Yorkshire Evening Post
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raveydavey wrote: dogduke wrote: Surely other things must have doubled in price in ten years The YEP, perhaps? I've just checked and on 1st January 2000, the YEP would have cost you 30p.So todays price of 42p represents an increase of 40%, which whilst not a doubling in price is still simply scandalous profiteering. Something must be done!
Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act – George Orwell
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- chameleon
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raveydavey wrote: raveydavey wrote: dogduke wrote: Surely other things must have doubled in price in ten years The YEP, perhaps? I've just checked and on 1st January 2000, the YEP would have cost you 30p.So todays price of 42p represents an increase of 40%, which whilst not a doubling in price is still simply scandalous profiteering. Something must be done! Went to buy a copy just after leaving school and was agog to find it had gone up from 6d to some silly priceAnyway someone has to pay for the nigh tclases in English Language.
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Hopefully it will go the way of MEN and Evening Standard and be handed out free but loaded with advertising. The Metro is not a bad paper and as long at the YEP has LUFC in it and letters by Bothered from Bramley I'll read it.What they need to stop doing is pretending to do car reviews in the "Motoring" supplement and paying eejits like McPhee to air their frankly pointless observations.Metro print syndicated interviews with interesting folk and generally repor the news without any kind of bias (albeit straight from the wire)
Ravioli, ravioli followed by ravioli. I happen to like ravioli.
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What day is jobs day in the Evening Pest now? I was thinking it used to be thursday but i grabbed today's and there was the skinnyest jobs suppliment, and then when i opened it it was only 2 pages with another suppliment inside that Someone tell me that wasn't it?Not that i care to buy it at all, but i'm about to be made redundent, and perhaps favour hypocrisy over unemployment.
Evil and ambition scatter in the the darkness, leaving behind dubious rumors to fly in public. To the next world, I commit thee.
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Crazy Jane wrote: What day is jobs day in the Evening Pest now? I was thinking it used to be thursday but i grabbed today's and there was the skinnyest jobs suppliment, and then when i opened it it was only 2 pages with another suppliment inside that Someone tell me that wasn't it?Not that i care to buy it at all, but i'm about to be made redundent, and perhaps favour hypocrisy over unemployment. Sadly it is still Thursday - it's just there are very slim pickings about at the moment. I would imagine they've lost a lot of the recruitment side to online (like Monster) and agencies - there seems to be a trend in paying someone else to line up interviews lately.Good luck with your job hunt!
Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act – George Orwell
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When I was a kid in Calverley, households were divided between the YEP or Bradford's Telegraph & Argus. We were YEP, (altho' Dad now gets the T & A), even though he used to work on the Yorkshire Post. The Yorkshire Evening News didn't seem to feature in any households I knew.Back in the 1950s there was a regular anti-smoking correspondent who signed himself (or herself) "Fresh Air, Shadwell". Gained quite a cult following. There was also a series of sketches of Yorkshire locations by an artist called 'Thack', and every year a small paperback book of them would be published.BTW, Dad, a retired printing compositor & newspaperman grumbles about the state of the T & A, so it's not just the YEP.
The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, moves on; nor all thy Piety nor all thy Wit can call it back to cancel half a Line, nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.
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When I was a kid in Calverley, households were divided between the YEP or Bradford's Telegraph & Argus. We were YEP, (altho' Dad now gets the T & A), even though he used to work on the Yorkshire Post. The Yorkshire Evening News didn't seem to feature in any households I knew.Back in the 1950s there was a regular anti-smoking correspondent who signed himself (or herself) "Fresh Air, Shadwell". Gained quite a cult following. There was also a series of sketches of Yorkshire locations by an artist called 'Thack', and every year a small paperback book of them would be published.BTW, Dad, a retired printing compositor & newspaperman grumbles about the state of the T & A, so it's not just the YEP.
The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, moves on; nor all thy Piety nor all thy Wit can call it back to cancel half a Line, nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.
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Uno Hoo wrote: When I was a kid in Calverley, households were divided between the YEP or Bradford's Telegraph & Argus. We were YEP, (altho' Dad now gets the T & A), even though he used to work on the Yorkshire Post. The Yorkshire Evening News didn't seem to feature in any households I knew.Back in the 1950s there was a regular anti-smoking correspondent who signed himself (or herself) "Fresh Air, Shadwell". Gained quite a cult following. There was also a series of sketches of Yorkshire locations by an artist called 'Thack', and every year a small paperback book of them would be published.BTW, Dad, a retired printing compositor & newspaperman grumbles about the state of the T & A, so it's not just the YEP. As it happens Uno I have an example of a Thack sketch from the YEP Mon Nov28th 1955,
It used to be said that the statue of the Black Prince had been placed in City Square , near the station, pointing South to tell all the southerners who've just got off the train to b****r off back down south!