We need a viable vision for city s future By Andrew Dixon Published: 09:26, 13 February 2021
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Analysis of how Inverness can be a base camp for tourists visiting the wider Highlands is being called for.
The work could be an important boost for the area as it aims to recover from the pandemic.
Inverness Chamber of Commerce chief executive Stewart Nicol is eager for talks to start.
âWe are at the start and finish of the North Coast 500 and our place as the capital of the Highlands is secure, but how do we get tourists to come to the city, experience something of our culture and heritage and use it as a base to explore the rest of the Highlands?â he asked.
Tucked in a residential neighborhood and in earshot of ab early childhood development center and the Y.H. Thomas Community Center, police also are limited to when they can practice.
A proposed amenity for the Wythe Fire Station is to create an apparatus bay to house antique equipment used historically by many volunteer fire companies.
Forty-one years ago last Sunday, I attended the Dublin County Convention where serious concerns were expressed over the All-Ireland football championship.
In fact, there was such disquiet over its perceived inadequacies that a large majority of delegates voted for change.
They wanted an open draw introduced in 1981, with the four 1980 provincial winners seeded so that they couldn’t meet in the early rounds. From 1982 on, the eight quarter-finalists would be seeded for the Round 1 draw.
Dublin certainly couldn’t be accused of selfish motives as they were Leinster six-in-a-row champions (1974-’79), won All-Ireland titles in 1974, ’76 and ’77 and reached the final in 1975, ’78 and ’79.
John Edward Gray, age 77 of Dorsey, Mississippi, left his earthly body, to go spend Christmas Day with the Lord Jesus on Friday, December 25, 2020, due to complications from a tractor accident. He was born to Octor and Bonita Loague Gray on August 25, 1943. He was married to the love of his life, Dianne White Gray, his “old lady” as he would jokingly call her, for almost 54 years. He loved the Lord, and he dearly loved his family. He was a life- long member of Hopewell Baptist Church where he served as a deacon. He was an avid conversationalist who loved to tell stories, laugh, and have a good time. Pulling pranks and jokes on his family and friends was something he did quite often. He was a retired sales manager for Toms Toasted Peanuts where he worked for forty two years. He was a charter member of the Dorsey Lions Club. His three grandchildren were the apple of his eye, and he was incredibly proud of all them. He loved talking about them to anyone who would listen. He was also