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	<title>paul-hilliard &amp;laquo; WordPress.com Tag Feed</title>
	<link>http://en.wordpress.com/tag/paul-hilliard/</link>
	<description>Feed of posts on WordPress.com tagged "paul-hilliard"</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 20 May 2013 06:17:19 +0000</pubDate>

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<title><![CDATA[Bye bye BNP!]]></title>
<link>http://antifash.wordpress.com/2012/05/04/bye-bye-bnp/</link>
<pubDate>Fri, 04 May 2012 14:39:00 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>antifash</dc:creator>
<guid>http://antifash.wordpress.com/2012/05/04/bye-bye-bnp/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Fascists had a bad night in local elections across the country. The BNP has, at the time of writing,]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Fascists had a bad night in local elections across the country. The BNP has, at the time of writing, lost all of the seats it was defending and failed to win any new seats. None of the smaller fascist groupuscles has fared any better</b>.</p>
<p>In the East Midlands, <a href="http://emaf.noblogs.org/post/2012/05/04/bnp-lose-two-seats-in-amber-valley/">the BNP lost their two seats in Heanor</a> where their share of the vote was considerably reduced. Cliff Roper’s term as “the invisible councillor” obviously didn’t go down well with the electorate and his share of the vote has fallen to 19.1% from the 36.5% he won with in 2008. Beaten into third place, Councillor Roper has become simply another nationalist chancer, the Heanor Patriot. Lewis Allsebrook’s replacement, Adrian Hickman, also failed to impress and came last. In Heanor &#38; Loscoe the BNP’s share of the vote was halved and in Ripley &#38; Marehay it was reduced to a third of the 2008 result. Emma Roper did particularly badly, getting only 59 votes (4.2%) in Codnor &#38; Waingroves. This is about a quarter of the share won by fascist farmer Alan Warner in 2008.<br />The National Front’s Amber Valley candidate, <a href="http://emaf.noblogs.org/post/2012/04/10/national-fronts-tim-knowles-tries-again/">Timothy Knowles</a>, <a href="http://emaf.noblogs.org/post/2012/05/04/nf-trounced-in-langley-mill/">only got 99 votes in Langley Mill</a>, coming in last place.</p>
<p>Over in Lincoln, <a href="http://emaf.noblogs.org/post/2012/04/20/local-elections-round-up/">disgraced Nazi sympathiser and BNP candidate, Dean Lowther</a>, got a pathetic 49 votes (2.8%) coming in last place. This is less than a quarter of the 12.2% he got last time around.<br />In Derby, <a href="http://emaf.noblogs.org/post/2012/05/04/bnp-fail-in-derby/">the BNP did slightly less badly</a> but their vote was still down on the 2008 results. <a href="http://emaf.noblogs.org/post/2012/04/19/black-shirts-in-derbyshire/">Paul Hilliard’s black shirt campaign</a> won him 14.7% of the vote in Chaddesden, but this was down from the 17.9% he got in 2008. The only good news for the party was that candidates in Derwent and Spondon beat the Lib Dems into last place, gaining 11.9% and 8.1% of the vote respectively.<br />Hope Not Hate are collecting <a href="http://www.hopenothate.org.uk/2008/results/results_2008.php?region=East_Midlands">the far right’s results</a> on their website and you can compare them with the results from 2008 <a href="http://www.hopenothate.org.uk/2012/elections/?link=East_Midlands">here</a>.</p>
<p>It seems that electoral support for the fascists is well down from its peak. Nick Griffin’s troubled leadership of the BNP looks decidedly shaky and party activists and voters are leaving in droves. The new fluffier British Freedom Party, who are backed by the EDL, haven’t got off to a good start either. Their candidate in Basildon only managed to get 4% of the vote and none of the 4 candidates currently declared in Liverpool got more than 3%.</p>
<p>These are good results for anti-fascists but we should never be complacent. The BNP was still voted for by a little under 1 in 5 people in Heanor and they are consistently winning over 10% in parts of Derby. There is always the danger that the far right will rearrange itself around a new pole in the wake of the BNP’s plunge into obscurity and start building on these foundations. Their current failure is a cause for celebration. Let’s make sure they don’t come back from the dead.</p>
<p><a href="http://emaf.noblogs.org/post/2012/05/04/bye-bye-bnp/">East Midlands Anti-Fascists</a></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Northampton Enterprize Zone Announced ]]></title>
<link>http://northantspatriot.wordpress.com/2011/08/17/northampton-enterprize-zone-announced/</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2011 16:29:52 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Northants Patriot</dc:creator>
<guid>http://northantspatriot.wordpress.com/2011/08/17/northampton-enterprize-zone-announced/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Northampton has been named as one of the towns to host a new enterprise zone, paving the way for up]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Northampton has been named as one of the towns to host a new enterprise zone, paving the way for up to 17,000 new jobs and £1 billion of investment. The plan for the 120 hectare Northampton Waterside Enterprise Zone will stretch along the River Nene from Sixfields to Brackmills. Businesses moving int the are will receive tax breaks, relaxed planning applications and incentives in order to boost growth. Good news for future employment in the town, and also for businesses in the town centre who will receive more lunchtime trade but bad news for the green belt. Much of this land is brownfield, which if developed for business will not be available for housing therefore forcing developers to continue applying to build on greenfield sites to build houses for the expected population boom to fill the jobs. Given the levels of unemployment in the county there is no need for any people to move here. The Enterprise Zone plans to bring in almost 400 new businesses and 7,700 new jobs in the next three years. And, by 2021 the area should have created more than 17,000 new jobs across the region.</p>
<p>Talking of greenfield sites to build new houses, outline planning permission to build 150 houses on land to the south of Brixworth has been submitted to Daventry District Council. This has come as no surprise to Brixworth Residents Against New Estates (BRANE) who have already have a petition up and running with thousands of signatures. A meeting of BRANE will take place tomorrow at 7.30pm in the community centre above Brixworth Library for anyone in the area that would like to attend.</p>
<p><strong>Derbyshire Organiser Arrested</strong><br />
You may be aware the Derbyshire organiser Paul Hilliard was arrested at 5.30am this morning for no apparent reason. Despite his wife being assured he would be released within an hour or so, when she called the police station at 11.30am she was told that he had not even been interviewed yet. Seeing that Paul&#8217;s arrest was hardly urgent, why was there the need to arrest im at 5.30am in the morning? It is pure harassment. He is still being held as I type almost 12 hours after his initial arrest. The police have not said on what grounds he has been arrested. I have met Paul on a number of occasions and he one of the most likeable and unassuming people you could meet. I would have thought that Derbyshire police would have more pressing matters to deal with than following the fatal stabbing of a notorious black drug dealer, Johnny Assani, by a gang of Muslims at the weekend. All at Northants BNP hope Paul is released shortly uncharged.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[<i>Excellentissima et merito famosissima historica</i> II]]></title>
<link>http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/2009/10/05/excellentissima-et-merito-famosissima-historica-ii/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 05 Oct 2009 17:27:31 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Jonathan Jarrett</dc:creator>
<guid>http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/2009/10/05/excellentissima-et-merito-famosissima-historica-ii/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Back again in the Winstanley Lecture Theatre atop Blue Boar Court in Trinity College, Cambridge, I r]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://tenthmedieval.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/rm-monogramme.jpg?w=98&#038;h=96" alt="RM Monogramme" title="RM Monogramme" width="98" height="96" class="aligncenter size-thumbnail wp-image-3287" /></p>
<p>Back again in <a href="http://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/index.php?pageid=290&#38;subid=7">the Winstanley Lecture Theatre</a> atop Blue Boar Court in Trinity College, Cambridge, I really regretted the no-caffeine resolve when I just about got to the second day of <a href="http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/?p=3286">Rosamond McKitterick&#8217;s birthday celebration conference</a> on time. Trinity is a very odd mix of styles internally, and really I think it would be fair to call it an odd mix of styles generally. It is full of odd little contradictions to its general ambience and attitude, and some of them are architectural. But anyway. We were safe away from the street, in fact from pretty much everything, so we settled into our seats and listened to the tributary scholarship.</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 210px"><a href="http://www.historyofscience.com/G2I/timeline/index.php?category=Libraries+"><img alt="Opening page of the St Petersburg manuscript of Bedes Historia Ecclesiastica" src="http://historyofscience.com/G2I/timeline/images/Beda_Petersburgiensis_f3v.jpg" title="Opening page of the St Petersburg manuscript of Bede\'s Historia Ecclesiastica" width="200" height="302" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Opening page of the St Petersburg manuscript of Bede's <em>Historia Ecclesiastica</em></p></div>
<h2>Session 3. History and Memory</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.usml.edu/education/Faculty/hilliard.htm">Paul Hilliard</a>, &#8220;Bede&#8217;s Use of History&#8221;. A nice clear summation of how Bede&#8217;s programme to incorporate the Anglo-Saxons into a universal history of Salvation actually operated, logically.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.igw.uni-bonn.de/-1/mittelalter/lehre/wintersemester-2009-2010/lehrveranstaltungen-im-wintersemester-2009-2010-linda-dohmen">Linda Dohmen</a>, &#8220;History and Memory: Angilberga and the court of Louis II&#8221;. A close study of the public profile of <a href="http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1piMMqjAf1MC&#38;pg=RA1-PA378&#38;lpg=RA1-PA378&#38;dq=Angilberga+Louis+II&#38;source=bl&#38;ots=01vMkWzZtM&#38;sig=nHJEitUw23DDQyURpxfQQjBZ1CQ&#38;hl=en&#38;ei=O7eySq_MNtrRjAez24jCCw&#38;sa=X&#38;oi=book_result&#38;ct=result&#38;resnum=3#v=onepage&#38;q=Angilberga%20Louis%20II&#38;f=false">the wife of the third Holy Roman Emperor</a>, one of the most powerful women of the early Middle Ages, who by the twelfth century, in certain chronicles, a figure of feminine evil, Jezebel-style (and where have <a href="http://www.bsw.org/project/biblica/bibl82/Comm13n.html#18">we heard that before</a>?). Linda presented some extra material that showed that this discourse was not completely fictional, and found the roots in eighth-century politics that had been twisted into romance, which make it hard to discern whether the stories would have been heard as romance or as history.</li>
<li>Rob Meens, &#8220;The Rise and Fall of the Carolingians. Regino of Pr&#252;m and his conception of the Carolingian Empire&#8221;. A useful presentation of <a href="http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/496036/Regino-Von-Prum">one of the Carolingian period&#8217;s gloomiest but most informative chroniclers</a>, arguing that Regino saw the Carolingians&#8217; fall as being brought about by their mismanagement of the proper restraint of sex and violence in due deference to Rome that had brought them to power.</li>
<p>In questions <a href="http://www.bbk.ac.uk/hca/staff/matthewinnes">Matthew Innes</a> made the excellent point that one of the things that the chroniclers dealing with the Vikings do is emphasise the way things have gone topsy-turvy by putting the Vikings in the narrative places of the king; instead of royal itineraries and victories you get pagan ones, and the whole world seems shaken out of joint as a result. I wonder how deliberate this would have to be but it&#8217;s very sharply observed. I wish, for various reasons, I could catch up with Matthew more often, he has a point like this for almost every discussion.</ul>
<div id="attachment_3323" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 232px"><a href="http://mandragore.bnf.fr/jsp/afficherNoticeMan.jsp?numero=31&#38;id=1752&#38;idPere=18"><img src="http://tenthmedieval.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/psautierstdenis6v.jpg?w=222&#038;h=300" alt="Psalter of St-Denis, also known as the Psalter of Charles the Bald, Paris BN Lat. 1152, fo 6v." title="psautierstdenis6v" width="222" height="300" class="size-medium wp-image-3323" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Psalter of St-Denis, also known as the Psalter of Charles the Bald, Paris BN Lat. 1152, fo 6v.</p></div>
<h2>Session 4. <i>Res italica karolina</i></h2>
<ul>
<li>Richard Pollard, &#8220;Carolingian Connexions: Reichenau and Nonantola. A new manuscript fragment of Hatto&#8217;s <i>Visio wettini</i>&#8220;. Seriously complex manuscript stuff trying to work out how the two different versions of <a href="http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15526a.htm">this rather odd and surprisingly contemporary text about Charlemagne in Purgatory</a> actually relate to each other, and in the process thickening the links we already knew between these two Carolingian mega-monasteries.</li>
<li>Clemens Gantner, &#8220;The Lombard Recension of the <em>Liber pontificalis</em> Life of Stephen II&#8221;. Posited that a part of <a href="http://www.yale.edu/adhoc/research_resources/liturgy/scpontif.html">the <em>LP</em>&#8216;s assembly of papal biographies</a> might have been sanitised of its ethnic abuse and general anti-Lombard rhetoric for the eighth-century political situation in which Lombard support started to seem desirable to the popes, again demonstrated by painstaking manuscript work. This one met with sceptical questions but Clemens was equal to them with the evidence.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/dept/coins/staff/fap22.html">Frances Parton</a>, &#8220;Louis the Pious, Lothar and Gregory IV: why was the Pope at the Field of Lies?&#8221; By means of a very thorough run-through of the texts, Frances showed that there is considerable uncertainty about Pope Gregory IV&#8217;s purpose in coming from Rome to assist Emperor Louis the Pious&#8217;s sons in deposing their father, and concluded that while Gregory had seen an opportunity to restore the papal status as arbiter of the Frankish monarchy Lothar had had much smaller ideas for him and kept him from having any such r&#244;le. This also met some tough questions, almost as many of which were answered by <a href="http://www.shef.ac.uk/history/staff/charles_west.html">Charles West</a> as were asked, if not the other way about, but one thing that was made clear to us all is that <a href="http://historymedren.about.com/library/who/blwwnithard.htm">Nithard</a>, and possibly other writers of the time, were definitely thinking of the papal approval of Pippin III&#8217;s kingship in 751 when they wrote up the doings of 833.</li>
</ul>
<p>Then there was a really quite nice lunch, and then back to battle/s!</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 410px"><a href="http://laudemgloriae.blogspot.com/2008/04/sunday.html"><img alt="Sarcophagus and crypt of St-B&#233;nigne de Dijon" src="http://inlinethumb13.webshots.com/7884/2197300870102359367S500x500Q85.jpg" title="Sarcophagus and crypt of St-Bénigne de Dijon" width="400" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Sarcophagus and crypt of St-B&#233;nigne de Dijon</p></div>
<h2>Session 5. Trouble and Trouble-Makers</h2>
<ul>
<li>Charles West, &#8220;Possessing Power. Unauthorised miracles and Dijon, <i>c.&#160;</i>842&#8243;. <a href="http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/2009/08/08/leeds-report-3-wednesday-15th-july/">Keen observers may recognise this title</a>&#8212;I certainly lost no time in taxing Charles about it because I&#8217;m nice like that&#8212;but this was actually a markedly different paper, albeit about the same miraculous episode, largely because Charles had now been able to consult the manuscript that sources it and found it to be probably contemporary and rather out of place in its binding; though a later cover appeared to have been made for it out of a redundant notarial instrument, the actual <i>libellus</i> that tells of the strange events at Dijon in 842 may well be the very one that Bishop Theobald of Langres received from Archbishop Amilo of Lyons and therefore presumably travelled as a letter between the two. The other new emphasis was on the parish structures which Amilo apparently thought, even in 842, should be absorbing these people&#8217;s religious energy and piety, rather than crazy cult sites with politically-charged ownership issues. For one small text there&#8217;s a huge amount of potential here, I envy Charles the find.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/staff/jamespalmer.html">James Palmer</a>, &#8220;Apocalypticism, <i>Computus</i> and the Crisis of 809&#8243;. A series of well-aimed kicks at the idea that there was a widespread belief in the years leading up to 800 that that was going to be year 6000 <i>anno mundi</i> and therefore the end of everything, largely as expressed by <a href="http://www.bu.edu/mille/people/rlpages/personlandes.html">Richard Landes</a>. James&#8217;s position basically is that <em>there is no conspiracy</em> but there are a lot of people really interested in time and how you reckon it. In making this stand, however, he also dismantled in passing a number of <a href="http://www.bu.edu/mille/people/rlpages/rlrecent.html">the pro-millennial arguments</a> which was a joy to hear. The significance of 809 is that in that year computistical experts were consulted by Charlemagne and his ecclesiastics on the age of the world, according to a council record, but that came on the back of two years&#8217; famine and a defeat by the Slavs so the date may not have been the big issue. I think we all finished this paper remaining comfortably convinced that 800 was a Carolingian high point, not a year everyone spent waiting for <a href="http://www.asterix.co.nz/characters/gauls/vitalstatistix.htm">the sky to fall on their heads</a>.</li>
<p>These darn summaries are getting longer as I warm up. Let&#8217;s see if I can keep this under control.</p>
<li><a href="http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/dept/coins/staff/ems17.html">Elina Screen</a>, &#8220;Adalhard the Seneschal: troublemaker?&#8221; As one of the really important nobles of the time of the war between Louis the Pious&#8217;s sons, Adalhard has been seen as a kind of destabilising kingmaker figure. Here Elina argued the opposite, that as a kind of &#8216;shuttle diplomat&#8217; he was frequently one of the few forces holding the fragile confederacy of brother monarchs together, largely because he had so very much to lose if it broke. She rightly pointed out in the course of this that an awful lot of the terminology we use to describe the politics of the mid-ninth century is straight from the Cold War: summit meetings, shuttle diplomats, and so on. I&#8217;m not sure what that does for our perspectives, because it does look like that in the sources&#8230;</li>
</ul>
<p>At this point, what should have been the closing remarks were shunted forwards to allow the relevant speaker to make a plane connection, so we were next treated to:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.uu.nl/uupublish/homeuu/onderwijs/studentenvoorzie/docentenprijs/archief/docentenprijs/dejong/10953main.html">Mayke de Jong</a>, &#8220;Rosamond McKitterick and the Frankish Church&#8221;.</li>
<p>This was more of a personal tribute than an academic one, but one of the things Mayke noted is that in a climate of scepticism Rosamond&#8217;s early work always took religion seriously and that this is a great strength. And this is true, but more widely, one of Rosamond&#8217;s greatest strengths of character is that she takes people, generally, seriously. The fact that one of the most notable professors with whom I&#8217;ve ever had contact listens to my ideas and thoughts as if they might be interesting and insightful has helped me wrestle down the imposter syndrome more often than I can tell you, and I&#8217;m sure I can&#8217;t be the only one. This is one thing I didn&#8217;t manage to say in my personal thanks to her so I&#8217;ll put it here.</ul>
<p>By now people were already gently and quietly making their farewells. People had come from Scotland, Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, the USA and Israel, as well as many points of England, and there were planes and trains necessary to catch. Pity, because the last session was just as interesting as any of the others.</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 210px"><a href="http://www.pontuali.com/marco/index.php?option=com_content&#38;view=article&#38;id=92%3Ala-musica-nellantica-roma-a-corredo-degli-spettacoli&#38;catid=21%3Atradizioni-e-folklore&#38;Itemid=93&#38;lang=en"><img alt="Roman tuba or military trumpet" src="http://www.pontuali.com/marco/images/articoli/tuba.png" title="Roman tuba" width="200" height="200" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Roman <i>tuba</i> or military trumpet</p></div>
<h2>Session 6. Taxes, Trumpets and Texts</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.dow.cam.ac.uk/dow_server/mfs/fellows/D.R._Pratt.html">David Pratt</a>, &#8220;Taxation and Origins of the Manor in England&#8221;. While this paper was not an exception to the statement I just made, because Dr Pratt&#8217;s erudition is considerable, I have friends who are a lot more sceptical about the solidity of the terms that litter Anglo-Saxon economic history for the sorts of land that were recognised in law than this, and there was also a somewhat apocalyptic r&#244;le for knight service which didn&#8217;t seem to have heard <a href="http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/2008/02/06/seminary-xvi-those-are-knights-and-were-feudal-all-right/">Nicholas Brooks&#8217;s new evidence</a> about the date of its introduction. So I&#8217;ll forebear from further comment except to say that really, the <a href="http://www.history.ac.uk/ihrseminars/seminar.php?series=113">Institute of Historical Research Earlier Middle Ages Seminars</a> are worth attending if you can, but almost all the Cambridge people only go if they&#8217;re speaking. I think exposure to <a href="http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/2009/02/07/seminary-xxxix-how-many-times-did-william-the-conqueror-survey-england/">Sally Harvey&#8217;s</a> and Professor Brooks&#8217;s papers would have made this one a different shape.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/teaching_and_research/subject_information/history1/billett/">Jesse Billett</a>, &#8220;Theuto&#8217;s Trumpet: the cantor in the Carolingian Renaissance&#8221;. A very unusual paper, as papers on chant usually are, not least because they are usually given by people who aren&#8217;t afraid to actually sing their subject, Dr Billett being no exception. Here he focused on one particular mention of a cantor with a trumpet in <a href="http://encyclopedia.jrank.org/EMS_EUD/ERMOLDUS_NIGELLUS_or_ERMOLD_THE.html">Ermold the Black</a>&#8216;s <em>In honorem Hludowici</em> and concluded that the usage was probably metaphorical, associating the poem&#8217;s military victories, which both mention real trumpets, with the spiritual one of the baptism of the <a href="http://scandinavian.wisc.edu/mellor/myth/timeline.html">Danish royal Harald Klak</a> in 826.</li>
<li>Matthew Innes, &#8220;The Carolingians and the Archival World: charters and their preservation in the ninth-century M&#226;connais&#8212;and beyond&#8221;. I actually can&#8217;t say too much about this one because it was a <a href="http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/2007/01/02/lay-archives-revival/">Lay Archives</a> paper, and I have caused trouble before by <a href="http://imc.leeds.ac.uk/imcapp/SessionDetails.jsp?SessionId=2359&#38;year=2008">talking too much about the Lay Archives project</a>. You can see from his title that <a href="http://tenthmedieval.wordpress.com/2008/06/22/confused-over-cluny-a-pre-leeds-charters-rant/">my work overlaps with Matthew&#8217;s here</a> and this is something that I think we would have wished to avoid, had better communication been possible. Suffice to say that half the paper was stuff I knew nothing about and was fascinating, and of the remaining fifty per cent half is not yet agreed between us&#8230; But Matthew&#8217;s stuff is as I say always fascinating so wherever this one actually comes out it will be worth the read. (The papers should be printed; but I believe this one may be spoken for already.)</li>
</ul>
<p>Final questions were fewer, largely because there weren&#8217;t many people left to ask them. The closing remarks were given by <a href="http://www.oeaw.ac.at/oeaw_servlet/e_PersonenDetailsGeneric?id=11208">Walter Pohl</a>, who made the excellent point that while the gathering had been advertised as a Festschrift, that obviously didn&#8217;t make a lot of sense to a German-speaker and he proposed instead calling it a Schriftfest, which we all thought worked a lot better. He also emphasised that the sort of open comparison of perspectives in friendship that we&#8217;d been able to do these two days was the best way to advance scholarship, and replete with that assurance, we all went our separate ways. I&#8217;m very glad to have been able to be part of all this. As long as I&#8217;m still in Cambridge it&#8217;s nice to be able to join in sometimes, and this was very good to join in with.</p>
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