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Coronavirus in Scotland: Prison governors to have final say over early releases

PRISON governors have been handed the power to veto prisoners they have concerns over being released early - as plans are pushed forward for up to 450 prisoners to be freed to allow inmates to socially distance in cells.




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Vanishing places: Scottish locations that have disappeared

St Kilda




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Do you remember the past lives of Sauchiehall Street?

We look back on the past lives of Sauchiehall street.




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From Harry Potter to the Wars of Independence: Five great Scottish bridges

Clachan Bridge




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Jeanie is Smoking a Cigarette: On love and loss

YESTERDAY would have been your birthday. January 24. Six months older than me for six months, I’d remind you. Normally I would have spent the weeks between Christmas and now trying to think of something original to buy you. And then, at the last moment, I’d just buy you another book.




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Glasgow whisky bond fire that killed 19 people is remembered 60 years on

It was an evening that began like any other night shift. Firefighters handed over at 6pm to start what they thought would have been a fairly routine night.




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VE Day 75: Extra bread as workers enjoy a day off, how The Herald reported the day

IT was a sombre appraisal, but the sense of relief was self-evident. “The war in Europe has ended at the last more suddenly than we sometimes dared to hope”, began the Glasgow Herald’s leading article on the morning of Tuesday, May 8, 1945.




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VE Day 75: Jubilant scenes across Scotland as people rejoiced the Second World War was finally over

It was 3pm on May 8 1945 when Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill addressed the nation from the Cabinet Room announcing that “we may allow ourselves a brief period of rejoicing,” but that message instead led to three days of partying in Glasgow’s George Square, children were given time off school and families were looking forward to being reunited again.




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VE Day 75 Scotland Remembers: How armed forces and veterans charities are still a lifeline in coronavirus lockdown

It dates back to1885 and started out as a fund to help military families at home while the Second Expeditionary Force set sail for Egypt. Major James Gildea wrote a letter appealing for money and a fund was set up to provide allowances.




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Sir Hugh Robertson to lead independent review of World Rugby

British Olympic Association chairman Sir Hugh Robertson has been selected to lead an independent governance review of World Rugby.




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Richard Cockerill looks for homegrown heroes as Edinburgh replenish ranks

Edinburgh Rugby have announced the signing of three Scottish qualified youngsters in Nathan Chamberlain, Ben Muncaster and Dan Gamble on academy deals which will turn into full-time contracts next summer, and head coach Richard Cockerill has promised that three current academy prospects in Rory Darge, Connor Boyle and Sam Grahamslaw will soon be elevated to the senior squad ahead of next season.




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Monday Interview: Building resilience against illness and climate change

By Kristy Dorsey




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Coronavirus: Home working 'could help revive Scotland's rural communities'

SCOTLAND’S workers could stay put in rural communities in the post-lockdown world - boosting countryside economies and cutting commuter traffic, a Holyrood cabinet secretary has suggested.




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Scots ‘should set new aim of planting 1bn trees'

Scotland needs to plant up to one billion trees to achieve the country’s ambitious climate change goals and help the economy recover from the coronavirus crisis, a group of environmental consultants have said.




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Edinburgh clean energy company in six-figure hydrogen fuel delivery deal

A SCOTTISH clean energy company has secured a key part in a six-figure contract for a hydrogen fuel project in Northern Ireland.




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Isolation in the forest as charity aims to save trees

For many people, lockdown has meant looking for joy in the natural world around us.




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Celtic Connections review: They Might Be Giants at O2ABC, Glasgow

Celtic Connections




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Celtic Connections review: BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional Musician of the Year, City Halls, Glasgow

Celtic Connections




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Celtic Connections review: Bert Inspired at Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow

Celtic Connections




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Celtic Connections and the roots of folk: Barry Didcock explores the links between traditional music and political protest

WHEN Malian quartet Songhoy Blues performed at last year's Celtic Connections, audiences were treated to a form of music appealingly dubbed “desert blues”. A user-friendly term, it sounds like it could have been dreamed up by a marketing agency and applied equally well to a perfume, a brand of jeans or a chain of upmarket Tex-Mex restaurants.




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Celtic Connections review: Piaf! The Show, Theatre Royal, Glasgow

Celtic Connections




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Celtic Connections Festival 2020 in Glasgow: who is playing, where are the venues, what time to concerts start?

From Thursday 16 January to Sunday 2 February 2020, musicians from across the world will take part in over 300 events in venues throughout Glasgow for the UK's premier celebration of celtic music.




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Celtic Connections 2020 will feature Bruce Springsteen tribute

THE Celtic Connections music festival last night lifted the curtain on next year’s line up – and revealed it will be kicking off the 700th celebrations of the Declaration of Arbroath.




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James Cairney: Fans bickering over titles are missing the bigger picture

FOR decades, both Celtic and Rangers have dominated the national conversation when it comes to football in Scotland. The vast majority of issues seem to revolve around the two Glasgow clubs and, predictably, the issue of how to conclude the Premiership campaign has been boiled down to whether or not Celtic should be crowned champions if – as is looking increasingly likely – the 2019/20 campaign is unable to be played to a finish.




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Shelley Kerr goes from silverware to seeking a silver lining

IT is less than two months since Shelley Kerr and her backroom staff, along with the domestic players in Scotland’s squad, flew back from Alicante to Glasgow. On the very same day – March 11 – the World Health Organisation accorded Covid-19 pandemic status.




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Graeme Macpherson: Limited expectations and dreaming big key for fans of smaller clubs

THE most important lesson in life is to always travel in hope rather than expectation. That way the almost inevitable disappointment that follows isn’t quite as crushing. A cheery thought for these troubled times.




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Neil Cameron: Newcastle United are selling their soul to worse than Mike Ashley

WOULD you still celebrate a cup final win for your team if you knew for absolute certain the game had been rigged?




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Cate Devine: Adult diners are acting like spoilt children

Cate Devine




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'Completely different take on Indian food' – Ron Mackenna's restaurant review of Swadish

Swadish – Modern Indian Cuisine




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Diary at Large: Glasgow bids farewell to an Italian restaurant that became an institution for Rangers players

IT’S almost time for the last supper. Though not quite. Another 24 hours will have to pass before the concluding morsel is munched, the final nibble on the edge of no more. After that, a little part of Scotland’s living history will die.




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Zinfandel Gastro Bar, Nithsdale Road, Glasgow. Restaurant review by Ron Mackenna

Zinfandel Gastro Bar




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Proper food from a proper city centre restaurant: Temaki, Glasgow. Ron Mackenna's home delivery review

Temaki




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'Fresh street food. In the house. Hard to beat' – Ron Mackenna's home delivery eating in review: Lebanese Street Sajeria

Thyme: Lebanese Street Sajeria




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Amazon Kindle Makes the Perfect Last-Minute Gift, and Here's Why

Amazon still has some nice deals right now on Kindle e-readers and Fire tablets — up to $30 off, plus $5 in ebook credits on select purchases, and 3 months of Kindle Unlimited for $0.99.




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Samsung Accidentally Confirms 5G-Ready Galaxy Tab S6

5G tablets are on the way, and Samsung's Galaxy Tab S6 could be repackaged as one of the first. The South Korean company accidentally listed the 5G-ready model on its website. Now, it's only a matter of time before the Galaxy Tab S6 5G goes official.




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The 2018 Apple iPad Is More Than $200 Off at Walmart

The sixth-generation 9.7-inch iPad with 128GB of storage and cellular connectivity would normally set you back $559, but is currently marked down to just $349.




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Amazon Fire Kids Edition Tablets Are Back at Cyber Monday Prices

For a limited time, the 7-inch Fire 7 Kids Edition is $40 off while the 8- and 10-inch models are both $50 off. These tablets make a great gift for 3-to-12-year olds.




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Deals: Roomba 675, Fire HD 8 at Black Friday Prices, More

The popular Roomba 675 is just $199 today, the 8-inch Amazon Fire HD 8 is only $50, and the 2TB Crucial MX500 2.5-inch SSD is back on sale for $200.




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Dell Latitude 7220 Rugged Extreme Tablet

Dell's Latitude 7220 Rugged Extreme Tablet lives up to its name by laughing at drops, splashes, and temperatures that would blow the average slate to smithereens. It's ideal for first responders and factory floors.




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iPad Air (2019), iPad Mini 5 Join Apple's Refurbished Lineup

Grab a refurbished third-generation iPad Air or fifth-generation iPad Mini from Apple to save big while getting nearly the same experience new tablets offer.




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Deal Alert: The Latest Apple iPads Are Up to $150 Off

scrolling through Amazon in the same way has turned up some great deals on iPads. Right now the latest models are available at all-new low prices.




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Tom Gordon: Nicola Sturgeon should end her insulting referendum sham

IT’S strange the different things people took away from Theresa May’s teary goodbye in Downing Street yesterday.




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David Torrance: The SNP's independence proposition resembles another Brexit-like leap into the unknown

In “Painting Nationalism Red?”, an engaging new pamphlet published by Democratic Left Scotland, the journalist Neal Ascherson pays tribute to Tom Nairn as Scotland’s “pre-eminent political intellectual”.




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David Torrance: 'The SNP don’t really want to make nice with wicked Tories in London'

Shortly before the second general election of 1974, the late John P Mackintosh attempted to explain the rise of the Scottish National Party to a predominantly left-wing (and English) audience in an essay for the New Statesman.




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David Torrance: How Gibraltar learned to stop fearing Brexit

A few days after a majority of Britons backed Brexit in June 2016, this newspaper reported that Nicola Sturgeon had been in talks with London Mayor Sadiq Khan and the Chief Minister of Gibraltar, Fabian Picardo.




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David Torrance: Why playing the history card could be key to Labour's resurgence

The Scottish Labour Party, I think it’s fair to say, hasn’t had a good decade.




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David Torrance: How Brexit vote has left the SNP making the same historical error

“Scotland”, declared a young Alex Salmond in May 1975, “knows from bitter experience what treatment is in store for a powerless region of a common market.”




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David Torrance: Airstrikes in Syria are far from ideal, but it’s better than nothing

Today in the House of Commons, the Prime Minister will explain her decision to authorise airstrikes against Syria alongside France and the United States.




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Belle Robertson endures in game of great longevity

Belle Robertson has played just one round of golf this year. She’ll double that tally with another today.




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Liam Johnston accepts the new reality for tour pros stuck at home

What do professional golfers do in this coronavirus-induced hiatus?