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It became a daily newspaper in 1953 after merging with the Glasgow Evening Journal. [2] In 1957, the name was changed to the Glasgow Daily Times . CNHI closed the newspaper as a result of lost revenue due to the COVID-19 pandemic , one of many CNHI properties which were closed, merged with sister papers, or reduced in publication frequency.
In the early 1980s, he co-presented the Scottish Television religious magazine programme That's the Spirit! and was also interviewed on VIP, also an STV religious show.His role as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland meant he was one of the public figures who led tributes to Diana, Princess of Wales upon her death in 1997 in a BBC broadcast.
John Cairney was born on 16 February 1930 in the Baillieston area of Glasgow. [3] He is the brother of footballer Jim Cairney. They were raised in the Parkhead area of Glasgow; the referee Tiny Wharton was a childhood acquaintance. [4] He briefly attended art college but dropped out to pursue the life of an actor. [5]
Robert Scott Weir (1 May 1953 – 4 October 2018) was a Scottish cricketer. [1] He played in four first-class and ten List A matches for the Scotland cricket team from 1975 to 1984. [2]
Griffiths was born in Sheffield but grew up in Glasgow, where his mother was a local Communist Party activist. [2] During his national service, he worked for the British Forces Network alongside Cliff Michelmore. After completing his national service, he took up a writing post with the Daily Worker, a communist newspaper.
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Carol Mary Rhodes (7 April 1959 – 4 December 2018) was a Scottish artist known for paintings and drawings of landscapes and marked by human intervention. Rhodes was born in Edinburgh, but spent her infancy and youth in Serampore, India.
In 1994, his son James, a drug addict, was murdered in the Oatlands neighbourhood of Glasgow. [ 10 ] Boyle has published Pain of Confinement: Prison Diaries (1984), and a novel, Hero of the Underworld (1999).