NEW digital billboards have appeared in Glasgow and Edinburgh as part of a new campaign arguing that Scottish businesses, jobs and pensions are better off in the UK.
Business group Scottish Business UK (SBUK) has launched the advertising campaign as part of plans to drive engagement with business leaders in Glasgow and Edinburgh. The group describes itself as an independent, non-party voice for business leaders who want to see Scotland thrive economically as part of the United Kingdom. The digital billboards, which will be visible at eight locations in the cities throughout April and early May to coincide with the Scottish Parliament election campaign period, contain simple messages arguing that Scottish businesses, jobs and pensions are better off in the UK.
The patient was taken to the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Govan, the Scottish Ambulance Service confirmed. Police said that the concern was of a medical nature and that the person was taken to hospital in an ambulance. The person s condition is not known. The Scottish Ambulance Service was approached for comment.
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Maisie at Bell s Bar in 1960 IT IS not the most pleasant name for a pub – the Coffin Bar – but for many east end drinkers in the 40s and 50s, this Whitevale Street venue (also called the New Coffin) was a favourite haunt. Times Past reader Jim Brown has got in touch, however, to ask if anyone remembers the Dennistoun pub was also a dance hall? “My parents reminisced about dancing at The Coffin on Whitevale Street in Dennistoun in the 40s,” he says. “I have also heard other relatives mention this as a popular dance hall and judging by the time frame The Coffin must have been a dance venue as far back as the early 1930s.”
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From La Scala to Vogue: When Glasgow had more cinemas per person than any city outside America IT was an era when Glasgow truly was Cinema City, when enterprising youngsters would take orders for fish suppers from people queuing outside the 130 picture-houses then in operation. It s startling to recall, in these days of hugely popular streaming services, and with multiplexes currently shuttered because of Covid-related precautions, it is thought that in the 1930s and 1940s Glasgow had more cinemas per person than any city outwith North America. Toledo They had such names as the Paramount, on Renfield Street, La Scala, on Sauchiehall Street, Arcadia, Mecca and Vogue. The Toledo, at Muirend, was noted for the Spanish-American influence on its hacienda-style windows.