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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Police appeal over missing man

North Wales Police are appealing for help in tracing a 69 year old man missing from the Trefynant Park area of Acrefair,  Wrexham. 

David Clwyd Davies has not been seen since the afternoon of Saturday 6th April 2013 and a concerned neighbour made contact with police earlier today.

North Wales Police and the North East Wales Search and Rescue team are currently conducting enquiries in the immediate vicinity of Mr Davies’ home but they are asking the public’s help with any information on sightings.  
 
Mr Davies (pictured right) is described as 5’ 11” tall, heavy build and sporting a thick beard.  He ordinarily wears jeans, fleece top and woolly hat and is well known in the local community.
 
Inspector Alan Hughes of Wrexham Police, who is coordinating the search said; “Mr Davies was due to meet up with a neighbour last Saturday and he failed to keep that appointment.  
 
He hasn’t been seen since and this is out of character. We are concerned and are appealing for any person who has seen Mr Davies or knows of his whereabouts, to contact the police.”
 
Anyone with any information should contact North Wales police on 101 or alternatively Crimestoppers on 0800555111.

Quiz for Cancer Research at RAFA this Friday



Cancer Research UK is hosting a quiz night at the RAFA Club in Llangollen this Friday evening (April 12).
 
Teams of four are invited to enter the quiz, which starts at 8pm, at a cost of £2.50 per team member.
 
All are welcome.

County council workers poised for protest

The BBC North East Wales news website is reporting today that workers at Denbighshire County Council are to protest against changes which they say could mean employees being sacked for refusing new conditions of work.

See the full story at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-north-east-wales-22069545

New book of Llangollen group pictures set for launch



* The new book is due for launch later this month.



* The Christmas Festival Committee pose for their picture.
 
Images of over 100 local groups have now been captured for a book recording the rich pattern of everyday life in Llangollen. 

The glossy 144-page work will be officially unveiled to members of the local public – many of whom are featured in it – at a launch ceremony later this month. 

Meanwhile, some of the pictures appearing in the book can be seen at an exhibition which is running at the town’s museum until May 3.  

The book, entitled Llangollen Community, is the brainchild of local man Simon Collinge who has directed the project while Llangollen-based cameraman Andrew Gale has taken the pictures. 

They have been working steadily away since late last year and the pictures have all been taken in the muted style of Old Masters painters such as Rembrandt and Frans Hals.  

Simon said: “We are producing the book as we felt it was about time that a documented pictorial history of these groups was recorded for posterity – it also seemed rather a fun idea.” 

He and Andrew thought originally that there would be about 50 groups from the area needing to be photographed but the final tally was over 100 groups, societies and organisations.  

These included outfits as diverse as Llangollen Silver Band and the Christmas Festival Committee. 

Simon added: “The book is now back from the printers - all on schedule for revised launch date of  Thursday, April 25 at Llangollen Town Hall, starting at 7.30pm. 

“We’ve invited Courtyard Books, Llangollen Library and the museum to bring along copies of their local Llangollen history books to make this a literary evening to remember.”

Monday, April 8, 2013

Llangollen stars in new fantasy thriller novel



Llangollen features prominently in a new e-book in which the villains are a breed of malevolent fairies intent on world domination.

And its author has explained how the idea for the fantasy thriller The Last Changeling came to her in a dream. 

Fiona Maher, who writes under the name of F R Maher, said: “We’ve had wizards and vampires, and I wondered what other supernatural beings would appeal to readers. 

“After a dream, I came up with the idea that it would be fairies - not the cutesy pink confections of modern cartoons, but the ancient malign creatures that haunted the forests, and stole children. 

“I called them metahominids - literally 'other men' - and I ask what if population pressure meant they started moving out of the country, and began invading our city spaces, like urban foxes? 

“What if we've been at war with them for centuries and the evidence was all around us? 

“If myxamatosis hadn't been developed for rabbits, but to spray on the barrows, the metahominid strongholds?”

Hero of the book is a young policeman named Watkin who gets caught up in a battle between a secret government department and metahominids in Kew Gardens.

In the melee, he is injured, and believes he has been involved in a UFO incident. 

However much he tries to find out what really happened, the government organisation, D9, evades all of his investigations. 

Dispirited, he gives up that line of research, and returns to his interest in UFOs. 

Watkin travels up from London to investigate the Beings of Bodfari, a legend that has been linked to UFO activity. 

En route, he stops off in Llangollen of which the author gives a vivid description taking in a number of well-known local sights and businesses such as Dinas Bran Castle, the Corn Mill, the station, the florists in Oak Steet and the Watkin Williams store in Regent Street. 

Coincidentally in Llangollen at the same time as Watkin is a D9 operative, travelling under the name of Sarah Deakin.

Her weapon of choice is a meaty survival knife, which she has brought to Llangollen to have its edges laced with silver - a lethal metal to all metahominids – at a local jewellers shop.

The author knows Llangollen well because although she lives on the Wirral, she works in the town and has been associated with the area for the past 30 years.  

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Latest Buy Local day planned for April 12



The Keep Llangollen Special (KLS) campaign group is arranging the latest in its series of Buy Local days in the town next Friday April 12.

The group is distributing printed flyers to residents in Llangollen to encourage them to support their local independent business.

KLS chair Mike Edwards said: "We are inviting everyone to support Llangollen's traders and get quality, personal service and value for money.

"You will be making an important contribution to the local economy."

If any business needs copies they can contact Mike Edwards at chair@keepllangollenspecial.org.uk

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Railway extension plan hits the headlines

 
* The current edition of The Railway Magazine in
which the Corwen extension article features. 
 
 
The current (May2013) edition of The Railway Magazine features a 5 page article about Llangollen Railway's plan to extend the line all the way to Corwen.
 
Compiled by Cliff Thomas as part of the magazine's Lazarus series - railways brought back from the dead - it looks at the recent history of the project, current status and the prospects of finishing phase 1 to Corwen East.
 
The article features numerous pictures of trains, mostly on the extension, as it currently exists to show what is in prospect when the line is operational on its full length.
 
Railway spokesman George Jones said: "Let's hope it attracts the rail fans and brings in some much needed donations to allow for completion in 2014."
 
Mr Jones explained that extracts from the article will be put on show as part of the Corwen exhibition in the coach at Llangollen Station.