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Br ighton & Hove
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TOUGH CLASH
>> PAGE 5
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The Grace Eyre charity teamed up with bus bosses for a unique training session on the seafront
Campaigners celebrated victory in the latest phase of their efforts to reopen a Brighton pub that closed last year
Albion are back in action after the international break as they take on high-flying Norwich City
WIN A YEAR’S WORTH OF FREE PIZZA PAGE 32
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Br ighton & Hove
Independent
Friday, April 3 2015
www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk
Our city's best-read newspaper
TRAVEL BUDDIES
CHEERS!
TOUGH CLASH
>> PAGE 5
>> PAGE 22
>> PAGE 42
The Grace Eyre charity teamed up with bus bosses for a unique training session on the seafront
Campaigners celebrated victory in the latest phase of their efforts to reopen a Brighton pub that closed last year
Albion are back in action after the international break as they take on high-flying Norwich City
WIN A YEAR’S WORTH OF FREE PIZZA PAGE 32
SQUALOR
SQUABBLE Landlord hits back at MP Frank le Duc @BHcitynews
A landlord has responded to claims by Brighton Pavilion MP Caroline Lucas that a block of flats is not fit to house vulnerable people. Baron Homes defended the way that it runs the town centre block which is often used as emergency accommodation. Ms Lucas called on Brighton and Hove City Council to stop sending homeless families to “damp, dark and depressing” Windsor Court. But Baron Homes director Nazila Blencowe said that there were “numerous and
frequent complaints” about antisocial behaviour from residents. And earlier this year, she said, a maintenance man was stabbed in the neck with a syringe. Despite the problems, the company had a good relationship with the vast majority of its tenants, some of whom other private landlords refuse to house. She said: “A large number of the people requiring temporary accommodation can be those suffering from challenging illnesses and drug and alcohol dependency. “It is of paramount importance to us that vulnerable residents >> Continued on page 3
It’s no joke – cross-dressing comedian Eddie Izzard joined Purna Sen, the Labour candidate for Brighton Pavilion, on the campaign trail as the general election campaign officially started. Keep up to date with the candidates, manifestos and the latest developments at www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk – and see page 9 for this week’s Poll Watch and Ward Profile
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Hospital trust recruits 200 nurses from abroad The trust that runs the Royal Sussex County Hospital has recruited more than 200 nurses from abroad over the past six months. Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust shared the scale of overseas recruitment with Healthwatch Brighton and Hove in response to concerns about staff shortages. The response from the trust said: “Nurse staffing levels have been challenging over the past six months.” The trust said that it had appointed a deputy chief nurse last September to oversee this area and had been recruiting actively in other countries. It added: “In the last four months, she has recruited 206 international nurses from Europe and the Philippines, who will be starting in a phased manner over the next four to five months. “Local and national recruitment continues and we are working closely with the University of Brighton and other universities
A watchdog found understaffing in two of the four wards that it visited
in the south of England to recruit newly qualified nurses and increase our ‘return to practice’ nurses.” Healthwatch made an unannounced visit to four wards and found that staffing and rates of pay for bank nurses were an issue in two of the wards. The trust said: “From April 2015 bank rates will be increased to encourage staff to fill gaps in
rotas and reduce the numbers of agency nurses employed in the trust. In the meantime overtime is being paid to substantive staff.” In a joint report by Healthwatch Brighton and Hove and their East Sussex counterparts, the visitors found: ■ 36 per cent of patients across four locations were medically fit to leave hospital but were unable to. This was largely because
social care packages had not been put in place. All patients in Overton Ward, an extra capacity ward, were waiting to be discharged. ■ 63 per cent of patients in the Acute Medical Unit were inappropriately placed there. Staff estimated that the average age of patients in the unit was 85. ■ Staff reported understaffing that sometimes compromised their ability to give comprehensive care, particularly one-to-one support and care for people with dementia. ■ The wards visited were not routinely giving patients all the discharge information that they needed, specifically the hospital’s discharge booklet. ■ Overall and across all wards staff showed a caring attitude and attention to their patients, particularly at meal times. There were many examples of best practice to be shared within the hospital.
Landlord hits back > Continued from page 1 feel safe and comfortable. There are numerous and frequent complaints from our tenants about anti-social behaviour from others within Windsor Court. “Other private landlords often refuse to house these individuals, which contributes to the pressing housing shortage that this city and indeed region, faces. It is a unique, difficult and complex management service that Baron Homes provides and we have the proven expertise. “We note with some interest that Dr Lucas makes no mention of the incident in which one of the tenants attacked one of our maintenance team and stabbed him in the neck with a syringe. That employee is still signed off work on sick leave. “Quite simply, we do not have to offer temporary accommodation but we take pride in the fact that we are providing accommodation to those who, for whatever reason, have been marginalised. Without us, the housing crisis in Brighton and Hove would be worse.”
E
HOV & N O T BRIGH
Y A D N U S R E EASSuTnday 5th April Children's field trip to new school Pupils from the Bilingual Primary School have taken part in a ceremony at their new site on the edge of Hove Park. Children signed their names on one of the beams making up the building’s frame at the site in the Droveway watched by staff, parents and supporters. The children spoke in Spanish to thank those involved in the project, including staff with construction company Kier. Interim head Laura O’Grady thanked all those involved in the project and said that the new premises symbolised hard work and promise. She thanked the Brighton Aldridge Community Academy (BACA) in Falmer which has provided a temporary home for the Bilingual Primary School. She also paid tribute to the parents who valued a bilingual education. Excerpts from the recently-published book
On This Day Dan Tester @DJDanteBrighton
1826 | Monday, April 3 The Brighton Herald reported: “Nearly 100 persons have been summoned in Brighton, this week, for non-payment of their poor rates; and between 30 and 40 distress warrants have, we regret to state, been issued against defaulters, some of whom have been accustomed to move in a respectable sphere of life.”
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4 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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We need to make the best use of the roads we have Jason Kitcat @jasonkitcat
Brighton and Hove is a success story: record numbers of visitors, topping the charts for new business start ups and attracting more residents every year. It’s good news for the local economy that our city is popular, with global name recognition way beyond what many other cities our size can dream of. But of course all of this success comes at a price. We need to build more homes for everyone choosing to live in the city plus more amenities to serve all the new residents and visitors. This is not only financially challenging in a time of austerity for council funding but also tough because of the choices these changes present. Long-term residents and businesses may find it uncomfortable to see a higher density of buildings proposed near by, leaving councillors on
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Faith hustings Ten candidates are to take part in a city-wide Faith hustings next week. The event will be split into two panels – one for local election candidates and the other for politicians hoping to be elected to Parliament. The Question Time style hustings is backed by the Brighton and Hove Interfaith Contact Group, the Anglican Rural Dean of Brighton, the Brighton and Hove Catholic Deanery, Sussex Jewish Representative Council and the Brighton and Hove Muslim Forum. The questions are expected to focus on issues related to faith matters and the hustings will be chaired by Dr Paul Davies, a reader of philosophy at Sussex University who specialises in the philosophy of religion.
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the planning committee the tough job of balancing those concerns against possible future benefits for residents not yet present. While we might be able to build upwards and more densely, we are unlikely to find more space for additional road and rail in the city. Road widening and new rail lines within Brighton and Hove seem financially, logistically and politically improbable. So we need to make the best of the infrastructure we’ve got. There’s rightly much attention on the capacity and reliability of our rail connections but sadly that’s not in local control so we resort to lobbying the rail industry. As we see in cities around the world, road use is an increasingly vexed issue as urban populations continue to grow. There is no one single solution to providing clean air, safe roads and easy connections. To ensure fair, safe and affordable transport for all we have to keep working across public, private and third sectors to change how we travel as a city and as individuals.
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It pays to be digital The Brighton Digital Festival is inviting people to pitch for grants worth up to £1,000 from today. The festival’s Digital Education Awards are open to independently organised educational projects that celebrate digital innovation, arts and culture. Proposed projects may come from schools, teachers, families or any enthusiastic digital creative in the city and must incorporate a key educational theme, the organisers
LIVE AT
Hollingbury Park Golf Course Grace Eyre hopes to sign up 30 service users in the coming year to look out for each other
Seafront trip for travel buddies Travel buddies went on an outing to the seafront thanks to the Grace Eyre charity and Brighton and Hove Buses. The lottery-funded Travel Buddy project is aimed at helping adults with learning disabilities to gain the skills and confidence to travel safely by bus or on foot around the area. Grace Eyre hopes to sign up 30 new service users over the coming year who will travel together and look out for each other. Their goal is to catch the bus, meet friends, be safe and get to where they want to go with the independence that most people take for granted. For the launch event, Brighton
and Hove Buses provided a “drama on the bus” session. Service users acted out scenarios, including what to do if they miss a stop or someone tries to bully them. Victoria Garcia, from Brighton and Hove Buses, said: “We are very pleased about the relaunch of the Travel Buddy scheme. Grace Eyre do incredible work supporting people in the community with learning disabilities and the Travel Buddy scheme is one of the fantastic initiatives that they have. “We will of course continue to support this event and look forward to our continued partnership with Grace Eyre.”
said. They can be aimed at schoolaged children or support lifelong learning for adults. And the projects must take place during the Brighton Digital Festival from September 1 to 27. Festival education co-ordinator Donna Comerford said: “Brighton has become home to many start-up organisations which are providing spaces to share skills, encouraging making and experimenting with cutting edge technology, and
which we hope will be part of the programme in 2015.” The projects will be judged by education and digital experts. The winners will be announced at the end of May. Projects can incorporate computing, robotics, electronics or 3D printing.Other events can include start-up culture, architecture, digital music, animation, games, film-making, maker culture or DIY tech. The deadline is Monday, May 11.
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Health
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Adult care services from Brighton and Hove City Council are to become more personalised to those eligible to receive care. The Care Act asks local authorities to promote “Direct Payments” meaning the council agrees a care budget with individuals and allows them to take charge of what it is spent on. Catherine Young, who has multiple sclerosis, said: “Direct Payments has completely changed my life – I can hardly put into words what a massive difference it has made.” Denise D’Souza, the council’s director of adult services, said: “Our top priority is putting people who have social care needs right at the centre of deciding what care they get and how it is delivered.
A Brighton nightclub is to start breathalysing customers who appear too drunk after a number of violent attacks nearby. The management at Shooshh nightclub have teamed up with Sussex Police to trial the scheme which is already in place in other cities around the country. They hope to prevent those who are most drunk from becoming a victim or an offender. If the staff believe the reading is too high, the clubber will be refused entry. The limit has been set at twice the drink-drive limit. Albie Saliba, the manager of Shooshh, said: ”We want to set standards in the city and the main thing is public safety.”
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6 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015 Politics
Owen Jones talk Owen Jones, the socialist writer and journalist, will speak at a public meeting at Dorset Gardens Methodist Church on Wednesday (April 8). Mr Jones, who writes for The Guardian, will talk about young people and the ballot box. Admission is free. He will be joined by Nancy Platts, Labour's parliamentary candidate for Brighton Kemptown. Ms Platts said: "It's great to have Owen Jones down to support my campaign, I want to be reach out to as many groups as possible in this campaign, to hear what they have to say and - if elected on May 7 - to be able to represent their views in parliament. "In Brighton Kemptown, there is a choice between more of the same with the Conservative MP or Labour's plan of a ban on zero-hour contracts, guaranteed apprenticeships, and lower tuition fees." For more information, visit: www.nancyplatts.org.uk
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Parenting Time Waits For No Mum One day a week, it’s just me and Tibbons at home. As well as being a lovely time for us to spend together, I have been known to try and throw some housework into the mix too. Pre-children, I would approach such tasks in a logical, straightforward fashion. But, as I am reminded each week, a toddler’s eye view is a little different when it comes to domestic chores (neither straightforward, nor logical). This week, for instance, I thought I’d take advantage of the high winds and peg some washing out. Tibbons was keen to help, passing me the pegs from the bag, as and when needed, telling me as he did so how many he was handing me and what colour they were. What a lovely little scene I thought - I almost hoped the neighbours were out in their gardens to look on admiringly as I combined domestic bliss with practising the essential toddler
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arts of numbers and colours. We soon, however, approached the end of the line, for the pegs that is; there was plenty more space on the washing line. Tibbons refused to give me any of the remaining pegs, even when I pleaded with him for the sake of his wet, stripy socks, impatient as they were to flap about in the breeze. He was not convinced. You see, the remaining clothes pegs were all blue, and surely, Tibbons argued, everyone knows that blue pegs are for decoration, not utility. Just another glimpse of how toddlers view housework - fun for a while, but not to be placed above other pleasures (can’t really argue with the latter part I guess). Interestingly, toddler etiquette also dictates that I can’t vacuum when it’s just me and Tibbons at home. He hates it. Seriously. What? He does! He will nevertheless point out bits on the floor and tell me it’s mucky. What am I to do?
Midnight in Sicily by Peter Robb I loved this book. The subtitle is "On Art, Food, History and La Cosa Nostra". And that about sums it up. I mean, for goodness sake, what’s not to love? I went to Sicily about five years ago to do a cookery course and vowed to go back as soon as I could (funds allowing). I haven’t managed it yet, but I will. I have to. The island (and it’s much, much bigger than I had imagined) had a curious hold over me. It’s a curious mix of high art and low criminals. The traces of invasion are there to be tasted in the local food, which has touches of
Moorish inspiration with chilli and sweet fruit that no other place in Italy has. Robb is a serious historian and covers the corruption of Sicilian politics with as much gravitas as he does the history of the fork. The complicated saga of the corrupt and venal prime minister, Andreotti, for alleged mafia connections, is a bewildering saga that makes The Sopranos look like Home and Away. The descriptions of the markets are as true now as they were 100 years ago, the only difference being the price of sea bass, I suspect. I longed for some pictures in this book, following his descriptions of various statues or paintings, but that’s just a minor moan. The writing is sensual and high spirited and will make you long to go to the island of lemons, broken dreams, and bribery.
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There are 21 wards in Brighton and Hove, electing 54 councillors
Ward profile: Goldsmid
A23
Gold Card_PRINT 18DEC_Cover.pdf
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02/03/2015
12:55
Withdean North Portslade
Sitting councillors
Patcham Hangleton and Knoll
A27
Hollingdean and Stanmer
Lewes Road Moulsecoomb and Bevendean
Councillor Ruth Buckley (Green)
Hove Park South Portslade
Councillor Rob Jarrett (Green) Councillor Alex Phillips (Green)
C
Preston Park
St. Peter’s and North Laine
Westbourne
Central Hove
Woodingdean
Hanover and Elm Grove
Goldsmid
Wish
M
Brunswick and Adelaide
East Brighton Regency
Queen’s Park
Y
Declared candidates for three seats Linda Freedman (Conservative) – @lindi_lmf Danny Hoskins (Conservative) Lucy Emeile-Samy (Conservative) – @LucySamy1 Amanda Knight (Green) Andrew Lippett (Green) Matthew Moors (Green) Saiorse Horan (Labour) – @Saoirsejh Malcolm Prescott (Labour) – @malcprescott Jackie Quinn (Labour) – @jacquelquinn Manrico Oliveri (Liberal Democrats) Gloria Parks (UKIP)
Rottingdean Coastal
CM
MY
CY
Goldsmid
CMY
K
MOBILE CARD NOW AVA I LABLE AT PA RT I C I PAT I N G V E N U ES O N LY
2011 election results Poll watch What's wrong with Goldsmid? Two of the three Green councillors are not standing again; the third, Alex Phillips, is shuffling across the border to stand in neighbouring Regency. And none of the three Labour losers last time is standing. Or, to be more accurate, two big losers are standing - but in other wards: Melanie Davis, in Brunswick and Adelaide, and Nigel Jenner, in Hangleton and Knoll. Meanwhile, Gloria Parks - who stood in 2011 for the Liberal Democrats - has remained loyal - to the ward, at least. She has, however, made the interesting journey from the LibDems to UKIP. So what is so off-putting about Goldsmid? The simple fact is that it could be one of the tightest three-way marginals in the city. Even though the Green vote may not have imploded, it will be difficult for the Green Party candidates to fill the shoes of the three sitting councillors. The three Labour candidates are not particularly well-known, but they can hardly do as badly as their predecessors in 2011. It's a big task for the Conservatives to make up ground on their rivals, but Linda Freedman - chair of Brighton and Hove Conservatives - will be a formidable candidate and cannot be ruled out. All things considered, a couple of Labour gains looks the most likely outcome.
Candidates
Votes
(%)
Ruth Buckley (Green - elected)
2,264
(14%)
Alexandra Louise Rosenfield Phillips (Green - elected)
2,204
(14%)
Rob Jarrett (Green - elected)
1,898
(12%)
Melanie Davis (Labour)
1,755
(11%)
Nigel Jenner (Labour)
1,516
(10%)
Adam James Love (Conservative)
1,428
(9%)
Rob Buckwell (Conservative)
1,420
(9%)
Debra Kirstie Livingstone-Wade (Conservative)
1,333
(8%)
Lis Telcs (Labour)
1,271
(8%)
Andrew Mailing (Liberal Democrats)
312
(2%)
Gloria Parks (Liberal Democrats)
281
(2%)
John Aloy (Liberal Democrats)
269
(2%)
Factfile Households: 7,955 Density (people per hectare): 120 ■■ Women: 50% (7,831) ■■ Men: 50% (7,858) ■■ Average age: 39 ■■ Higher managerial occupations: 15.7% (2,119) ■■ Unemployed: 5.4% (520) ■■ White: 88.2% (13,839) ■■ Black/African/Caribbean/Black British: 1.4% (221) ■■ Asian/Asian British: 4.1% (649) ■■ Number who cannot speak English well: 198 ■■ Dependent children in household (% of all households): 19.6% ■■ Christians: 38% ■■ No religion: 44% ■■ Married: 27% ■■ Divorced: 10% ■■ ■■
Number of same-sex civil partnerships: 148 ■■ Living as co-habiting couple: 19.8% ■■ One family - all aged 65 and over: 2.8% ■■ Lone parent - with dependent children: 5% ■■ No adults in employment, with dependent children: 2.2% ■■ Long-term unemployed: 1.5% ■■ Activities limited a lot by poor health: 7.9% ■■ No cars or vans in household: 40% ■■ No qualifications: 11.9% ■■ Full-time students aged 18 and over: 5.7% ■■ One person in household with long-term health problem/disability - with dependent children: 2.5%
Over 40 exclusive o ffers SHOP EAT DRINK PLAY STAY
■■
Source: Census 2011
Housing
Revenge evictions Campaigners from Brighton and Hove’s Home Sweet Home campaign celebrated after “revenge evictions” became unlawful. Campaigners helped put revenge evictions under scrutiny last year when the Tenancy Reform Bill was defeated in the Commons. Candice Armah, Home Sweet Home campaigner and President of Brighton Students Union, said: “This is a huge win for private renters, not just within the university community, but for everyone who rents in Brighton and Hove and the rest of the country.”
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Chapter and verse on Graham Chainey's guide to Brighton and Hove's bookshops Dear Graham Chainey,
■I
understand that Noel Brookes’s florid complexion was due to a skin condition. ■ Ken Lane subsequently ran a second-hand bookshop at 52 Blatchington Road, Hove, at the junction with Belfast Street, in the 1960s and 1970s.
Thank you for your excellent article on Brighton’s secondhand bookshops. Just some additional information, of which you may already be aware, but due to space limitations were unable to include: Remembering some of our characterful old bookshops ■ About 18 months ago, John Loska mentioned to me that George Holleyman was still alive aged 94. ■ He also told me that his father said that Noel Brookes spoke perfect Polish. 18 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, March 27 2015
Graham Chainey
Brighton was once famous for its secondhand bookshops. But, as Graham Greene lamented back in 1973, “far more shops disappear than new ones open. Even Brighton is not what it was.” Four attritious decades on, few remain. Not just bookshops, but antique shops, junk shops, and all the other interesting little shops, which once gave the city its special bohemian character, have vanished - replaced by too many slick boutiques, bars, and eateries. The best of the survivors and long may it endure - has to be Colin Page’s shop at 36 Duke Street, with pricey antiquarian items on the ground floor and cheaper general stock in the basement, accessed down a Carrollesque corkscrew stair. Begun in the 1970s, it was taken over in 1999 by the present owner, John Loska. He is one of the few booksellers left who does not trade on the internet; 80%
of sales are apparently to trade. Other survivors include Brighton Books, in Kensington Gardens, and the Studio Bookshop in Kemptown. Among long-gone shops were those of William J Smith at 41-3 North Street (“150,000 volumes in stock” in 1892), George Sexton at 53 Ship Street (lasting from 1885 to 1979), and KJ Bredon at 22 Prince Albert Street. There used to be several in Trafalgar Street. Combridges in Church Road, Hove, lasted from Edwardian times to the 1960s. Judy Middleton, who used to work there, recalls the antiquarian department at No 70, managed by Ken Lane, as lined with shelves stretching so high that an immense ladder had to be employed. There was an ancient telephone, worked by turning a handle, to communicate with the other branch. Purchases were wrapped in mauve paper with string. In 1955, their extensive Sussex section contained 400 volumes, including 23 volumes of the Sussex County Magazine (very desirable now), and a 95-volume run of the Sussex Archaeological
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Collections priced at £20. Still much missed is Holleyman and Treacher, at 21A-22 Duke Street. Founded after the war, it once boasted the largest antiquarian stock in the southeast, acquiring the library of Leonard and Virginia Woolf, and supplying rare books for major libraries such as the Bodleian. After George Holleyman retired, it was latterly run by David Plumtree and Michael Kadwell (who oversaw the excellent firstfloor music section). Maggie Smith and Denis Healey were among customers. A savage rent increase forced its demise in 1998. I also still mourn Tall Storeys in St James’s Street, which closed in 2001; Brimstones opposite, which moved to Kingston and online trading; and, further down, Borus Snorus. Among alternative bookshops, the psychedelically decorated Unicorn, at 50 Gloucester Road, founded in 1967 by an American, Bill Butler, and described by Greene as “one of the most interesting bookshops in Great
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Britain”, was busted in 1968 for selling obscene material, but survived until 1974. Another American, Richard Cupidi, in 1973 founded the Public House Bookshop in Little Preston Street, which stocked socialist, Zen, jazz, Native Indian and anarchist material, and was visited by Allen Ginsberg. It closed in 1999. Most memorable was the chaotic emporium of Noel Brookes at 123 Queen’s Road. A former pupil of FR Leavis at Cambridge, Brookes originally had premises opposite, and I recall that by the time you reached the top floor you literally had to tread over books. His new premises began more neatly, but soon the books were again towering perilously overhead and congesting the windows. Florid and stoical, Brookes never sat or indulged in heating (wearing hat, coat, and gloves in winter), and never gave discounts. He could magically pluck any requested item from the labyrinthine disorder. Financial problems led to the collapse of his business in 2002; he died soon afterwards.
The former Unicorn bookshop in Gloucester Road, Brighton
■ In
the mid-1990s, I used to frequent a small bookshop near the bottom of Little Preston Street called Dinnages. This specialised in bus publications and books, together with second-hand photos. It was very useful for the historic backgrounds shown in the photos of local buses. I always enjoy reading your articles which are full of local interest and well-written
SOUTHCOAST
WINDOWS
AND HOME IMPROVEMENTS LET THE
LIGHT SHINE THROUGH
Yours sincerely, Michael J. Davies Noel Brookes, owner of bookshop in Queen's Road, Brighton (August 1999)
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BUY ONE, GET* The Brighton and Hove Food and Drink Awards launch at the Hotel du Vin (Photograph: Julia Claxton Photography)
Entries open for annual food and drink awards The Brighton and Hove Food and Drink Awards are open for nominations. Some of last year’s winners were among the guests at a launch event held at the Hotel du Vin in Brighton on Wednesday evening. The categories include best restaurant, best café, best takeaway, best pub, best burger and best Sunday lunch. New categories this year include best breakfast, best venue to do business and best place to sleep. The awards are organised by the Brighton and Hove Food and Drink Festival. Managing
director Nick Mosley said: “The awards have gone from strength to strength over the past couple of years, with thousands of members of the public nominating their favourites. “Our city has an amazing food and drink offering that punches well above its weight. The awards are a way of acknowledging, showcasing and celebrating the best of the best.” The Brighton and Hove Food and Drink Awards Easter Weekender is also under way. It runs until Monday, including the free entry Big Sussex Market in New Road,
Brighton, from 10am today and tomorrow. The Children’s Easter Egg Hunt, in aid of the Rockinghorse charity, is due to take place in the Pavilion Gardens from 11am to 2pm on Easter Monday. Public nominations for the food awards are now open at www.brightonfoodfestival.com/ foodawards2015 and run until Monday, August 31. The top three in each category will be shortlisted and a panel of judges will decide after a secret shopping exercise. The winners will be announced in October.
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12 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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A Week in the City Who says the British aren’t adventurous in the bedroom?
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Housing
Triple success Apprentices at City College Brighton and Hove celebrated a trio of wins in the Barclays Sussex Apprentice of the Year category. Bruce Daughtree, health and social care apprentice, won the Sussex Apprentice of the Year for his voluntary work at the Grace Eyre Foundation. The runner-up was Joanne Williams, a business administration apprentice. Renzzo De Souza, a Carpentry student, was also named as winner of the City & Guilds Sussex Learner of the Year award.
Parks
Development
Sport
Restoration award
Waterfront project
Jockey injured
Restoration work on The Level has won a national award. Councillor Brian Fitch, Brighton and Hove’s mayor, presented an award to landscaping company Gavin Jones Ltd on behalf of the British Association of Landscape Industries. Improvements to the park included a new playground, fountains, new planting, a sensory garden, new lighting and seating. The park’s historic pavilions were also restored and transformed as part of the project.
Proposals for a new conferencing and events venue have made progress. The Brighton Waterfront project involves proposals for a new conferencing venue on the Black Rock site and an expansion of Churchill Square shopping centre. The council is working on the project with partners Standard Life Investments and Venue Ventures. It is estimated that the project would generate 2,000 new jobs and around £150 million per annum of net additional expenditure in the city.
Jamie Moore, the Brighton jockey, has broken his leg and will miss the Grand National. The incident occurred at Towcester, meaning he will miss the iconic race on April 11. He is the sixth leading rider to be ruled out of the 2015 National, joining the injured Mark Walsh, Davy Russell, Barry Geraghty and Jason Maguire, plus suspended Bryan Cooper. Jamie is the regular jockey on the 2014 Queen Mother Champion Chase winner Sire De Grugy.
Fine
Hospice
Crime
Scaffolding permission
Midnight walk
Billboard defaced
The boss of a scaffolding firm has been fined after erecting scaffolding without permission. Ben Newton, owner of BN Scaffolding, received fines and costs totalling £2,450 after pleading guilty to placing two scaffolds on the public highway without permission. Magistrates heard that last year Highway Enforcement Officers noticed unlicensed scaffolding at 110 Gloucester Road and 9 Melville Road. The scaffolding has now been removed.
The Martlets Hospice Midnight Walk is returning to Brighton and Hove and they have added a new 20-mile route. The Midnight Walk has raised over a million pounds to enable nurses to care for local people living with life limiting illness. Antonia Shepherd, Martlets Midnight Walk organiser, said: “We receive less than a third of our funding via the NHS so rely on the generosity of people like you, taking part in our events, to provide our services.”
Sussex Police arrested a 47-yearold Hove man on suspicion of defacing a poster featuring Graham Cox, the Conservative parliamentary candidate for Hove. Nick Morgan, of Westbourne Grove, is accused of scrawling “lies, lies,lies” on the billboard by the King Alfred Leisure Centre in the early hours of Tuesday. Mr Cox, who spent 30 years in the police, said: “I am quite happy for the person to receive a warning as I do not want to see police/court time taken up unnecessarily.”
Charity
Litter picking Staff from a Brighton law firm took part in a litter pick on the city's beach and raised cash for charity at the same time. Mayo Wynne Baxter, the awardwinning law firm with offices across Sussex, had its staff wear emerald green t-shirts in support of the Macmillan Cancer Support charity. The team collected £200 from the public. The firm’s PR manager Liza Laws chairs the Macmillan Mascots. She said: “We are really lucky to be able to use a working day to volunteer.”
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Insertion: 20.03.2015 Friday, April 3 2015
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Brighton & Hove Independent 13
Compiled by Andrew Will
Buses
Paddle Bus Brighton & Hove Bus and Coach Company and Paddle Round the Pier Beach Festival have launched their eye-catching new bus onto the streets of the city. The Paddle Bus is the result of a partnership between the award-winning event and the local bus company. Paddle Round the Pier gives disabled children and their carers access to water sport activities. David Samuel, founding director, said: “This really feels like Paddle has finally come of age.”
Events
Schools
Employment
MC’s versus poets
History exams
Chancellor visit
Young people in Brighton and Hove will have the chance to learn the skills of poetry and rap from professional coaches in April and May. BITE! is a series of free workshops helping young people in schools and youth clubs to express themselves. Michael Parker, the founder of BITE!, said: “we poets and rappers, the best of enemies, bring out the best in each other and in the young people that we work with across the city.”
Kevin Newman, a GCSE assistant examiner for all 3 exam boards, writer of KS3 GCSE history textbooks and former Head of History, is running workshops to help students prepare for their GCSE History exams. Revision sessions will look at all styles of questions, what an examiner is looking for, what to do if you’re stuck and how to get top marks. The first session will take place at the Royal Albion Hotel, Brighton on Saturday, April 25.
The Chancellor, George Osborne, visited a pizza restaurant in Hove. Mr Osborne worked the dough at the Church Road Pizza Express as he paid tribute to the company’s promise to take on an apprentice in every branch. The apprenticeship plan is expected to create 2,500 jobs over five years. Mr Osborne, who also visited the constituency last August, told staff that he had been eating at Pizza Express since he was a child.
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The politics of the possible Geoffrey Bowden @TheSussexSquare
I didn’t expect to be elected in 2011, let alone end up being part of a minority administration. It was a leap into the unknown and one of the first lessons learned was that to achieve anything you have to work with politicians from across the political divide, along with diverse community and special interest groups. For many, whose political education is the weekly knock about spectacle of Prime Minister’s Questions, they would be forgiven for thinking that life in the council chamber is all point scoring and fault finding to seek petty advantage over your opponents. Projects like the Circus Street regeneration may grab the headlines but much good work takes place quietly behind the scenes OK, it can be like that sometimes, especially in the theatre of full moving and effective speeches and serve its residents to the very done in a local authority where no party has overall control. council meetings. However, the from politicians from all sides of best of our abilities. There are countless examples of We may differ on the priorities, reality is a million miles from that the chamber. You quickly discover that, and the means to achieve them, politicians working together for for most of the time. A good example occurred at the whatever colour rosette worn by but I am glad to report from four the common good. For example, last full council during the debate a councillor on the stomp, there years at the sharp end, the ethos while I am proud to have moved initiated by the notice of motion is a common denominator that of public service is alive and well. a number of major developments highlighting the horrors of female binds them together – the desire It’s a surprisingly unifying force towards the launch pad, none of genital mutilation. It prompted to change our city for the better when it comes to getting things that would have been possible
without the input and often wise counsel of men and women from other parties, as well as the hard work of the often unsung council officers, who keep the wheels of local government turning. Setting aside the headlinegrabbing developments with which I have been involved, such as the King Alfred, Preston Barracks, Circus Street and the Waterfront project, there are many other instances of politicians working together for the greater good of the city. Some, below the radar, such as the Brighton Fund, make payments of around £3,000 a month. It is presided over by the Mayor with representatives from all parties considering countless hardship cases and agreeing small awards that make a huge difference. When the noise of the election fades, the values that drive men and women to want to step up to the plate and work for their local communities will be what dominates proceedings, as it has for the past four years. Councillor Geoffrey Bowden chairs the council's economic development, culture and sport committee
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16 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015 Venue
Room at the inn JD Wetherspoon, the pub chain, plans to create a fourth floor rooftop bar and a hotel in its Bright Helm branch in West Street. Owners of the pub applied for planning permission to carry forward proposals that would see the establishment transformed into the first Wetherspoons hotel in Sussex. Flats above would be turned into guest bedrooms and a rooftop bar would also feature including a smoking area and a new food hoist which would allow for food to be lifted up to the rooftop terrace. The plans represent the second major development scheme in Brighton and Hove by the company who recently uncovered plans to open a DESIGN AND ACCESS STATEMENT pub under the Abacus student halls in London Road.
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Pubs and clubs should show consideration for neighbours Graham Chainey
Night club owners and music promoters have been portraying themselves as victims. A petition recently presented to Brighton and Hove City Council protested at the vulnerability of premises to closure under existing rules regarding noise. This follows the demise of a few long-established live music venues. In this newspaper, Peter Marks, chief executive of night club operator Luminar, last week rightly called for a balance between the needs of venues and their neighbours. Where I disagree with him is in the notion the balance has somehow swung unfairly in the residents’ favour. I declare an interest, since I happen to live in proximity to five late-night venues. Unlike the sort of residents he bemoans, who move in next to an existing venue and then complain, I have actually been here longer than any of them. During more than 20 years there has usually been a noise issue
with one or another. It is a hydraheaded problem: no sooner do you get one source of noise abated than another starts up. Changes in ownership or management often mean agreements are forgotten. For residents, things have not improved. There used to be a cutoff time, when you knew noise would cease, which meant you could put up with it until then. Now, instead of closing at midnight or 2am, many premises are open all night or until an early hour. This means residents are more prone to inconvenience and more likely to complain. Additionally, noisy gangs of smokers now congregate outside premises, oblivious to the fact they are just yards from people’s homes. The campaigners give the impression it is easy to complain about a venue and even to get it closed down. Nothing could be less true. The council’s noise patrol operates only on two nights per week. At any other time, residents have no means of immediate redress. One can only contact the council next day with a retrospective complaint. Moreover, the onus is on the
resident. In some countries, such unamplified. The biggest problem as Spain, I understand the onus is is the current fetishisation on the venue always to keep noise of volume. It is insane when below a stipulated level, and they residents, with closed doublecan be closed down instantly by glazing, have to employ earplugs, an inspector should they exceed or when the sound of a cabaret that level. Here, a club can make or karaoke artiste from within a as much noise as they like until venue is louder than the radio you are trying to listen to. A friend who someone complains. A complaint necessitates the used to perform at the Freebutt, keeping of noise diaries and one of the now closed venues, told the installation of monitoring me musicians there used earplugs equipment in one’s home – how themselves. Up to one in four young people many times I have had to go through these procedures – as well nowadays has hearing loss, from as the witnessing of the problem by exposure to excessive noise in pubs, officials. This may mean strangers clubs and concerts. It is no wonder visiting you in the middle of the that, as they emerge deafened, night. A lot of people do not bother. they yell and bellow through the As a rule of thumb, I would say sleeping streets. Peter Marks and that for every complainant there his industrial colleagues could will be several others who feel the solve a lot of problems simply by same way but do not wish to get turning down the decibel levels. involved. I often see van We need to balance needs of loads of equipment pubs, clubs and neighbours going into venues, yet many are actually small, intimate, lowceilinged places where a competent band or singer should be able to project their sound Peter Marks' article in last week's newspaper 16 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, March 27 2015
Peter Marks @petermarks100
I was recently asked to speak at a Westminster Social Policy Forum on the future of the UK high street. As traditional retail comes under pressure from the internet the late night economy is at last being seen as part of the solution to empty premises. As the UK’s largest nightclub operator, we’re passionate about what we do and believe that, when late night operators get it right, they add real value to the economy and help to create vibrant town centres. The late night economy comprises of anywhere that trades after 6pm. It is a large and often overlooked piece of our economy, accounting for 6 per cent of GDP, 8 per cent of UK businesses, 10 per cent of all jobs and 27 per cent of town and city centre turnover. The sector also creates a huge amount of employment,
especially for the under 24s, which has been a primary concern for the UK since 2008. In the last year alone, the night time economy has created 37,000 new jobs and generated £66 billion of sales, delivering significant tax returns for the government. Over the last three years Luminar has invested over £20 million in transforming our night club estate, including £1 million at PRYZM Brighton. We have some fantastic venues in great locations and we want to see a healthy economy in our town centres. A new or invested night club can often boost a town or city centre far better than any other single café, bar or pub because we have the capacity, the marketing budgets and the expertise to bring people back into town. When a nightclub ceases trading the local night time economy usually follows a downward spiral. No one picks up the trade, the town gets quieter. Things are getting better and most of us remain cautiously
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optimistic. The latest CGA Peach report also shows that confidence is the highest for years. But just when things are improving, we have another potential issue to deal with – “permitted development rights” (PDR) introduced in May 2013. Put simply, a vacant office block, often having laid empty for several years, can now be developed into residential premises. On the face of it, this sounds like a great idea that we would all support. It helps the housing issue, revitalises town centres, and makes use of unwanted office space. So what’s the problem? Because it doesn’t matter if you have had 30 years in a site as a bar, restaurant, club or live music venue, a new resident has the ability to complain about the noise from the venue or other public nuisance and restrict hours or even revoke your licence. Unfortunately, a number of bars in Brighton and Hove, including the Blind Tiger and Ouch Bar have already closed
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after noise complaints. The answer of course is not to stop the transference of use from old offices to accommodation. It can be a good idea. But it needs more thought. We either need town centre zones, without such accommodation, that allow late night economies to flourish, or an understanding that should someone move into a building that was developed into living space after an existing Luminar has invested £1 million in PRYZM in Brighton licensed premises, the We believe that we can all residents have limited rights to object to a licence that continue to be part of the success could impact employment and story for rejuvenating areas like Brighton and Hove but this investment. The good news is that Brighton will only happen if we all work is thriving and we, like other together to ensure harmony late night operators, are keen to reigns between the needs of the continue to work with licensing economy and the residents in our and planning teams to maintain city centres. a healthy balance between the needs of residents and that of the Peter Marks is the chief executive of Luminar late night economy.
Photo: Julia Claxton / Jeremy’s Restaurant
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EASTER WEEKENDER 1-6 April Wednesday 1 April 7pm: Chateau Musar Wine Dinner, Drakes of Brighton, £85 Thursday 2 April 7pm: Make Your Case Extreme!, Hotel du Vin, £35 Good Friday 3 - Saturday 4 April 10am-5pm: Big Sussex Market, New Road, FREE Easter Monday 6 April 11am-2pm: Rockinghorse Children’s Easter Egg Hunt, Royal Pavilion Gardens, £3 donation Easter Monday 6 April 3pm-6pm: BYO, Ten Green Bottles, £12 Easter Monday 6 April 2pm-5pm: Brighton Food Trail, £12
SPRING HARVEST 20-31 May Wednesday 20 May 7pm: Wines of New Zealand Dinner, Drakes of Brighton, £85 Thursday 21 May: International Chef Exchange: Vancouver & Brighton, Terre à Terre, £55 Friday 22 May 7pm: Cantina’s Taste of Guernsey Supperclub, £40 Saturday 23 May 9.30am-5pm: Sussex Wine Bus Tour, £75 Saturday 23 May 7.30pm: The Set Pop Up, SEALIFE aquarium, £55 Sunday 24 May 2-5pm: Food Lab, 64 Degrees, £70 Bank holiday Monday 25 May 2-5pm: Kemp Town Food Trail, £10 Tuesday 26 May 7pm: Three Chefs go to the Movies, Curry Leaf Café, £42 Wednesday 27 May 7.30pm: Cheese & Beer Supper, Jeremy’s Restaurant, £55 Thursday 28 May 7pm: Make Your Case, Hove Lawns, £35 Friday 29 May 10am - 4pm: Children’s Food Festival Big Day Out, Hove Lawns, FREE Friday 29 May 7pm: English Wine & Food Matching Night, Hove Lawns, £50 Friday 29 & Saturday 30 May 6-9.30pm: Brighton Beer & Cider Festival, Hove Lawns, £7 Saturday 30 & Sunday 31 May 10am - 6pm: Sussex & The World Market, Live Food Show, Masterclasses, Waste Not Want Not and Children’s Food Festival, Hove Lawns, FREE Saturday 30 May noon & 2.30pm: Brighton Wine Festival, Hove Lawns, £20 Sunday 31 May from noon: Sensory Dining Experience, The Set Restaurant, £22
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18 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
Give a dog a home ¨ campaign
@BrightonIndy
www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk
Brighton & Hove Independent has teamed up with New Priory Vets, Vets 2 Home, and Dogs Trust Shoreham to help find homes for some of Brighton and Hove’s unwanted dogs. This week is Dillon.
Factfile: “Dillon is an eight-month-old male Lurcher. “He was first adopted at threemonths-old and has recently been returned through no fault of his own. “He is very friendly with people and loves saying hello to everyone he comes across. “He also adores the company of other dogs, he is confident and playful with them. “Dillon can live with children over five-years-old, has lived with cats in the past but this would need to be retested.”
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Can you offer Dillon a home? If you can, please call 01273 452576 Advertising feature
Senior pet moments Susan Gregersen Hospice & Emergency Vet April is National Pet Month and is all about celebrating just how much joy our companion animals bring to us - and especially our seniors truly enjoy the special friendship these blessed creatures bring every day. While celebrating this unique bond, something weighs heavy on my heart. Often as an endof-life specialist vet, I have been called out to gently put a pet to sleep while living with its elderly owner in sheltered or assisted-living accommodation. This is very sad on its own, but often the saddest part is seeing a pet living unnecessarily long – even sometimes far beyond what is reasonable - and hearing them say that final goodbye.
For the owner, this could mean saying goodbye to ever having company again. This double unnecessary suffering (for pet and owner) is simply caused by moronic housing regulations that only the pet that moved into the sheltered accommodation will be allowed, and a new companion is not accepted! This is the saddest, most inhumane piece of regulation I have ever come across as a vet and it causes so much unnecessary suffering. This inhumane sheltered housing regulations must be abolished. For Pete´s - and Pets’ - sake! Susan Gregersen is an Emergency and Hospice Vet and also the founder of Vets2Home Veterinary Service – helping families say goodbye at home 24/7
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Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 21
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Business Architects invited to design homes for challenging plots A contest is being held for architects to come up with innovative ways to design homes on some of the tightest plots of land in Brighton. The organisers hope to attract local architects as well as small and medium-sized practices from a wider area. The parcels of land include garages and car parking spaces next to existing council houses and flats – as well as a small council-owned commercial car park. The four sites are in Hinton Close, Hollingdean, Rotherfield Crescent, Hollingbury, Natal Road, Brighton, and Frederick Street, in the North Laine. The competition is being run jointly by Brighton and Hove City Council and the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). The homes are being planned as part of the council’s New Homes for Neighbourhoods Programme. The judges will not know the identity of the architects at the initial stage of the competition. Five concept designs for each
site will then be shortlisted for further development at the second phase. The winners of the second phase will be paid – and invited to develop their design ideas further. Nick Hibberd, the council’s head of city regeneration, said: “These are challenging sites to develop due to their size, context or restrictive access. However, they are typical of many of the sites available for new homes in the city. “Brighton and Hove City Council is keen to support the
growth and development of smaller architectural practices. We hope that the competition will inspire them to produce some innovative designs for these sites in ways which will be engaging and entirely relevant to residents living in the area.” Sam Smith, the council’s estate regeneration programme manager, said: “We are delighted to be working alongside the RIBA, who will bring their extensive knowledge and experience of delivering successful competitions of this type. “It is a very exciting project which I hope will deliver creative solutions for some of our smaller development sites. If the competition pilot is successful, we will be using it to bring forward other smaller sites from the New Homes for Neighbourhoods programme.” The closing date to send the pre-qualification questionnaire to the council is Friday, April 24 at 5pm.
Advertising feature
An advocate of using art to benefit wellbeing, the Montefiore Hospital - newly opened in 2012 - was the first hospital to incorporate Brian Eno’s atmospheric and tranquil light and music installations in its building design. A full service hospital offering a comprehensive range of diagnostic and surgical services, the Montefiore was designed around its patients, committed to the creation of a comfortable, calming environment from the moment patients walk through the doors. Kathryn Cooke, Business Development Manager at the Montefiore Hospital said: “We are delighted to be working in partnership with the Brighton Dome & Brighton Festival. Being a champion for such initiatives creates sustained opportunity for art to be made more accessible.” Andrew Comben, Chief Executive of Brighton Dome & Brighton Festival said: “We are thrilled to partner with the Montefiore Hospital. Art and culture has a crucial
Pension changes will affect about 4,000 local businesses, according to a Brighton payroll firm. Quartz Payroll and Auto Enrolment flagged up the changes as it starts an autoenrolment service today to help clients manage the new demands on them. Quartz described its service as a fully managed, easy to use, low-cost solution to meet the auto-enrolment pension demands of UK businesses. The government’s incoming workplace auto-enrolment pensions scheme takes effect from Monday 1 June, the first of several staging dates for companies with fewer than 30 staff to comply. At the same time Quartz said that its turnover had increased by 50 per cent in the past year. Kirsty Wild, marketing manager for Quartz, said: “It has been such an exciting time for our company, with huge growth for the company in terms of revenue and staffing. Most excitingly, however,
B&H Independent-2003:Layout 1
our new service launches this month and will help take the headache out of auto-enrolment pension demands for Brighton – and national – SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises).” Quartz was created in 2003 as a payroll solution for SME businesses. It now provides payroll services for more than 500 employers, from pubs and restaurants to leisure outlets and service-based companies. It estimated that 4,000 businesses in Brighton and Hove would be affected by the government’s new pensions legislation. It based the figure on data from the Brighton and Hove Chamber of Commerce and Brighton and Hove City Council. The Chamber believes that there are about 13,400 businesses in the city and council research last year indicated that 31 per cent employ between 10 and 49 staff. To find out more, visit www.quartzpayroll.co.uk 3/12/15
10:08 AM
Page 1
WHAT’S ON? at a glance!
New local partnership connects art and health Brighton Dome & Brighton Festival are delighted to announce a new partnership with the Montefiore Hospital. The two organisations are coming together to support community wellbeing via artfocused events and projects. Brighton Dome works yearround to bring a diverse range of art to the people of Brighton and beyond. The Creative Learning team develop innovative projects, taking art to people who might not otherwise be engaged in the arts and running a rolling programme of workshops, performances and courses. The new partnership with Spire Healthcare’s Montefiore Hospital, will allow this community work to develop and grow.
Pension changes will affect 4,000 businesses says payroll company
LORD OF THE DANCE Thur 2-Sun 5 Apr MCBUSTED Tue 7 Apr MICHAEL BALL Tue 14 Apr THE BEACH BOYS Wed 3 June THE MOODY BLUES Mon 8 June MICHAEL MCINTYRE Thur 27-Sun 30 Aug CROSBY, STILLS AND NASH Sat 19 Sept JOE BONAMASSA Sat 31 Oct DIVERSITY Sun 1 Nov PAUL WELLER Fri 20 Nov
role to play in people’s lives beyond entertainment – it can be both stunning and life-changing in one moment and then something that can help people maintain a connection to the world and their own equilibrium. There is also a growing body of evidence to support the fact that participation in the arts can contribute to community cohesion, reduce social exclusion and make communities feel stronger. The value of art in society really cannot be underestimated.”
BILL BAILEY Thur 3 Dec JOOLS HOLLAND Sat 12 Dec THE BOOTLEG BEATLES Fri 18 Dec DYNAMO Wed 27-Sun 31 Jan 2016
THUR 2 - SUN 5 APR
www.brightondome.org www.spiremontefiore.com
box office 0844 847 1515 www.brightoncentre.co.uk
22 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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One more round in
The Rose Hill Tavern campaigners win another reprieve Campaigners said that they were delighted after plans to convert an historic Brighton pub into flats were turned down by councillors. The Save the Rose Hill Tavern Action Group also urged the property’s owner to start having a productive conversation about its future. It was the second victory within a week for the group, which is trying to prevent the Rose Hill Tavern, in Rose Hill Terrace, Brighton, from being turned into two flats. It follows a judge’s ruling that the pub should be classed as “an asset of community value”. Joanne Harris, from the building’s owner Evenden Estates, said that the company would consider whether to appeal after Brighton and Hove City Council’s Planning Committee refused planning permission. An official report recommended granting permission.
Richard James wants to reopen the Rose Hill Tavern. As an asset of community value, campaigners have the right to bid - though not necessarily to buy - should the pub go back up for sale
She said that Brighton and Hove had a shortage of housing but no shortage of pubs. And she added that she was willing to talk to the campaigners. Richard James, from the Save the Rose Hill Tavern Action Group, said: “We’re delighted – over the moon.”
A colleague, Dave Boyle, said: “We always knew that we needed to stop the planning application to bring into play a chance for discussion. Evenden knows where we are.” He said that the company had twice appealed against the pub’s designation as an asset of
We need more homes – not pubs The need for housing outweighed the need for a pub, the Planning Committee was told. Simon Bareham, of Lewis and Co, spoke for Evenden Estates, and said: “Where a council cannot demonstrate a five year supply of housing land, the need to satisfy housing demand carries more weight than preserving an asset of community value. “Many of the objectors do not even reside in Brighton. Of the 23
residents that have objected, 11 are outside of Brighton, and 7 are from Brighton but not close to the pub. Five are within walking distance of the site, but benefit from having other pubs nearer than the site. Members will also note the letter of support from a Rose Hill Terrace resident - stating that the previous use caused nuisance. “Evidence submitted to the council shows that the pub has been in steady decline, with beer
We support the communities we serve For more information visit: southernwater.co.uk
sales down 80% compared to 2004. In 2013 the pub was charged only £10 a week rent by the owners, with beer sold to the pub at free trade prices rather than tied pub prices. “Even with such significant assistance, the pub still lost £7,500. Given that the pub showed a significant loss when paying only £10 a week rent, it is inconceivable that a pub could make money if it had to service a mortgage.”
community value and twice lost. The most recent verdict came last week at a tribunal when Judge Peter Lane ruled in favour of the campaigners. And with the Planning Committee decision Mr Boyle said: “Three times they’ve tried to go against the community. Three times they’ve lost. “We’d rather spend our time working out how to get the community to put together a viable plan for a reboot of the pub and to raise the money we will need to make that happen. “And the sooner Evenden start talking to us, the sooner we can move into a productive phase.” One councillor, Ian Davey, wondered whether the owner had been aware of the pub’s listing as an asset of community value when taking
it over from Enterprise Inns. Afterwards Evenden said that it had asked the council and been told, mistakenly, that no application had been received. Housing Committee chairman Councillor Bill Randall, normally a keen backer of new homes, said: “I’m reluctant to see this pub go. There are at least ten pubs within walking distance of this one but you need a menu of pubs because people have different drinking tastes.” Planning Committee chairman Councillor Phélim Mac Cafferty praised the handsome façade, historic interior and stained glass windows. He said: “It’s a unique place. It’s a place of great beauty and a wonderful community asset. “Pubs aren’t just for drinking in. They remind us that communities have hearts.”
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Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 23
@BrightonIndy
last chance saloon
From left, the Downsman in Hangleton recently closed, plans to turn the Toby Inn in Woodingdean into a hostel have been rejected and the Atlas in Hove is due to open as a Co-op store in the near future
Closures blamed on big pub owners, changing drinking habits and tax We need to be selective and choose which battles to fight. I don’t think we can just argue to retain every pub every time there’s a campaign otherwise we lose credibility” Councillor Geoff Wells criticised Enterprise and the big pub companies. He said that they charged extortionate rents and rip-off tied prices. And he lamented the demise of the local, saying that we had recently lost the London Unity and the Albion. But he pointed to the 450 students moving into the old London Road Co-op – part of the area’s revival – as offering hope should the Rose Hill Tavern reopen as a pub.
A number of councillors cited the Bevy, the first communityled pub in Brighton and Hove. But they were mindful of the efforts in Bevendean and beyond to realise the dream of reopening the venue. And it faced almost no competition, they acknowledged. Councillor Graham Cox said that it was often presented as doom and gloom but pubs were opening as well as closing every week. He cited a micro pub in Hove, which is about to open by Hove Station.
He said that the Rose Hill Tavern was not equivalent to the Bevy and he added: “I do think we need to be selective and choose which battles to fight. I don’t think we can just argue to retain every one every time there’s a campaign otherwise we lose credibility. “We have to be careful with public money. I rather suspect that if we do turn this down today against the officers’ recommendation, it will be overturned on appeal, costing us
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money. We do need more homes and these are two more homes that will be provided, not being built on green fields.” As well as the London Unity and the Albion, two other pubs near the Rose Hill Tavern have closed in the past few years – the Cobbler’s Thumb, which has been demolished, and the Northern. Other recent pub closures include the Downsman in Hangleton, where the owner was also critical of the prices charged by Enterprise, and the Atlas, formerly the Stadium, in Hove, soon to be a Co-op. Pressure Point, formerly the Richmond, in Brighton, has become a hostel. While in Woodingdean, plans to turn the old Toby Inn into a hostel were turned down.
3682c_09.14
The Rose Hill Tavern is one of a growing number of pubs to have closed as drinking habits have changed with more eating out and tax rules giving supermarkets a price advantage. Tied pubs, in particular, seem to have torrid time and the prices that they are charged for rents as well as beers and spirits have been criticised many times in Parliament. The big pub companies, such as Enterprise Inns, which used to own the Rose Hill Tavern, borrowed too heavily against their property portfolio. Hence, say critics, the reason for charging tied tenants such high prices. At the Planning Committee meeting – the first to be held at Portslade Town Hall while Hove Town Hall is revamped –
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26 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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Entertainment
Proudly supporting August 1 - 2 2015 www.brighton-pride.org
This week's must-see event Lord of the Dance The Brighton Centre April 2 - 5 Michael Flatley’s Lord Of The Dance: Dangerous Games – a spectacular new staging of the traditional master piece – comes to The Brighton Centre this week.
With all the visceral precision and thrills of the original, Lord Of The Dance: Dangerous Games features new staging, new costumes and choreography. With 40 of the world’s most outstanding young performers directed by Michael Flatley,
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Jimmy Carr Brighton Dome Sunday, August 30 Following his sell-out performance at Brighton Dome, Jimmy Carr announces an additional date in August for his Funny Business tour. For tickets, call: 01273 709709, or visit: www.brightondome.org
Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 27
@BrightonIndy
What’s On Guide Sugar Kicks
Kemptown Carnival
@Rialto_Brighton Sugar Kicks delight in bringing you performances inspired by some of the most iconic films ever made. Enjoy a night of hedonistic, awe inspiring, fun and sexy performances. 10pm, £15 - £25 Rialto Theatre 11 Dyke Road, BN1 3FE
@Concorde_2 Bring out your finest floral getup this fundraising party for next year’s Kemp Town Carnival. 11pm – 4am, £8 Concorde 2 Madeira Drive, BN2 1EN
Brighton Festival Chorus
Spamalot @TheatreRoyalBTN Monty Python’s Spamalot bring the West End production to theatres across the land as Joe Pasquale reprises his much loved role of King Arthur alongside Bonnie Langford and many others. 7:45pm, £13.40 - £46.40 Theatre Royal Brighton New Rd, BN1 1SD
Brighton & Hove Food and Drink Festival @brightonfood Enjoy a showcase of fantastic food, drink and hospitality at the largest festival of its kind in the south of England. 10am - 5pm New Road, Brighton BN1 1UF
@TOMvenue Using nothing but found-footage from one of his granddad’s old videotapes, Ross Sutherland attempts to draw out his entire life story. 8pm, £12 The Old Market Upper Market Street, BN3 1AS
Old School Party @FunkyfishClub Go wild at the Funkyfish Club whilst the resident DJ spins classics from the 70s, 80s and 90s at this old school style club night. 10pm Funkyfish Club Marine Parade, BN2 1TL
SUNDAY Easter Fun Day at Shoreham Fort @shorehamfort From egg and spoon races to our shooting range, gun rack display and a chance for the kids to learn what it’s like to be a soldier in the kids parade, there is plenty to do on this Easter Fun Day 12pm – 5pm, free Shoreham Fort Shoreham-By-Sea
On Brighton Racecourse Easter Egg Hunt in Preston Park It’s Preston Park’s Easter-Egg Hunt time again, courtesy of the Friends of Preston Park. Take part in the hunt, answering questions about the park, and win a chocolate egg. 11am – 2:30pm, £1 Preston Park, BN1 6SD
MONDAY 6TH APRIL MONDAY 5TH MAY MONDAY 25TH MAY MONDAY 31ST AUGUST
MONDAY Easter Monday Eggstra Fun Day @Blakers&FivewaysBTN Bring your own hard-boiled eggs, decorated if you wish, and enter them into the egg-rolling contest, followed by a special treasure hunt in Blakers Park. 10am, 50p each event Blakers Park, Brighton BN1 6FG
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McBusted @BrightonCentre With the excitement of 2014’s jaw-dropping arena tour still ringing in fans’ ears nationwide, McBusted announce their return to the live stage in spring 2015. 6:30pm, £41.50 Brighton Centre Kings Road, BN1 2GR
Woodland Crafts EVENTS MANAGEMENT presents
WEDNESDAY Annabelle’s Skirtingboard Adventure @TOMvenue From the creator of the Little Howard shows, a brand new theatre show for young children which combines animation, film and music, all created live before the audience. 2pm, £8.50 The Old Market Upper Market Street, BN3 1AS
at Lancing College Saturday 11th & Sunday 12th April 10.30a 10.30am to 4.30pm
A su superb b range off Crafts, C f A rt and Speciality Foods Art Br B Bringing together an exciting and wide ra range of artists and makers with an op opportunity for the discerning customer to purchase unique crafts. Wit entertainment, demonstrations and With tasty refreshments, Adults £4.00 there something for Seniors £3.50 there’s all the family. Under 16s FREE
THURSDAY
[
Muscovado
The Big Sussex Market comes to New Road this weekend
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A mix of sexual intrigue, piercing choral music and extreme racial tension, Muscovado provides an unflinching portrayal of life on a sugar plantation in 1808, accompanied by live original music and atmospheric soundscape. 8pm, £8.50 Marlborough Theatre Princes Street, BN2 1RD
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28 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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No.216
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Double Crossword
Last week’s solutions:
CRYPTIC - Across: 1 Gate; 8 Acute angle; 9 Director; 10 Pest; 12 Keeper; 14 Tartan; 15 Palace; 17 Betide; 18 Stye; 19 Well done; 21 Run at a loss; 22 Hits. Down: 2 Active part; 3 Ease; 4 Punter; 5 Secret; 6 Inspirit; 7 Felt; 11 Standing at; 13 Played an; 16 Enwrap; 17 Ballot; 18 Sort; 20 Dash. QUICK - Across: 1 Loss; 8 Positioned; 9 Handsome; 10 Same; 12 Revert; 14 Thirst; 15 Stroke; 17 Clever; 18 Glum; 19 Solitude; 21 Lugubrious; 22 Sign. Down: 2 Ornamental; 3 Sped; 4 Escort; 5 Street; 6 Conspire; 7 Idle; 11 Misleading; 13 Enormous; 16 Ensure; 17 Callow; 18 Gold; 20 Toss.
Choose either quick or cryptic clues.
Cryptic Clues:
Codeword Each number in the grid represents a different letter of the alphabet and every letter of the alphabet is used. Use the given letter(s) to the right of the main grid to start you off.
1
14
2
15
3
16
4
17
5
18
6
19
7
Last week’s solutions: 1
F
14
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
V Q T S N K W M A P H
15
16
17
18
19
D G U R O J
20
21
22
23
24
Z B C Y E
25
A L
20
8
21
9
22
10
23
11
24
12
25
13
26
13
I
26
L X
Across Down 7. A system of 1. Railing is in poor condition in time detecting wireless (8) site? (13) 2. Used for shooting 8. See 6 Down one of Falstaff’s 9. This will cut some followers (6) of the potted 3. Scheme to put fifty geraniums (4) in a vessel (4) 10. French bitterness, I 4. Filmed but not see! (6) exposed (8) 12. See 14 Across 5. The way of a 14 & 12Ac. One acts townsman (6) under what has 6 & 8Ac. Kind of call for become ingrained a runner (4-8) habit (6,6) 11. Apples required for 16. Alarmingly coiled, small fish (8) but far from fierce 13. Kind of clause for (6) one of the family 18. Featureless kind of (8) race (4) 15. Get boat in a 20. Showing lack different way (6) of courtesy, I’m 17. One dog - the getting the stick miner has no end! about it (8) (6) 22. Forcing one to 19. Guide played by adopt the faith - or the star (4) just pretending 21. Noble support, we hear (4) (6,7)
11
27
7
12
45
9
20
9
10
4
11 24
11 8
10
22
14
11
23 19
12
8 14
12
12 19
clue, clued, clunked, cued, deck, duel, duke, dunce, dune, dupe, duple, kelp, lend, lucked, neck, nude, nuke, peck, pend, pled, plucked, plunked, puce, pule, puled, uncle, undue, unplucked, upend.
7. Blameworthy (13) 8. Impetus (8) 9. Entry (4) 10. Coating (6) 12. Rush (6) 14. Current (6) 16. Chief (6) 18. Fashionable (4) 20. Wizard (8) 22. Understanding (13)
13
12
14
23 12 8 7
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 11. 13. 15. 17. 19. 21.
Fragrant (8) Mourn (6) Closed (4) Hostile (8) Loiter (6) Lump (4) Recall (8) Lift (8) Get away (6) Charge (6) Band (4) Vale (4)
Fill in the white squares with numbers 1 to 9. Each horizontal block must add up to the number in the shaded square to its left, and each vertical block to the number above. Numbers may be used once in each block. Last week’s solutions:
6
12
15 13
8 9 3 3 5 2 1 9 8 2 2 8 4 4 9 9 3 2 1 5 8 6 9 7 5 3
8 1 3 5 4 4 6 3 6 5 1 2 9 2 8 4 4 3 4 7 1 9 8
7 9 2 1
I
A H P N R D N ? A C E S I
Y
✍
V R
K
Last week’s solutions: The letter represented by the question mark is L. Walliams, Mitchell, Fielding, all British comedians.
Alphamuddle Rearrange the letters in the grid B to make five words that read both across and down. Five letters have been placed to start you off.
L
1 4 6 2 1
U E
Sudoku Fill in the grids below so that every column, every row and each of the 3x3 boxes contains all the digits from 1 to 9.
Simple
Replace the question mark with a letter so that the letters within each circle can be arranged to form words on a common theme. What are the three words, and the letter represented by the question mark?
Down
20 10
Last week’s solutions:
15 words - average; 25 words - good; 35 words - very good; 40 or more - excellent.
10 8
11
How you rate:
Across
Scribble pad
16 6
A R I T N N T E I
Quick Clues:
Kakuro
Wordsquare Give yourself ten minutes to find as many words as possible using the letters in the grid. Each word must use the central letter and at least 3 others, and letters may be used only once. You cannot use plurals, foreign words or proper nouns, but verb forms ending in ‘s’ are permitted. There is one 9-letter word to be found.
Circlegram
Intermediate
Difficult
Last week’s solutions: >
N E
From top to bottom Simple, Intermediate, Difficult
T D B M D
Y U O E E
S R L N N
A
E T L T U
R Y E E M
B
Last week’s solutions: Sever, Exile, Visas, Elate, Reset.
Mercedes-Benz A-Class, C-Class and E-Class.
Now with no customer deposit. And 3 years’ free servicing^ on A-Class. For more details, visit www.lookers.co.uk/mercedes-benz Mercedes-Benz of Brighton Victoria Road, Portslade, Brighton, East Sussex BN41 1DY 0844 6593320 Mercedes-Benz of Eastbourne Eastbourne Road, Westham, Eastbourne, East Sussex BN24 5NH 0844 6593320 Mercedes-Benz of Gatwick 78 Gatwick Road, Crawley, West Sussex RH10 9AW 0844 6593320
6.1% APR R E P R E S E N TAT I V E
Official government fuel consumption figures in mpg (litres per 100km) for the A-Class range: urban 32.1(8.8)-67.3(4.2), extra urban 48.7(5.8)-88.3(3.2), combined 40.9(6.9)-78.5(3.6). CO2 emissions 165-92 g/km. Official government fuel consumption figures in mpg (litres per 100km) for the E-Class range: urban 20.3(13.9)-47.1(6.0), extra urban 36.2(7.8)-67.3(4.2), combined 28.3(10.0)-57.6(4.9). CO2 emissions 234-128 g/km. Official government fuel consumption figures in mpg (litres per 100km) for the C-Class range: urban 15.2(18.6)-54.3(5.2), extra urban 33.2(8.5)-80.7(3.5), combined 23.2(12.2)-68.9(4.1). CO2 emissions 285-109 g/km. Mercedes-Benz UK Ltd, Tongwell, Milton Keynes, MK15 8BA are the firm responsible for making this financial promotion and will act as introducing agent. Whilst this offer is only available through Mercedes-Benz Finance, we do arrange finance on behalf of other finance companies as well. Mercedes-Benz UK Ltd may receive commission
from the lender for acting as introducing agent. Guarantees and indemnities may be required. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer. Please contact your Retailer for availability. Offer may be varied or withdrawn at any time. Terms and conditions apply. ^Participating retailers only, on a Mercedes-Benz Service Contract. Free servicing based on 3 services over 36 months. For eligible A-Class models only (excluding AMG versions) registered between 1 January 2015 and 31 March 2015. 57520
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30 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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Food and Drink
Sponsored by Sun Harvest
www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk
Recipe of the Week Luis Rodriguez
Cosy North Laine bistro that ticks all the boxes Suzanne Rose @placesieatbtn
The simplest things can be hard to find. When eating out, I often just want a relaxed, atmospheric spot, where I can chat for hours over a simple meal and great bottle of red - somewhere that isn’t hyped, overpriced, and noisy. I want a lovely little bistro like Grow 40. Formerly Café Delice, it’s run by the same people, but with a new chef - Parisian Mickaël Blanchett, formerly of the acclaimed Pig hotel group. As before its refurb and rebrand, the restaurant opens daily for breakfast and lunch, but now serves dinner all week, too. Downstairs, all exposed brick and wood, is inviting and cosy with outside tables for excellent people-watching. Upstairs is more intimate, candlelit, and appealingly rustic - arguably a better option for dinner. It’s that rare all-purpose café/restaurant where you can stop for coffee, wine and charcuterie, or a long, boozy meal. The dinner menu is small, which I like. Four starters, five mains. We started with goose rillettes, pickle, red onion purée and focaccia (£5.75), a great plate for sharing with classic flavours and contrasts. Razor clams with lemongrass crystals, rocket butter and parsnip purée (£6.50) were cooked well without a hint of chewiness, but could have packed more flavour. For my main, it had to be aged ribeye with fries and Bearnaise (£20.50). I’m a complete sucker for this dish and here the beef was cooked exactly as I like it and really well seasoned. The Bearnaise, a little too sweet perhaps, came as a huge bowlful. Big thumbs up (I don’t react well to thimblefuls of Bearnaise). Pan-roasted pork with sweet potato, sage jus and creamed curly kale (£13.50) wasn’t at all dry, and fillet is such an easy cut to mess up. Sweet mash, bitter leaves, and woody sage with pork - it’s a failsafe combination. We didn’t want to leave our candlelit corner, so I went for a dark
Salmon tartar with uriwaki sushi and watermelon soup Ingredients 100g fresh salmon 100ml teriyaki sauce Chives 100g watermelon 1 tomato
10g mint 30g bread 10ml olive oil 10g vinegar 100g sushi rice
Poppy seeds 1 sheet of seaweed Rice vinegar Seasoning
Method ■ Dice the salmon and mix through with the teriyaki sauce for 10
seconds, then add chive. ■ Blend the tomato, bread, oil, vinegar and melon together and then
season. ■ Wash the rice with cold water. ■ Cook the rice, and then cool down with rice vinegar.
Grow 40, in Kensington Gardens, is an inviting and cosy bistro
chocolate and chilli fondant with Read more by Suzanne Rose and white chocolate sauce (£6). The the Places I Eat Brighton team, at: fondant was a touch overbaked, www.placesieatbrighton.com but tasted great with just enough chilli heat. Sweetcorn cake with salted toffee popcorn and yogurt ice cream (£5.50) was syrupy by and almost nutty in flavour, not unlike polenta cake. Incidentally, everything we ate also features on the lunch menu. Service, by manager and sommelier Steve, was attentive and In 1796, a man called Michael informative. Here’s a guy who’s Thonet was born. He was clearly proud of his restaurant and German-Austrian and, its ethos - using local suppliers therefore, you don't do the and growing their own produce French "nay" thing with his wherever possible. He chatted name. Pronounce the first and enthusiastically about the roof the last T and ignore the H garden, which will be open this Michael "Toe-net". summer to customers, and his Thonet completed an wine recommendations were spot apprenticeship in carpentry on; I love that they serve 500ml before becoming an carafes at just £15 each. independent cabinet maker My only complaint? Too much in 1819. He was married and wooden board and slate action had 13 children. He spent the going on. I’m just not a huge fan of 1830s trying to make furniture eating meat straight off a porous from glue and bent wooden board from which many others slats. Perhaps he inspired the have eaten before me. It’s a small balsa-wood model aeroplanes gripe, but one I know I share with we made as kids. You know many others. the ones - you pay £1.99 for All in all, for a simple, the first magazine with the understated meal in romantic, glue and a wing and then your cosy surroundings, this is the parents won't spend £7.99 on perfect place. the next issue. Thonet's first success was his Boppard Layerwood Grow 40 Chair in 1836. He acquired @Grow_40 the glue factory, but failed 40 Kensington Gardens, Brighton, BN1 4AL to successfully patent his 01273 622519 methods. A prince in Vienna thought his designs we pretty www.grow40.com
Coffee Chronicles
■ To make the sushi, lay the rice flat on paper with the seaweed on top,
then salmon after that, then roll in to the shape you wish.
Luis Rodriguez is demi chef de partie at Hilton Brighton Metropole rad, so he invited Thonet to show his furniture to the Imperial Family. Thonet sold his company, moved to Vienna and, with his sons, worked on decorating the Palais Lichtenstein. He formed Gebruder Thonet (Thonet Brothers) in 1850 and began working on the "chair of chairs". In 1889, he made his Konsumstuhl Nr 14. Unlike with other European languages, we've struggled to allow the introduction of German words into our everyday drawl. There are, of course, exceptions like museli, rucksack and blitz last one's a bit awkward there - but we generally rename stuff we borrow from the Germans. Thonet's Konsumstuhl Nr 14 is therefore what we would call The Coffee Shop Chair No 14, - or The Bistro Chair, if you're from up north, in Coronation Street or you like a teacake with your milky coffee. This "chair of chairs" won the gold medal at the 1867 World Fair in Paris. More than 50 million have been produced and they are still in production today, albeit in Japan and under a different name, with a new design and manufactured by a different company. Somehow that counts as "still in production".
The imaginative and innovative idea of mass producing a product using unskilled workers and then disassembling the product to save space during transportation was in fact not invented by Ikea or the meat industry, but by our man Thonet. There's a museum in Hesse which gives you a factory tour and information about the history and design of Thonet's chairs. To see a reallife chair inspired by Thonet, find a coffee shop and observe the chairs. If you're in a state of disbelief that you've just spent an inordinate amount of your precious time learning about a chair and you're really quite disappointed that the 10 screws bit never amounted to anything then we're sorry. Save your wanderlust for next week when your resident zeitgeist will join you for a kaffeeklatch with the leitmotif of coffee and a dash of schadenfreude. And some lederhosen. And a Volkswagen. With bratwurst. Auf weidersehen, Chroniclers.
Find The Little Coffee Company at 4 Bartholomews, BN1 1HG
SunHarvest
Ltd
An
alternative
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Delivering to
restaurants,
24 hour order line: 01273 697631 www.sunharvestltd.co.uk info@sunharvestltd.co.uk
Competition Win a year’s worth of free pizza courtesy of Papa John's Who are Papa John’s? Papa John’s was founded in 1984 in the US by John Schnatter. He sold his beloved 1971 z28 Camaro to purchase the pizza equipment and started selling pizzas out of the back of his father’s tavern. A few years later, Papa John’s now has over 250 stores across the UK and thousands across the rest of the world, including the busy store in Brighton’s Preston Road, each busy fulfilling John’s ‘Better Ingredients, Better pizza’ philosophy. What makes Papa John’s unique? Papa John’s use only 100% fresh and never frozen dough. Take delight in watching the staff slapping and tossing the dough fresh in store with every purchase, which provides a better natural flavour when making the pizzas The unique tomato sauce is made from the best Californian tomatoes too, which are picked and packed from vine to can in just six hours!
For your chance to win, simply answer the following question:
Q When was Papa John's founded? A 1902 B 1984 C 2006 Alternatively, email your answer, and include your full name, address and a contact phone number to: competition@brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk. One lucky winner will be selected at random. Closing date is Thursday, April 9, 2015, at noon. Brighton & Hove Independent competition terms and conditions apply. For details see: www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk/tandcs. A year’s worth of free pizza is one large pizza (excluding stuffed crust) delivered, every month, for 12 months from April 2015 to March 2016. Winner must be 18 or older and live within the Brighton Preston Road or Hove, 44 Station Road store’s delivery zone which can be confirmed by entering the postcode into www.papajohns.co.uk. The winner will be identified and notified by Brighton & Hove Independent to arrange prize delivery.
Fresh, fast and friendly, Papa John's delivers Jamie Roshan
The pizza game in Brighton and Hove has been rising rapidly like a sourdough in a stone bake oven in recent years. Amongst the contenders in this pepperoni playoff is Papa Johns, an American-based company with a commitment to better ingredients and better pizza. Papa Johns was delivered right on time to the UK doorstep in 2001, and now has over 250 franchises across the country. In Brighton and Hove they have quickly established themselves into our crustafarian community, serving up high quality and assorted pizza from their plot on Preston Road, Brighton. We ordered on a Tuesday cashing in on the two pizzas for the price of one deal. With 19 pizzas and 12 sides to choose from it was no easy selection. but we eventually decided on a margarita, the benchmark and true test of a pizzerias skill, and
“The Papa’s favourite”, Sausage and Pepperoni. Pizzas arrived promptly within the 30-minute promised time by a polite delivery person. The box was warm and sure enough the pizza was at a nice hot temperature, ready to be attacked. Having skipped breakfast my stomach was braced for the challenge. The scent of the hot cheese and tomato was flirting with my nostrils and the incestual marriage of sausage and pepperoni on Papa’s
favourite was crying out for me like a piglet cries for its mother. It was time to put us both out of our misery. Responding to the squeals I moved towards it with haste. The soft sausage, the chewy pepperoni, the hot supple cheese and eruptions of tomato bubbling in my mouth all converged on my tongue to arouse a feeling that I can only describe as ”bellissimo.“ The dough had been nicely worked and the base was soft with a slight crisp along the rim
of the crust. The toppings tasted fresher than I have experienced at other takeaway outlets around the city and the feeling of guilt that one often experiences after tackling a large pizza was halved due to the freshness. A few improvements could be made, for instance there could be a wider range of bases to choose from and the garlic and herb dip didn’t quite hit the spot for me
although these grumbles may be down to personal preference on flavours and textures. You’ll have to try for yourself. At the end of the Papa Johns experience, I was left in a state of mild euphoria. I had been fed, and I had been fed good. The service was swift and polite while the pizzas were ladled with flavour. Thanks Papa John, I owe you one.
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Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 33
@BrightonIndy
Public Notice INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Join the only 5-a-side leagues Exclusively for businesses and professionals and start ‘networking through football’
IN BANKRUPTCY
BRIGHTON COUNTY COURT
NO 295 of 1994 RE: JOHN THOMAS FINNERAN Of and lately carrying on business as a Groundworker at 72 Queen Street, lately of and previously carrying on business at Coach House, Lyminster Road, Lyminster, both in Littlehampton in the County of West Sussex, also a Company Director, currently Unemployed. D.O.B: 11 April 1942 Note: The above named was discharged from proceedings on 24th February 1997 and may no longer have a connection with the addresses listed. I intend to pay within four months from 6th May 2015 (being the last day for proving) the first and final dividend of 100.00 p/£. Creditors who have not yet proved their debts must do so by 6th May 2015 (being last day of proving) otherwise they will be excluded from the dividend. The required proof of debt form is available on the Insolvency Service website (www.bis.gov.uk/insolvency, select “Forms“ and then form 6.37). Alternatively, you can contact my office at the address below to supply a form. A Oliver, Official Receiver and trustee, LTADT, PO Box 4376, Companies House, Crown Way, Cardiff CF14 8JX. Tel: 029 2038 0178 e-mail: RTLU.SouthWest@insolvency.gsi.gov.uk
JOHNNY CANTOR
Straight from the commentary box >> PAGE 43
STARTS April 22nd
Style Jane Busby @janeforstyle As a personal shopper and stylist, I am always looking out for shops that offer my clients something different. Mistral opened its doors in June 2014 in East Street and showcases the collection in vintage surroundings making the customer’s experience enjoyable and memorable. It is a family owned company with a growing chain of 29 stores across the South of England. All the garments Mistral sell are in-house designed with a lot of love and attention. The design
team aims to bring you a great range of products which you can adapt to any occasion whether walking the dog, dropping the kids at school or going out to dinner. They offer everything in a fantastic range of colours, trying hard to be affordably stylish without compromising on quality. Mistral is appearing on the catwalk in the third Brighton Thistle Fashion Show at the Thistle Hotel on Saturday, April 18. The free shows are at 2pm, 2.45pm, and 3.30pm, hosted by Guy Lloyd and Sophie Corbett. For more about Jane Busby, a personal stylist and shopper, visit: www.janebusby.co.uk
Wednesday Night Falmer 42 minute games £34 - per team STARTS April 27th NEW Worthing league 6:30-8pm
Other Sussex leagues: Eastbourne Thursday Nights 8.30-10pm, £32 - per team 42 minute games Crawley Tuesday Nights 6-8pm 38 minute games
NEW Super League in Association with AITC STARTING MAY 2015. Thursday nights at American Express Elite Performance Centre! For more information, contact:
07414 744659 max@firmballs.com | www.firmballs.com
Beauty Pretty Good Thinking
Sarah Morgan @sarah_morgan
I promised to reveal the ultimate nail polish and I believe I have found it in the luxury nail brand Only Fingers and Toes. The O.F.A.T. freefrom nail lacquer polishes are presented in chic, black, grosgrain textured gift boxes with vibrant orange linings for extra impact. They are wonderful as pressies. Only Fingers and Toes believe that your polish should be kind to your body. These products are all free from Toluene, Formaldehyde, Formaldehyde Resin, DBP and Camphor, and also Phthalic Acid. They are remarkably easy to apply, thinnish with great coverage, fast-drying and a terrific shiny finish. The Classic is a single, gift boxed polish for £16. The Trilogy (3 polishes of your chosing) comes in a £42 and The Edit (6 of your favourite
polishes) is £75. The Connoisseurs Collection (24 polishes in a double choc box layout) is enough to send both diehard nail colour addicts and their bank managers straight into orbit. The main library extends to over sixty shades. The palettes have been carefully curated to echo seasonal trends while retaining a devotion to timeless classics. The volumes are called Vivid (Bittersweet is the orange one in the pic) Molten, Illumine and Lustre. I went for a bright zesty satsuma shade, Bittersweet for exuberance, and a light khaki mink metallic; Blooper Cooper. They are buildable in that the colour coverage intensifies well without clogging. I think two coats are the ideal minimum and I loved it even more with
Painting your nails should be a reflection of who you are. Whether you’re conservative or edgy, nail lacquer is the perfect way to express yourself” O.F.A.T founder India Martin. three, which lasts several days. Each polish has ergonomically designed handles for comfort, usability and the best possible experience. The brushes give perfect 3-stroke, long lasting, lustrous coverage. To my delight, this translates
into a really pro-looking finish. After some decades I have become neat at doing my own but this product made the painting more pleasant (no weird smells) to the extent that I even tried a very-rarelyattempted three coat finish for
maximum depth on the metallic, which was sheer heaven because it dries so well. The O.F.A.T range is available from Harvey Nichols (London, is our nearest store or shop at www.harveynichols.co.uk) and professional treatments are available at Grace in Belgravia and The Private Clinic in Cheapside - www. onlyfingersandtoes.co.uk
34 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
@BrightonIndy
Property
www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk
Br ighton & Hove
Independent
To Let
Rottingdean Village
£1500.00
PCM
■ Stunning former stable conversion ■ One double bedroom with vaulted ceiling ■ Open plan living area ■ Views to the South Downs ■ Private parking ■ Front and rear gardens For more information, contact: 01273 677365 | sales@bonetts.co.uk 78 St Georges Road, Brighton, East Sussex, BN2 1EF
What you can get for … £900,000 £899,995
£900,000 OIEO
£900,000 OIEO
Lawrence Road Hove
Woodland Drive Hove
The Upper Drive Hove
Telephone: 01273 777123
Telephone: 01273 778877
Telephone: 01273 821800
www.mishonwelton.com
www.mishonmackay.com
A detached Tudor style residence, together with a mature westfacing garden, with fine wooded aspect at the rear, backing onto the wooded copse, in this sought after residential location. Three separate reception rooms. Well-equipped office, garage, 4 good sized double bedrooms.
A detached 4 bedroom home which does require some updating. Self-contained annexe to the side, accessed from the dining room in the main house or by its own door at the front. The open plan lounge/kitchen leads on to the rear garden and there are two double bedrooms and a modern bathroom/WC. Private drive providing parking for at least two vehicles.
www.goldinlemcke.com Four double bedroom, three floored property with a stunning south-facing room kitchen. South-facing garden. Many features and fireplaces. Two cloakrooms and TV room.
www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk
Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 35
@BrightonIndy
the city is our office Bonett’s
Can you be an ‘ethical’ estate agent? I always remember, even when I was running an alternative bookshop in the ‘70s that I was tarred with the brush ‘unacceptable face of capitalism’. Perhaps it was meant ironically as we never made any money so were a bad example to would be capitalists! Anyway, in ’82, needing to ‘earn a living’, I answered an ad in the press to work in an estate agency: what clinched it for me was the line, ‘enthusiasm more important than experience’. I finally got the job and now, over thirty years later, I’ve been running my own business for twenty-five years. Yet, I think I harbour all the values that I had when I was in ‘Solstice’. But, can you square the circle in an industry where we have a poor reputation for honesty and transparency, not to mention hype and greed? Over the last ten years or more, the Buy to Let investor has, thanks to a complete volte-face on mortgage lending, been able to easily access funds to buy up a large proportion of the cheap, typical First Time Buyer property. As such, what is left is now mostly too expensive for FTBs to buy. So, many of these are renting,
putting pressure on the rental market, owned by the Buy to Let landlords, so rents have shot up too! How do you deal with that? I was reading an article in the Big Issue (you should buy it; it has some great journalism) about the homeless, those not having easy access to property, working on zero hour contracts, not able to get a job as no settled living accommodation… You just have to think a little and realise this is not sustainable or right in the twenty-first century. We should be looking for a new model which gives everyone a roof over their heads but does not destroy the life savings of the investor landlord. With the recent news that pensioners can access their pension pot easily and in lump sums, thus potentially able to use these as deposits for mortgages for ‘buy to let’, it could make the local situation even worse for those already struggling to find ‘decent and affordable’ housing. I’ve been reading ‘The Spirit Level’ by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett. It critically evaluates the continuing ‘economic growth’ drive on a global level; it’s clear we cannot sustain this model much longer. Many people say
it is already past its sell-by date but few people dare consider the alternatives as they are very radical. So, what does an estate agent do? Our role is basically to act for our client seller to ‘achieve the best price’. Market forces prevail and in Brighton and Hove there is not enough supply for the demand. We have the ‘London market’ effect and we are, year by year a more and more popular City. Land for new build is at a premium here and, when built, is sold to investors more often than to owner/occupiers. There are, I’m told, quite large numbers of vacant and underused accommodation above shops throughout the City but that is not going to make a really big difference although it
should be explored as a part of the solution. We have an ever-burgeoning student population and I’m not convinced the new-build student housing is sufficient to handle the numbers. For sure, if the Universities built really substantial numbers of halls of residence, it would take the pressure off private housing, bought as buy-to-let for students. Landlords would in all likelihood then sell and pocket the profit. This could put a reasonable number of properties back into the ‘churn’ and do something to stabilise local prices, with a larger supply available. But, this will not happen overnight. It would be very interesting to see if any of the
“First class service” Buying and selling property is supposed to be one of the most stressful things you can do, but having the support of a friendly and efficient agency like Bonett’s made all the difference. If you're thinking of selling your property you should definitely give them a call. Geoffrey, March 2015
local political parties can honestly address our local housing shortage with practical solutions. It needs a real political as well as a social will for this to happen. In closing, I realise I haven’t really addressed the ‘ethical’ estate agent issue in depth. But perhaps, if we as an industry make the right noises, encouraging a more transparent and fairer deal in the marketplace, we could do something to redress the balance towards those desperate for a roof over their heads. Meanwhile, have a happy and peaceful Easter. Paul Bonett F.N.A.E.A. M.A.R.L.A. Paulbonett@bonetts.co.uk Twitter: @bonettpa
Portland Mansions, Kemp Town £299,950 A two double bedroom, two bathroom ground floor flat which is located on the side of the building facing Portland Place. The flats have well kept communal gardens overlooking the sea and are situated just off the seafront, south of Kemp Town village, half way between the Marina and Brighton Pier. The flat is sold with no chain.
Chichester Terrace, Kemp Town £400,000
Atlingworth House, Marine Parade £675,000
A stylish and well laid out lower ground floor seafront apartment with two good sized double bedrooms in one of Kemp Town's most impressive Grade 1 listed terraces. The living room overlooks a secluded, south facing private patio area. The property also has use of the stunning Kemp Town enclosures.
Unique seafront duplex apartment with amazing sea views from every room. The apartment is in an end of terrace period building so has light from side windows as well as the beautiful large bay windows in the living room and master bedroom. Currently arranged with an open plan living room and three bedrooms, there is also a large roof terrace that provides one of the best views in Brighton.
VALUATIONS: Would you like to know what your property is worth today? Please call and arrange an appointment for one of our very experienced valuers to come to your property and give you our best advice.
Bonetts.co.uk 01273 677365
36 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
@BrightonIndy
www.brightonandhoveindependent.co.uk
www.maslen.co.uk Open until 8pm every Thursday
NEW to the market
KINGS ROAD £599,000 Leasehold
FARM ROAD £399,000 Freehold
n Fantastic 3 bed 5th floor apartment n Stunning direct sea and beach views n 2 x balconies, lift access n Garage n EPC C70
n 2 Bedroom town house n Off street parking and roof terrace n In need of modernisation n Study, gas heating, great location n EPC C70
Call Hove office 01273 321000
Call Hove office 01273 321000
NEW to the market
NEW to the market
PORTLAND VILLAS £350,000 Share of Freehold A FANTASTIC GROUND FLOOR CONVERTED 2 DOUBLE BEDROOM GARDEN FLAT with beautifully presented and well arranged accommodation throughout. The property has a private, attractive walled West facing rear garden, off street parking, a stylish modern kitchen and bathroom, central and underfloor heating and is finished to a high standard throughout. Energy Rating D59 Call Hove office 01273 321000
COWLEY DRIVE Offers in excess of £260,000 Freehold
MERSTON CLOSE £325,000 Freehold
n Recently renovated throughout n Perfect first home n Brand new kitchen/bathroom n Nearby shops In Cowley Drive n EPC D63
n Garage and off road parking n Modern kitchen/bathroom n Living accommodation over 3 floors n 100ft rear garden n EPC D56
Call Woodingdean office 01273 278866
Call Woodingdean office 01273 278866
“David Maslen Estate Agents - Experts in everything we do” NEW Price
NEW to the market
MELBOURNE STREET £300,000 Freehold
AUCKLAND DRIVE £270,000 Freehold
FRIAR WALK £850,000 Freehold
STANMER PARK ROAD Offers in excess of £380,000 Freehold
n Bright and spacious 2 bedroom period house n Arranged over 3 floors n Modern fitted kitchen & bathroom n West facing rear patio garden n EPC D64
n Extended 3 bedroom house n Conservatory, utility room, GF WC n Gas heating, double glazing n Tiered rear garden n EPC C70
n 4 bed family home n Lounge, dining room n Kitchen/breakfast room, garage n Large garden n EPC E40
n 4 Bedroom link det house n Lounge, modern kitchen n Study area, bathroom and shower room n Integral garage and no chain n EPC D58
Call Lewes Road office 01273 677001
Call Lewes Road office 01273 677001
Call Fiveways office 01273 566777
Call Fiveways office 01273 566777
See all our current property listings at: www.maslen.co.uk LEWES ROAD 01273 677001
●
WOODINGDEAN 01273 278866
●
CHURCH ROAD 01273 321000
●
FIVEWAYS 01273 566777
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Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 37
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38 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 41
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42 Brighton & Hove Independent Friday, April 3 2015
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Don’t miss the latest news about the Seagulls via Twitter @BHIndyAlbion
Next up at the Amex…
Sport
Brighton and Hove Albion v Norwich City in the Championship on Friday, April 3 kick-off 3pm. Tickets available online at www.seagullstickets.com or by calling 0844 327 1901
Albion set for tough clash with Hughton’s former employers
Albion statistics:
League position
League goals
TEIXEIRA 6 DUNK 5 BALDOCK 2 DARYL MURPHY (Ipswich Town) 23
16TH
Opponent's position
4TH
League form guide W-L-L-D-D-W-W-L-W-L-D-D-W Last 3 league fixtures 0-1 W Blackburn 0-0 D Millwall 1-1 Wolves D
Next 3 league fixtures Norwich 03/04/15 Rotherham 06/04/15 AFC Bournemouth 10/04/15
H A H
Albion league statistics 2014 -15 Pass completion Average Possession
Shots per game
78%
77% 56%
162
Albion Norwich
53%
14.9
Shots on target per game
4.3 5.5
Shots conceded per game
9.6
Goals
76
Goals against
43
Points
70
12.9 43 46 45
Mustapha Carayol is delighted to be joining the Albion (Photograph: Paul Hazlewood)
Bradley Stratton @BradStrat Albion are back in action after the international break as they take on high-flying Norwich this afternoon (Friday). It will be the first time that Chris Hughton comes up against his former side. The 56-year-old managed the Canaries for almost two seasons in the Premier League, with today’s game coming three days short a year on from when he was sacked from his role in Norfolk. With the end of the season in sight, and only seven games remaining, the task now for Albion is to reach the required
number of points to guarantee their safety, and a place in the Championship for the 2015/16 campaign. The resurgence in form has largely been built off rebuilding confidence at the Amex, with Hughton’s men currently on a four-game unbeaten run in their own back yard, including three consecutive victories. However, on paper, they will be hard pushed to extend that today against a Norwich outfit still in the mix for an automatic promotion spot. Alex Neil’s side have performed well away from home throughout the season, and haven’t lost a league game on the road in 2015. You have to go back to when
Albion were in the old First Division to find the last time today’s visitors came away empty handed from Sussex, with the home last win coming in a 3-0 victory at the Goldstone in December 1982. Despite the history books not pointing in their favour, Hughton will be boosted by the return of Lewis Dunk from suspension, with Mustapha Carayol’s arrival on-loan from Middlesbrough also adding more creativity to the midfield. A 10-point gap between them and the bottom three at this point means Albion should avoid relegation. But, fans won’t rest easy until they are mathematically safe.
Albion
Lessons for young players Youth players at Brighton and Hove Albion are to receive training on issues concerned with sexual consent. Male and female players will attend the sessions, which are part of the Protect, Inform and Prevent programme. The guidance lessons are expected to be led by a former police detective and psychotherapist and will involve confidential questioning of the young players on previous sexual encounters. Developments have come after Ched Evans, the former Sheffield United player, was convicted of rape in a highly publicised case and after four players from Brighton and Hove Albion were exonerated of sexual assault charges at the Old Bailey in 2013.
*ABC (Audit Bureau of Circulations)
Championship table
PL
GD
PTS
1
Bournemouth
39
42
73
2
Watford
39
32
72
3
Middlesbrough
39
29
72
4
Norwich
39
33
70
5
Derby
39
26
67
6
Ipswich
39
16
67
7
Brentford
39
12
66
8
Wolves
39
11
65
9
Nottm Forest
39
8
57
10
Blackburn
39
1
54
11
Charlton
39
-2
54
12
Sheff Wed
39
-4
53
13
Leeds
39
-4
52
14
Cardiff
39
-2
51
15
Birmingham
38
-12
47
16
Brighton
39
-3
45
17
Bolton
39
-11
45
18
Huddersfield
39
-19
44
19
Reading
38
-19
44
20
Fulham
39
-18
43
21
Rotherham
39
-20
40
22
Wigan
39
-17
35
23
Millwall
39
-31
33
24
Blackpool
39
-48
23
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Friday, April 3 2015 Brighton & Hove Independent 43
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JOHNNY CANTOR
@johnnycburger
Straight from the commentary box
The Albion Roar @albionroar Alan Wares
With Ady off on parental duties, and Al in search of some chocolate rabbits after spinning the vinyl the day before, the Roar will be taking a break this week for Easter. Instead, you can mellow out to a selection of some of Al’s guilty pleasures, from Manfred Mann to Scott Walker; the Kinks to
Jacques Brel, with some Stone Roses and Morrissey thrown in. We’ll be back on Saturday, April 11 with more Albion gossip. Tune into Radio Reverb, 97.2FM, online at www.radioreverb.com, or via the podcast on iTunes and www.albionroar.co.uk. The show is brought to you in association with www.oldfootballshirts.com
Mods & Rock, at the Amex In the best traditions of a Bank Holiday by the seaside in Brighton, Albion Roar’s Big Al, Digitalis, and our very own Dante, are hosting a musical event worthy of the association after today’s game with Norwich City at the Amex. In the East Stand concourse, with Mods and Rockers in
APRIL AT THE AMEX
Albion face the final four games of the season
mind, the boys will be playing a broad selection of tunes from the era, encompassing soul, mod, classic rock, funk, disco, Northern, ska and a bit of metal, for good measure. It’s free and everyone is welcome. Unlike in the 1960s, though, the luzzing of deckchairs is actively discouraged.
So, were you sucked in? This week was April Fools’ Day. Brighton and Hove Albion sent out messages on social media asking for ideas for goal music at the Amex. Some may have been tricked but others made a few jibes about the number of goals scored, or music to accompany near misses. Each stadium has its own atmosphere and each club often has a historical song before kick off. At the Amex the rendition of Sussex by the Sea is certainly building from the crowd and the pre-match visuals from the web team are excellent. At Bolton recently I was ribbed by some fans for my view on the heavy metal pre-match tunes but each to their own.
As for melodies after goals, I am undecided. Some clubs have introduced it but the traditionalist in me thinks it’s about the supporters and the noise they generate. Many sports have now tried to whipup crowds with music after significant goals or baskets. The BBL fires up the crowd and the Super League Netball has done the same. Cricket’s T20 has adopted music and flashing bails. Each sport will continue to evolve and is obviously targeting a different audience. One of my favourites is the darts. A trip to the BIC in Bournemouth was certainly an eye opener but everyone joined in, and then some. Yes, the beer does help.
Follow all the action, home or away, on BBC Sussex Sport or Twitter @BBCSussexSport @johnnycburger @BHIndyAlbion Other ‘ inspiration’ can be found from fellow spectators at the cricket in the Caribbean. The Chickey stand in Antigua had a distinctive smell as the West Indies quickies came in to bowl. There was also the loud boom of music from the 20-foot speakers behind me! Will football take up some Eminem, AC DC, Ed Sheeran? Who knows, mind you we have already had some Neil Diamond on the road this season. Maybe Fatboy Slim can conjure something up? Enjoy Easter. Two cracking games to come. Boom boom.
When Albion marched through the month of March Dan Tester @BHIndyAlbion As Marchs go, 2015’s was a fairly innocuous month for Brighton and Hove Albion. Five games gleaned five strikes – one penalty and one own goal – two victories, two draws and just one defeat. Average, but an upturn in fortunes. March is a key period in the football calendar; most clubs will know by now if they have a chance of promotion, or if a nail-biting relegation run-in is on the cards. And, not forgetting the latter stages of the FA Cup, of course. In the 1902/03 season, with Albion competing in the SouthEast League, a 100% month was completed in spectacular fashion with a 9-1 hammering of Hertfordshire-based Hitchin Town. Seven years later Albion played four games in just five March days, winning three.
Imagine today’s nampy-pampy Premier league players having a meltdown at thought of such a schedule! In 1955/56, a clean sweep was almost achieved but four successive victories – with club legends Peter Harburn, Denis Foreman and Des Tennant regularly finding the target – were preceded by a loss at Brentford. In 1999/00, Albion, firing on all cylinders in Withdean’s first season, nearly made it through March victorious, winning five and losing just once, at Hartlepool United. In 114 years of professional football Albion have triumphed in each March fixture just two times. And what a triumph it was! In 2011, Gus Poyet’s charges were steamrollering every obstacle romping their way to securing the League One title. Eventual runners-up Southampton struggled to
‘keep up’, languishing seven points and five places behind their Sussex neighbours at the beginning of the month. March commenced with a 1-0 victory at Yeovil, swiftly followed by a 4-3 humdinger, against Carlisle at the Theatre of Trees, and a narrow single-goal win at Brentford. The team were playing a compact, possession-based game, playing out from the keeper and distributing sideways and backwards, if necessary, in order to retain the ball. It frustrated the living daylights out of the opposition and enthralled Albionites everywhere who had never seen anything like it. In ten days Tranmere Rovers, Oldham Athletic and Notts County were seen off before a home victory versus Swindon Town and a dogged 1-0 from the spoils at Dagenham. A stunning eight successive victories – Murray (3) and Barnes (4) scoring for fun. If it ever happens again, the open-top bus will need a clean.
Norwich City
Friday 3rd April Kick-off 3.00pm
AFC Bournemouth
Friday 10th April Kick-off 7.45pm
Huddersfield Town
Tuesday 14th April Kick-off 7.45pm
Watford
Saturday 25th April Kick-off 12.15pm
BUY TICKETS NOW AT
www.seagullstickets.com
Call the Albion Booking Line on 0844 327 1901 or visit the Amex ticket office B&H Independent - 268x64 APRIL.indd 1
24/03/2015 11:03
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