- Welcome
- Important notice
- About the author
- About this site
- Site guide + Search box
- Dedications
- Acknowledgments
- My personal pantheon (of the great and the good in survey research)
- Recent and planned activities
- Textbooks for Research Methods and Data Analysis
- 1: Survey Analysis Workshop (SPSS)
- 1a: Statistical concepts and methods
- 1b: Teaching with Survey Data
- 1c: Developing research projects using survey data
- 1d: Workshop and presentations for ASSESS (SPSS users in Europe)
- 2: Survey Research Practice
- 2a: Survey Research Methodology, Practice and Training
- 2b: Major survey series
- 3: Subjective Social Indicators (Quality of Life)
- 4: Survey Unit, Social Science Research Council (UK)
- 5a: Polytechnic of North London (1976-1992)
- 5b: Survey Research Unit (1978-1992)
- Village life in Normandy
- Contact
- Origins of the British Crime Survey
- British Crime Survey
D-Day 70th Anniversary
6 June 2014
After a fruitless attempt to get to Bayeux for the evening celebrations (huge traffic jam: 1 and a half hours to do 2 km) we did a U-turn and found an open air concert in St-Lô. Many of the musicians were known to us and an enjoyable evening was spent on the terrace of a bar overlooking the square. There was also a visiting band from the USA (in the red jackets; name to be added later)
Slide-show
Slide-show
Video clip
Janet Booth (photo) who died on 30 Nov 2018, was the daughter of Joe Hughes, who was parachuted into Normandy on 6 June 1944 for the raid on the Merville Battery (simultaneous with the raid on Pegasus Bridge).
She had a holiday home in Roncey (where Joe's ashes were scattered in 2003) and her brother Ron has one in Notre Dame de Cenilly.
She had a holiday home in Roncey (where Joe's ashes were scattered in 2003) and her brother Ron has one in Notre Dame de Cenilly.