Archive

  • Under 11 Cup Third Round Draw

    Stanford/Chalgrove v Kidlington Colts/Ox City Oxford Irish v Didcot Town Youth B Horspath v Didcot Town Youth A Abingdon Town v Abingdon Youth Kidlington Youth v Marston/Summertown Dr Summertown Stars v Cholsey Bluebirds

  • Abingdon soldier faces extra charge

    A SOLDIER accused of desertion has appeared before a court martial charged with a second offence. Lance Corporal Joe Glenton, of 4 Logistic Support Regiment, part of the Royal Logistic Corps, based at Dalton Barracks, Abingdon, was initially

  • Rail worker dies after collapsing in Banbury

    A NETWORK Rail employee collapsed and died today while working on the tracks in Banbury. The air ambulance was scrambled to the incident at about 1.45pm but the man was pronounced dead at the scene, near the town's waterworks, off the A422 Hennef Way

  • Oxford University seeks views on sports complex scheme

    HOUSEHOLDERS have been invited to help shape a multi-million pound revamp of Oxford University’s Iffley Road Sports Centre. The university plans to overhaul the centre, which surrounds the famous running track where, in 1954, Sir Roger Bannister

  • RAF Benson helicopter damaged in US crash

    A MERLIN helicopter from RAF Benson has been damaged after a hard landing during a training flight in the US. Three members of the crew sustained minor injuries in the incident, which occurred during a night flying exercise at the El Centro

  • MOTORCYCLING: Brad signs new deal and aims for world title

    Oxfordshire star Bradley Smith has signed a new deal with the Spanish-based Aspar team to spearhead their efforts to retain the World 125cc Championship. This year, Smith came so close to matching Britain’s last world champion, Barry Sheene, but eventually

  • Pupils learn about Harwell science complex

    PUPILS got a chance to consider cutting-edge engineering as a career on a visit to a pioneering research centre in Oxfordshire. More than 80 children from schools around the county and beyond visited the Diamond Light Source, in Harwell, which is used

  • Oxford United reject unofficial approach for Wilder

    Oxford United chairman Kelvin Thomas has turned down an unofficial approach from Peterborough United for U’s boss Chris Wilder. Skybet.com made Wilder the 6-4 favourite to take over from Darren Ferguson after his dismissal this week. But Thomas said

  • Oxford college unveils £50m campus plan

    Keble College has unveiled new plans for a £50m scheme to create a new campus between Woodstock and Banbury Road, Oxford. The college wants to build on the site of the former Acland private hospital, which the college bought four years ago

  • Suicide verdict

    A mother-of-one died from an overdose of painkillers, an Inquest heard. Julie Low, 45, was found dead by her brother Simon Bustany at her caravan, in Thameside Court, Northmoor, on Friday, May 29. A verdict of suicide was recorded by coroner Nicholas

  • Bus workers vote on pay

    Hundreds of drivers, engineers and office staff at the Oxford Bus Company will today vote on whether to accept an offer of a 1.6 per cent pay rise. About 400 members of the union Unite will take part in a ballot at Oxford's Watlington Road

  • RACING: Ray shines for Curran

    Sean Curran, who is based at Hatford, near Stanford in the Vale, produced a fine training performance when Ray Mond overcame a 767-day absence to win at Warwick on Wednesday. Wayne Kavanagh was aboard the eight-year-old in the handicap chase over three

  • Veterans remembered at abbey service

    THE death of an Oxfordshire First World War veteran was marked at a memorial service at Westminster Abbey yesterday. The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, senior politicians and the heads of the armed forces attended the service, which was held

  • Oxford teenagers have dramatic message

    TEENAGERS have been using the power of drama to address family issues such as divorce, money and adultery. Members of Oxford Youth Theatre’s company, based at East Oxford’s Pegasus Theatre, drew on their own experiences and those of their friends to

  • Silent salute to lost war heroes

    SILENCE spoke volumes as thousands of people in Oxfordshire paused to remember Britain’s war dead yesterday. Two minutes of silence were held at 11am as part of commemorations of Armistice Day, marking the moment the guns fell silent in France

  • Team effort saved Steve's leg

    A FORMER Oxford United footballer has given a heartfelt thank-you to the team of health workers who saved his crushed leg. Father-of-three Steve Tavinor said it was unbelievable that more than 40 people working for the NHS had played a part

  • Pub praised by guides

    A WEST Oxfordshire village pub has received accolades from three independent guides. Since reopening a year ago, the Swan, at Ascott-under-Wychwood, has featured in the Good Beer Guide 2010, Michelin’s Guide to Eating Out in Pubs and Alastair Sawday’

  • Witney school gets consent to grow

    PLANS are being drawn up to expand a Witney primary school after education chiefs agreed it should be allowed to take 50 per cent more children. Madley Brook Primary School opened in 2003 to serve the Madley Park estate by taking on 30 children

  • Oxford author praises young readers

    WINNIE the Witch author Korky Paul praised children from Oxfordshire who have overcome difficulties to master the art of reading. He was speaking at a ceremony at St John’s College, Oxford, on Friday for those completing the Reading Quest programme,

  • Crowmarsh awaits housing inquiry verdict

    AN INQUIRY into whether 210 homes should be built in Crowmarsh Gifford could have a far-reaching impact on the district. Villagers packed the four-day hearing, which finished on Friday, to protest against a development they say would adversely change

  • Mayor is missing the point

    AS Lord Mayor of Oxford, Mary Clarkson’s explanation of allocated time for debate at council meetings (yesterday’s Oxford Mail letters) proves the comments made by Nuala Young (letters, November 5). Mrs Clarkson has not grasped (as is common with county

  • Halloween costumes were a treat

    CAN I say thank you to all the trick or treaters who called at my home at Halloween. Tiny tots to teenagers with mums and dads: your outfits were great, whether made by yourselves, mums or shop-bought. And your manners were impeccable. I’m sorry if

  • I can understand US objections to NHS

    I CAN understand America’s reluctance to have NHS-style medical care in part. In America, those with thyroid inactivity problems, which thyroxine does not solve alone, are given the chance to have an additional hormone T3 in combination with thyroxine

  • A failure to grasp council procedure

    OXFORD city councillor Nuala Young seems sadly not to have understood the city council’s constitution or how the finances work (Oxford Mail letters, November 5). Motions ‘on notice’ at council meetings have no relevance for the council’s day to day administration

  • Property is beyond buyers' budgets

    OWNING your own home in Oxfordshire is just a dream for most people living in the county, according to a report published this week. The National Housing Federation report, Home Truths 2009, found that last year the £293,128 average cost of

  • Help with a cuppa

    Dementia is a devastating disease that changes lives – not only of those with the disease themselves, but whole families. When my mother was diagnosed we did not know where to turn. We needed as much help as she did. Admiral Nurses – trained and supported

  • Roll out the red carpet

    Roll out the red carpet – but not for Daniel Craig He might be good for quantum leaps or doing a stunt Let the red, red carpet of poppies made by Haig Acknowledge all the men who fought the line at the front Roll out the

  • MP backs Wantage rail plan

    “I WAS sceptical, now I’m a believer.” That’s the view of Wantage MP Ed Vaizey on the likelihood of a train station reopening near the town after he held high-level talks with the Association of Train Operating Companies. Now Mr Vaizey is calling for

  • Burglars steal car from Horspath

    Police tonight appealed for information after two burglaries in South Oxfordshire. Overnight, a property in Cuddesdon Road, Horspath was burgled. The thieves got into the house through an insecure front door and stole a mobile phone and car keys.

  • The Insider

    Council meetings can be tedious affairs at the best of times, but when Labour is at the helm there is always cause for a smile sooner or later. We are told that at last week’s city council bun fight – sorry, full council meeting – Labour councillor Val

  • Robert Stevens: Musician performed in countless concerts

    MUSICIAN Robert Stevens has died after a short illness, aged 55. Mr Stevens, who lived with his family in Bicester, was one of the earliest to benefit from Oxfordshire County Music Service’s instrumental tuition in schools. He studied trombone and composition

  • Dan Kemp: Dedicated to the timber trade

    TRIBUTES have been paid to Dan Kemp, the former managing director of Oxford timber firm Timbmet, who died on Sunday aged 87. Hundreds of mourners attended his funeral at Wolvercote Cemetery on Tuesday and Simon Fineman, chairman of Timbmet and Mr Kemp

  • Conman steals £60 from man, 70

    Police are appealing for witnesses following a distraction burglary in Wilcher Close, East Hagbourne. At 12.30pm yesterday, a man called at the property and told the occupant that he had read his meter and he owed £60. The victim, a 70 year-old

  • £1.3m hall overhaul wins support

    DIDCOT’S Civic Hall is set to have a £1.3m facelift at taxpayers’ expense. On Monday, town councillors voted to back plans which will see the creation of a new entrance block facing Broadway and improvements to the existing building. They decided to

  • It's boom time at Marriotts Walk

    WITNEY’S newest shopping centre has recorded huge sales in its first fortnight of trading. Since Marriotts Walk opened 13 days ago, business has been booming with Marks & Spencer enjoying three times its expected sales. There are

  • Nursery opening prompts call for new crossing

    CHILDREN could be injured or killed unless a pedestrian crossing is installed outside an Oxford nursery, a former parish councillor has warned. Brian Lester, a past chairman of Blackbird Leys Parish Council, said he was “horrified” a crossing had not

  • GOLF: Frilford clinch KO crown

    Frilford Heath went one better than last year by winning the Shaw Gibbs Oxfordshire Foursomes League’s Knockout Cup. The 2008 runners-up defeated Chipping Norton, who had already claimed the Section 2 title, 2-1 in the final on Mentmore’s Rothchild Course

  • GOLF: Pepperell's England call

    Eddie Pepperell represents the English Golf Union (EGU) in Argentina’s Juan Carlos Tailhade Cup, starting today. The 18-year-old Drayton Park member teams up with Tommy Fleetword (Formby Hall) in the 72-hole strokeplay event at Los Lagartos Country Club

  • GOLF: Results round-up

    OXFORD CITY Thistle Cup: 1 J Humes 41pts, 2 P Bradbury 39, 3 N Holman 38. NORTH OXFORD Winter Challenge – 1st round: 1 I Booth & C McNulty 44pts, 2 B England & J Riley 43, 3 S Horne & G Watts 42. 2nd round: 1 M Allen & M Boulton 40 (cb), 2 I Booth

  • AUNT SALLY: Maunder's magic in vain

    Ken Maunder’s 14 dolls proved in vain as reigning champions Garsington Sports A went down 4-2 to the Plough in the Gladiator Beer Seller Wednesday League. A bad week for Garsington Sports was complete when they were thrashed 6-0 by Clare Car Hire in

  • BAR BILLIARDS: Vikings stun Democrats

    Vikings Club made it three wins in a row with a brilliant 4-1 victory at the Democrats Club in Section 1 of the Johnsons Buildbase Oxford & District League, writes PETE EWINS. Democrats’ John Patey scored 8,310 to take the first game against Alan Oliver

  • Finance man plans solo 2,400-mile cycle across Oz to mark 50th

    FINANCIAL adviser John Vaughan-Fowler is planning to spend his 50th birthday in Melbourne — but he’s got to cycle 2,400 miles first. The father-of-four, whose sister Susan Santamaria lives in the city, will face extreme temperatures of more than 40C

  • RUGBY UNION: Erinle's Hawks boost

    Henley Hawks may have slumped since their heyday, but they can still add an England international to their ranks after Ayoola Erinle made his debut on Saturday. Erinle, who played for Henley between 2001 and 2003 and is now with Biarritz, came on as

  • RUGBY UNION: Volley to skipper Stanley's XV

    Former Wasps, Harlequins and Chinnor flanker Paul Volley will captain the Major Stanley’s XV to face Oxford University at Iffley Road next Wednesday. Volley, who is now with London Scottish, came through Chinnor’s junior ranks before embarking

  • RUGBY UNION: Wallingford happy to fight

    Wallingford head coach Chris Norrington says playing in South West 1 East is definitely worth the fight. Norrington’s men have found it hard going in their second season at this level, with four wins and six defeats so far. But having risen to the highest

  • RUGBY UNION: 'No need to panic'

    Banbury Bulls coach Grant Holmes says his side must keep calm after suffering their first defeat in Midlands 2 East South – at new leaders Market Harborough. Holmes said: “There certainly isn’t any need to hit the panic button. “What we must do is take

  • ATHLETICS: Hawtin's silver lining at Luton

    Beth Hawtin, the youngest of the talented clan at Oxford City, upstaged her sisters in the second round of the Apex Chiltern Cross Country League at Wigmore Park, Luton. Hawtin took home the silver medal in the under 13 girls’ race, finishing

  • ATHLETICS: Brackett goes that extra mile

    Woodstock Harriers marathon man Paul Brackett was delighted to put his feet up for a well-deserved break after he took part in the arduous Druid Ridgeway three-day Ultra Marathon. Brackett took part in the challenge – a combination of three

  • ICE HOCKEY: Stars hit back to see off battling Haringey

    Oxford City Stars moved up to fifth in Division 1 South of the English National League after beating Haringey Greyhounds 5-3 Oxford travelled to London with a depleted squad, with Dean Francis, Grant Bailey, Shannon Taylor, Dax Hedges and Yousif Abu

  • Mr Nice reveals his rare talent to abuse

    It is gratifying indeed to find Gyles Brandreth describing Elizabeth Sweeting, the one-time administrator of the Oxford Playhouse, as “a difficult old cow”. That was my opinion of her, though – such was the deference shown by most of those obliged

  • John Piper Prints: The Jam Factory

    Fergus Madden is holding an exhibition of original prints by John Piper at The Jam Factory, Oxford’s arts centre in Park End Street. A new film on Piper will also be shown, and copies of Frances Spalding’s new biography of the artist will be on sale.

  • A decade of music from the Pavlova Wind Quintet

    If the name ‘Pavlova’ suggests puddings or ballet to you, the chances are you’re not alone. You might also wonder what they have to do with a wind quintet. Happily, it’s easily explained. “My house is in Anna Pavlova Close,” Simon Payne, founder

  • Great range of food at our new museum

    The view is amazing, the food fantastic and the venue is now propelling the country’s oldest museum into the 21st century. I am talking about the Ashmolean’s stylish new roof-top restaurant that opened to great acclaim last weekend. Perhaps one

  • Ideal Home for an Arbiter of Taste

    Fitting somehow that Sir Hardy Amies (1909-2003), the urbane and witty designer of The Queen’s clothes for almost 50 years, should have lived and died in the village of Langford, in west Oxfordshire. The village was listed as a Royal estate in the Domesday

  • Recipe for steak tartare

    You don’t find steak tartare on many menus these days, so Hugo and Ben Warner are being very bold by reintroducing their diners at the roof-top restaurant to this delicious dish, which can be served as either a starter or a main course. It’s said that

  • Oxford Symphony Orchestra: Oxford Town Hall

    It sounds odd to describe any of Brahms’s major orchestral works as a comparative rarity, but his Double Concerto for Violin and Cello doesn’t turn up all that often in the concert hall. As the OSO’s thoughtful programme note suggested, perhaps that’s

  • 2012

    Cancel the London Summer Olympic Games! Our time on the third rock from the sun will come to a dramatic end on December 21, 2012, when planets align as decreed by the Mayan calendar. Thus no one is going to care a jot about whether our stadia are finished

  • Jenny Jowett and Jonathan Savill: Said Business School

    enny Jowett and her husband Jonathan Savill are holding this substantial exhibition in aid of The Oxford Botanic Gardens. A percentage of each sale will go to support the work of the garden and the Harcourt Arboretum. Savill paints the diverse places

  • Art and craft: Witney Museum

    A mixed art and craft exhibition is on show in the delightful upper gallery of the Witney Museum, Gloucester Court Mews, High Street, Witney, until November 15. Wood turners from West Oxon Woodturning Association, based at Brize Norton, are showing some

  • As You Like It: OFS Studio

    A programme note from director Maximus Marenbon raises the worrying possibility that the Oxford University Dramatic Society’s Acorn Productions might be adopting a quirky approach to As You Like It at the OFS Studio this week. First, there

  • Sharon Thomas: The North Wall

    The dry autumn leaves strewn on the floor of the North Wall Gallery, Summertown, have not been blown in by the wind. They are all part of the picture Apotropaic, by Sharon Thomas, which dominates the main wall (see picture). This long charcoal drawing

  • Buttermilk, George Irvine: Art Jericho, Oxford

    George Irvine asks that people see this, his photographic exhibition, through the eye of a painter. He is a painter by training and initially simply used photographs to help in his teaching. But increasingly he found that he could create what he wanted

  • The Black Album: Oxford Playhouse

    The year is 1989, and Shahid is taking up a place at a north London college. “Make sure you wash under your arms,” cries Mum as he departs with all possible speed from his staid suburban home in Kent. Once in London, the impressionable Shahid is

  • Bounce Street Dance Company: Wycombe Swan and touring

    Insane in the Brain is the Swedish company Bounce’s take on One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, the multi-Oscar-winning film based on the 1962 play by Ken Kesey. McMurphy has got himself transferred from a criminal work-camp to a psychiatric institution

  • Schola Cantorum: Exeter College Chapel

    Two composers: one familiar, the other perhaps not quite so familiar. Schola Cantorum’s typically adventurous programming paired Maurice Duruflé’s Requiem with sacred works by one of his successors as organist at the church of St Etienne du Mont in Paris

  • Dreams of Violence: Out of Joint, The North Wall, Oxford

    Stella Feehily’s Dreams of Violence is a cracking play – funny, serious and always accurate as a portrait of life as some people lead it. It would make a marvellous 90 minutes of television were the overpaid and under-talented tribe who run this

  • Good Shoes: The Jericho Tavern, Oxford

    three unknown bands called Franz Ferdinand, Bloc Party and Razorlight were all emerging from Britain’s toilet circuit armed with spiky guitar riffs, driving rhythm sections and acerbic lyrical observations on modern life. They were Gang of Four meets

  • Madam Butterfly: Welsh National Opera, New Theatre, Oxford

    A regular visitor to Oxford over 30 years, WNO’s acclaimed production of Puccini’s Madam Butterfly from director Joachim Herz returned to the New Theatre last week to delight two packed houses. That it still looked good under revival director Caroline

  • Wozzeck: Welsh National Opera, New Theatre, Oxford

    Wozzeck is not an opera for everyone, as the people who left after the first scene – a full 12 minutes into Thursday night’s show – will testify. However you package it, it remains a bleak tale of madness, exploitation and infidelity that opens

  • Bruno hopes to make his own way

    Bruno Senna hopes to quickly shake off the tag of being the nephew of one of the greatest grand prix drivers of all time when he makes his Formula One debut next season. Senna, whose uncle Ayrton won 41 races and three world titles in a glittering

  • Brawn won't meet Button's demands

    Ross Brawn has indicated Jenson Button's salary demands will not be met and is instead prepared to offer the new world champion more freedom to seek out personal sponsorship deals to boost his income. Button has been locked in contract negotiations

  • Computer games stolen in Wallingford break-in

    Police are appealing for witnesses after a burglary at Blockbusters in St Martins Street, Wallingford, in the early hours today. At 1.15am, offenders smashed through the front door of the property and stole four Call of Duty computer games, a Wii and

  • Boys charged with Iffley Road burglary

    Two boys have been charged with aggravated burglary following an incident in Iffley Road, Oxford, on Monday. A 15-year-old and a 16-year-old have been remanded to appear at Oxford Youth Court today. An 18-year-old has been released on

  • Crash blocks A4130

    A crash is reported to have blocked the A4130 at Didcot. The crash, at the junction with the B4493, is reported to be causing congestion to the Milton Interchange on the A34. Heavy queues are reported into Didcot from the A34 with no

  • Crash partly blocks A421

    A two-car crash today partly blocked the Bicester to Buckingham road. The A421 was blocked eastbound by the collision which happened between Main Street and Radclive Road, Tingewick, shortly after 9am. Emergency services attended the

  • UPDATE: Local jobless figures fall

    THE number of people claiming Jobseeker's Allowance (JSA) in Oxfordshire has fallen. Figures released by the Office of National Statistics revealed 8,951 people were claiming JSA in Oxfordshire in October - a fall of 289 on the previous month. Nationally

  • Oxon jobless figure falls

    Oxfordshire's jobless figure dropped last month by 289 people, despite the worst national total for 12 years. The number of people claiming Jobseeker's Allowance fell in Oxford, Cherwell, the Vale of White Horse, South and West Oxfordshire, giving a

  • Young people feel the pinch as unemployment rises

    The youth unemployment rate has reached a record high of almost 20 per cent as the jobless total continued to increase, although at a slower pace. The number of people out of work increased by 30,000 between July and September to just under two and a

  • Former Met boss to head local crime group

    Former Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair has been appointed head of local crime prevention group the Thames Valley Partnership. The voluntary organisation aims to cut crime in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire. The appointment

  • Students warned before fancy dress binge

    POLICE have warned hundreds of students to watch their behaviour on a fancy dress pub crawl tomorrow night. About 800 students are expected to attend the “doctors and nurses” themed event in Oxford city centre. The night has been organised

  • It's a crunch month for Oxford United

    Oxford United boss Chris Wilder says this month can set the club up – if everyone works hard to get the results they want. Eight points clear at the top of the table, the U’s have important Blue Square Premier games at Kidderminster and Forest Green

  • FOOTBALL: Quickfire Abingdon up to second

    Abingdon United jumped up to second place in the Zamaretto Southern League Division 1 South & West table after a splendid 2-0 win away to Mangotsfield last night. Two goals in the first eight minutes did the damage. The home crowd of 135 were stunned

  • Blame city's road layout, not the police

    THE anger of drivers caught in yet another Oxford jam is understandable, yet the police find themselves caught between a rock and a hard place. On the face of it, taking 11 hours to clear the wreckage of a lorry carrying car parts on the southern

  • 20mph? If only

    ABINGDON is set to follow Oxford by implementing 20mph zones. But again the question has to be one of enforcement. Without the stick of police ticketing there will be motorists who are prepared to blithely ignore the new limits and continue on their

  • Cancer centre staff win award for work

    A TEAM which checks thousands of Oxfordshire women for breast cancer each year has been recognised for its excellence. Staff from the breast imaging centre at the Oxford Cancer Centre, in Headington, will travel to the House of Commons tomorrow