Quantcast
Channel: Crawley Observer JPCO.syndication.feed
Viewing all 26324 articles
Browse latest View live

COUNTY NEWS: Tragic passing of Sussex football stalwart

$
0
0

Horsham YMCA chairman Mick Browning tragically lost his battle with leukaemia yesterday, the club has confirmed.

The Sussex football stalwart and well-known and much-respected local man sadly passed away this morning after bravely battling the disease for a number of years.

Despite his illness he had continued to be involved heavily at his much-loved football club and all matters at Gorings Mead.

Earlier this month, the former England amateur international footballer hosted an evening at the club looking back on his 50-year plus career in game in the YMCA clubhouse.

A number of touching messages have already appeared on social media describing Mick as a ‘true gent’ and saying he will be sadly missed by everyone.

The Southern Combination League led a number of tributes and tweeted: “It is with great sadness that today we have been told of the passing of Mick Browning, chairman of Horsahm YMCA. A true gent of football. RIP.”

The Horsham-born player started his footballing career at YMCA back in 1954, before spells at Horsham, Reading and Tooting & Mitcham as well as with Sussex and England after an offer of a professional contract with Tottenham Hotspur.

After his illustrious career and management spells, Mick ended up in a number of administration roles at Queen Street for Horsham Town, before taking over as YM chairman.

To leave a tribute to Mick, comment below or email ollie.berry@jpress.co.uk or ct.letters@sussexnewspapers.co.uk


COUNTY NEWS: The music track designed to help safe driving

$
0
0

A Sussex based company has commissioned the first ever music track created specifically to encourage safe driving, including influencing smoother braking, accelerating and awareness of speed limits.

It has been commissioned by MORE TH>N SM>RT WHEELS to coincide with the current Road Safety Week and encourage safer driving among higher risk 17– 25 year old motorists - the age group research shows are most likely to have their driving influenced by listening to music.

We have included a one minute excerpt for our readers.

It follows new research revealing that one in 10 (11%) young drivers has had a crash or near miss as a direct result of the music they were listening to while driving. Additionally, 90% of young drivers admit to having sung and danced along to music while also attempting to control a moving vehicle.

Safe In Sound was composed by professional musicians in collaboration with Dr Simon Moore, a Chartered Psychologist and university academic.

Dr Moore has spent years researching which genres, styles and volumes of music can be dangerous to listen to behind the wheel; able to negatively effect people’s driving behaviours, hamper their reactions and decision-making abilities and increase their likelihood of having an accident.

After conducting research, including interpreting brain imaging and cognitive safety analysis, Dr. Moore concluded that the safest music for motorists has a not-too-fast, not-too-slow ‘Goldilocks tempo’ of 50–80 beats per minute (mirroring the average human heartbeat), includes energetic movement and steady pulsation (such as baroque-style music), shuns lyrics altogether, has no repeating melodies and is of a low intensity and volume.

MORE TH>N SM>RT WHEELS say that, taking this into consideration, fans of Bob Marley, Metallica, Jay Z and even Jamie Cullum might want to reconsider their musical persuasions behind the wheel, with the research by Dr Moore showing that reggae, heavy metal, hip hop and jazz all encourage bad driving and are about as far from the blueprint for a safe song as it is possible to get.

All of these music styles were given a wide berth in the production of Safe In Sound.

Indeed, sticking closely to Dr Moore’s guidelines a team of musicians emerged from the recording studio with an original track specifically designed to encourage alertness, smooth braking, accelerating and speed awareness.

Although not fitting any particular music genre, Safe In Sound includes elements of contemporary electronic music with classical and ambient sounds.

The three-minute track can be downloaded for free from the {http://www.morethan.com/|MORE TH>N website|website} or streamed from Spotify and Soundcloud {https://soundcloud.com/user-683809244/more-thn-safe-in-sound|(https://soundcloud.com/user-683809244/more-thn-safe-in-sound)|download}.

In addition to Dr Moore’s in-depth research, MORE TH>N SM>RT WHEELS conducted a survey with 1,000 motorists aged 17 – 25 to gauge the risks associated with listening to music and driving. Among the findings were:

20% of young drivers have had a crash or near miss while listening to music behind the wheel;

Of those, over half (56%) claim that the music they were listening to influenced their driving, distracted them from the road and subsequently played a significant part in their crash or near miss;

Over a third (34%) of those drivers said that rock music played a part in their crash or near miss, closely followed by pop (33%) and dance (19%);

Among tracks cited as playing a part in a crash or near miss were AC/DC’s Back in Black and Britney Spear’s Toxic;

65% believe that the type of music you listen to when driving can affect alertness, braking, accelerating and speed;

90% of young drivers admit to singing, dancing or both to music when driving; and

Pop is the most popular genre of music to listen to when behind the wheel, with almost two thirds (64%) enjoying chart hits when travelling in their car. This is followed by rock (47%) and RnB (45%).

Kenny Leitch, Global Telematics Director at MORE TH>N, commented: “Road traffic accidents remain the biggest threat to the safety and wellbeing of teenagers and young, inexperienced drivers. We launched SM>RT WHEELS telematics to not only encourage safe driving behaviours but also to actively reward young drivers who demonstrate them through reduced premiums.”

“The track we’ve released today, Safe In Sound, very much mirrors the thinking behind SM>RT WHEELS - created out of robust scientific insights to aid alertness on the roads, smoother braking and accelerating and a greater awareness of speed limits. If 92% of young drivers are going to be listening to music every time they drive, we want to encourage them to choose the kind of music that won’t distract them or encourage erratic driving styles, but, instead to make choices that will help them to be safer on the road.”

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Crawley MP visits Iraq to see work countering terrorism

$
0
0

In the wake of the attacks on Paris, Crawley MP Henry Smith writes about his experience visiting Iraq to see how terrorism is being combatted.

A little over a week ago, I returned from an insightful trip from Iraqi Kurdistan, where I

spent time on the front line in the fight against ISIS/Daesh.

I can report that the Peshmerga soldiers I met, as well as families, communities and refugees I sat down with, appreciate the support of RAF air support in helping them counter terror and extremism.

The work of the UK is having an effect; in terms of air cover, as well as almost £60 million in humanitarian aid supporting people across Iraq who have fled from the evil they face.

ISIS/Daesh know they are losing and so are lashing out. As the attacks in Paris went to highlight, they are a totalitarian death cult who have shown that they do not have any regard for human life. We cannot reason with such an ideology.

Late last week, the UN Security Council unanimously backed action against ISIS/Daesh in both Syria and Iraq, as well as reiterating its determination to secure a political solution to the Syrian conflict.

It is poignant to note that France has been targeted in this way, in spite of its fierce and unrelenting opposition to the Second Gulf War.

One of the most striking aspects of my trip was hearing from Kurdistani soldiers, telling myself and other British MPs that they are winning the fight against ISIS/Daesh.

To see the black ISIS/Daesh flags on the front line was a visual reminder of the danger that the Peshmerga soldiers are confronting – and beating.

I want to bring the message home that while they like to portray themselves as all-powerful, on the ground ISIS/Daesh are being pushed back.

Earlier this week, the Prime Minister stood alongside President Hollande in Paris, and said, ‘We have shown our firm resolve and together we will destroy this evil threat. Nous sommes solidaires avec vous.’

This sentiment will be at the forefront of my thoughts when the Prime Minister comes to the House of Commons to set out the case for taking action against ISIS/Daesh in the coming days.

The terrorists respect no boundaries so neither should we in defeating them.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage at {http://www.crawleyobserver.co.uk/|www.crawleyobserver.co.uk|www.crawleyobserver.co.uk}

2) Like our Facebook page at {https://www.facebook.com/crawley.observer|www.facebook.com/crawleyobserver|www.facebook.com/crawleyobserver}

3) Follow us on Twitter {https://www.facebook.com/crawley.observer|@Crawley_Obby|@Crawley_Obby}

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

The Crawley Observer - always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Chief superintendent reassures Sussex residents over terrorism protection

$
0
0

SUSSEX POLICE has moved to qualm concerns expressed by an MP in parliament over the number of armed officers the force has at its disposal.

Peter Kyle, Labour MP for Hove and Portslade, {http://www.chichester.co.uk/news/local/mp-reveals-sussex-police-has-seven-armed-police-officers-on-duty-1-7081814|told Prime Minister David Cameron that Sussex Police only had seven armed officers on duty}.

However chief superintendent Tony Blaker contested this, saying: “Plans for deployments, locations and timings are obviously operationally sensitive and we will not provide any detail of these except to say that the figure quoted publicly today for firearms officer availability does not represent the true level, which is significantly higher than that quoted.”

He urged the public to remain ‘vigilant’ and to report any suspicious behaviour or activity by calling the confidential anti-terrorist hotline on 0800 789 321 or 999 in an emergency.

The chief superintendent added: “We have well-developed response plans for any terrorist incidents and these have been exercised with partners, locally, regionally and nationally. Armed response officers are deployed 24/7 across Surrey and Sussex and are able to respond quickly to any incident, whether at Gatwick or elsewhere.”

He said there were extra numbers of officers available on call to give ‘further firearms capability’.

“The current deployment of armed officers is based on our assessment and intelligence about the likelihood of incidents involving armed criminality, including terrorism,” he said. “The response to any such incident will also involve immediate support from our neighbouring forces, and resources which are part of national contingency plans.”

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Amazing Ally shows why he is one of Crawley’s finest boxers

$
0
0

The amazing Manny Ally showed just why he’s rated as one of Crawley’s finest boxers at Bewbush on Saturday night.

18 year old Ally boxed the perfect fight to outscore Brighton City’s Ben Duncan to the delight of the loud and packed crowd at the Bewbush Centre.

Living up to his ring nickname “Amazing” the hugely talented Ally had the local fight fans on their feet roaring him to victory.

Duncan was a good strong kid who certainly came to fight, and as he came forward looking to throw his big shots Ally’s speed and movement made him virtually impossible to hit.

It’s a clever fighter who can box off the back foot, and Ally is certainly that. But making Duncan miss was only half the job, as the fast and accurate jab of Ally constantly found it’s target.

Stinging left jabs to the face and damaging body shots soon wore Duncan down.

Star guests WBO Featherweight champ Ben Jones and the former British and Commonwealth title-holder Michael Alldis were at ringside, and both were full of praise for Ally at the final bell.

If Ally was amazing then 14 year old Abdul Miraj was pure magic.

Making his ring debut against the formidable Brighton City puncher Jack Groves the exciting Miraj had Jones and Alldis singing his praises, predicting an outstanding future in the game for the Northgate kid.

For his first time in the ring Miraj quite simply was magical. Hard fast hands, superb movement and talent in abundance saw him snatch a narrow points win over a very good boxer in Groves.

Miraj constantly rattled Groves with his two fisted attacks, that were both accurate and fast. Groves can dig, and posses a heavy shot with either hand, but Miraj was never troubled as he glided round the ring banging out his own power punches.

The noise from the sell out crowd was so loud that the two boxers standing toe to toe in a fantastic bout failed to hear the bell for the end of the second round, continuing to trade punches as the referee tried to split them up.

The final round had it all, both young boxers coming forward throwing an incredible array of shots, neither one willing to take a backward step. So tight was the contest that Crawley’s Miraj got the decision by the narrowest of margins.

Experienced junior Byron Jones was on the end of a points defeat at the hands of Danny Bull from the Hastings Boxing Club. Jones kept looking to get inside of Bull’s double handed jabs, but was caught constantly with stiff scoring shots that earned him the judges verdict.

Earlier in the evening there were points defeats for Sulman Mirza, Josh Limbachia, Bayley Whiteoak and Alfie Power in their ring debuts. Jay Watkins saw his scheduled three round contest against Hamza Sharif from the Felbridge ABC end early when the referee jumped in and stopped the contest in the second round. Watkins fought bravely but was outgunned by a bigger, stronger opponent.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1 Make this website your homepage

2 Like our Facebook page at {https://www.facebook.com/pages/Sport-Sussex/1445133019077417?fref=ts|facebook.com/pages/Sport-Sussex|click here}

3 Follow us on Twitter @SportSussex

4 Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Train delays after trespass in Worthing

$
0
0

SOUTHERN RAIL has reported train delays along the Brighton to Southampton line.

The company said the delays were down to a trespasser on the line at Worthing.

A British Transport Police spokesman said: “We received a report of a person on the tracks at Worthing station, West Sussex on Tuesday, November 24, at 4.21pm.

“The person quickly returned to the platform and left the station.

“Officers will be making further enquiries to establish the circumstances of the incident.”

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Former police officer jailed for ‘horrendous and barbaric’ sex offences

$
0
0

A former Sussex Police officer has been sentenced to two and half years in prison for ‘horrendous and barbaric’ historic sex offences against a minor.

Thomas John Rees, 77, from Wick, appeared at Hove Crown Court on Monday, charged with four counts of indecent assault and one of assault causing actual bodily harm of a minor.

A police spokesman said the offences were committed against a girl at Haywards Heath.

Timothy Raggatt, defending, said the sentence was for two incidents more than 40 years ago.

Mr Raggatt said it was unfair for the court to take into consideration that Mr Rees served as a police officer.

He said: “It was wrong in principle to take that into account, it just happens that that was his job, it plays no part in the sentencing other than his character. It’s an aggravating feature in the case.”

Judge Michael Lawson said it may be an explanation as to why the victim found it difficult to report the incidents at the time.

Mr Raggatt described Rees as a man of ‘exemplary character’. Rees provided Judge Lawson with clippings to demonstrate his service to the community as a police officer over a 30-year period.

Mr Raggatt said: “This is a man of 77 who has built up an enormous credit and who has led an unblemished life for the last 40 years.

“He isn’t the slightest risk to anyone for any reason whatsoever.

“There is no public interest to be served by imprisoning a man of his age. It does not demand a custodial sentence.”

However, Judge Lawson referred to Rees’ crimes as ‘horrendous and barbaric’.

He said: “In one of the cuttings, you send a message to all these villains and refer to there being no acceptable level of crime.”

In reference to the historic nature of the crimes, Judge Lawson added: “There’s no delay that excuses or expunges offences.

“The essence of these offences are exactly the same then as it is now.”

Judge Lawson said he had taken into account Rees’ exemplary character, but added a custodial sentence was necessary.

Rees received a total sentence of two and a half years.

Crash on M23 blocks part of road

$
0
0

Part of the M23 has been blocked due to a crash this morning (Wednesday November 25).

The vehicles involved in the incident have now moved to the hard shoulder.

The motorway is partially blocked northbound before junction 10 with the A2011 in Crawley.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage at {http://www.crawleyobserver.co.uk/|www.crawleyobserver.co.uk|www.crawleyobserver.co.uk}

2) Like our Facebook page at {https://www.facebook.com/crawley.observer|www.facebook.com/crawleyobserver|www.facebook.com/crawleyobserver}

3) Follow us on Twitter {https://www.facebook.com/crawley.observer|@Crawley_Obby|@Crawley_Obby}

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

The Crawley Observer - always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.


CHRISTMAS TIPS: Celebrity chef James Martin shares his festive recipes for something sweet

$
0
0

Fancy a traditional fruit and nut cake for Christmas? Celebrity chef James Martin provides the following recipe.

Glacé Fruit And Nut Cake

‘I love this classic fruit and nut cake, which is an adaptation of a family recipe. I’ve always liked glacé fruit, but you do need to buy the good-quality sort. My favourite way to eat a slice of this is spread with just a little bit of unsalted butter.’

Serves 8–10

For the cake:

225g butter, plus extra for greasing

225g caster sugar

1 vanilla pod, split and seeds scraped

4 large eggs

100g ground almonds

275g self-raising flour

125g sultanas

125g glacé cherries

125g raisins

For the decoration:

150ml stock syrup glaze

50g whole, peeled almonds

5g red glacé cherries, halved

Preheat the oven to 150°C/ gas mark 2 and grease and line the base and sides of a 20cm round, deep-sided cake tin. Cover the outside of the tin with a layer of silicone paper and secure in place with kitchen string. Beat the butter, sugar and vanilla seeds in a kitchen mixer or large bowl with an electric whisk, until really light and fluffy. Beat the eggs in, one at a time, then fold in the ground almonds and 200g of the flour.

Place all the dried fruit in a bowl and toss with the rest of the flour so that they are all coated, then stir into the cake mixture until well combined. Spoon into the lined cake tin, smooth the top over then bake for 13⁄4 hours until golden brown and risen – cover the top with baking parchment or foil half-way through if the top is colouring too much. A skewer inserted into the centre of the cake should come out clean – if it doesn’t, return the cake to the oven for a further 5 minutes and repeat.

While the cake cooks, place the stock syrup in a small saucepan and heat until just simmering. Add the almonds and simmer for 3 minutes then lift out onto silicone paper. Drop the cherries into the syrup just to warm through then lift out and place them alongside the almonds.

When the cake is ready, remove and cool in the tin for 5 minutes then arrange the almonds and cherries in rings onto the top of the cake – they will stick to the surface.

Leave to cool completely before removing from the tin and discarding the paper. Serve in wedges.

Candied Fruit

Christmas Garland

This looks elaborate, but in actual fact it is surprisingly simple to make, as long as you have the right mould for baking the brioche. In keeping with the Christmas theme, I’ve decorated the garland with a layer of royal icing ‘snow’ and some really beautiful glacé fruit. (If you want to have a go at making your own, there’s a recipe in my previous desserts book.)

Serves 8–10

1 quantity brioche dough butter, for greasing

50ml spiced rum

zest of 1 orange

zest of 1 lemon

300g candied fruit, such as pears, tangerines, cherries and angelica, roughly chopped

50g sultanas

flour, for dusting

100ml stock syrup glaze

200g royal icing

150g whole glacé fruit, halved or sliced

Make the brioche dough and prove it for 11⁄2 hours (instead of the 2 hours in step 4 of the brioche dough recipe). Generously butter a 24cm bundt tin or savarin mould. Place the rum, orange and lemon zest, candied fruit and sultanas in a bowl and leave to soak for 20 minutes.

Take about 60g of the fruit and scatter into the buttered tin. Lightly flour a work surface then tip the dough out onto it and gently knock the air out of the dough. Spread it out to a large rectangle about 50cm x 30cm and scatter the remaining soaked fruit over the dough.

Roll into a large sausage shape about 50cm long, then twist round into a circle, joining the ends together. Transfer to the prepared tin, cover and leave to rise for 11⁄2 hours in a warm place. Preheat oven to 190°C/Gas mark 5. Bake 30 minutes until golden brown and hollow when tapped on the base of the ring. Remove, turn out upside down and brush with stock syrup glaze, leave to cool. When cold, spread royal icing on top and decorate with the glacé fruit.

Tock Syrup Glaze

Makes 300ml

200g caster sugar

100ml water

Heat the sugar and water in a saucepan until the sugar has dissolved. Stir well, then bring to the boil. Remove from the heat and decant into a sealable container. Leave to cool, then cover and store in the fridge until needed. To use, brush over the baked cake or tart with a pastry brush and then leave to dry.

Brioche Dough

Makes 800g

50ml room-temperature milk

10g fresh yeast

300g strong flour,

10g fine sea salt, plus extra

20g caster sugar

4 eggs, plus 2 egg yolks, for glazing

125g softened butter

2 white sugar cubes

Whisk the milk and yeast together in a bowl, then set aside for 5 minutes. Put the flour, salt and sugar into a food mixer fitted with a dough hook and mix to combine. Add the yeast mixture and eggs and mix well, until you have a soft, smooth dough.

Add the softened butter and beat for another 4–5 minutes until it is all incorporated and the dough is soft and shiny. Tip out onto a lightly floured work surface and knead until smooth. Transfer the dough to a clean bowl, cover with clingfilm, leave in a warm place to rise for about 2 hours.

Use the dough for a plaited loaf or brioche buns. To make brioche buns or a brioche loaf, flour a work surface then tip the dough out onto it and gently knock the air out. Divide the dough between buttered brioche moulds or place in a buttered 23cm x 7cm, 1kg loaf tin. Cover and leave somewhere warm to double in size.

Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F/Gas mark 4. Beat egg yolks with a pinch of salt and brush over the top of the loaf or buns. Crush the sugar cubes over the top. Bake 25–30 minutes.

Recipes from Sweet by James Martin (Quadrille £20) Photography: Peter Cassidy.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

REVIEW: The Mousetrap by Agatha Christie at Chichester Festival Theatre

$
0
0

The bitter-sweet nature of the nursery rhyme became a defining hallmark of many of Agatha Christie’s greatest whodunnits.

The dark underbelly of these rhymes lurking beneath the innocence of childhood captured in so many ways the stark contrast of her books.

So often they were set in sublime, privileged settings with evil just a scratch away beneath the surface.

The Mousetrap is Dame Agatha’s most famous play. It is her most successful. It has been running continuously since 1952 in the West End and has broken one box office record after another.

And like so many of her remarkable books, it is a nursery rhyme which underscores the entire piece - in this case Three Blind Mice.

That apart, all the normal Christie ingredients are to be found in abundance. A stately country home, a fresh fall of Christmas snow, a group of stranded guests each one of whom could be concealing dark secrets. And a plot which moves at a traditional Christie sprint to a perfectly unorthodox conclusion.

The detective in this case is not drawn from the Poirot or Marple drawer. It is an unknown. But Christie’s best works are sprinkled with one-off crime solvers such as Sgt Trotter.

But it is not the cast that are the stars of this play. Nor even the plot. The play itself is now a part of English folklore and establishment. The Mousetrap towers like some huge institution, as much a part of London as the Houses of Parliament, Harrods, and Buckingham Palace itself.

Indeed, it began life as a short radio play in honour of Queen Mary, so it has an impressive Royal pedigree too.

It’s finally on tour, taking its surprise to new audiences.

Chichester loved it.

For me, it holds nothing but happy memories. Of seeing it first on my 21st birthday in London and of talking about its wonders with long-standing producer Sir Stephen Waley-Cohen many years ago when he was a director of a newspaper company for which I then worked.

Long may this great theatrical institution continue to tease, inspire, and reassure us that Dame Agatha remains the undisputed Queen of Crime.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Christmas tips: It’s the final festive countdown

$
0
0

Christmas Day is now 30 days away, and the countdown to the last shopping day before Xmas is under way - although as any disorganised husband will tell you, petrol stations may still be open on the big day itself.

The better-organised among us may have already prepared their Christmas pud, but there may still be time.

Traditionally ‘Stir up Sunday’ is the last Sunday before Advent - when parents teach their children how to make the pudding and everyone takes a turn mixing it up. But don’t forget that it’s stirred from East to West in honour of the journey of the Three Wise Men who visited the baby Jesus.

If you want to organise a work night out or gathering with friends, best get your (ice) skates on. Remember that the last weekend before Christmas starts on Friday 18th . Of course, there’s the option of going out on a school night from the 21st, albeit with the attendant hangover at work the next day.

It’s never too early to buy gifts (filling station option notwithstanding), but for anyone unwilling to brave the shops close to the holidays, bear in mind that the last delivery dates for online shopping are around the 20th December - the Money Saving Expert website has a comprehensive list. Of course, there’s always Black Friday on November 27th if you want to pick up some bargains...

In these days of electronic greeting and present shopping, the Christmas card may seem like an almost quaint greeting method to some, especially for far-away friends and relatives. Unfortunately you already missed cheap surface mail, sorry. Final airmail dates are as early as Friday 4th for Africa and the Middle East, but there’s plenty of time to sort out cards for those closer to home. For second class UK mail the final posting date is Sat 19th, with first class two days later, on Mon 21st. And for any last-minute panic, Signed for Special Delivery will still reach its destination on Wed 23rd. More at www.royalmail.com/greetings

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

COUNTY NEWS: Equine clinic’s gate warning after horse dies in road collision

$
0
0

A small horse died after being hit by a car on Monday (November 23) - moments after escaping through a gate left open by a careless walker.

The cob was one of three horses to let themselves out through a footpath gate left open by someone walking through the land, near to the A26.

Cliffe Equine Clinic, in Lewes, is now urging people to be more attentive when crossing an area used by livestock.

A message posted on the clinic’s Facebook page said: “I personally would like to issue a word of caution to anyone who uses footpaths through land containing livestock - if you open a gate, CLOSE it behind you.

“Today, we sadly lost a beautiful cob on the A26 in a RTA, one of three horses that let themselves out through a footpath gate left open by the last user.

“The car that hit the horse was a complete write-off, but very luckily the driver was uninjured.

“This was a wholly avoidable tragedy and the owners are devastated.

“Please share to stop this type of tragedy, or worse, happening to anyone else.”

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Homeless man attacked and robbed in Crawley

$
0
0

A homeless man was robbed by three people as he was walking in Ifield.

The 36-year-old was attacked while walking by the underpass of Crawley Avenue, Crawley, at the junction with Ifield Avenue, at about 5.45pm on Wednesday November 11.

He had started speaking to a man in front of him when he was grabbed from behind by two others.

They forced him to his knees and tried to grab his rucksack, punching him while he was on the ground.

They then made off with his mobile phone.

One of the suspects is described as black, aged about 18, slim, with bad teeth and wearing a blue hooded top and dark blue tracksuit bottoms.

Detective Constable James Gwynne said: “We are appealing for any witnesses who may have used the underpass that evening and saw anything suspicious, including any people hanging around.

“If you can help please contact us via 101@sussex.pnn.police.uk or call us on 101, quoting serial 1221 of 11/11.

“You can also contact the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111, or at www.crimestoppers-org.uk”

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage at {http://www.crawleyobserver.co.uk/|www.crawleyobserver.co.uk|www.crawleyobserver.co.uk}

2) Like our Facebook page at {https://www.facebook.com/crawley.observer|www.facebook.com/crawleyobserver|www.facebook.com/crawleyobserver}

3) Follow us on Twitter {https://www.facebook.com/crawley.observer|@Crawley_Obby|@Crawley_Obby}

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

The Crawley Observer - always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Crawley depot takes silver in prestigious industry awards

$
0
0

Metrobus’ Crawley depot, which operates Fastway and other local services, has won the Silver Award in the Top National Bus Depot contest.

The UK Bus Awards Scheme is designed to recognise and reward excellence and good practice in a wide range of disciplines associated with the operation, design and promotion of bus services.

Metrobus also won Gold in the Making Buses a Better Choice award.

Metrobus’ Fastway Rapid Transit is a 24-hour service principally for workers at Gatwick Airport and business commuters.

Launched ten years ago, 2014/15 has seen dramatic improvements including a major investment in the Fastway Upgrade which comprises guided busways, bus lanes and bus-only links and high-spec infrastructure.

The service is the result of a partnership between Metrobus, Gatwick Airport and four local authorities.

The upgrade project was funded by Metrobus, with support from the other partners.

To justify the cost which funded 18 new vehicles and continuing timetable improvement, Metrobus needed to increase patronage by 4% - in the first 12 months of introducing the new buses, patronage on both Fastway routes was up by 8% to over 4.2m passengers per annum.

The UK Bus Awards scheme was founded in 1996 and is marking its 20th annual competition this year. The scheme is organised and run by an independent not-for-dividend company which works with a Management Committee of industry stakeholders to administer and develop the scheme.

Entries are judged by panels of independent experts. Before deciding the winners, finalists in the operating and driving categories were checked by “mystery travellers” to ensure that service delivery is up to the mark.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Families’ relief over tax credits U-turn

$
0
0

Many families across Sussex will be breathing a sigh of relief this afternoon (Wednesday November 25) after Chancellor George Osborne performed a U-turn on controversial cuts to tax credits.

Mr Osborne had faced opposition from opposition parties and the House of Lords, which last month voted to delay the planned cuts.

In today’s Spending Review, the chancellor told MPs improved public finances had enabled him to scrap the planned phasing of cuts altogether.

However, analysts have warned that the introduction of Universal Credit - and changes associated with it - could still see families losing out in 2020.

Elsewhere, councils face losing a sizeable chunk of funding, with the phasing out of the government’s support grant over the course of the parliament.

This, Mr Osborne said, would be tempered by proposals for authorities to keep business rates collected locally.

He said his vision represented a ‘revolution’ in the way the country was governed, with new powers but ‘new responsibilities’.

What do you think? Let us know your views by commenting below.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.


Christmas tips: festive turkey recipes

$
0
0

If you’re looking for a more ambitious way to cook turkey, but without too much fuss, try these dishes.

Phil Vickery’s saffron turkey with wild rice and cranberry stuffing

For the stuffing:

1 tbsp olive oil

50g butter

2 onions, chopped

2 large sprigs rosemary, leaves only, chopped

100g cooked wild and long grain rice

50g dried cranberries

100g dried apricots, roughly chopped

175g fresh white breadcrumbs

6 good quality pork and herb sausages, skinned

1 lemon, finely grated rind

1 egg, beaten

For the turkey:

5.6kg British turkey, thawed if frozen, giblets removed

1 lemon, halved

1 bay leaf

50g butter

1/2 tsp saffron threads

Method

Heat the oil and butter in a saucepan and fry the onion and rosemary for 5-6 minutes. Remove from the heat and stir in the remaining stuffing ingredients until well combined. Season.

Preheat the oven to 180°C/Gas mark 4. Melt the butter in a small saucepan, stir in the saffron threads and leave to cool slightly.

Push some of the stuffing into the neck end of the bird packing it right up to the breast meat. Secure the neck skin with cocktail sticks. Roll the remaining stuffing into balls (these can be cooked separately for 30 minutes).

Weigh the turkey and calculate the cooking time at 20 minutes per kg + 90 minutes at the end. Push the lemon halves and bayleaf into the cavity and place in a roasting tin. Brush the whole bird with the saffron butter and season well.

Cover with foil and roast. Remove the foil and baste with any remaining saffron butter and roast uncovered for the last hour of cooking time. To check to see if the turkey is cooked push a metal skewer into the thickest part of the leg – if the juices run clear the turkey is cooked if the juices are slightly pink pop back into the oven for a further 15 minutes before checking again. Cover with foil and allow to rest for 20-30 minutes before carving.

Soy and apricot

glazed turkey

For the stuffing:

1 tbsp olive oil

1 medium onion, peeled and finely chopped

3 rashers back bacon, finely chopped

50g fresh cranberries

250g fresh breadcrumbs

Grated zest and juice of 1 orange

2 tsp fresh thyme leaves or 1 tsp dried thyme

75g pecan halves, coarsely chopped

3 eggs, beaten

Ground black pepper

For the turkey and glaze:

6kg oven-ready British turkey

5 tbsp apricot jam

2 tbsp soy sauce

1 tbsp lemon juice

1 To make the stuffing, heat the oil in a pan and fry the onion and bacon until the onion is soft and golden and the bacon cooked. Add the cranberries and continue to cook until the berries ‘pop’. Transfer to a bowl and stir in the breadcrumbs, grated orange zest and juice, thyme, pecans and eggs. Season with freshly ground black pepper and stir everything together until evenly mixed.

2 Spoon some of the stuffing into the neck end of the turkey and roll the rest into small balls. Place the balls in a single layer in a shallow, greased ovenproof dish and chill until needed. .

3 Fold the loose neck skin under the turkey and tuck the wing tips under the body to hold the neck skin in place. Lift the turkey into a large, deep roasting tin and season all over with freshly ground black pepper. .

4 Preheat the oven to 190°C/375°F/gas mark 5. Cover the turkey with a large sheet of foil to form a tent over the bird so air can circulate around it and tuck the foil around the top edge of the tin to make a tight seal. .

5 Roast the turkey in the oven for 3 hours, basting it with the pan juices from time to time. Mix together the apricot jam, soy sauce and lemon juice until smooth. Remove the turkey from the oven and take off the foil. Brush the glaze over all over the turkey and return to the oven with the stuffing balls.

Roast for another 30 mins or until the turkey is a rich golden brown and the juices run clear when the thickest part of the leg is pierced with a skewer. .

6 Leave the turkey in a warm place to rest for 15-20 mins before carving. Serve with roast potatoes, vegetables and the stuffing. .

Cook’s tip: Don’t buy a premium apricot jam to make the glaze as it will contain lots of large pieces of fruit that will need to be sieved out. If your supermarket sells apricot glaze, using for brushing over fruit tarts, this is ideal as it’s smooth.

www.britishturkey.co.uk.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Third of South-East car passengers let friends drive while over the limit

$
0
0

One in every three of car passengers in the South East of England have admitted to knowingly getting in a car with a driver who was close to or over the limit, a new survey says.

The recent research, carried out to mark National Road Safety Week (November 23-29), also found that 22% of people know someone who regularly drives when over the limit.

The region’s drivers were questioned too, and 24% revealed they have driven the morning after a night of heavy drinking, knowing they might still be over the limit.

The survey was commissioned by personal injury claims specialists Hudgell Solicitors, who said they see a spike in cases each year from November to January related to worsening weather conditions.

With the festive period approaching, the survey focused on the judgement people make as to their own abilities when having drank alcohol.

Those aged 25-34 the most likely age group to get into a car with a driver knowing they were close to or over the limit.

Matt Tuff, a solicitor who handles road accident compensation claims for Hudgell Solicitors said: “This survey paints a very interesting picture of how many drivers perhaps flout the drink-drive laws, putting themselves and others in serious danger of serious injury,”

“As specialists in handling personal injury and accident compensation claims, we see the devastating impact serious road accidents can have on peoples’ lives. They can be life-changing incidents, leaving the victims needing a complete package of support to provide them with any chance of being able to rebuild their lives.

“Leaving somebody facing that kind of battle is not something anybody wants on their conscience, so we feel that it is important to raise this issue as part of Road Safety Week, as well as the need for people to generally adjust their driving to meet the tougher conditions on the roads.”

This, coupled with the fact that 42 per cent of people admitted they wouldn’t be prepared to inform police if they knew a close friend often drove over the limit, suggests the British public are not taking drink-drive laws seriously, despite the obvious dangers.

Furthermore, 29% of people who have been driving for over five years say they wouldn’t be confident in passing their test now if they had to take it again.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1) Make our website your homepage

2) Like our Facebook page

3) Follow us on Twitter

4) Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

Always the first with your local news.

Be part of it.

Kate Cheer gets England Schools call-up for Worlds

$
0
0

Kate Cheer has been named in the England team to compete at the World Schools’ Table Tennis Championships in Israel.

The 15-year-old Ifield Community College student will travel to Eilat in April as part of a 15-strong England squad selected by the England Schools Table Tennis Association (ESTTA).

England are fielding two teams – one representing Grantham College and the other drawn from the rest of the country.

Cheer will compete alongside Tin-Tin Ho and Letitia McMullan and Denise Payet in the national team. The Grantham College line-up is Emily Bolton, Beth Cook and Grace Potter.

In the boys’ competitions, England will be represented by London Academy – Theodore Achampong, Ryan Barnett, Eren Gozcu and Omar Khassal – plus a nationally-drawn team of Billy Forster, Tom Jarvis, Alex Ramsden and Alec Ward.

All the England players will also compete in individual events.

The tournament takes place from April 2-8 and the draw will be in January. Teams competing are likely to include table tennis powers China, Chinese Taipei and Germany, plus the likes of France, Ireland, Croatia, Greece and the host nation.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.

1 Make this website your homepage

2 Like our Facebook page at {https://www.facebook.com/pages/Sport-Sussex/1445133019077417?fref=ts|facebook.com/pages/Sport-Sussex|click here}

3 Follow us on Twitter @SportSussex

4 Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends - so they don’t miss out!

NEILSON’S COLUMN (November 26, 2015): Three times the surprise as jobs line up perfectly

$
0
0

It’s either feast or famine.

Welcome to the life of an actor, where jobs are like buses – none for ages then three come along at once.

This usually means that having waited for weeks for something to turn up, the actor finds that he can only do one of the jobs because they clash. It’s a horrible situation to be in, but it’s all too familiar.

It happened to me last month.

I’d been to castings for three or four television commercials and a series on BBC One. I had dismissed them from my mind as I felt I hadn’t given the commercial casting directors exactly what they wanted and I know how difficult it is to get cast in a TV series, even in one episode. It’s best to keep your expectations low in this business.

So I was surprised when my agent called and told me that not only had I got two of the commercials, but also the TV job! Great, I thought, but did they clash? It turned out that one commercial filmed on Monday, the other filmed on Tuesday and the TV job filmed the following Wednesday; I could do all three.

I have previously written about the need for luck in our business and that was a prime example.

Filming is very different to theatre. In a theatrical production, the cast, director, stage management, wardrobe department et al, meet on the first day and spend at least two weeks rehearsing and, in the process, getting to know each other.

When it comes to TV work, the actor may turn up on set without having met anyone apart from the director. The camera operator, the sound technicians, assistants of all kinds, maybe thirty or so people on set, may be total strangers, which gives the job a totally different feel.

You’re on your own and when you hear ‘action’, you have to be ready to go – lines learnt, plot and character studied and everyone watching you.

No pressure then!

Both disciplines require the same toolset, but used in very different ways.

Next week I start rehearsals for panto in Chatham, so this year I’ll be at home for Christmas. I’m playing the Dame again, Dorothy Derrière in Beauty and the Beast.

Hopefully I’ll get time to see The Capitol theatre production in Horsham, which is coincidentally, Beauty and the Beast.

Good luck to everyone involved!

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be among the first to know what’s going on.

1 Make our website your homepage

2 Like our Facebook page

3 Follow us on Twitter

4 Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends – so they don’t miss out!

Be part of it.

Hole-in-the-heart tot proves he’s a little hero

$
0
0

A tiny tot who was born with a hole in the heart is battling his way to health ... by proving himself a little swimming star.

Two-year-old Joseph Daly was taken into special care as soon as he was born and had to undergo a heart operation when he was just three months old.

But now brave Joseph, of Blackheath, Pound Hill, has been named a Little Hero and won a national award by toddler swim school Water Babies for his incredible accomplishments in the water.

Joseph’s problems were first discovered when his parents were told at their 20 week scan that their son had a defect in his heart wall.

He underwent an operation to fit a pulmonary band to reduce blood flow and stress on his heart - and underwent another op when he was nine months old.

His mum Jemma said: “The pulmonary band was a temporary measure and doctors told us that swimming would be really beneficial to develop Joseph’s upper body strength and core muscles, as he had missed out on important ‘tummy time’ due to his surgery.

“Despite having a feeding tube in place, Joseph was able to start swimming lessons at seven months of age and he loved it from the word go. It really helped him learn to push up on his elbows and roll over.”

Joseph’s surgery has proved successful but he will have to be monitored for the rest of his life.

Viewing all 26324 articles
Browse latest View live