Food festival celebrates the cultural diversity of Hyson Green
Remembrance march pays tribute to fallen Clifton soldier Kieron Hill
Firefighters called to blaze at Colwick Recycling Centre
David Clarke upbeat for Great Britain opener
Firefighters tackle three house fires overnight
Police hunt for four men who stole cash and cigarettes from Sutton-in-Ashfield shop
Nottingham Forest's lightening start was key, says Gary Brazil
David Vaughan agrees permanent move to Nottingham Forest
Lee Westwood wins Malaysia Open in Kuala Lumpur
Bark in the Park competition attracts more than 150 cute canines
Fire at a house in Selston started in fuse board
Disappointment for Nottingham Panthers crop: Croatia 4 Great Britain 0 - match report
Record Store Day proves a hit for music fans
Cyclist comes off bike on Market Street
Firefighters rescue dog who gets head trapped in wall
Council could stump up £2,000 for 'scratch and sniff' cannabis cards
NOTTS County Council could put up £2,000 for a cannabis awareness scheme.
Crimestoppers and Notts Police first ran the campaign in 2013, sending out "scratch and sniff" cards to the public to help them detect cannabis farms by recognising the smell.
The plan led to more intelligence and arrests, the council claims. Now the authorities want to repeat it and send out 4,000 cards to residents in areas of crime and disorder.
Councillors decide next week whether to back the plan. The council will also discuss paying £3,300 to tackle rural crime, £15,000 to address hate crime, and £3,500 for tackling vehicle nuisance on the M1.
Vinyl makes a comeback as fans mark Record Store Day
EAGER music fans plundered the shelves at the Music Exchange, in Hockley, as they sought the perfect piece of music for Record Store Day.
Nearly 500 rare records – including ones by Jake Bugg, the Sex Pistols, the Rolling Stones and David Bowie – were pressed especially for the day, which took place on Saturday.
Claire Maguire, 26, of Musters Road, West Bridgford, spent around an hour flicking through the sleeves before settling on a 12-inch record of Jake Bugg performing live in Seattle.
She said: "I think I love the browsing more than anything – there's something more real about vinyl compared to downloads online.
"Also, I'm a huge fan of artwork on music too, so vinyl is good for that.
"I could easily have spent a fortune here, there's so much good stuff on the shelves."
Owner of the store Brian Mutton said: "I think it's the most fun day of the year – a lot of bands come and a lot families as well."
Meanwhile, Nottingham Contemporary played host to three bands to celebrate Record Store Day.
Cal Burns from Nottingham-based band Kagoule, performed alongside Ex-Easter Island Head and Henry Blacker.
Mr Burns said: "It's good to remind people the records still exist and record store day does that well.
"It lets artists get creative with vinyl, Liars are putting out a clear heavyweight vinyl with string inside, which is really cool.
"The guys at the Music Exchange are super lovely.
"What a perfect little shop. It has a great collection – I find it hard to walk in and not buy something – and it's for a good cause. It's done a lot for Nottingham and it's a magnet for music lovers."
'Miracle' Nottingham girl proves doctors wrong in fight against rare illness
DOCTORS have been "proved wrong" by a little girl who has defied the odds despite suffering from one of the rarest illnesses in the world.
Maddison Sherwood was diagnosed with an inherited muscle and respiratory condition – affecting just 50 people worldwide – when she was a baby.
Her parents were told to prepare for the worst because 95 per cent of youngsters born with the illness die before they are 18 months old.
But five-year-old Maddison has defied all her doctors' expectations and is now a pupil at Lantern Lane Primary School, in East Leake. Doctors also predicted she would struggle to talk, but following speech therapy classes she can speak as well as her classmates.
Maddison's mum Lidia, 27, said: "Now she's five, she's in mainstream school and she's doing brilliantly. It's incredible.
"She's very brave and very confident for someone who has been through so much.
"She's really clever and she's doing really well at school.
"I have high hopes for her future – I have never thought she should just be protected from the world and if you ask her there's nothing wrong with her.
"The doctors say she's a phenomenon."
Maddison's condition, spinal muscular atrophy with respiratory distress type 1, is expected to make children progressively weaker until they suffer respiratory failure and die – but the youngster is actually getting stronger.
She needs a wheelchair to get around and uses a ventilator to help her breathe, but she is still able to play games with her three siblings.
She attends clinics at Nottingham City Hospital every two months. Consultant paediatrician Toni Wolff said: "We thought she would get weaker and weaker and be miserable and uncomfortable. But she's such a cheerful and happy little girl.
"She's proved us completely wrong. She's taught us that children with this condition can be very happy.
"She's flying really."
BIG-HEARTED builders have given up their time and money to create a play area for a youngster suffering from a rare illness.
Five-year-old Maddison Sherwood suffers from Smard1 – a debilitating respiratory and muscle condition – and has to use a wheelchair with a portable ventilator to help her breathe.
Volunteers from Kier group construction, of Nottingham, have given their time this Easter to turn Maddison's garden, in St Mary's Crescent, East Leake, into a flat wheelchair-friendly area with raised flower beds for her to enjoy.
Maddison's mum, Lidia, said: "She loves the outdoors and playing. We've got a big garden but it's very bumpy and dangerous so they are going to make it safe so she can go out and play.
"It will make a big difference so she can play and we can watch."
Workmen spent three days doing the renovation, with ten people on site and the company's suppliers donating equipment and products for free.
Lidia added: "They've paid for everything – the equipment, men, skips and everything. We would never have been able to do it ourselves. They are putting raised beds in so they can do planting and a separate paths. It's lovely."
The company's site manager, Dave Sessions, said: "It is quite a big commitment – we asked our team who would like to be involved and who had got the time, and juggled the business around.
"It's all volunteer-led and our sub-contractors and suppliers gave their time and the money and the materials.
"I think it could make a massive difference. For Maddie to be able to go around the garden would be great. She would be able to enjoy the garden a lot more."
Mr Sessions added: "She's seen the machines digging the garden up – she's just smiling. From the minute we turned up she had a massive smile on her face.
"It's a lovely thing to do. We've all got different skills and the aim is to produce this garden that can be used by Maddie – it's fantastic."
While Maddison is defying all of the usual prognoses for her illness, she still has to have 24-hour care and is helped to cough every morning to ensure she does not get a lung infection.
Dad-of-four Jamie Sherwood said the garden would give her a chance to enjoy her life even more.
"It's fabulous," he said. "We would never be able to afford to do it ourselves and it's going to change her life. It's going to be much easier and we're really grateful.
"It has been tough, but she's my daughter. You do what you need to do every day, and with three other kids too, it is quite hard work at times.
"I definitely feel she's got a bright future."
The company heard about Maddison through Barnardo's, which supports the family, and chose her as their annual cause to support.
Have you had anyone show an act of kindness for you? email newsdesk@nottinghampost.com
Hillsborough: Nottingham Forest fans share their memories
Author @Danny Rhodes@ recalls the tragic events of Hillsborough and the impact on a teenage boy in his new semi-autobiographical novel Fan. Here's an extract from his compelling novel.
THE Kop is filling up, as are the North and South Stands but the Leppings Lane end is all wrong. The pens to the left and right are only sparsely populated. Just the central pens are truly occupied.
"What's that all about?" asks one voice to his left. "They've not sold their tickets," laughs another to his right.
He's thinking the same, there's been some enormous cock-up, that none of what he's seeing makes sense.
And nothing changes as the clock ticks onward, except that the central pens become fuller, tighter, become a mass of heads and bodies and that some fans clamber over the lateral fencing from the central pens to the wing pens.
But he doesn't know anything. He only knows that it's 2.40pm on match day, just 20 minutes before the biggest game of the season.
Outside the ground, in the narrow elbow of Leppings Lane, more than five thousand fans are still trying to get in. And the Leppings Lane end has not reached capacity. There is plenty of room in the wing pens. Plenty of room. But the wing pens will not reach capacity. Not on this day in April. Not on this day.
15th April 1989 Semi-Final Liverpool v Nottingham Forest VOID. You're always there.
5.20pm. He's traipsing his way back to Sheffield station, casualty numbers drifting from the open windows of cars trapped bumper to bumper on the Penistone Road, finding his ear.
Thirty dead. Fifty, sixty, seventy. Over seventy dead.
There are queues of lads lined up outside the phone boxes at the station. Pick a queue, any queue, wait your turn. He waits forty minutes. His dad answers. His dad tells him to get home safely. It's okay because he's safe. Everything will be okay.
But it's not okay. It will never truly be okay.
He doesn't call Jen. He's only got one ten-pence piece. There are queues of lads behind him. His own crew have already [gone] to the platform. 6.10pm. The 'Special' inches out of the city and through the Peaks. Some lads are talking about it. Some lads are telling jokes about dead Scousers. Some lads are picking fights with the blokes telling jokes.
Some lads are worrying about the football, about the FA Cup, if the game will be replayed, if the whole thing's been ruined. Some lads are staring out of the train windows at England's green and pleasant land, their eyes filled with tears.
Some lads aren't anywhere at all.
Dronfield, Chesterfield, Alfreton, Langley Mill, Nottingham.
Lads alight the train. Lads drift away. Lost souls slip back into lives they no longer own. Lives removed. Forever.