THESE are some of the stories which made the news in the South Wales Guardian in the week ending Thursday, May 6, 1982.

Dinefwr Borough Council are sending a delegation to the European Commission in Brussels to establish what grants are available.

More than 70 percent of Amman and Towy valley residents are Welsh speakers - the highest percentage of any area in Dyfed.

Dyfed County Council have denied claims that the quality of meat supplied to local schools is sub-standard and that the education department have been involved in a cover-up.

Pantyffynon sub-post office has been closed since April 15, Dinefwr Council were told in a letter from the head postmaster.

A new building for Dinefwr Borough Council would increase the authority's efficiency by bringing all the staff together under one roof, councillors were told by chief executive Elmer Harries.

Plans to close the South Wales Electricity Board's Ammanford depot are being opposed by the unions and Dinefwr Borough Council.

Oilskins and wellington boots may be supplied to school caretakers under plans being considered by Dyfed County Council's education department.

Local MP Dr Roger Thomas, a general practitioner in Cross Hands, has called for a better campaign for vaccination against measles in Wales.