Weather, possibly 15 or 16 even. To the north, chilly, the shower is a tad wintry on the tops of the scottish mountains but that milder air will move northwards again as we head towards the end of the week. We are looking at the prospect of some 16 and welcome to scotlands largest town, a stones throw from glasgow. Historically, it was a Labour Stronghold until the partys rout in scotland in 2015, when the snp had a spectacular win here. So with a general election looming, what are the preoccupations and passions of the people of paisley be It Domestic Issues or defence, education and the environment, young and old, rich and poor . Tonight, politicians and people from every major sector are gathered to debate how they, and scotland, are faring 25 years on from the opening of scotlands parliament. Good evening. Applause paisley became an economic powerhouse in the Industrial Revolution, at the forefront of the textile industry, home of the famous paisley pattern, and equally famous radi
workers just refused to have the vaccine? workers ust refused to have the vaccine? , ., workers ust refused to have the vaccine? , . , workers ust refused to have the vaccine? , . , workers ust refused to have the vaccine? , . , ., , vaccine? they are saying it s only temporary vaccine? they are saying it s only temporary and vaccine? they are saying it s only temporary and that vaccine? they are saying it s only temporary and that they - vaccine? they are saying it s only temporary and that they have - temporary and that they have declared 3000 workers for the moment have not been vaccinated and that is a divide between them and those. supporting the health workers and doctors. most of the doctors. liberal doctors and 95% to be vaccinated but there is a real divide and one of the big parts of this measure is that it creates division. i this measure is that it creates division- - - this measure is that it creates division. ., ., ., ., division. i would have to leave it t
Following numerous setbacks and disappointments, the Bat was proven under combat conditions.
On May 27, 1945, U.S. Naval Reserve Lieutenant Leo Kennedy was patrolling from his station at Yonton Field in Okinawa. These were the closing months of the war in the Pacific, and Kennedy’s mission was to destroy any enemy shipping he could find. Hanging from the outboard stations of his Consolidated PB4Y Privateer aircraft were two very secret, odd-looking, wooden glide bombs.
Kennedy’s squadron had been equipped that April with the new weapon, and so far the results had been mixed. This new glide weapon, carrying a 1,000-pound bomb in its belly, had shown it could certainly do damage, but it had not exactly hit what its operators had targeted.