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Cornton Vale Prison: mentally ill women in distress segregated for up to 82 days
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Kirriemuir Signs of Change art project launches in tribute to inspirational founder
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Kirriemuir public art project planned to brighten up wee red town
© Supplied by Hamilton Kerr
Graham Galloway and Maureen Crosbie.
Peter Pan and Bon Scott could join forces in an exciting Kirriemuir public art project to help the Angus town’s pandemic bounce back.
They are among the famous figures and features set to be included in the Signs of Change initiative across the wee red town.
The community-led project of public art, murals and painted doors aims to engage locals in brightening up Kirrie.
And it hopes to boost visitor numbers to aid the area’s recovery from Covid-19.
Kirriemuir public art project planned to brighten up wee red town
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The following is part of KRCC s Peak Past essay series.
Really thick Scottish accents sound a little like gibberish to me. When I’ve worked with Scots before, I’ve had to admit I didn’t understand what they were saying.
So recently while watching a travel show on Scotland, when the host kept saying something I didn’t understand, it wasn’t a surprise. He kept saying “Munro” in place of “mountain,” so, naturally, I thought I just didn’t hear him right.
But he really did mean “Munro.” He was referring to Sir Hugh Munro, born in London but raised to be a mountaineer in the Scottish Highlands. In 1891, Munro published the first list of 3,000-foot high mountains in Scotland.