TALKS are going to be a lot more interesting now Blackmoor and Whitehill Women’s Institute can illustrate them with a new projector, bought with a £120 grant from town, district and county councillor Adam Carew.

The projector was put into action at the start of this month, when Kim Phillips gave a talk on Brookwood Cemetery, near Woking, which opened in 1845 to provide space for the London dead after the city’s burial grounds became full.

Secretary Sara Finch said the WI members were grateful to Mr Carew: “The £120 exactly covered the cost of the projector and it will make a big difference to our talks, which can be illustrated with slides and we can use it with a computer to show photos and films.”

Members of Blackmoor and Whitehill Women’s Institute are pictured with the new projector. Picture order no: BD29-01-16.