It has now become an unofficial home of the club's Aussie supporters ahead of the
"Life was what you made it," he said. "[There were] a lot of times we didn't enjoy obviously. You had to make do with what you'd got".After the war Mr Page, who was born in March 1923, returned to work in Desborough in various roles maintaining machinery and went on to have three children and five grandchildren.
He now lives in a care home in Northampton and when asked about the secret of his longevity said: "There's no secret, life is what you make it if you put up with what you're given."The percentage of people able to speak Welsh is the lowest recorded in over eight years at 27.7%, government statistics indicate.There were around 851,700 Welsh speakers in Wales in the year ending 30 September 2024, according to the annual population survey - around 1.6% lower than the previous year.
The Welsh government said it was "absolutely committed to our goal of having one million Welsh speakers and doubling the daily use of Welsh."The target of achieving a million Welsh speakers by 2050 is measured using census data rather than this yearly survey.
Plaid Cymru spokesperson Heledd Fychan said "these are really disheartening numbers from the government's own data".
She added: "Today's news should serve as a warning to Labour that something needs to change if we are to see the drastic turn around needed to reach Cymraeg 2050."Dignity in Dying said the campaign used "positive imagery" and was fully compliant with the Committee of Advertising Practice code. Transport for London said the adverts were compliant with its advertising policy.
for England and Wales on Friday.Some of the posters on the network have been covered by posters for the Samaritans. The organisation said it had not sanctioned this.
A spokesperson for Dignity in Dying said its advertising campaign, Let Us Choose, featured real people who wanted a change in the law on assisted dying, either because they were terminally ill and wanted the choice, or because their loved one wanted the choice but had been denied it."The campaign uses positive imagery of these people living life on their own terms, alongside messages about why they are campaigning for greater choice," the spokesperson said.