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Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
On Fri, Oct 01, 2010 at 06:09:05PM +0100, Arthur Figgis wrote:
On 01/10/2010 11:41, Roy Badami wrote: On 01/10/10 11:34, Bruce wrote: "But funding for Crossrail and Tube projects will only be retained if London mayor Boris Johnson abandons plans to scrap the Western extension of the congestion charging zone or axes concessionary bus and tram fares for 16-17 year olds." Assuming those really are the only two options for saving the necessary money, I wonder which would be politically more palatable? Well, 16-17 years olds can't vote... But most of those that would be affected by having their cheap fares scrapped now will be able to vote in 2012. -- David Cantrell | top google result for "internet beard fetish club" If I could read only one thing it would be the future, in the entrails of the ******* denying me access to anything else. |
Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
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Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
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Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
On Mon, 04 Oct 2010 12:16:15 +0100
David Cantrell wrote: No, a student is one who studies. So a 5 year old in primary school is a student then? Yeah, and being at school does tend to prevent one from getting a job that pays well, especially if you put the necessary time and effort into your studies to actually benefit from them. So what? B2003 |
Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
On Mon, 4 Oct 2010 12:38:00 +0100
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 09:46:47 on Mon, 4 Oct 2010, d remarked: Round here, most of the 6th Form Colleges get better A-Level results than the schools. I'd call a kid who goes to 6th form college a pupil, not a student. Then you are out of step with much of society. Like the NUS, who sign up 6th-formers these days. The NUS are and always have been a joke. Only the people running it who all seem to believe they're a future prime minister in waiting don't realise that. If I hadn't spent a "gappy kind of year" doing my Cambridge scholarship exams, I could easily have gone to university aged 17 and a quarter. I took a gap year and got a job to earn money to go to university. Unlike the trustafarians who bum around foreign climbs with daddies gold card patronising the locals. B2003 |
Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
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Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
"Roland Perry" wrote I didn't have any money, which is why I spent the second and third terms that year still at school, as (mainly) a form of volunteer technology teacher. I spent the 9 months between the Oxford entrance exam and going up working in the Public Relatioss and Publicity department of the WR London Divisional Manager's Office. Peter |
Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
In message , at 21:16:51 on
Mon, 4 Oct 2010, Peter Masson remarked: I didn't have any money, which is why I spent the second and third terms that year still at school, as (mainly) a form of volunteer technology teacher. I spent the 9 months between the Oxford entrance exam and going up working in the Public Relatioss and Publicity department of the WR London Divisional Manager's Office. Sounds like a great placement to have had. And I forgot, as well as doing the volunteer teaching I sat (self-taught) the first ever Computer Science A-level: Oxford board. Naturally, I got an "A" :) -- Roland Perry |
Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
On 04/10/2010 21:57, Roland Perry wrote:
And I forgot, as well as doing the volunteer teaching I sat (self-taught) the first ever Computer Science A-level And I bet someone still said it had got easier... -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
Crossrail and Tube upgrades spared the axe - NCE
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