472** weekend supplement. Every month readers can enjoy the READERS glossy Limited Edition and In Business magazines which are the perfect vehicle for lifestyle and business advertising. ACROSS OXFORDSHIRE With 12,638* copies sold, 42,472** people read The Oxford Banbury Times in the affluent area of Oxfordshire. Readership locations oxfordtimes.co.uk Abingdon The Oxford Times Chipping Norton Banbury Our 150th year Thursday, September 6, 2012 £1.30, or subscribeTheand save: Page 36 OxfordTimes Bicester Bicester Win a £150,000 school bursary Burford WE CELEBRATE OUR 150TH ANNIVERSARY WITH ST EDWARD’S: SEE P14 Carterton PROPERThursday, TY September Revealed: fresh plans 6, 2012 Charlbury oxfordtimes.co Witney 260 .uk/homes Burford for concert hall in city PAGES A40 Chipping Norton NEW SECTIONS School bid to create 1,000-seat The OxfordTimes Didcot PROPERTY oxfordtimes.co.uk/homes auditorium in North Oxford may The OxfordTimesThursday, September 6, 2012 Oxford Join our birthday WEEKEND celebrations at Oxford Castle gig Thursday, September 6, 2012 Your weekly leisure guide MUSIC P4 for music venue INSIDE end long search THEATRE Poetry Cricket radio legend at the comes The Eynsham By Reg Little London at the launch of a school Oxf foundation, the school’s new or times.co.uk NEW dT rlittle@oxford fundraising vehicle. WRITERS imes The project will help complete A THOUSAND-seat concert hall a performing arts complex Faringdon in North Oxford should bring a begun with the creation of the 30-year wait to an end for the North Wall, which contains a city’s music lovers. theatre and dance studios. Architects have started design When the school acquired the Lemon Tree site, it initially ThurWEEKEND work on a concert hall on the sday, Gloucester to build music teaching Funny business September Woodstock Road, with space for planned : Martin rooms, recording studios and an Weedon outside 6, a full orchestra. the former 2012 chestral recital hall. home The £15m scheme, including a or of Ronnie Barker has since NEW LOOK , top right music school, is being put for- But the decision Picture: Merlin made to go instead for this Lyons/E8 Property Yo ward by St Edward’s School, been Solutions ur weekly Join our High Wycombe which will launch a major larger two-phase project, both leisur birthday e guide celebrations fundraising effort at the RAF elements of which are designed 22 WEEKEND listings oxfordtimes.co.uk/leisure Thursday, September 6, 2012 Po Club in London’s Piccadilly on by Tim Ronalds Architects, spe- CULTURE SEPT 6-12 Oxford at ComedyArt exhibitions pop, folk, jazz e plays, musicals, comedy galleries, Music classical, Theatr etry Thursday Oxford Newbury Oxford Glee Club: Sat, stand-up with Corn Exchange: Friday, An Art Jericho: Until Sep Castle Oxford: Adam Stowe.Singer/ Copa Audience with the Duke of Windsor 16, Together.Group – covers old and new. Free. Andrew Stanley, Jonny Awsum, – guitarist photography exhibition. 9.30pm. 01865 246906. Jacques Barrett and Tiffany dramatisation about Edward VIII. Stevenson. 7.15pm. £14/£5. Box £14, £12. 7.45pm. Sat, Hat of Doom, Wed-Sun, 11-5pm. 07709 cialists in art centres. Friday office: 0871 472 0400. Andy Hamilton. £16/£14. Sold out. 239 322. Heritage open days. Ashmolean Museum: Crown and Thistle,Abingdon: Jericho Tavern: Until Sep 21, The 7.45pm. Sep 8-9, 9. ,blues.Free. Sat 10am-4pm, Sun 11-4pm. Thurs, Sep 13-Oct 28, College October Loose Covers.Rock, pop Government Inspector .Flintlock 9pm. 01235 522556. Tangomotion.£17/£15. 7.45pm. Commissions: All Souls gig adapted Theatre’s satirical comedy 01635 522733. and New College 2012. Football Club,Didcot: Back to by Nikolai Gogol.7.45pm. 92 Tues-Sun, 10am-6pm. Free. Skool disco.Over-30s.Fancy dress £12.50/£10. 01865 5807 . New Greenham Arts 01865 278002. 07789428795. optional.9pm. £5. tre: Until Sep Auditorium: Fri, Barb Jungr’s Blue North Wall Arts Cen Bartlemas Chapel: Until Dead On Her Feet y Ron Hours – Stockport to Memphis. George and Dragon, Sutton 15, ,b Sat. Lost landscapes. y Barry Kyle. £15/£13. 8pm. Sep 8-9, Heritage Courtenay: Adam Stowe.9pm. Free Hutchinson, directed b 01635 Organised by the 01235 848142. 2.30pm. open days.Sat-Sun 11-5pm. £12/£10/£5. 8pm, Saturday 522733. Campaign to Protect Rural MUSIC school is 01865 319450. music s Arms, Bic: Pete McCray. Soul King’ ee.10am-5pm. Abingdon The £6m England. Fr concert hall and reggae.Free.9pm. 01869 249040. Oxford Playhouse: Until Sep 29, Reading 07587 548 548. The proposed The Mill at Sonning Theatre: Sep £3. Mon- The Mill Arts Centre: Friday, The Oxford Tour audio poetry. Scared To Death, Blenheim Palace: Until aturday, 13-Oct 27, by Ron Shadowers.8pm. £10. 01295 279002. Sat 10am-6pm. Until S Oct 4, OneOak Exhibition. Murder on the Nile atha Christie Aldridge.8.15pm, matinée (Thurs, .Ag 0118 969 8000. 10.30am-5pm. Parks and Port Mahon, Oxford: Nairobi; Theatre Company. 7.30pm, Fri 8pm, Sun) 2.15pm. Empty White Circles and Matt gardens £11.50/£6. legend’ P4 would be built on the former expected to open in 2014 with the Kidlington Lemon Tree restaurant site and £9m concert hall to follow, possi- ats Faringdon M40 neighbouring land occupied by bly by 2017, depending on INSIDE JACK fm radio. fundraising. the Jones said: “We needed to home FREE 28-PAGE The head of St Edward’s, Mr THEA Warden Stephen Jones, said: replace the existing music room, up TRE Oxford “The absence of a concert hall which is 50 years old. But we he SUPPLEMENT family home for Crick prob- recognised there was room to of Ronnie et has been a longstanding is on the mar Barke palace ke r sale radio t. Mr lem for Oxford. The Sheldonian build a concert hall attached to parents Leonar Barker’s By TO MARK mo d and Edith Gill Oliver legend Theatre is a great building but it. T ved to Olive 1949 r Road, interna- and lived ther Cowley School and comes uncomfortable for audiences. “We want it to attract Ear e for six in OURthe City 150TH ly on, the years. School. of Oxford Ke to town Shrivenham comic His High y “We want to create a 21st- tional orchestras but also local rep in worked stage career facts Je Aylesbury in theatr joined the began wh re hall in North young musicians from the uni- parents but move e Theatre Pla en he ADDRESS: my century concert at Olive d in with his MaryANNIVEand yeRSARrs group Y Number Smith versity and Oxfordshire’s at the r Road after St John Chur at St Road, Cowley 4, Oliver looks Didcot Oxford.” Oxfor landing He ch Hall. ahead d Playhouse a job was best kno PRICE: P11 While it would be used for County Music Service. Young Vendor Mar in 1951. Two Ro wn for TV £330,000 literary to a Don tin Weedon, nnies, Porr shows The FILM people are what the whole thing and Mary whose par Hours idge and Open AGENT festiv school performances, he said it bought ents and his Thursday, September 6, 2012 All : Chamberlain sponsored al, said: “Ro the house Corbett.150TH ANNIVERSARpartnershipY COMMEMORATIVE SUPPLEMENT Evans to serve “as is really about.” nnie was 19 in 1964, After with Ro CONT Steeple Aston would be big enough mo wh he nnie ACT by ved here. en his par wife retired in : 01865 Oxford Th ole The school said it recognised Ready for the off: Ginny Howe, of Duns Tew, washesHis landladDivilabit aheadents of Joy moved 1987, he and www.chamberlain-evans.com727203 e a major facility for the wh wouldn’t let y in Aylesb Dean to a conve Times him take ury and opened rted mill in a ,w city”. parking would “inevitably be an the Fidelity Blenheim Horse Trials, startinghometoday.every Thousandsbathsof, sopeoplehe are antiques The Emporium mouth-w ith weekend to came shop in Semi-detached The independent school will issue”. to attend the event. Preview: PageMr16BarPicturke e: OX54110haveby oneMark Bassett He Chipping list atering expected r’s family .” died in 2005 Norton. of on Page 3 when he came to wa aged 76, irst guests set out its concert hall plans in Continued was four Oxford s in Banb and his of all, ..... He wa , living in ury. Mr funeral Three Wo let’s s a pupil Cowley toastmaster Weedon’s bedroomsodstoc get the Wallingford at Road. fa k Donnington and ther, a Festiva Literary name How Thame we amateur l wh Fe straight. Middle ll-kno actor F it wo en stiva does wn , Air-r One: in Some from TV was also aid Th uld in fact, l, others Keira and fi Andsheltere Blenheim cour if cop the call it as Karenina? do lms. ye t be of yright Blenheim the propertyedit@nq literarys, tha Palace ficiall were Gar t under Liter y refer challeng o.com age types lining ary Fe red to ed, So with ...) IS impor stiva as P12 Wantage wa tha l At Exhibit y, wh t out tant (these Woodstoc actuall at is of the k. COUNTR ther are, after y see? e to all, Well, Y might considering Wallingford ha Sunda ve thought you y Ti the Mar mes Lit ch had Fest literary satiated in ha lusts all ve yo , prep ignited.
Recommended publications
  • 2006 Annual Report
    TABLE OF CONTENTS 2006 Financial Summary . 1 Letter to Shareholders . 2 Board of Directors . 7 Company and Divisional Officers . 8 Form 10-K COMPANY PROFILE: Gannett Co., Inc. is a leading international news and information company. In the United States, the company publishes 90 daily newspapers, including USA TODAY,and nearly 1,000 non-daily publications. Along with each of its daily newspapers, the company operates Internet sites offering news and advertising that is customized for the market served and integrated with its publishing operations. USA TODAY.com is one of the most popular news sites on the Web. The company is the largest newspaper publisher in the U.S. Newspaper publishing operations in the United Kingdom, operating as Newsquest, include 17 paid-for daily news- papers, almost 300 non-daily publications, locally integrated Web sites and classified business Web sites with national reach. Newsquest is the second largest regional newspaper publisher in the U.K. In broadcasting, the company operates 23 television stations in the U.S. with a market reach of more than 20.1 million households. Each of these stations also operates locally oriented Internet sites offering news, entertainment and advertising content, in text and video format. Through its Captivate subsidiary, the broadcasting group delivers news and advertising to a highly desirable audience demographic through its video screens in office tower and select hotel elevators. Gannett’s total Online U.S. Internet Audience in January 2007 was nearly 23.2 million unique visitors, reaching about 14.8% of the Internet audience, as measured by Nielsen//NetRatings. Complementing its publishing and broadcasting businesses, the company has made strategic investments in online advertising.
    [Show full text]
  • Architecture Facts and Attractions About Britain
    Architecture Yahoo Portal Architecture http://dir.yahoo.com/arts/design_arts/architecture/ British Council http://www.britishcouncil.org/arts-aad.htm IA-UK http://www.ia-uk.co.uk/ ADAM http://www.intute.ac.uk/artsandhumanities/ AECPORTICO http://www.aecportico.co.uk/ Architecture Foundation http://www.architecturefoundation.org.uk/ RIBA http://www.architecture.com/go/Architecture/Home.html Art & Architecture http://www.artandarchitecture.co.uk/ Archinet http://www.construction-index.com/ Intbau http://www.intbau.org/ Great Buildings http://www.greatbuildings.com Facts and attractions about Britain Museum and Arts 24 Hour Museum – gateway to over 2,500 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions www.24hourmuseum.org.uk The British Council http://www.britishcouncil.org/ Art Guide – features a great linklist to all museums in the UK www.artguide.org/uk Royal Academy of Arts http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/?lid=1226 British Arts http://www.britisharts.co.uk/ BBC Arts http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/ Design Council www.designcouncil.org.uk Arts Council England www.artscouncil.org.uk London Theatre Guide www.officiallondontheatre.co.uk The British Film Institute http://www.bfi.org.uk Theatre web of the UK www.uktw.co.uk London Theatre Guide http://www.londontheatre.co.uk/index.html West End London http://www.albemarle-london.com/news.html ADAM Gateway http://www.intute.ac.uk/artsandhumanities/ Art UK http://www.artuk.co.uk/ National Organization of Youth Theatres http://www.nayt.org.uk/ Theatres Online http://www.theatresonline.com/
    [Show full text]
  • Helen Peacocke with the Copper Kettles Made by Her Father
    Castaway oxfordtimes.co.uk Helen Peacocke with the copper kettles made by her father Photographs: Antony Moore 8 Oxfordshire Limited Edition April 2013 oxfordtimes.co.uk Castaway Sylvia Vetta talks to author, journalist and dog walker Helen Peacocke s a young woman, Helen Helen with Peacocke made a mental list of her border all the things she would like to collie do before she reached the age puppy A of 70. That landmark arrives Barnaby this month — so has she managed to get everything done? “There is still one thing left to do,” Helen revealed. “I want to do a parachute jump from a plane.” This month’s castaway on our desert island, Helen will be well known to regular readers of The Oxford Times as she has written for the newspaper almost every week for 23 years. Working for the newspaper also helped her achieve many of her ambitions — including drinking vintage champagne while soaring above the countryside in a hot air balloon. All in the name of science you understand. But Helen had lived several lives before she sat at her desk at the newspaper’s office in Osney Mead. She was born at the Acland Hospital, Oxford, on March 30, 1943, and brought up in Eynsham. Indeed Helen Richards, as she then was, came from an Oxfordshire family that would not seem out of place in Lark Rise to Candleford. Her grandfather (Helen cannot remember his name) was blacksmith in Burford, and her father, Alfred Harper Richards (better known as Jim. also had metalworking skills. Standing in the open fireplace of Helen’s charming cottage in Eynsham are a set of gleaming copper kettles made by her father, He was obviously a fine craftsman because the spouts are slender and elegant — no mean achievement.
    [Show full text]
  • Chic, Upmarket and Beautifully Designed with Strong Editorial
    MEDIA PACK 2019 OCTOBER 2018 COMPLIMENTARY LIMITEDEDITION SEPTEMBER 2018 | COMPLIMENTARY LIMITED EDITION AUGUST 2018 | COMPLIMENTARY LIMITED EDITION TIME TO WIN THE BIG GET COSY AFTERNOON Interior ideas to see you TEA WITH WIN right through winter LAURA ASHLEY FASHION BLENHEIM PALACE FESTIVAL ISSUE TICKETS The trends you need to know this season DREAMY MODERN NIGHTS MASTERPIECES MAGIC Heavenly weekend BRIGHT The best homes on MOVES breaks for autumn the market now Your spellbinding new SPARKS home could be inside Standout fixtures HOME to light up your life SWEET HOME GREEN WITH ENVY The hottest Meet the sisters properties on with the golden the market touch for now gardens Style A-Z Take this shopping with you MAD ABOUT FEELING PLUS AUTUMN Arts & culture BLUE WIN: tickets to an evening with acclaimed interiors THE HOUSE Food & drink Why navy is the smartest hue INSPIRATIONS for your autumn wardrobe Food, decor and fashion expert and Instagram star Kate Watson-Smyth Instagram interiors star Kate Watson-Smyth comes to Oxfordshire Society events Chic, upmarket and beautifully designed with strong editorial content Welcome to the Limited Edition media pack, where you will discover how to make your advertising work as hard as possible for you. For more than thirty years Limited Edition has delighted Oxfordshire readers through first-class features about local people and their lives, accompanied by exquisite photography. Our readers are loyal, discerning people who enjoy the finer things in life and who have a large disposable income to afford their luxurious lifestyle. We celebrate the most interesting homes to covet and the finest properties and estates to buy, review the best places to eat, sleep and play, and focus on luxurious goods from local retailers.
    [Show full text]
  • Media Ownership and News Coverage of International Conflict
    Media Ownership and News Coverage of International Conflict Matthew Baum Yuri Zhukov Harvard Kennedy School University of Michigan matthew [email protected] [email protected] How do differences in ownership of media enterprises shape news coverage of international conflict? We examine this relationship using a new dataset of 591,532 articles on US-led multinational military opera- tions in Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan and Kosovo, published by 2,505 newspapers in 116 countries. We find that ownership chains exert a homogenizing effect on the content of newspapers’ coverage of foreign pol- icy, resulting in coverage across co-owned papers that is more similar in scope (what they cover), focus (how much “hard” relative to “soft” news they offer), and diversity (the breadth of topics they include in their coverage of a given issue) relative to coverage across papers that are not co-owned. However, we also find that competitive market pressures can mitigate these homogenizing effects, and incentivize co-owned outlets to differentiate their coverage. Restrictions on press freedom have the opposite impact, increasing the similarity of coverage within ownership chains. February 27, 2018 What determines the information the press reports about war? This question has long concerned polit- ical communication scholars (Hallin 1989, Entman 2004). Yet it is equally important to our understanding of international conflict. Prevailing international relations theories that take domestic politics into account (e.g., Fearon 1994, 1995, Lake and Rothschild 1996, Schultz 2001) rest on the proposition that the efficient flow of information – between political leaders and their domestic audiences, as well as between states involved in disputes – can mitigate the prevalence of war, either by raising the expected domestic political costs of war or by reducing the likelihood of information failure.1 Yet models of domestic politics have long challenged the possibility of a perfectly informed world (Downs 1957: 213).
    [Show full text]
  • Broadcast Media
    BROADCAST MEDIA 19 February 2015 Professor Karl Claxton was interviewed on: BBC 1 News, BBC News 24, BBC Breakfast, Today programme BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio Five Live Sky News BBC Radio Derby BBC Radio Foyle BBC Radio Somerset BBC Radio Hereford & Worcester BBC Radio Bristol BBC Radio Coventry & Warwick BBC Radio York 26 February 2015 Professor Claxton was interviewed on BBC Breakfast 7 April 2015 Professor Claxton featured in Is Cancer Money Well Spent? on BBC Radio 4 Type Headline Date Outlet URL Regional Expensive drugs 19/02/2015 News Letter - http://www.newsletter.co. Online uk/news/national/expensive- the-nhs-1-6588440 Regional Expensive drugs 'harming the NHS' 19/02/2015 The Southern Daily http://www.dailyecho.co. Echo - Online uk/uk_national_news/11803 Expensive_drugs__harming ref=rss Regional Expensive drugs 19/02/2015 Lancaster http://www.lancasterguardia Guardian - Online uk/news/national/expensive- the-nhs-1-7114351 Regional Expensive drugs 'harming the NHS' 19/02/2015 Asian Image North http://www.asianimage.co. West uk/news/11803728. Expensive_drugs__harming Regional Expensive drugs 'harming the NHS' 19/02/2015 Lancashire http://www.lancashiretelegra Evening Telegraph uk/news/national/11803728. - Online Expensive_drugs__harming Regional Expensive drugs 'harming the NHS' - 19/02/2015 Belfast Telegraph - http://www.belfasttelegraph. BelfastTelegraph.co.uk Online uk/news/uk/expensive-drugs nhs-31004659.html Regional Expensive drugs 'harming the NHS' 19/02/2015 This is Local http://www.thisislocallondon. London uk/news/national/news/1180 Expensive_drugs__harming Regional Expensive drugs 'harming the NHS' 19/02/2015 TheVisitor.co.uk http://www.thevisitor.co. uk/news/national/expensive- the-nhs-1-7114351 Regional Expensive drugs 'harming the NHS' 19/02/2015 The Southern Daily http://m.dailyecho.co.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2018-19
    National Council for the Training of Journalists Annual Report 2018-19 www.nctj.com Contents NCTJ mission Vital statistics 3 To be recognised as the industry charity for attracting, qualifying and developing outstanding Chairman’s review 4 journalists who work to the highest professional standards. We provide a world-class education Chief executive’s report 5 and training system that develops current and Commitment to equality, diversity and inclusion 6 future journalists from all walks of life for the demands of a fast-changing media industry. Community News Project 9 Maintaining high standards of accredited courses 11 NCTJ objectives Developing journalism qualifications 15 • Increase resources to build the capacity and capability of the NCTJ to strengthen Gold standard students 18 its role and influence across all media National Qualification in Journalism 20 sectors and related sectors where journalism skills are required. Inspiring the next generation of journalists 23 • Ensure there are effective products and Journalism skills training 25 services for journalists and journalism trainers at all stages of their careers and Discussing the latest in journalism skills and foster a culture of continuing professional celebrating excellence 26 development. Student Council and Diploma in Journalism awards 29 • Maintain a progressive, flexible and inclusive framework of respected industry Updates and developments 31 ‘gold standard’ journalism qualifications and apprenticeships that embrace digital Business and finance review 32 and other changes in practice. Patron’s review 35 • Accredit journalism courses of excellence Who we are 36 at colleges, universities and independent providers and reward and support them to achieve the media industry’s challenging performance standards.
    [Show full text]
  • International Coverage Source Headline Country URL
    International Coverage Source Headline Country URL COVID-19 patients who undergo surgery are at increased risk of http://7thspace.com/headlines/1203887/covid_19_patients_who_undergo_surgery_are_at_increased_risk_of_postoper 7thSpace Netherlands postoperative death ative_death.html ABC.es - Agencias La COVID-19 eleva riesgo de sufrir complicaciones pulmonares tras operación Spain https://agencias.abc.es/noticia.asp?noticia=3393851 albertonews La COVID-19 eleva riesgo de sufrir complicaciones pulmonares tras operación Venezuela https://albertonews.com/internacionales/la-covid-19-eleva-riesgo-de-sufrir-complicaciones-pulmonares-tras-operacion/ Andhravilas COVID-19 patients who undergo surgery at high death risk: Lancet United States http://www.andhravilas.net/en/COVID-19-patients-who-undergo-surgery-at-high-death-risk-Lancet Study reveals COVID-19 patients who undergo surgery are at increased risk https://www.aninews.in/news/health/study-reveals-covid-19-patients-who-undergo-surgery-are-at-increased-risk-of- AniNews.in India of postoperative death postoperative-death20200531091419/ Arkansas Indian COVID-19 patients who undergo surgery at high death risk: Lancet India https://www.arkansasindian.com/desi/newsdetail.asp?id=558021 Patients who undergo surgery after COVID infection at increased death risk: Asian Age India http://ct.moreover.com/?a=42239719265&p=3bo&v=1&x=xzKDXzzwJVwVg0l8yZrhig Study ATT.com Death rate after elective surgery soars if a patient has Covid-19 United States https://currently.att.yahoo.com/att/death-rate-elective-surgery-soars-193801677.html
    [Show full text]
  • POETS "Democratic Deficit 2021
    DEMOCRATIC DEFICIT 2021 Who decides Oxfordshire’s Future? An update by POETS (Planning Oxfordshire’s Environment and Transport Sustainably) February 2021 Authors Chris Cousins, former head of sustainable development at Oxfordshire County Council Elizabeth Wilson, associate lecturer in environmental planning, Oxford Brookes University David Young, former director of environmental services at Oxfordshire County Council Democratic Deficit – Who decides Oxfordshire’s future? February 2021 Executive Summary Democracy is under threat all round the world. In the last year our lives in Oxfordshire have been affected by The shrinking of local and national news media The failure so far to hold meaningful consultation on the growth agenda across Oxfordshire and the wider Oxford to Cambridge Arc The continuing impoverishment and enfeeblement of local authorities by increasingly centralised national government. The gagging of local councillors in South Oxfordshire, prohibited from developing their Local Plan The growth of misinformation and conspiracy claims There are many other instances of democratic deficit. There is a risk that as they become more commonplace we no longer routinely notice them, with a real danger of the country collectively sleepwalking its way to the loss of any real local democracy. This paper looks at what has been happening in the past year, drawing together many different strands with particular reference to Oxfordshire, and makes recommendations about how we can seek to reverse these trends. It is broken down into three parts: Part one - An Overview – page 2 Part two - A Growing Deficit: where we are today – page 4 Part three - Recommendations – page 14 Oxford Times Editorial 17 December 2020: “…[councillors] were told by Housing Minister Robert Jenrick, in an extraordinary affront to local democracy, that they had to accept the plan or he would impose it on them by force…Given the Government has cut funding to local authorities, one wonders what they envision the future to look like for councils in this country.
    [Show full text]
  • The A.L. Smith Collections
    THE A.L. SMITH COLLECTIONS THE PAPERS AND LETTERS OF ARTHUR LIONEL SMITH MASTER OF BALLIOL 1916-1924 By Tim Procter Modern Manuscripts Assistant 1993 Catalogue copyright Balliol College 1993, 2012. Page 1 of 186 Table of Contents Introduction ....................................................................................................................................................4 Biographical Summary..................................................................................................................... 4 ARTHUR LIONEL SMITH.................................................................................................................4 A.L. SMITH AND THE TEACHING OF HISTORY IN OXFORD ......................................................6 BIBLIOGRAPHY AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. ...........................................................................6 THE PROVENANCE OF THE COLLECTION.................................................................................... 7 THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE COLLECTION................................................................................. 7 1. The Papers of A.L. Smith - General Arrangement. ......................................................................7 2. The Letters To A.L. Smith - Arrangement. .................................................................................10 3. Arrangement of the Collections - Summary. ..............................................................................10 ABBREVIATION NOTE. .................................................................................................................11
    [Show full text]
  • The 2012 Newspaper Awards in ASSOCIATION with PJ and FUJIFILM
    The Winners The 2012 Newspaper Awards IN ASSOCIATION WITH PJ AND FUJIFILM 1 Three years ago, in my introduction to the Winners All this made the judging of The 2012 Newspaper Book for The 2009 Newspaper Awards, I said that Awards particularly challenging though the 14-strong newspapers were facing exceedingly tough and judging panel of industry professionals was remarkably challenging times never seen or witnessed by anyone consistent with its decisions and no category required a then working in the industry. chairman’s casting vote. The digital revolution, the effects of which were Of course without the judges, all eminent people in exacerbated daily by prevailing economic conditions, was our industry with hectic daily schedules, there would be forcing rapid change to traditional newspapering and no Awards. So on behalf of the Awards team, our thanks. traditional business models. And newspaper publishers Thanks are also due to all the publishers and printers were coming to terms with the loss of revenue and that entered the 16th annual Awards – with over 1,000 circulation sales and the need for major change. newspaper copies and digital entries on the table to Today, as evidenced by this year’s Awards, the scrutinise. industry may not have returned to former levels of And thanks are also due to all our sponsors, and in profitability, but it is more stable, it is bursting with particular Fujifilm, the Awards’ headline sponsor since technical and publishing innovation, and it is investing in day one and which again provided excellent facilities new wave technologies, systems and software.
    [Show full text]
  • 2004 Annual Report Gannett Co., Inc
    2004 ANNUAL REPORT GANNETT CO., REPORT ANNUAL INC. 2004 2004 ANNUAL REPORT GANNETT CO., REPORT ANNUAL INC. 2004 GANNETT CO., INC. 2004 ANNUAL REPORT GES IMA ON/GETTY THORNT ALAN s MCLEAN, 22107 VA GANNETT CO., INC. WWW.GANNETT.COM 7950 JONES BRANCH DRIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS SHAREHOLDERS SERVICES 2004 Financial Summary . 1 GANNETT STOCK THIS REPORT WAS WRITTEN AND PRODUCED BY EMPLOYEES Letter to Shareholders . 2 Gannett Co., Inc. shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange with the symbol GCI. The company’s transfer agent and registrar is Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. General inquiries and OF GANNETT. Board of Directors . 7 requests for enrollment materials for the programs described below should be directed to Vice President and Controller Company and Divisional Officers . 8 Wells Fargo Shareowner Services, P.O. Box 64854, St. Paul, MN 55164-0854 or by George Gavagan telephone at 1-800-778-3299 or at www.wellsfargo.com/shareownerservices. Director/Consolidation Accounting DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN and Financial Reporting Form 10-K The Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRP) provides Gannett shareholders the opportunity Leslie Sears to purchase additional shares of the company’s common stock free of brokerage fees or service charges through automatic reinvestment of dividends and optional cash payments. Vice President/Corporate Cash payments may range from a minimum of $10 to a maximum of $5,000 per month. Communications Tara Connell AUTOMATIC CASH INVESTMENT SERVICE FOR THE DRP Senior Manager/Publications This service provides a convenient, no-cost method of having money automatically Laura Dalton withdrawn from your checking or savings account each month and invested in Gannett stock through your DRP account.
    [Show full text]