- ri
10 ClitheroeAdvertiser&Times, July 18th, 2002 p, kifet-.',:
write to: The Editor, Clitheroe Ad'crtiserand Times, 3 King Street, Clithcroe BB72EW~ ' Editorial email:
clithcroe.cditorial@
rim.co.uk [- ^ ---- -----.
■Vf ' i b o * ' > ’ Hall’s design
is practical THE letter you published last week from the Squire of Slaidburn and Mrs King- Wilkinson regarding the Slaidburn ■ Community Development Group prop os-, als for a new village ball was disappointing. The existing village hall is
' Village Hall Committee on generous terms but, as any? one who actually uses the hall will know, the facilities are not adequate. The hall has several flights
owned by the Slaidburn Estate who lease it to the
with the village.'.!11 ru ■
■ ■ ■ --- • • j ; Obviously, ihis 'answercan
never please'everybody, but' pubhc consultation has been exhaustive and over, time it is probable:theinew design, if. planning iapproval. is .given, . will become accepted and
loved. , ,. i . r, _ i \ r While writing, it is per
haps, worth ^mentioning! that the,charity,’whicli is;hoping to-build, the,new.haU Jhas
A • f‘- . . S - g ?™ w,tK 0.e
. proposal, given that he does UIRENA ZALASIEWICZ, ; ' care about the environment.iy.HebburriDrive,.
and conservation of, proper- j; Bury, ty. . .
,ti;' thfe^ro^ert t ha ^ ji is™?mplyO t i m e tO g e t
the present plan?..... ..... Further comments and
of stairs which are difficult for some elderly people, young mothers with toddlers and many disabled. The Vil lage Hall Committee spent £1,000 some five years ago trying to find a way in which
the existing hall could be modernised, but unfortu nately concluded money spent on modernising the facilities would not get over the fundamental problems of access and parking. Thus a new building had
acquisition i§ intended,to. make Slaidburn villagers' Alexandra Road," become "Lords of their own Lancaster. Manor"and to ensure har mony between the new vil lage hall,'the green-and the Hodder,'while providing more grass for the exercise and recreation of'both locals and tourists/i * inq«-
MELDIACK,,,, ' "
JOHN PARRY, Chairman,'
Slaidbufn Community Development Group, Lower Stony Bank, Slaidburn, Lancashire BB7 4TR.
’
to be found. There are few possible sites in Slaidburn and, when the former Methodist Chapel became available, it seemed the answer. Probably the whole of this group, consisting of 29 people and representing virtually every organisation in the village, initially thought the chapel would be maintained. However, three architects were invited to produce proposals against our brief and only one felt the chapel could be saved. Even he proposed to demol ish Chapel House which he thought was structurally unsound for any develop ment. Keeping the existing facade, as the Squire and Mrs King-Wilkinson have suggested, was ruled out on professional advice many months ago. Eventually this group
.
views are certainly welcome on this proposed "Blot on IN your edition of Thurs Slaidburn and .the
.:; appeared under the headline .! • ,T ..jiTprchhght Float Costs". .
A playtime for the rich
,: t r S ^ A ridiculous
hall blot plan FOLLOWING a letter writ ten in last week's Advertiser and Times by J. N. and A.
«*d , t xt
Chapel, I p a id a v is i t to Slaidburn. I would strongly urge all
the. , _ . , old Metnodi ,st . a
King-Wilkinson concerning the proposed replacement for
residents of th a t area to view the plans and sign the petition at the .Heritage Centre and at IVIyttori Farm Crafts.
looks like something one would see at! an .airport rather than in'iain area of conservation, and whoever is responsible for allowing this to be even presented to the. Ribble Valley planning authorities should resign or
The proposejd building il
' He was asked not to copy any building in Slaidburn,
chose an architect, David Lea, who has a first class honours degree in architec ture from Cambridge Uni versity, who is nationally known for his sympathetic, sustainable designs and who has worked on many presti gious buildings, including some in conservation areas.
be sacked! The people of Slaidburn
should make every effort to make their feelings known to everyone involved in this ridiculous proposal. Why the original stone
"?
United Utilities is an estate0i t ielephone number for the ow A a f i irSyi - fM 'Q r l / thi< ; owning, commerciaFcompa-,,. Awards for All in the North ^ q U e S l l O ^ m d r K
j.be consumers, pay tyest Lottery Scheme based, m y letter of July:4th was in ;
Let us "break, it^down. contact name, address and uniucu unnu ca *j .«*** i r* r, A 1 J — f— A
. ■ _ h - ™ A nlnl 'A rtw ™M ds uci 1* 1«a vaa
— ------------ c
jn Wmrington.
its is a matter for shiarehold-’•;grant! programme; has a ers. If they want to attract three-month turnaround more shooting parties to "'period'for all applications boost the tourist;trade,--it-is—and therefore, for the Torch- their matter.,
U n in n f n r o V io ro n n l f l .* •' ‘ Ll J. - o n m m n - l i n e n , . However, shoptingls a. ■
■
owhirfng.vehicles and gave a ;£Plea, pyefeihis’ Bicuuuiic u —ll
,tt
tbe price for water. Estate l ianH<! are also used eommer-
‘»'r‘ ,yj W:i •' Unfortunately, in contact-
response to points made by th e Rev. Steve Cooper the
ciallylor agriculture. How ing the Awards for All office; previous week'about the See the company spends its prof- I failed to mention that the ■
luxury "sport". I' wp.ndjr,. by the beginning of June at how much these tourifetstpay for the day's privilege? Could this;money not be invested to provide play-time for the rich, instead of using funds obtained from European and Government resources? English Nature also
-year.
chipped in. Even the RSPB is listed as a donor. Many years ago, I rescued a wood-' cock tha t hit the window and knocked itself out. I gave it enough time to recov er and then took i t tp an RSPB reserve to find out
JOHN WELLS, Town Clerk to Clitheroc Town Council, Clitheroe Town Hall.
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G am e s - a th le t ic s ,b o x in g , i cycling,, fencing, ldw n b ow ls , row in g ;sw im m in g a n d d ivm g ,
weightlifting and wrestling.., ' • The British* Emaire, had 'foi
^ i ^ e ^ p m t s .were^fej&tur . -
rfh
nations that Jamaicans infrastructure would : j5 S etesd^ 0 yea^^evious at the Munich » Ten sports were featured at the Edmonton not make for a successful Game^*^^|4ms Qi - |
"I-There was a worrrryy, amongst.;tne
larger.by-l „^mTaTteVThWmds'sai^^^^^ jTfiere Wa irid h _ _ _ _n( icrapl.;
:*‘*As'host-nation, Canada also topped the ’ j. \
C om m o nw e a l th G am e s J iW r e h e Id *P; ‘ “ s g f ^ i j ^ a ^ t i i h t f t f r t h e . ^ F A British Kingston, Jamaica.
x i s t b y , th e t im e ^ h e , . Britiisn proved to be largely unfoundec*. W * J \ i * y i *^usVurrouRdedrtheathletesl vlllaae cycling, gymnastics^ lawn f ,, ' : : 1
athletes and 504 officials to the Edmonton Games. *,
' - , , - ! medal table for the first time. ■ . . . __ , - - - ^ ; - « . ,«
the following day. , , ' m , ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ^nm !? The extreme heat persisted, and Australian
»
Jersey was amonast the medal winners .for ," the two'Scottish brothers who won gold, one;; the first time, whiillsstt,. British H j« jum s ,
., r>
time that Queen Elizabeth ,II altended in her capacity as Head of the Commonwealth. Scots will further remember,the Games for
on^hTfi^daV^d one on the last
New;medalvwiriniM;natipns‘:jmcluded l-Tahzania^Matawifdnd
J £ k ^ h S ™ { 3 - - ^ jmourgn?wBiiic»., r ; . - ■.■ , '*
'-'Ten sports were featured in the Games - a^hletics;Y
e . „ . *uZ,PU m ^ & T 9 6 6 ® B r 1 t i s ^ fen c in g , faw n b ow ls , sh o o t in g , sw im m in g ia i aer . Commonwealth Gamesjn Chlristchurch, New.
? badminton, ;boxing, cycIing, w e ightiifting.and'Wrestling.
sending a,total of 1,316 athletes and officials The nine sports featured in the Kingston Games 'were athletics,•. badminton,; boxing,
Thirty-four nations competed in the Games, f ' r ■ • -■ ~
cycling; fencing; shooting, swimming and diving,weightliftingand .wrestling.
. Scotland, and Edinburgh, were the hosts for the 1970‘British Commonwealth Games, which are remembered for.a .number of
firsts. ~ , 1 , u l1''.
and electronic photo-finish technology were employedattheGames,iand^dIsothefirst
It was the first time that metric distances ' . Its^vW
ME dry h e . r . ^ i s S S ' l S ^ i l i e dropped, riploied with bodmin.on ond Australian Army, utilised to keep snooting. . . i competitors cool at The 1962 British
'100m and 200m gold medals. Quarrie went on to win the 1978100m as well.
Quarrie successfully defended both his ;1970 On the wii tub track,_ Jamaicans 'Don
: Only 22 countries succeeded in winning medals from the total haul of 374 medals on offer, but first time winners included Western Samoa; Lesotho, Swaziland, St Vincent and
the Grenadines.
wrestling. ■
Games.
Christchurch Games - athletics, badminton, boxing, cyclingj lawn bowls. shooting, swimming and'diving, weightlifting and
Nine . sports;“ were featured■ . in the . . .
as the Edmonton Games became the first to bear^the currentititle of Commonwealth
The Canadian city won the right to host the" Games with an 1 audacious vision
.
'1976 Montreal Olympics,;caused by a:New.;, 'Zealand rugby tour of South Africa...; ; »>?Vv Forty-six countries; sent.a. total •,of 1,405.;,
But the organisers- were keen to,,avoid a repeat of the African nations' boycott of the
sembly.'^ • ‘ , •' , . , . . .
ty-two nations ''sent; a total of nearly presented, -six^years earlier t o t h e O athletes 'and officials to the first
Commonwealth Games Federation General Assembly. -
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. . - . . 'l : : . . , l ig h t "procession, groups Would have needed to apply
the latest. However, I under stand that funding is still available for groups to wish ing to celebrate the jubilee with activities later in the
.. Whatever changes the Editor or one of his staff ("we") made to the-Jetter, it was my name published at
ond World War and the Jew ish Holocaust.
Lottery cash day, July 11th, an article
, ‘ The‘article was inspired by concernsiabout the rela tively low number of entries received for the Torchlight procession to be held in Clitheroe
on.Satiirday, Sep tember 14th, to celebrate the
’ "For Water and Birds"- pub-UI 11 I t :is believed th a t one of lished a fortnight ago and Afh’ reasons for
REGARDING the le t te r1' Queen's Golden Jubilee. -
S f f 8SSSS& ^ 1 the column in Valley M a t - '- is that groups and orgamsa-
- i f i s Deiievea cnac one ui the reasons for this situation:
stand how the owner of,'theiagrouseineed heather tips as property has allowed .such a infood.; VT ”0 ;, . • .f i' , '
I am a t a! loss>to.under? hpassmg walker to see — :‘ Jt ...................................... ...................... . • la m uiuuivnwipvi.
su a d e ; BT th a t Ithereftis demand for;the‘ service;here, so th a td h ey wiljLIriake'it available.11 also would urge
for the future.of Glitheroe., mark in, say, a year's time if During
tKe.preparation;of the Action Plan we identi fied the need for Broadband services
details,of; our-Action‘Pla*n ............. ‘ '
requirement
for.the mod my;w .
as
Ito'gef'cSble’-servlcesiih the . forseeable future. We are . therefore reliant on BT for our telecommunications infrastructure: ■
Clitheroe. the Future has, just begun to lobby BT for
.
the installation off the neces- f e & i r ,
b T will soon be JlisHKShe
'ley Matters is right to ques- 'payment of hire charges, tion: "Has this large ex p en --• - The article went on to say diture of mainly.,‘public iiithat lotterygrants might be money benefited jp o u g h ^available to meet the cost of people?"
real aims of United-Utilities health and safety issues, and Mr Tim Procter in'Val- which might be overcome by
now! -
;uBecause'6f!our geographi-. cal iMatibh;) we are tlliUkely
.-7- . . •• j. i a necessary
ago, I did write
supporting.aiV4?,™?;nds a» p^ope-wide local AnneFranke^l)itionf^S9l,ut^on. At the recent
Just less than six years;. s,,4ufPPe-wide prob’em, which . . . t j : j __
ou oium * , .::
of measures to
tackle.it. Joint operations to tight
saying that we should keep Seville Summit EU heads of government agreed a series
etoarmebksite
JEREMY GROUT-SMITH, Chairman, : Clitheroe the Future. :; u - y.'1 - ■ ..'in'imqi,
, ever forget the terrible atroc ities committed inrthe name of Communism which are . still being perpetrated in some countries today. , "Up to 200,000 men,
pressing home to the present generation the horrors.which were perpetrated by German National Socialists., , But neither should we
■ Communist China of Tibet and the; mass murder of Tibetans, one of the most
women
and.children being held in brutal prison camps in North Korea as political prisoners. The occupation by
peace-loving nations on the trary, they specifically ta. get planet. / „
T ib e ta n s , one oi.-tne
BERT HARDWICK' Wnddington.
-------- ------— T— On the trail o f
th^ end of it:} ;;; . ;'i A question mark,‘accord
ing to the Oxford Dictionary and Thesarus mean's: "This
. footnote on my letter last week regarding my com plaint about the editing of my July 4th letter:, I accept, reluctantly, the : adding of "a very few. words
is used instead of a full stop at the end of a sentence to show that it is a question." Replying to the Editor's
a comedian CAN any local historian help me discover-where my Lon don-born great) great, great, great grandfather, Joseph Lardner, a travelling comedi an, may have performed in Clitheroe during 1823? He was also in Colne dur
, :i.r,r ,be-hewcomers.
Europe has a long and proud history. Migrants bring major cultural and econom ic benefits to our countries. Indeed, many of Britain's public services could not function without them. The Seville measures will
'Legal immigration into ers
ing 1820-1 and Lytham 1824 - would this have been part
of a circuit? Would there have been
$_t'oit". I accept, reluctantly, the editing out of the two books
tigated, and a building more -13 miles of-fencing, with an - Broadband Internet services . Communist Party official)
any local records from this time regarding newspaper reviews or theatre records? Any help would be grateful ly received. Many thanks.
PAUL MOSS, 17, Church Road, Elmstead Market,. Essex C07 7AT.
e-mail:'.
PMOSS13663@aol.com
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crack down on international criminal gangs that trade in human misery. People-traf fickers prey on'the desperate and the dispossessed, help ing them gain illegal entry into Europe, by exploiting weaknesses in the existing asylum and immigration system. A co-ordinated Europe
; and’action to get third coun tries to re-admit illegals. And a timetable was agreed to establish EU-wide rules for processing asylum appli
en security on Europe’s external borders will begin by the end of the year. There
will.be tighter visa controls
cations. These moves 'are not
designed to block legal migration and genuine asy lum seekers. On the con-
people to do this. kb' : words "the Holocaust.j).TI.ow^;way.::Anyone from. Clitheroe Youjrecently published.. would I have explainedjawayiJ,, j.javejjjng .j0 Spain, or any th a t unwanted queessttiiponnjy-g^popular European des • finnfmnc Hiic QlimmPr IS
-. staff inserted an UNWANT-.^ .VERY soon the great holi- ED question mark afterjny^Jyay exodus will be under
- What I do not understand ,, is why you or-one of, your^.
-------- ^
ernisation of the local econo Hardwick." I can hear the . howls of laughter now..
I had not established NOW, who was responsible for it? ■ "It wasn't me,' guv, it,was someone else." "But your name was below it, Mr
travelling to Spain, or any jY5tll-^pop "
Europeandes-
tinations this summer, is likely to encounter some thing very familiar - a great public .outcry about illegal immigration.
. That is because this issue is not just a British but a
'
about events before and dur-.. ing that war.
<
Immigration’s new measures
A Nazi death camp survivor tells story
A SURVIVOR of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz was among several distinguished speakers at a conference a t Clitheroe Royal Grammar School, writes Robbie Robinson. The talks and lectures
was my religious beliefs th a t supported me through the dark days." After the talk, pupils
gathered round Meyer to thank him for speak ing and several of them commented about it. Emily Northin, of
were part of the Sixth Form Religious Studies Conference, held on Fri day at the school's York Street Centre. Over 100 senior pupils
heard Meyer, as he is only known for security reasons, speak about his experiences. As a 13-year-old boy
------------------•>“ h” 7._____t. entry and false asy-
B e s t wishes a n d 'L h o p e ^
lum.claims th a t make life so 5 letter^^clears^lS^vmis^^' difficult or genuine would- -be ne co
he was transported from his home town to Auschwitz, one of many concentration camps in Nazi-occupied Europe, in which millions of Jews were systematically murdered, along with gypsies, homosexuals, prisoners of war and refugees. Meyer himself lost many members of his family. The main reasons for
Clitheroe, spoke for many pupils when she said that it was such a great opportunity to hear a Holocaust sur vivor speak. Sarah Moorhouse, of Gisbum, said: "I was particularly interested to hear about how he felt afterwards; how he doesn't hate them and why," and Helen Bagshaw, of Rish- ton, echoed those feel ings when she added: "It's humbling that they could go through so much and yet not hate or feel anything against anybody." During the day-long
the talk was to give the pupils a first hand account of the horrors of that time with the vital fact that it was a deep faith in God, through their religion, which sus tained him.and others through years of suffer ing.
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conference, pupils had the opportunity to hear talks on a variety of reli gious study subjects. They were told about
0120( Also, Meyer was able
wide approach offers the only possible solution. In Seville, EU leaders finally started to tackle an issue tha t concerns so many of their citizens.
GARY TITLEY MEP, Spring Lane, ■ Radcliffe.
to convey the impor tance of realising how quickly and easily such horrors can happen, once a populace or group can be convinced of a cause, however evil it might be. He also explained the
Christianity in the mod em world, Islam and the West, New Age Reli gions and Humanism. They were introduced to Buddhism and medita tion, and a variety of ethical and spiritual issues. The speakers came
from a wide range of reli gious, academic and charity-based back
grounds, and presented their subjects through out a thought-provoking day's study. In our picture Meyer
ences. He said: "It is impor-. tar it to realise th a t . i t
guilt suffered by sur vivors and how he had coped with his experi
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is showing his tattooed Auschwitz camp number to Sixth Form College pupils Emily Northin (left) and Sam Rowe. (J120702/I9)
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