Category Archives: Editorial

The Whistler – August 2013

MAKE A SPLASH  SUMMER’S HERE AT LAST
MAKE A SPLASH
SUMMER’S HERE AT LAST

WEST HILL NEWS

The WHCA AGM was held on 28 May 2013, at which reports were received and the yearly accounts were adopted. All members of the committee stood down and were re-elected.

Jim Gowans was re-appointed as the WHCA representative on the Conservation Advisory Council and he continues to be vigilant about planning applications in the West Hill area. He needs a deputy for the few occasions when he can’t attend meetings so if you’re interested please write to The Whistler. It is illegal to display Estate Agent boards in conservation areas and Jim is keeping a watchful eye for any breaches of these regulations by estate agents.

The Wild Life Garden group continues to make the garden surrounding the Hall flourish and always welcomes new members who would like to join in for the fun of growing plants, herbs and vegetables. If you live in a flat without your own garden and have a hankering to get your fingers green, do get in touch with us at The Whistler or the Hall.

The Hall itself is also flourishing, with new regular sessions taking place as well as one-off bookings for a variety of activities. In October we welcome Stuart Deeks and friends who will play two classical music concerts for stringed instruments. See details in Events. After Kate Dyson’s marvellous Poetry Recital last autumn, this will be another chance to see the Hall in a mellow light.

The Whistler – June 2013

Jeff Koons
EXHIBITION CONTINUES UNTIL 8 SEPTEMBER AT
BRIGHTON MUSEUM & ART GALLERY

UPDATES

Looking back in The Whistler archives, we found a story dated January 1997:

“The final proposals for the improvements to Brighton Station are being considered…there has been a slight delay…but if all goes to plan, the officers hope that the improvements will start on the site in October.”

Continue reading The Whistler – June 2013

The Whistler – April 2013

THE ENGLISH ELMS by Carol Ann Duffy

Saveourtree

Seven Sisters in Tottenham,

long gone, except for their names,

were English elms.

Others stood at the edge of farms,

twinned with the shapes of clouds

like green rhymes;

or cupped the beads of rain

in their leaf palms;

or glowered, grim giants, warning of

storms.

In the hedgerows in old films,

elegiacally, they loom,

the English elms;

or find posthumous fame

in the lines of poems –

the music making elm –

for ours is a world without them…

to whom the artists came,

time upon time,

scumbling, paint on their fingers and

thumbs;

and the woodcutters, who knew the

elm

was a coffin’s deadly aim;

and the mavis, her new nest unharmed

in the crook of a living, wooden arm;

and boys, with ball and stumps and bat

for a game;

and nursing ewes and lambs, calm

under the English elms…

great, masterpiece trees,

who were overwhelmed.

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The poet laureate, Carol Ann Duffy, wrote this poem in 2010 about the decline of the English elm caused by Dutch elm disease. The centuries old healthy elm tree at Seven Dials is one of the survivors of the disease which destroyed millions of elms throughout the UK in the 1970s.

Brighton houses the National Elm Collection and is home to rare ancient elms, including the Preston Park Twins, reputedly the oldest remaining English elm in the world, and the hollow veteran at Brighton Pavilion, which was planted in 1776.

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TREE FELLAS

We elect local councillors to look after local interests and do their best to preserve and improve local services for residents. Do they always get it right? No – and that’s why there are local elections every few years so if people don’t like what the politicians have done, they can vote them out and start again, hoping that another set of promises made will be kept. As Jim Gowans reported in his Pavement Clutter piece in the February edition of The Whistler, the elm tree was to be removed as part of the improvements to the Seven Dials. In answer to Della’s question in her letter in the Letters section, “Does anyone else see anything horribly wrong with a Green council deciding to chop down an ancient Elm tree at the Seven Dials?” – it seems that a lot of people thought that it was wrong.

Brighton is the home to the National Elm collection. Valedictory messages posted on the tree changed to pleas for it to be saved from the chop and Tom Druitt and Stephen Hendry set up camp in it, with local residents taking guard below it. As the protest drew attention, some councillors and even the local MP suddenly twigged that the last healthy elm tree at the Seven Dials (two others had previously succumbed to Dutch elm disease which wiped out millions of elm trees in the 1970s) was to be felled.

It seems that people power is breaking out all over the Seven Dials. With the Exeter Street Hall now safely in the hands of the community after a magnificent campaign to raise the funds to buy it, it just goes to show how powerful passion for a cause can be.

Local politics matter and are the very best reason to get out and vote in local elections. Voter turnout in the May 2011 council elections was 41%.

The Whistler – February 2013

Dictionary Series - Marketing: communication
The year has started off well at West Hill Hall as we are enjoying a brand new floor thanks to the genius work of Skydec’s Simon Kelly. Not far from the West Hill Hall is the Exeter Street Hall. A group set up to save it and ensure it is used by the community has so far raised over £139,000 by issuing a community share offer. The Hall Get Involved Ltd was initially given 6 months by the current owners, St Luke’s Church, to raise £200,000 to purchase the 128-year old Victorian hall. Since mid-September anyone has been able to purchase shares in the company. Having struggled to buy and maintain our own West Hill Hall over the years, West Hill Community Association has supported the Exeter Street Hall group and bought shares and Vinod Mashru of Bright News has matched the donation and bought shares himself. To help ensure the future of the Exeter Street Hall, you can still purchase shares by going to www.exeterstreethall.org
STOP PRESS! As of 23 January, St Luke’s has dropped the asking price to £150k, the fund now stands at £140k, so there’s only £10k more to find.
STOP STOP PRESS! They did it – raised £150k and more (will be needed for the renovation). So well done.
Continue reading The Whistler – February 2013

The Whistler – December 2012

If you believe clap your hands

SEASON’S GREETINGS

The Whistler offers you a politically correct Christmas greeting. Best wishes for an environmentally conscious, socially responsible, low stress, non-addictive, gender neutral, winter solstice holiday, practised within the most joyous traditions of the religious persuasion of your choice, but with respect for the religious persuasion of others who choose to practise their own religion as well as those who choose not to practise a religion at all. Additionally, we wish you a fiscally successful, personally fulfilling, and medically uncomplicated recognition of the generally accepted calendar year 2013, but not without due respect for the calendars of choice of other cultures whose contributions have helped make our society great, without regard to the race, creed, colour, religious, or sexual preferences of the wishees.

(Disclaimer: this greeting is subject to clarification or withdrawal. It implies no promise by the wisher to actually implement any of the wishes for her/himself or others and no responsibility for any unintended emotional stress these greetings may bring to those not caught up in the holiday spirit.)

In this issue we feature the many and varied activities that take place at West Hill Hall, and here we remind readers about the monthly fun quiz run by WHCA which is open to all. As we go to press a new fitness class is starting on Wednesdays and Fridays and of course, there are our internationally-famous music gigs on selected weekends.

The committee is appealing for heavy curtains for both the Hall stage (260cm drop, 487 total width) and the 4 windows (215cm drop, 180cm width). If you know of any which are going spare, we would be most grateful to hear from you.

The theatre tickets competition answer was Of Human Bondage. Congratulations to all those who got the answer correct. All those names went into a hat and David Fielder won two tickets to see “The Sacred Flame” by WS Maugham at the Theatre Royal. The editors went to review the play but found the acting by some of the cast members wanting and the direction clumsy. Best leave it at that.