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In the next few weeks the following features will be rolled out on the site:-

Rich Text & Media in all of your Main Page modules


Your Activity, Blog, and Forum features will support rich text and media. This means that if someone posts a video, you should be able to play it from the Activity Feed. And if someone posts a forum discussion with a photo or hyperlinks, those should appear on the Main Page as well.

It's a simple change, but making content more engaging on the Main Page is a great way to draw people deeper into your community.

Like & Comment on Status, and post a status from the Main Page


We've seen great traction of the Status feature, which lets members share updates and integrate with third party services like Twitter & Facebook. We'll continue that momentum by improving Status in 2 ways:

1) Let members post a status from the Main Page
2) Let members comment on and like status posts.

Inline Commenting


Finally, we've seen great engagement by allowing Liking inline on the Main Page. We want to take it to the next level and let members comment inline on the Main Page in the Activity Feed and Blog module.

We're just kicking off work on these initiatives, and we'll have more updates as we get closer to releasing. I just wanted to share these projects with you early, and get your initial thoughts and feedback!
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DGJ in the USA


By Prof Dai Twaddle B.S. M.A. P.H.D, 2011-05-09

Sounds like an alphabet soup to me, but it rhymes and has cadence; so that's good. You did know I have 'letters' in music don't you? I mean, I'm as familiar with Tonic Sol-fa as I am with Tonic Water.

I'm thinking about getting my alumni people to throw in a few shillings so I can get the pleasure of viewing my very own pie (it will have to be a true 3.1429 inch diameter pie) pushed into DGJ's face! Just how many shillings are there in $50 anyway? I wonder if I can pay in guineas; we just don't hear too much about them anymore. They used to be very popular at the horse track, I recall.

One problem is, I need help with composing a dedication or message. Can I have one that expresses gratitude to all the barmen, barmaids and floor-sweepers that have helped me get back on my feet all these years?

I want to make a poem too. Can anyone help me find suitable words to rhyme with 'Twaddle' - without making any characterizations of my closing-time gait?

I'm hoping you will come to my aid, so I can do my bit to help send that man across the sea and get him out of the land of fathers for a few days. Let's hear that chant again:

David Garland Jones in American homes! David Garland Jones in American homes

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Ive always lived in farming areas, amongst the hard-working and pragmatic attitudes that go hand-in-hand with the way of life. We know that farmers work hard, but it is the women who amaze me most: from the ones who chatted as they wrung chickens necks in the battery hen farm where I worked as a teenager, to the Peruvian island farmer who I helped haul her children and tools up a mountain each morning, dig a sackful of marble-sized potatoes, then lug them all back down the mountain (with her knitting as she went) before cooking them on an open fire - and even making them taste nice!
Of course, the most galling thing is that they still get called farmers wives which conjures up an image of a rosy-cheeked woman baking a ham and egg pie, rather than one covered in chicken muck hitting a pile of sacks with a shovel trying to get those b*@**!*d rats that lurk underneath.
Therefore, when I decided that my book, Cold Enough to Freeze Cows, was to be set in a mid Wales farming community, I wanted to do justice to the level of getting stuck in that these women farmers do. At lambing time in my village, for example, instead of chatting at the school gates, these women screech to a halt on the double yellows, jump out wrapped in overalls that are slopped in every possible bodily fluid, shout, GED IN, GED IN! to their children who are sprinting down the pavement instead of their usual dawdle, and then they zoom off back to the farm before the next emergency happens.
When writing my novels, I make sure I do lots of research to try and stop the jarring that occurs when you notice an author has made an error. For Cold Enough to Freeze Cows, I spoke to a number of farming women to try and glean what their days entailed and what exactly was their way of life, and although every farm is different, a few regular themes cropped up.
The women typically did the stock related side of the farm the checking, feeding, drenching, tailing, lambing side of it, whilst the men did the bits (and this was a regular comment too!) that required sitting in a tractor or mucking about with machinery.
There are downsides to this split, the main one being that when stock needs seeing to, it needs seeing to now - be it morning, noon or the fifth night in a row. The upside was that the women were able to sneak through some of their favourite little characters mostly ones that should have gone to the butchers some time ago! More than one said that she was glad that she had the powers to allow the little ewe that she took care of as a tiddler during a previous season, to hobble through to be kept for another year: even busy farmers are suckers for a cute little face it seems!
Of course, doing any job is difficult when you have small children in tow and many farmers rely heavily upon extended family and friends during the busier times. Despite this, it seemed common enough to have a separate sheep pen for the toddler to doze in and even an industrious two-year-old who would take the dead lambs away in her pedal tractor and trailer! Farming children have to grow up fast; as soon as they are able to do anything useful, they are required to do it, but the general consensus was that this was a positive thing, something that turned the next generation into people who can cut the dags off 500 sheep on an open hillside in horizontal sleet...
The need for pragmatism had spilled over into their sense of humour too. What do a group of women farmers joke about? I asked. Someone else having to deal with foot rot, they replied (it stinks) or someone else getting covered in bodily fluids and the smellier, the better. A friend stepping back onto a dead rat was funny when I was a child and it seems that this hasnt changed either.
The overall thing that struck me as I chatted to these women was their attitude to their farming. It was not a job: it was very much a way of life. Their farms were their responsibility - not just in terms of an income and the welfare of the animals, but also as part of the local community and the landscape. If diversifying a sheep farm to growing, say, grapes was a viable and more profitable option, would they do it? No, was the carefully-thought-through answer.
The proof of the pudding: would they want their daughters to do it? No, its too hard, was the reply then they would think about it, then proudly relate how, actually, maybe the middle one would be up for it: she was already pretty good
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Some kind of Week...


By Jude Johnson, 2011-05-07

This has been some kind of week...

Sunday evening brought such excitement... Yes, I received a call from Ceri Shaw!

(Well, and then there was the little announcement from President Obama.Hoo-YAH!)

Back to Ceri: I am very excited to be coming to the West Coast Eisteddfod in September. I mean, whoa - there's the possibility of meeting DGJ in the USA ( if the lad can raise the dosh), and finally meeting Mona Everett in person, who has been a wonderful supporter of my writing since I started. Ceri's phone call also revealed he wants me to help judge the contest for the best Male National Welsh Costume. I'm hoping there are a few Tom Jones impersonators, Richard Burton look-alikes in Cleopatra Roman centurion skirt garb, or Torchwood dudes. ( I really miss Ianto the Tea Boy!) So I'm quite looking forward to that entire event.

This week I also learned that my novel, Dragon & Hawk , is now not only available on Amazon Kindle, it's now also available from Amazon Kindle UK. This is the first time my book has been easily available across the Pond. If you don't have a Kindle, no worries. They have a free download for you to read Kindle books on your PC, iPad or iPhone. And it's less than 5!

And last but certainly not least, Champagne Books has contracted to publish the third book in the series, tentatively titled Dragon's Blood , sometime in Spring 2012. Guess I'd better get busy writing that fourth one, eh?

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I must be getting old


By Prof Dai Twaddle B.S. M.A. P.H.D, 2011-05-05

I am NOT a Luddite, a fuddy-duddy, or an ignoramus, but some things are hard for me to comprehend. To wit:

How did we go from this - a photo of me getting around campus in my 'learning years' -

to this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=GB&v=Cj6ho1-G6tw

It puts me in need of this:

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welsh author aled lewis evans

Aled Lewis Evans is a Welsh poet and writer in various media. Born in Machynlleth and now lives in Rhosllanerchrugog. His first volume of poetry was published by Barddas in 1989. He w

as a broadcaster on local radio (Sain y Gororau) from 19831993, then taught at Ysgol Morgan Llwyd, Wrexham. He has won prizes in the National Eisteddfod three times: in 1991 for his volume of poetry for young people, in 1998 for his monologue and in 1999 for his anthology of poetry for young people 12-14. His most recent volume of poetry, Dim Angen Creu Teledu Yma, was published in 2006. AmeriCymru spoke to Aled about his new book Driftwood.

...



Interview

Americymru: Hi Aled, many thanks for agreeing to be interviewed by AmeriCymru. Care to tell us a little about your new book - Driftwood

Aled: Driftwood is a selection of stories from over 30 years of writing in the Welsh language which are available now in English also. They come from two Welsh collections published in 1991 and 2006. Its true to say that they are my favourites and mostly emerge from North East Wales life.

Americymru: In the course of a varied career you have taught Creative Writing, Welsh, English, French, Media and Drama. How has your teaching experience informed your writing?

Aled: Some of my poems in Welsh collections for Barddas feature a school or young people background. During the ten years teaching at a High School in Wrexham I particularly tuned into the world of young people, and wrote about it. This was good grounding for the creative work I now do in schools. Recently I have been conducting a Creative writing course in 20 schools in Denbighshire with harpist Einir Wyn Hughes, where the children were stimulated to write by music. Before the National Eisteddfod in Wrexham I will visit all 5 Welsh medium primary schools in the Wrexham area to write about parklands in the area Ty Mawr, Parc y Ponciau and Melin y Nant. Some children will then perform their work at the National Eisteddfod. Through writing now I get a chance to meet and teach all ages.

Americymru: You have also worked for BBC Radio Cymru and Marcher Sound. Can you tell us a little about your experiences as a broadcaster?

Aled: I was a Welsh and English broadcaster on the independent local radio in North East Wales when it started broadcasting in 1983. My association with Sain y Gororau / Marcher Sound continued for ten years. For 5 of those I was a full time producer and presenter of Clwyd am Chwech, Cadw Cwmni, Both Sides of the Border and Voice and Brass. These were in the good old days when local radio was local. This void has now been filled by community stations. But I enjoyed getting to know the area and its people in a very intimate way. My Welsh programmes were magazine programmes. I presented some of my interviews to the Archive Services of the time, as they were a fitting record of a particular period. Nowadays I contribute quite frequently to BBC Radio Cymru especially to Dweud ei Ddweud a Thought for the Day slot on the Breakfast programme, and also to Rhaglen Dei Tomos. With the advent of the National Eisteddfod to Wrexham it is nice that the area will receive more media coverage.

Americymru: Professor Meic Stephens has said of your writing that:- " Many of the people who appear in his work are from the north-east corner of Wales where the Welsh language culture rubs shoulders with that of Merseyside, a confrontation that he finds stimulating." Care to comment?

Aled: I agree with Meic Stephens, but I must admit that I have seen a great change in attitude and practice in North East Wales as regard to the Welsh language. There are 29,000 Welsh speakers in Wrexham County alone, and due to Welsh medium education it is on the increase. The Council and cultural events have promoted the Welsh language, and it is being normalised more in the everyday life of Wrexham. My poetry and literature actually mirror this change. Wrexham has always had its own identity, like a separate entity in borderland. Perhaps the non- Welsh speakers dont feel proper Welsh like the people of Bala, but they certainly dont associate themselves with Chester. Merseyside spills over more to Deeside and the North Wales coast perhaps, rather than Wrexham and these areas are also reflected in some poems and short stories.

I have written a great deal about Liverpool because of Liverpool in its own right. It is a very Celtic city and on the most part friendly. It is a place to escape to for a few hours from Wrexham, and over the years I have written a great deal about it especially its Cathedrals. There is a strong Welsh community in Liverpool and I have conducted services and meetings in Heathfield Road Chapel, Capel Bethel, and for the Literary Society of that church. Also I have been several times to Cymdeithas Cymry Lerpwl which meets in the city centre.

Americymru: Your story, 'Driftwood' focuses on a member of the 'Puget Sound Welsh Choir' whose life is in transition.. Have you visited the Pacific North West? What inspired this story?

Aled: I have very dear friends in Seattle, and have visted on three occasions first as the MC for Brymbo Male Voice Choir in a number of concerts in 1985. Then in 1994 and 2000 visiting Jennifer and Holt my friends there. The story Driftwood, orginally titled Bae y Broc Mr in Welsh, featured places we visited in the Pacific North West. Driftwood Bay was one of these and the photo on the front of Driftwood is actually one I took of the bay. The actual story is an elaboration on a real life decision that the main character had to make and the fact that she had to tell her son about it, because of the special bond between them.

Americymru: In 'The Border' you seem to take a rather pessimistic view of the Welsh language's chances of survival in this part of Wales. Would that be an accurate assessment of your opinion?

Aled: This early story was actually based on breaking down and asking for petrol at the farm. It happened as it says in the story and I hope it depicts the area near Oswestry and Arddlin where it happened. The only difference is that years later I did actually meet the lady who welcomed me that night at a service in Oswesty Welsh Chapel. So it was not a dream after all. But for years it seemed as if it was, and I still cant always locate the house!

The story of the Welsh language is in reality far more hopeful in the Wrexham area than that story suggests. In the future I think the key to making Wales a totally bilingual nation is in making every primary school in essence a Welsh school teaching Welsh and English effectively to all pupils as it should be in all schools in Wales. (Similar to current policy in Gwynedd). Two or even three windows on the world are better than one. Some of the Welsh learners in the Wrexham area are truly inspiring.

Americymru: The book closes with a dramatic adaptation of your first novel 'Y Caffi'. Care to tell us a little about the play? What unites the characters and what divides them? Are there currently any plans to stage 'The Cafe' ?

Aled: When my nofel Y Caffi was published in Welsh in 2003 it sold very well, and was somehow a mirror to the postmodern period of literature and the 80s and 90s in Wrexham. Its structure was a little disjointed, and the insular lives depicted in the book and this was deliberate.

The Cafe in the Library is the one thing that does unite these different characters. In the play the monologues present separate lives and indeed nothing much does unite them. The play was presented in 2006 in the Wrexham Festival and others have used various monologues for other presentations. However it would be great to have another production of the Cafe. Perhaps a good producer could suggest an unifying factor, something to bring them all together in the end.

Americymru: What's next for Aled Lewis Evans?

Aled: It has been a very busy two years preparing for the Natinal Eisteddfods visit to Wrexham and District. As Chairman of the Literature Committee we have devised the List of Subjects and then recently as a committee worked on filling eight days of events for the Pabell Ln (Literature Pavilion). I think we have a good mix of National and local topics in a variety of forms lined up fro visitors, and there is something for eveyone, and all ages are taking part.

At the Wrexham National Eisteddfod I publish my latest collection of Welsh language poems Amheus o Angylion (Wary of Angels). I am particularly excited about this coinciding with the Eisteddfod itself. Then after the Eisteddfod and after a break I hope to get back into my own writing in a big way. I have many projects one of which is producing a sister book to Driftwood a collection of some of my poetry from the last 30 years of writing in English.

Americymru: Any final message for the readers and members of AmeriCymru?

Aled: I hope you enjoy Driftwood, and if you visit the National Eisteddfod in Wrexham come and see me in the Pabell Len on the Field. I hope to visit America again in the future, and best wishes to Americymru.



Review

driftwood by aled lewis evans front cover detail " Aled Lewis Evans writes in both Welsh and English, and the pieces in this collection have all been adapted from the original Welsh, either by Martin Davis or by the author.

The collection opens with a series of stories about sad and sorry characters bored, ignored wife and mother of four, Sue, whose spirits and hair colour are temporarily lightened in response to the attentions of the local Casanova; homeless Harry, interminably snapping away with a camera that contains no film (we are pre-digital here); Gareth, the lonely radio presenter, wondering who will listen to him on Christmas day; and middle-aged Ruth throwing an attention-seeking tantrum that backfires on her. Is there anyone out there? Is anyone listening? Does anyone care? These are the questions that resound throughout, as Evanss characters convince themselves that they have either failed or been failed, and fall into the inevitable trap of anger and self-pity.

Other stories and monologues address questions of language and roots from various angles. In The Gulf, Melys Parry, exiled in Wolverhampton and married to Dave the gas-man, visits the Eisteddfod in her hometown of Mold. In Just a Few Seconds, sisters Rhiannon and Naomi are estranged because of the cultural divide that has opened up between them. And in The Border, an elderly couple expresses their pride that their sons went to prison fighting for the Welsh language, and their bewilderment that those same sons now live in England.

The back cover description of the short stories and monologues as driftwood from three decades of writing is apt: an assortment of treasures and trivia, of curiosities to enjoy or pass by, of pieces that have dated with the passing of the years and others that are very much of the now."

Suzy Ceulan Hughes A review from www.gwales.com, with the permission of the Welsh Books Council.

Interview by Ceri Shaw Email

The World - as I see it


By Prof Dai Twaddle B.S. M.A. P.H.D, 2011-05-04

Bore da, boys and girls.

I have very few words for you today, but want to let you see the World as I see it - most of the time:

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A reminder from last month's winners post:- "As you may have noted from an earlier announcement we have transitioned to the weekly leaderboard for our monthly Top Blogger adjudication. Henceforth the winner will be decided on the basis of their ranking and points in the final weekly leaderboard of the month. Posts which were published in preceding months will be discounted. The reasons for this are twofold. Firstly the weekly leaderboards are much more responsive and competitive and secondly the monthly board has some strange quirks. In particular it insists on ranking a few ancient posts that have received no 'Likes' comments or recent traffic."

So without further ado here are this months winners:-

1. Lyn Mackay 58 points ( 38 ranking points plus 10 for quantity and 10 for 'traffic', Lyn has blogged consistently on the site this month and our log files indicate that her posts have been well received. View Lyn's blog on AC here )

2. Mona Everett 19 points ( 19 ranking points. View Mona's blog on AC here )

3. Jeff Phillips 16 points ( 16 ranking points. View Jeff's blog on AC here )

Fabulous digital prizes will be awarded to our three winners today and Lyn will receive a copy of Owen Sheers, 'White Ravens'. We will be announcing next months Top Blogger prize shortly. To view the current weekly leaderboard and peruse the rules of the competition go to this page

If you would like to congratulate our winners please feel free to do so in comments on this page


This Months Prize

Gwales Review :- " Aled Lewis Evans writes in both Welsh and English, and the pieces in this collection have all been adapted from the original Welsh, either by Martin Davis or by the author.

The collection opens with a series of stories about sad and sorry characters bored, ignored wife and mother of four, Sue, whose spirits and hair colour are temporarily lightened in response to the attentions of the local Casanova; homeless Harry, interminably snapping away with a camera that contains no film (we are pre-digital here); Gareth, the lonely radio presenter, wondering who will listen to him on Christmas day; and middle-aged Ruth throwing an attention-seeking tantrum that backfires on her. Is there anyone out there? Is anyone listening? Does anyone care? These are the questions that resound throughout, as Evanss characters convince themselves that they have either failed or been failed, and fall into the inevitable trap of anger and self-pity " read more

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A Realistic Assessment


By Alan Stafford Jones, 2011-05-03

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

A Realistic Assessment



Once again it is "Prediction Time" for "Independence Cymru", so here is your trusted unfailing prediction for the elections.


Scotland: Alex Salmond and the SNP will be elected into government with a comfortable majority over Labour.....


Wales: Plaid will fail in its bid to overtake Labour and Carwyn Jones and Labour will form the majority party and govern alone.....


N. Ireland: Once again Sinn Feinand the DUPwill gain the majority of votes for Stormont with a good showing by the SDLP and the peace process will continue but with growing support for unification.
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Things To Do In L.A.


By Ceri Shaw, 2011-05-03

As the West Coast Eisteddfod approaches we are aware that many people will be travelling from outside L.A. and indeed from outside the USA to attend this event. This is the first in an occasional informational series for first time visitors to L.A. Today we present a personal view with advice and recommendations from AmeriCymru member Margaret Lloyd Beckham .


Barnsdall Art Park viewed from the north Image via Wikipedia 1) Don't worry about earthquakes.

2) Getting around in LA is not difficult with Public Transit (or so my brother says). If you have a GPS device, take it with you, and set it for LA. There are no toll roads to worry about.

The Hollywood sign on Mount Lee in Griffith Pa... Image via Wikipedia

3) Griffith Park is just North of Barnsdall Park , where the WCE will be held. Several have voiced an interest in going there. It has the Gene Autry Museum, Train Town (you can ride the train there), a Zoo, and an Equestrian Park where you can ride horses. Along the South End of the Park, there is an area that reminds you of the "land that time forgot". There are huge, beautiful ferns, plenty of places to picnic, and beautiful scenery. A lot of people use this for birthday parties, and other family gatherings. It's quite beautiful.

View of the Hollywood Sign on Mount Lee in Los... Image via Wikipedia




4) The WCE site is also close to Hollywood and Vine, a very famous location. Don't bother trying to get up to the "Hollywood" sign, taking a "Hollywood" star tour, or buying star's maps. It's a waste of your money.

5) Investigate your hotel, motel or lodgings ahead of time. Don't pick some cut rate place just to save a dollar or two. Find a nice hotel and find out if you can make a deal with them. They are more likely to give a good rate, especiallyif you prepay. There are a lot of good hotels. We want you to be happy, not stuck in some awful place. By Sept., the tourists will be gone and there should be plenty of vacancies.

Griffith J Griffith statue in front of Griffit... Image via Wikipedia

6) Weather in LA will be about 60-75 degrees; it'sbeautiful weather. Youmay need a jacket in the mornings and evenings. It can get very cool due to the ocean breeze.

7) There are great restaurants in LA, and the prices will vary with how nice the restaurant is. We will be adding more information to this list as soon as we get it.

8) Some expressed a wish to go to San Francisco once the WCE concludes. Travel between 10 AM & 3PM so the traffic isn't so bad. A fun thing to do is drive up the PCH (Pacific Coast Hwy 1), which goes through Malibu, Point Magu, Zuma Beach, Ventura (for sport fishing), Santa Barbara (has a Marina and small public beach, you can also take a champagne cruise), Morro Bay (rock formation), Cambria (where the pines meet the sea), San Simeon (famous Hearst Castle), Big Sur, south of Carmel there is a Sea Otter Game Refuge, then Carmel (beautiful bay), Monterrey (larger bay and a famous Aquarium), Santa Cruz, San luis Obispo, then San Francisco. Once you get there, you won't want to leave. You may see dolphins, whales, & seals in different locations along the coast. There are lots of B and B's and hotels along the coast, and quirky hotel called Madonna near Cambria. Keep in mind that is can be cool in San Francisco (same latitute as England & N.. France).

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