Flooding in Market Harborough (well Little Bowden actually)


This was the scene in Scotland Road an hour ago.

The police have now closed the road near its junction with Northampton Road. This is because of submerged roadworks as well as the floods. If anything the waters have gone down since I took the photo.

Meanwhile, the temporarily traffic lights, set up for those works, continue their work dutifully.
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Liberator's Ralph Bancroft has died

I spent Tuesday in London and met some Liberator friends at the Comedy Museum where we saw the Round the Horne show.

While it was bona to vada their dolly old eeks, I learnt the sad news that another of our number, Ralph Bancroft, has died.

There are tributes to him by Gareth Epps on Liberator's blog and by Caron Lindsay on Liberal Democrat Voice.

When I first joined the Liberator collective Ralph was central to the magazine and was responsible for its finest hour. That was the Runners and Riders article that led the BBC News one evening in 1984.

I think that is the best way to remember him...

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‘He just appeared and started singing Neil Diamond’ - mystery of Norfolk’s Sunday League Werewolf

Our Headline of the Day Award goes to the Eastern Daily Press.

And the paper has a video of the incident too!
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Paul Keetch launches Liberal Leave



The former Liberal Democrat MP Paul Keetch announced in an article on the Independent website this afternoon that he will be voting for Britain to leave the European Union in June's referendum.

Keetch, who sat for Hereford between 1997 and 2010, also announced that he has joined with other party members and supporters to set up the Liberal Leave campaign group.

He makes some valid points in the article:
Why should African countries be forced to pay 30 – 60 per cent import tariffs if they want to sell cocoa products to British chocolate factories? Are they not entitled, especially given Europe’s terrible legacy of colonialism, to a fair deal and an equal footing? 
Thousands of refugees are fleeing the Middle East and North Africa yet the ‘free movement of peoples’ inside the European Union has in effect become a closed door to the rest of the world.
The trouble is that a vote to leave the EU would strengthen the hand of politicians who oppose the policies Keetch favours.

Few of his new allies in the Out movement will agree with him about Britain's colonial or want to see more immigrants from beyond Europe. Nor is public opinion likely to move in that direction if Out triumphs.

It is hard to agree that a fight for a more liberal Britain should start with our cutting ourselves off from our closest political and geographical allies.

I also note Paul Keetch's comment about "those of us who fought for our membership in the 1970s". 

Paul was born in 1961. Britain agreed an accession treaty to the European Economic Community on 22 January 1972.

If he did any campaigning for British membership of the EEC he was in short trousers at the time - or at least in flared jeans as a precocious 13-year-old for the 1975 referendum campaign.
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Thief steals handbag from Northamptonshire house while occupants are inside

Our Headline of the Day comes from the Northampton Chronicle & Echo.
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Disused railway stations in Kirklees



The Clayton West branch did well to survive until 1983.

I was there on the day the it closed and was even allowed into the signal box.
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Six of the Best 579

"Why is it that when Conference supports the leadership it’s binding and an act of disrespect to rebel, but when Conference disagrees with them its word is provisional, borderline advisory?" Graham Cowie on the Scottish Liberal Democrats' row over fracking.

Richard Kemp proposes a radical shake up of the way Liverpool is run.

Nick Clegg and the dogging site - a first post from Ben Rathe that went viral.

Northern Soul presents a striking piece of local history: "In 1859 the body of a man by the name of Harry Stokes washed up in the River Irwell. Upon examination, it was discovered that twice-married Stokes was biologically female and had been successfully living the life of a Victorian man in Manchester."

"The thrill of the aerial running shot and the suddenness of the ending mean that this, rather than The 400 Blows, is the film that leaves the viewer breathless. Even writing about it makes me shiver." Somewhere Boy has been to see Andrei Tarkovsky's first feature-length film, Ivan's Childhood.

A Clerk of Oxford visits Ramsey Abbey in the Fens.
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The Stains: Bored



I came across a tweet the other day that suggested the actor David Hemmings had lived briefly in Shrewsbury High Street. That is hard to reconcile with what I know of his life, but it did lead me to this record.

The Stains were a Shrewsbury punk band whose original vocalist was Dom Estos. And Dom Estos was Dominic Hemmings, the adopted son of David Hemmings.

His mother was Genista Ouvry, who acted under the name Jenny Lewes. Dominic had already been born when Hemmings met her during  a two-week repertory engagement in Leicester in 1960 and they fell in love. They married shortly afterwards and Hemmings adopted Dominic, but the marriage did not last.

A few more snippets...

The band turn up in a letter to the Guardian by Mark Webb in 2010:
I was amazed to read of Kevin ­Rowland's antipathy towards ironed creases in jeans ... In the 70s, playing drums in Dom Estos And The Stains, we got a gig supporting Dexys ­Midnight Runners at Shrewsbury Music Hall. Dexys got the bigger dressing room, but we had the electric socket. A knock on the door and Mr Rowland appears: "Hello, lads. Can I plug in my iron to do my trousers?"
Dom Estos appears still to be making music, under the name Dominic Ouvry, as part of Liquid Vision.

And a little googling suggests Genista Ouvry used the name Jenny Lewes because Lewes was her mother's maiden name.

Not only that: it suggests she was a direct descendant of George Henry Lewes, Victorian man of letters and partner of George Eliot (or Mary Ann Evans).
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If you thought Labour couldn't do worse than the EdStone...


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Stewart Lee on his new series of Comedy Vehicle



We have seen Stewart Lee talking to Will Self and Alexei Sayle.

Here he is being interviewed by The Quietus:
Have you noticed a similar change happening in comedy? 
SL: I have. If you went to the alternative night with all the weird acts, which 25 years ago was downstairs at the Market Tavern on Islington Green on Essex Road, you'd see Simon Munnery who is the son of a plumber. Or Johnny Vegas, who is not a member of the upper classes. 
The same thing now, which is the Alternative Comedy Memorial Society at the New Red Lion, is a very good night, but there's a higher proportion of people whose parents bought them a flat. Inevitably, because you can't do that sort of stuff that doesn't pay, unless you've got some sort of fallback position.
The interviewer, Simon Price, takes Lee Terribly Seriously, but then maybe we should.
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