4 CJWi«f©e Advertiser & Tiroes, September 4th, 1997 Valley Matters a weekly look at local Issues, people and place®
Clinging to of common se
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states that all good works we can attain cannot put us right with God, but once we have been put right with God there is something radically wrong with our Christianity which does not
G
issue in good works. This is simply due to the inevitable law of love. When we are truly loved by someone who is really fine, lovely and splendid, we know that we can
od created us to do good works. However, the paradox of Saint Paul
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; I have battled to keep my sani ty zs a Pressman by dinging to a life raft that goes by the name o f common sense — a t least until I arrived in the office on
I
Monday morning. Bo: before I turn to that, 1st me&d*' accepted things c£f my chest.
1 T ITp -'.y ' ynr— efba. I was <tev astaffif pr r*v> cesdtess drain of socn a j pecscEi who <Sd so ns:
And, also like millions of people
, round thegiobe, lamappeitedhylfis | original allegation of wbaieansed
that death, and that of the ocha- two victims — greed, unadnlteratec greed, to mala a fasc toex by the so- caQed paparazzL But, when it comes to the Press,
, there tea Deed to keep things in per- speesve— andtbeperep«srre;iisfer
n the midst of a sss. of con troversy over the Diana, F’rincess oi Wales, tragedy,
As I see it
checks wish the emargsatT a orta # OTET
a ccr cf fa
einz. T h » seet * h2&, d
taken s nsw twist, ir iih It2» two that the drtrar of She < 0rtx&
g- tii£ slrctDsd EnSt#
obvioas reasons, the paparazzi ■ and, by impScaSaon. tbsTrwsstts.
j f A — jsriiicedodrcCpcciSt*?^3" I regard the artEsade of those
dx— 7-1 the Press in total for the o s -
c-.-v.-T-x geengs-cD, prior to and 2 ,*^ ^ oorrt5c Paris ezadL as an insritt
: to theEkso f my newspaper— any h - . i -.■■
as weekly newspapers like the Clitheroe Advertiser and Times is : mwwmed. is a worid apart from the occupied iry some of the labVrd
rags that I rAtsie to cafl news^ipers.
And that is where my Monday mocning shock comes into it. I t is obvioas, in the eyes of some of
t*r>. pftpnfarinn- that the Press should all be tarred with the same tendL £ "Why otherwise would a newspaper contact on Sunday morning say to
, one of oar reportss, “ I don’t think I j should be talking to you today,, should I?" — when all we wanted; were the results from a local flower:
..n.ii.rtvpewsaaneafir’taa- more: To oe mensaooed in the same
■ blast oi disapproval aimed at the ruLatess photographers wax i f the esriy'tqipasiSaon tores oat to ce fart, are prepared to EtereBy hoond peo
ple to death- saddens me oeepty This newspapen Eke many othere
wiodi sene thsr local coamrmiitaes all around the nation, prides itself, above afl d!3ev on ocEnpassaaQ when it
• : resate in a feeling of trees withm the
-nan., to peoptebEvesaad privacy.^ T t is rt** very stufL withoct doabt. that kxal newspapers are ahomt and
community of which we are very proud. LnEke the national nesspa-
At the forefront of metropolitan police force
A wrtRxrFTi CBtheroe man who is now the asssiant chief ^mtahaMpof MflTwhfag has been back home to give an
insight into his >ob. Mr Alan Bridge’s father, Frank, is a member of the
Clitheroe Probus Club, whose members were grven an inada-k view of the difficult task of poHring a metropfitan
area.
Mr Bridge is a former head boy of Ribblesdale High SchooL joining the police asabeat bobby at fihe age of 20.
,
Today, the Manchester pohee area basap^mlation of two and a half million people, o i wbomrax per cent are of
I —1 :*-L_ T~*-7fery<T-»L rt ii'an-Ttf OTCTngiag -cnTg^ n fe g p g OSDt
and more t r^am ioo,lkw saioeots uve witpn ua Mr Bridge toW his rapt andieiKe that there were current-
[ ly 6^10 police officers, 3^50 support s t ra n d 660 special constables. The annual budget was £330itl, which trans lated as 27p per day per person. The force received some five and a half million telephone caBs annually.
1 Particular problems woe, he said, sporting functions,
with the right football league dubs attracting some 90,000 spectators weekly. Manchester was also home to one of
| the country’s largest airports, catering far 15 miTHnn pas- |
dangerous motorway network.
a ypar, and the area bad 110 mBesQTintrKate and j
I _______
He devoted mnch ofhis talk to the pfiative and progres sive way the Manchester force tackled ever-increaang ! drug misuse, now part of a multi-milBon dollar industry,
j and eipressed regret at the growingtendency today to an ^tj^lijwmtarjrm with drugs was a Dmm.
Further statistics dKwed an estimated one and a half mil lion ecstacv takers in the United Kingdom and that drugs
| were responsible for some £141
miUion.in acquisitive rrimP-
I Regarding future developments, be was pleased to oct- Hne the success of the country’s pobce autbcBTUes genCTai-
J j
I It, and Manchester particularly, in keepii« ahead in tech- j nicaJ developments, especially tb% computer revolution and the Internet-He stressed the aivanf tion with local authorities and TvaT+T%
ew,!>
and commerce and with local In conchxson, the speaker ref population and said that the — ported half a million retired pen
| tually non-existent and even t l victims erf violent crime. The gre in the pursuit of crime present* the maintenance of law and ordi Mr Bridge dealt with an unnsmuij
tion, and police recruitment.
Managing ’ clerk for solicitors
LEG A L executive Mr David Room, of Clitheroe, has been appointed managing clerk at the Blackburn Northgate office of solici tors Forbes and Partner. Mr Room, who is mar ried with a four-year-old daughter, specialises in crim in a l law. Prior to his new appoint ment he worked for a Manchester-based law practice, which he joined after 13 years with Far leys, the Blackburn solic
itors. } jf A vote of thanks -was proposed by Mr Paul Duck. ”
[countryis ageing area alone sup- fivabywasvir- itaied could be use of violence problems in
number of ques- w
tions, including police accountability,^nternal investiga tion of one force by another, the moctern habit of litiga
Matthew Eagles
Interesting career is forecast for ex-CRGS pupil
A FORMER Clitheroe Royal Grammar School pupil has beaten off 1,000 competitors to secure a job at the Meteorological Office in Bracknell,
Berkshire. Matthew Ragles 121) has begun work as aModels Diag nostic Srienrist ax the Hadley Centre for Climate Predic
tion and Research. He wfil be using the office’s comput- ers to draw up models and rinmlafions af the future cli mate and is involved in the research being undertaken to
look at the Greenhouse Effect. Mr Elagles, who formerly lived in Franklin Street,
CBtheroe, attended the grammar school until the age-of 16 before leaving to study far A-levels at Blackburn col lege. He then treat on to gain a degree in applied physics from the pulveisity of Central Lancashire. He first applied for the job in April, before he had actual
ly graduated, and was thrilled to be selected despite the competition. He began work in Jniy and seemsto be set tling in welL TTte father; Mr 23. Eagles, said: “We are'delighted'with
Ins achievements. He has fannd himself a. flat nearby and seats to be loving every minute of Ins new job.”
Work to go at autumn
A W AD D IN G TO N
‘ artist w ill be display ing ax paintings at the forthcoming British Society o f Painters’ Autumn Exhibition. Mrs Kathleen Thylcs; of
Beech Mount, has a wide variety of subjects that have been exhibited local ly in the past, but tins is the first time her work wi l l be displayed on a national level. Her paintings will be
Daiid Room
THOUGHT fo
r te we: h ek
never deserve such a great love. It is not possible. To deserve a love like that would be quite beyond us. We have received a special gift such as we shall never deserve. We instinctively know thi^ to be so. At the same time we know with utter conviction that we must spend the rest oi our life in trying to be worthy of that love. It is the same with our relationship
to God. Nothing that we can ever do can win or earn the loving favour erf the grace of God! All the rest of our lives we shall need to try to deserve such a love. Our consciousness erf Sal
vation creates within us a dee; to do great works for God wi
saved us by His grace. Ou: works do not put God in oar d I t is God’s love which lays on
obligation to shew that thro: allour fife wv are trying to be' it- We know what God wan
do and have learned from IE and through His Son we cann
Goals love, but we can and mu bow grateful we are for u, b y : with our whole heart to live b erf fife winch will bring joy to who has such a wonderful low
shown at the exhibition, which takes place at the Winter Gardens in Hkley
on display ‘ exhibition
from September ISth to 21st, along with more than 1,400 original works from other artists in all media— from oils and pastels to acrylics and watercolours. As well as being a keen painter, Mrs Taylor is also a garden enthusiast and this is reflected in her work. Her subjects which will be on display include ““Auricula and Polyan thus'”, ‘'“Market Day iu Great HaTWood” aud “Borne Courtyard” . “Dre exhibition will be offi
cially opened b y TV’s Countdown compere, Mr Richard Whiteley.
Here, in cgms&sx mstiitns tftVte
EibbJe NsBsy, #2» AdhtssnUiaarstRil ' j i=^ w 3 esinSShoe fe> &> tllliii®S tfite
■s^iifcasfflsi^asinan^dteiattes^ taking: mtto
pl=b fe£nss when rapnriiii® cm Ihcau Ete.
toierreswiihEfewiSficnittlBie^p-
pletePrincess.'weaddousraKntm'" J2 3 5S to the rzSSmcs Sfiait fiffin® bean mreg-Ad tothefemaBiscff ttetjitoaie
s of theBaristrasedst UJfficifur
txzsS. ti&e Tgfrsi iiis *3os not tins nsiiiiaii
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fir**, feggag of cartaas foes p soffi m o are rar=s2 j c c fr tco
—-tftwStWiac
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