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June 24, 2005

Celtic genes a hazard?

http://saoirse32.blogsome.com [SAOIRSE32] HAVING Celtic genes or even just living in Scotland could put people at far greater risk of heart disease, scientists claimed yesterday.

Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.

http://nothingandall.blogspot.com [Nothingandall] On this day in History - Jan. 02: model ( Calvin Klein Eternity) .1971 - 66 die in stairway crush at Rangers v Celtic football match, Glasgow, Scotland.

Rampantscotland.com[Rampantscotland.com] Rampant Scotland Newsletter - 30 October 2004: New Boatyard for Clyde It may not be the same as the days when the river Clyde launched liners and warships as if they were going out of fashion, but Clydeport, the company developing the massive Glasgow Harbour complex, has unveiled plans to create the first new boatyard on the river in living memory. The £1 million centre of excellence is expected to attract a variety of marine businesses, including yacht repairers, chandlers, storage, joiners, carpenters and other sectors of the boat repair industry.

News.bbc.co.uk[News.bbc.co.uk] BBC NEWS | Election 2005 | Have Your Say | UK voters' panel: Keith ...: To SNP supporters like Keith who quote Norway as being like what their independent Scotland would be: I would like to ask them to put a few more of the facts on the table to round off their comparison, such as tax (far higher than in the UK), much higher cost of living, conscripted military service, ID cards for everybody, far higher sense of social responsibility to the community in which you live, and most important of all - not a member of the EU (although all businesses have to comply with EU legislation). The 'Celtic Tiger' economy he speaks of was fuelled solely by EU handouts, nothing else.

Sundayherald.com[Sundayherald.com] Green Machine - [Sunday Herald]: There are 170 players between 8 and 11 in the development centres, another 300 between 8 and 16 being assessed by the scouts, 80 registered players and 10 trialists coached at Barrowfield between the ages of 11 and 16 and 30 registered professionals between 16 and 18 who in some cases are on the brink of the first-team squad. Those figures do not include the Celtic in the Community programme, aimed at encouraging children –

Homepage.mac.comhttp://homepage.mac.com [Homepage.mac.com] Jonathan Lewis' Weblog: For example, he sees the 1745 as further illustration of a Celtic propensity to back causes just as everyone else is abandoning them. Yet only a few pages later he is pointing out that the clans were very much divided over their support for Charles.

http://www.scottishchristian.com [Scottishchristian.com] Scottish Christian news monitor: April 16-30, 2004: The review into religious observance in Scotland was set up in 2002 after HM Inspectorate of Education found that non-denominational secondary schools were failing to provide time for religious observance in accordance with ministerial guidance. A Herald leader piece says: "If, as is strongly hinted at, the executive insists that religious observance must continue in non-denominational schools to be within a broadly Christian context, it will be flying in the face of moves in England to recognise the increasingly secular nature of British society."

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Posted at June 24, 2005 09:36 AM

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