Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Glasgow Times is an evening tabloid newspaper published Monday to Saturday in the city of Glasgow, Scotland. Called The Evening Times from 1876, it was rebranded as the Glasgow Times on 4 December 2019.
The Evening Times Champions Cup, the name of the current version, is an association football trophy for clubs of the Junior level in the western part of Scotland.Sponsored by the Glasgow-based newspaper the Evening Times (now branded as Glasgow Times) since its inception, the trophy has been competed for since 1896 and has been recommissioned under many different guises throughout its history.
The contents of the "Wee Express", as it is known locally (to distinguish it from the "Big Express" i.e. the Scottish Daily Express) are typical of a local newspaper: local news, human interest stories, classified advertisements, intimations, church news, crosswords, wedding photographs, school photographs, local sports (mainly about the town's ...
The Evening Citizen, was an evening version of The Glasgow Citizen (a daily newspaper founded in 1842 by James David Hedderwick). [1] It was first published in August 1864, was one of the first of three evening newspapers to be printed, published and sold in the Glasgow area of Scotland. Both papers were founded by James Hedderwick. [2]
Norwich Evening News’ Pink 'Un ended in 2009 [15] Sheffield Star Green 'Un, which began as the Saturday Sports Edition ran from 14 September 1907 until 20 July 2013. Edinburgh Evening News' Pink News, ceased publication in the 2000s. Evening Times's Sport Times (later known as Saturday Sport) published in Glasgow ended 29 August 1992.
Andover Advertiser; Ardrossan and Saltcoats Herald; Armley & Wortley Advertiser; Asian Eye; Avon Advertiser, Salisbury; Ayrshire Weekly Press; Banbury Cake; Barnes, Mortlake & Sheen Times
The full trial started on 4 October 2010 at the Glasgow High Court before Lord Bracadale, with a jury of 13 women and 2 men, mostly younger women with one ethnic minority juror. [ note 2 ] On 15 December the judge excused one of the women jurors from serving further; the trial continued with 14 jurors.
Back in Glasgow, he took up temporary employment as a bus driver. His experiences there led him to develop a series of "pocket cartoons" depicting the city's "caurs" (tramcars) and their "clippies" (female conductors). In 1944 Neill commenced a series of cartoons for the Glasgow Evening Times, themed around Glasgow life.