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The Tameside neighbourhood where stunning peacocks rule the roost - but not everyone is happy
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Overturned lorry causes severe traffic block on A303
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I went to the now-gone, Andover Grammar School. So, memories of those five years remain. In the large hall and long corridors there would be many voices, loudly chatting, laughing, although we would gather in our small groups and didn’t feel it was too loud then. Yet the numbers were in their hundreds I am guessing now. There was a stage for the head teachers, deputies and others to sit on their wooden chairs. Black flowing gowns and flat black hats with tassels held them tall. In assembly the girls sat to the right, the boys to the left. How the teachers kept that silence, I wonder but I recall it may have been due to their raised shoulders and utter silence, with eyes pointing in the direction of those misbehaving.
Letters to the Editor: Brexit woes and politicians withheld
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‘Urban meadows’ are to be created across Andover as part of an experiment to bring rare species back to the borough. Sites in Augusta Park and Picket Twenty, as well as St Mary’s Church, are among areas where grass will be left unmown until September as part of a pilot by Test Valley Borough Council (TVBC) to find out whether rare plants and insects, which are negatively affected by regular mowing, will make a comeback. The plans are part of a wider initiative, No Mow May, where gardeners across the county are encouraged to let their garden grow to allow rare species to thrive.