Blogs
More signs - some of them crass and tacky, some boring, many clever and very funny - here:
http://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/the-100-best-signs-at-the-rally-to-restore-sanity
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If you would prefer to view it in a separate browser window click here. Then click back in the browser to return to read on.
Peninsular Business Services Ltd (that's me) sponsor and organiser of the competition collaborated with The Bay Bistro Coffee House Rhossili where Alan Gregg's photograph will hang for all to see. Alan and his wife will enjoy dinner here as part of his prize.
The Bay Bistro is a favourite of visitors to Gower who pilgrimage to The Worm's Head to take in it's power and beauty. I imagine ten's of thousands of photographs exist of this phenomenon, how many are equal to Alan's shot, not that many methinks.
So today 29th October we met at the bistro to award Alan his Certificate of Achievement and it was kindly presented by His Worshipful The Lord Mayor of Swansea, Cllr Richard Lewis. The South Wales Evening Post newspaper covered the event.
Please comment and share your views on this winning photograph. I will pass on all your kind wishes to Alan and prompt him to set up a profile here on Americymru so that you can view future images from his portfolio.
Many thanks to Americymru (Ceri Shaw) for partnering with Peninsular Business Services (me - aka @LadyBizBiz on Twitter) for this great event.
There - all done for this year - now I'm off to begin considering which establishment might partner with me for next years event - somewhere in Mumbles perhaps, or Cheriton, or Stembridge, or Port Eynon ..... or ......
I had a drink or two, but then decided not to have any more alcohol, even though everyone else around me was knocking it back and having a great time. I explained to everyone that I didnt feel too good and I was going back to my villa. I left the bar, made my way home alone and as soon as I arrived at the villa I went straight to bed, feeling really weird"
Friday, 12 November - Waterstones Carmarthen 1.00-2.00pm
Saturday, 13 November - WH Smith Cardiff 12.00-1.00pm
Friday, 19 November - WH Smith Neath 12.00-2.00pm
Saturday, 20 November - Waterstones Swansea 12.00-2.00pm
Saturday, 27th November - Browning Books, Blaenavon 12.00-2.00pm
The 2011 North American Festival of Wales will be held in Cleveland, Ohio, September 1 4 at The Crowne Plaza Hotel, right downtown, near the Lakefront. It is a great location, within walking distance of several museums, the Cleveland Browns Stadium, and the pier where you can get boat tours.
The Grand Concert will feature the male voice choir Hogiar Ddwylan, from the Menai Strait area, North Wales. They have won many first prizes at the National Eisteddfodau. Their Director, Ilid Anne Jones, will also conduct both sessions of The National Gymanfa Ganu. The soloist at the Banquet will be Megan Morris, a native of Ohio, who has won the David G. Morris Memorial Award in both 2005 and 2009. She went on to place second in the mezzo soprano category at the National Eisteddfod in Wales in 2006 and 2010.
Rooms at The Crowne Plaza are available at the special reduced rate of $115 per night for a single or double room when you use the code WNGGA. Call 216-771-7600 to reserve your room. Reduced parking rates will also be available for those who drive.
Details about tours, seminars and other activities will come later.
Barbara M. Jones
Local Venue Co-Chair for 2011
The mid to late 19th Century saw a massive increase in emigration from Europe to the United States. Sometimes it was for religious reasons like the Mormons or to escape political persecution as in Russia and Eastern Europe. More often however it was simply a desire to seek your fortune and a new life in the exciting expanding economy of the new world. Often these dreams ended in disillusionment and sadness. For others by dint of ambition and hard work, they achieved their goals and ended up with great success and a life style they might have not achieved had they stayed in Europe. Wales provided its share of ambitious emigrants, and there are many stories of Welsh men and women who did extremely well in their new homeland. One such story that involved a family from Carmarthenshire is that of Jane Rees and her brothers, Thomas, Charles, and James. They came from a well-known Lower St Clears family, several of whom were burgesses and involved in the towns affairs. Their grandfather John and father David were builders and cabinetmakers.
Jane was first to emigrate in 1869 leaving to marry a man called Jeremiah Reeves. Jeremiah was a native of Dorset whom she had met whilst he was studying the trade of boiler making and structural iron working in Wales. Jeremiah had emigrated to Pennsylvania two years earlier in 1867, and had already had found work there. On Janes arrival they were married and set up house together. Four years later in 1873, by dint of hard work, Jeremiah and his brother Jabez who had also emigrated managed to start their own boiler works at a town called Niles in the next door state of Ohio. Their success in this encouraged them nine years later to sell their business and take over the operations of the much bigger, but ailing Dover Rolling Mills in the same state in 1883. They renamed the company The Reeves Iron Company with Jeremiah as its head and Jabez as plant superintendent. Again by dint of hard work and business acumen, they had become by 1896 one of the largest employers in that part of Ohio, employing nearly a thousand workers.
By the turn of the century they were so prosperous that Jeremiah and his son Samuel sold the mills to a subsidiary of U.S. Steel. Samuel formed a new company and called it the Reeves Manufacturing Company, which again produced steel and other metal products. Unfortunately Samuel died tragically soon afterwards, and Jeremiah had to come out of retirement to resume control of the company. The new company continued to prosper, building four new mills in 1912, and then branching out into banking, transport and the hotel industries. By now Jeremiah and Jane were extremely wealthy and besides their splendid Dover residence they had a winter home in Palm Springs Florida. Jeremiah died there in 1920 and Jane died there in 1926.
Undoubtedly the success of their sister and brother in law encouraged Janes brothers James, Charles and Thomas to make the same journey across the Atlantic. James and his wife Amelia arrived in Dover in 1892 time of the plants sale to U.S.Steel, its General Superintendent. James following the family tradition was a skilled builder and cabinetmaker having trained in Liverpool and London, and when the plant was sold he used this experience to remodel the beautiful and large mansion, which had been bought by his sister and brother in law.

27th October is the 96th anniversary of the birth of Dylan Thomas.
As part of the Dylan Down the Ups celebrations we are having a 'gathering' at his birthplace - 5 Cwmdonkin Drive, Uplands, Swansea - tonight.
Lots of people reading Dylan's work, some food, some wine.
Do you have a favourite Dylan poem or story - we'd loved to hear it.

However there were many lows as Tom Jones continually reinvented himself from young rock-and-roller in Pontypridd to sixties hip-swiveller to seventies cabaret king, and then, under the strict direction of his own son Mark, to mature rocker and born again gospel singer with the recently released Praise and Blame .
Now 70 years of age, Tom Jones says, "I'll still be belting out tunes when they're trying to nail me down." The biography also highlights Tom's attachment to his Welsh roots and to his wife and childhood sweetheart, Linda Trenchard -- which is, according to the author, "the craziest thing of all in the rascal's ultra-crazy life."
Author Aubrey Malone, says: "Tom is a flawed icon but an irresistible one, going up the down staircase, refusing to stay down for long. His huge belief in himself as The Voice made this the thing people would always remember when the knicker-throwing stopped."
Aubrey Malone has also published biographies of Ernest Hemingway, Charles Bukowski and Brendan Behan. This biography, Still Rockin' , sells for 6.95 and is published by Y Lolfa at www.ylolfa.com .
I am actually really glad I had the chance to show my top 12 as every one of those had great potential in terms of describing their own particular 'sense of place'. The 6 semi finalists took this sense one step closer and each one moved me very distinctly about places I've never even seen.
These final three all create a strong sense of place, mood and geographic identity, to me at least. Above that they are also just wonderful simple compositions and are photographically strong even if not technically perfect. These images made me wonder, made me smile and made me reminisce. I am genuinely pleased with the choice and on showing my poet wife Carol, she agreed entirely with my decision making me feel even happier

In third place for it's moody evening atmosphere, the dusk street lights and the view over the houses in the street opposite, like an illustration from Under Milk Wood, lies "In My Room" by Diana Manzanilla
http://americymru.ning.com/group/leftcoasteisteddfod2010visualimagecompetition/forum/topics/in-my-room
So that's all folks, it took a LOT longer to assess your entries than I thought it would but I can assure you of my seriousness in deliberation. I wish there had been hundreds more entries but the examples here would have held their own anyway
Dymuniadau Gorau iawn i gyd
Glyn Davies
A highly acclaimed writer and academic, whose memoirs recall scenes from a varied and exciting life in many countries, will again find himself in a politically delicate situation when he takes his new book to the Istanbul Book Fair.