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Should the Oasis be revamped or demolished? | Swindon Advertiser
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Should the Oasis be revamped or demolished? | This Is Wiltshire
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A BUSINESSMAN with entrepreneurship in his blood is opening a fudge shop on a booming high street. Thomas Griffiths, 31, and his girlfriend Mariah Mcentee have set up The Finest Fudge Company on Great Harwood’s Queen Street which has a growing reputation for independent food traders. Close to the new Finch Bakery, the shop, which will be fronted by Mariah, will sell their homemade fudge alongside ice cream from Longridge and donuts from Blackburn. Tom, who is the great-grandson of Blackburn shoe emporium legend Tommy Ball, said: “Living round here, I have got to know Great Harwood and I thought that it looks like a little foodie paradise – let’s get in there.
Telling men to educate themselves won t make women safe
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image captionEllie, 17, was a pupil at Hardenhuish School, Chippenham
A mother who fought to change the law around murder says her daughter would be very proud .
Announced on Tuesday, Ellie s Law, named after Wiltshire teenager Ellie Gould, means teenage killers could face sentences of up to 27 years.
Ellie was stabbed to death by her ex-boyfriend Thomas Griffiths in May 2019.
He was 17 at the time, so received a more lenient sentence than an adult defendant would have.
The change in the law, announced by Justice Secretary Robert Buckland, is the culmination of a two-year campaign by Ellie s parents.