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National readers views of the 2021 Holyrood election campaign

WE asked you how the campaigns are going in your area. Here’s what you told us . I AM in Kate Forbes’s constituency, or at least in the Drumnadrochit part of this huge area, but I also travel to Moidart to visit my shellfish farm. My impression is that that the Unionist parties don’t seem to be bothering to campaign as far as posters on lampposts are concerned. It is only the SNP that seem to be doing that. The Tories, of course, have the money to give us voluminous mail shots, which for me go straight into the bin. I voted SNP 1 & 2 because my main purpose is to achieve an independence majority. Regretfully, that meant not putting my cross against Andy Wightman, but needs must.

iN PHOTOS: The founder of Fintry was no remittance man, he just looked like one at times | iNFOnews

Image Credit: Submitted/Fintry.ca April 11, 2021 - 6:00 PM The Okanagan’s history is littered with stories of remittance men, who were the younger sons of the British elite who were sent off to the Colonies with stipends to find their way in the new world while first-born sons inherited wealth.  One was Coutts Marjoribanks whose sister Lady Aberdeen built Kelowna’s Guisichan House for him in an effort to keep him out of trouble. It didn’t work all the well as the home was known as a party house. Another might have been James Dun-Waters. He was destined to be just such a son but a “number of tragic deaths in the family precipitated him into the position of financial authority,” according to Dan Bruce, curator of Fintry Estates.

Friends of Fintry announce heritage lifetime achievement for curator - Vernon News

Friends of Fintry announce heritage lifetime achievement for curator - Vernon News
castanet.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from castanet.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Wheatsville Food Co-op criticized for penalizing employees during storm

Austin 360 When the recent winter storm knocked out power and water to thousands of Austinites, Andrea Lewis and her 3-year-old sat in their cold apartment for 24 hours before deciding to drive to the closest family member’s house in San Antonio on Tuesday, Feb. 16. The drive took more than 2 ½ hours. She messaged her boss at Wheatsville Food Co-op to say she wouldn’t be able to make several of her shifts, she said. Within a week, she and at least one other employee would be without a job at all. Lewis was scheduled to work on Friday, Feb. 19, but she was still in San Antonio dealing with another round of snow that fell Thursday night. They had no idea what was going on at their apartment back in Austin, she said, so they stayed one more night.

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