Face Mail In Former Intek Windows

Friday 19th October 2012

Over the summer something was going on in Warminster.
Appearing in different businesses, cafes and pubs 
in the town were display boxes with postcards in them.

The Art Team at the Warminster Festival
launched a project called Face Mail
and encouraged local residents to draw self-portraits
on the the free postcards, which were
sponsored by the Footprints Gallery in Chinn’s Court,
Warminster. The message from the Art Team was:
don’t feel intimidated – just have a go!

Danny Howell took these photographs of the Face Mail
portraits on display in the windows of the former
Intek mobile phone shop in the Three Horse Shoes Walk,
Warminster, on Friday 19th October 2012.

About 200 postcard-size portraits on display.

Below are just a few of the self-portraits:


Pat

Nikki

 Hilary Jackson

 Mimi

Joshua

Rebecca

A final look at the portraits.

Friends Of Chernobyl’s Children (Warminster And District)

Wednesday 10th October 2012

Friends Of Chernobyl’s Childrem

Patron: Nick Park (Wallace & Gromit)

Can you help? We are setting up a satellite group of Friends of Chernobyl’s Children (F.O.C.C.) within Warminster and district. 

The children of Belarus are still suffering after the horrendous disaster at Chernobyl on 26th April 1986. The plight of these children has been forgotten.

F.O.C.C. aim to bring groups of children over from Belarus for one month each year for a month’s respite care. Good food, medical checks and lots of loving tender care in a clean air environment will help re-build their battered immune systems.

Other disasters have come and gone but the legacy of Chernobyl is here to stay. Please help us to help them. Could you be a host family, help fund raise, be part of the organising team or be prepared to help us in any way?

We will be holding a meeting on Friday 26th October 2012, at Sutton Veny Village Hall, at 7.30 p.m. The founder of F.O.C.C., Mrs. Olwyn Keogh, will be at the meeting and will address it on the group’s aims.

Please come to the meeting, or contact:

Cam Poulter, 24 Springhead, Sutton Veny, Warminster, Wiltshire, BA12 7AG.
email: cam_poulter@yahoo.co.uk
www.focc.org.uk

News From St. John’s School, Warminster

Monday 1st October 2012

Sheelagh Wurr writes:

St. John’s School may look like a building site from the outside, as the building of our new school is now well under way. However, inside, there are big improvements already. The Early Years’ classroom now has its very own toilets and there is a smart new disabled toilet in the hall as well as the large store cupboard adjoining the kitchen, which has made Liz, our cook, very happy. The badgers have been given a brand new luxury apartment block and we hope that they will settle there and keep away from the main building!

Already, the children are looking ahead to the opening of the new school. The older children have been reading the log book which holds records of school events from 1872 when the school opened with 48 pupils in the morning and 44 in the afternoon.

At the beginning of term the school had a visit from a Victorian Headteacher which gave them a flavour of school in the early days of St. John’s.

Church visits are planned for all the classes before half term. The new children have already been in to explore, and enjoyed the experience. One very little boy pointed to the font and said excitedly, “My baby brother was born in there!”

On 28th September, the Harvest Festival service was held in church. This year, to encourage the children to think of children further afield and to support a local good cause, the school offered two ways to donate for harvest.

First, families had the opportunity to purchase fair-trade rice through a scheme called ‘The 90kg Challenge’. This scheme enables Malawian farmers to send their children to school for a year, for the cost of 90kg of the rice that they produce on their farms.

In addition, children were encouraged to donate non-perishable foodstuffs to the Warminster Foodbank. Parents and children were incredibly generous and, as well as purchasing a total of 26kg of rice, a huge amount of food was collected for the Foodbank.

During the service in church, each class presented an aspect of Harvest through songs and poems, and these contributions reflected an awareness of the needs of others, as well as God’s care for all in the world.

Following the service, Headteacher, Lyn Taylor, said “Yet again, I’m overwhelmed by the generosity of the children and parents in our school.”

Our Open The Book team from church will continue to take bible study assemblies into school and there are plans afoot to set up an ‘Advent Experience’ in church in the second half of the term.

The church ‘team’ would be delighted to see new members. If you would like to know more or volunteer, please talk to the Rector or me.

Pam Goodger ~ Experiences In The WAAF

Saturday 29th September 2012

Pam Goodger, who formerly lived at Corsley, prior to moving to her present home in The Close, Warminster, was the guest speaker at the September 2012 meeting of Boreham Women’s Institute. She held her audience captive by relating her experiences in the WAAF. Pam began by reminding everyone who could remember, how calm and peaceful life was before 1939. Pam was just 16 at the time but had a desire to ‘get on’ with her life, with an ambition to learn to drive.

Pam’s first experience of work was with the WVS. A six-week domestic science course gave her a basic training but in 1941 with the arrival of her 18th birthday Pam joined the WAAF. She was sent to Bridgenorth and was there kitted out with the standard issue of uniform – some 63 items – including a haversack to put it all in, not forgetting the large black knickers! Pam then recounted how the recruits were taken on to the parade ground for drill and were ‘barked at’ by a male NCO, who took delight in ordering the women about.

Eventually the sought-after driving training came along, and Pam was in Wales learning to drive a 3 ton, 6 wheeler, left-hand drive lorry, a hearse and a Hillman car. Unfortunately Pam failed her driving test.

She then spent some time in Gloucester, guarding a barrage balloon which managed to break free from its hawser and lumberd away “like an escaping elephant”. 

The desired driving test reappeared and this time Pam passed. This was followed by a posting to an RAF station in East Anglia, where she was expected to drive a tractor, towing bombers from their hangars. 

One car she had to drive broke down on a runway, having sheared the cottar pin. This meant Pam had to go before the C.O., but rather than a reprimand she was given a commision as a catering officer and sent to London for more courses. Further catering management skills were honed under the tutalage of one of the J. Lyons Company members, this time in Lancashire. These young women were considered sufficiently trained to take the responsibility of organising girls hardly younger than themselves.

Pam Goodger’s talk was well received by Boreham WI. The members found it interesting to remember and learn how rapidly one had to ‘grow up’ in wartime. The RAF was 22% women by 1945 – “how attitudes changed in those few war years.”

Boreham WI Talk ~ Pam In The WAAF

Friday 28th September 2012

Pam Goodger, who formerly lived at Corsley, prior to moving to her present home in The Close, Warminster, was the guest speaker at the September 2012 meeting of Boreham Women’s Institute. She held her audience captive by relating her experiences in the WAAF. Pam began by reminding everyone who could remember, how calm and peaceful life was before 1939. Pam was just 16 at the time but had a desire to ‘get on’ with her life, with an ambition to learn to drive.

Pam’s first experience of work was with the WVS. A six-week domestic science course gave her a basic training but in 1941 with the arrival of her 18th birthday Pam joined the WAAF. She was sent to Bridgenorth and was there kitted out with the standard issue of uniform – some 63 items – including a haversack to put it all in, not forgetting the large black knickers! Pam then recounted how the recruits were taken on to the parade ground for drill and were ‘barked at’ by a male NCO, who took delight in ordering the women about.

Eventually the sought-after driving training came along, and Pam was in Wales learning to drive a 3 ton, 6 wheeler, left-hand drive lorry, a hearse and a Hillman car. Unfortunately Pam failed her driving test.

She then spent some time in Gloucester, guarding a barrage balloon which managed to break free from its hawser and lumberd away “like an escaping elephant”. 

The desired driving test reappeared and this time Pam passed. This was followed by a posting to an RAF station in East Anglia, where she was expected to drive a tractor, towing bombers from their hangars. 

One car she had to drive broke down on a runway, having sheared the cottar pin. This meant Pam had to go before the C.O., but rather than a reprimand she was given a commision as a catering officer and sent to London for more courses. Further catering management skills were honed under the tutalage of one of the J. Lyons Company members, this time in Lancashire. These young women were considered sufficiently trained to take the responsibility of organising girls hardly younger than themselves.

Pam Goodger’s talk was well received by Boreham WI. The members found it interesting to remember and learn how rapidly one had to ‘grow up’ in wartime. The RAF was 22% women by 1945 – “how attitudes changed in those few war years.”

Nobel Peace Prize Winner

Saturday 22nd September 2012

Tonight, on BBC2 television, at 8.10 p.m., there is a programme in the This World series – Aung San Suu Kyi – a profile of the Nobel Peace Prize winner and Burmese politician, who has spent nearly 20 years under house arrest and has become an international symbol of the power of peaceful resistance.

Ang San Suu Kyi is the sister-in-law of Mrs. Lucinda Phillips, of Teddington House, Church Street, Warminster, Wiltshire.

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