CAROLINE MUNRO, conference manager for Inverness District Council's
Conference Bureau, has handled many different conferences in her six
years in the job. The conferences come in all shapes and sizes, and they
often make a small presentation to the staff as a token of their
appreciation.
None was more unusual however than the presentation made earlier this
year by the Canary Isles Dental Association.
They presented Caroline with a 10 ins high metal molar with the head
of Nessie engraved in it.
''It is certainly unusual,'' Caroline told me, ''with the roots of the
molar designed as the legs of Nessie.''
Some readers who set off to the Canary Isles in search of the sun
might wonder why they should leave their sunny climes for Scotland.
Simple, each year the Association has their conference in one of the
six islands which make up the Canary group, and then in the seventh year
go to a foreign destination. Some of their members had visited Scotland
on golfing holidays and were attracted by what was on offer.
Caroline enjoyed their toothy humour but conferences are a serious
business for Inverness, and next year looks set to break all records
with those already booked showing a 20% increase compared to the 25
conferences the Bureau organised this year .
It is estimated that in 1995 delegates attending conferences in the
Highland town will spend #2.3 million which is a healthy boost for local
businesses.
Conferences booked include the Boys Brigade, Baptist Union and the
Inland Revenue Staff Federation. Caroline can only hope that the IRSF
don't present her with a tax bill.
McLures
achieve
missive
task!
Missive Impossible is how the staff at McClure Naismith Anderson &
Gardiner felt when they were faced with inspecting the missives of
several hundred flats throughout the West of Scotland in one operation.
McLures handled the purchase by SE Land & Estates of the flats, with
sitting tenants, from Ernst & Young who are acting as receivers of the
Scottish Heritable Trust.
Before the deal could be completed the missives of all the properties
had to be checked out.
Wilson Aitken, a partner in McLures described how ten boxes containing
the missives arrived by van.
''We had four weeks to do the job, which might sound like a long time
but there was a lot of small print involved. It was an unusual,lengthy
exercise -- but we made it.''
It was news
to Scot FM
THERE are some red faces at Independent Radio News following the news
release which they issued claiming that they had secured the exclusive
contract to supply news to Scot FM, the Edinburgh based adult rock
station which is set to deafen us in a fortnight's time.
In fact Reuters Radio, the media and information group's newly-formed
radio service, has won the contract to supply news to Scots FM in what
the trade journal Broadcast described as a ''coup''.
It appears that IRN, which supplies news to Radio Clyde, had jumped
the gun -- or was it to conclusions? Reuters will beef up its growing
Scottish presence by basing two correspondents in Scotland who will work
out of the Scot FM office near the new Scottish Office at Leith Docks.
Business Diary cannot throw any light on how IRN managed to ''break''
the wrong news as we were told that all those who could provide us with
answers were ''out of the country.''
Search for
Scots skiers
MIKE RYDER, the chief executive of Lambert Smith Hampton's Scottish
operation, is looking for competent skiers to join him for a few days on
the Italian Alps next January and take on the English.
Earlier this year in January Mike took part in the Lambert Smith
Hampton Ski Challenge, and discovered that although there were a few
Scottish property representatives in the thirty teams there was no
Scottish team taking part.
Mike now hopes that he can find half a dozen Scottish skiers who will
join him in the four-day trip to Courmayeur, 5,000 ft up the Alps
between January 18-22 so that they can compete as a team in the Giant
Slallom event.
''Its a lovely break, and is a good way of meeting other people
involved in the property industry. You pay your own expenses but you
don't have to take part in the ski-ing events. If you want you can just
enjoy the apres ski,'' Mike told Business Diary.
Like any good team manager who had failed to make a good signing, Mike
forgot to mention that he had already allowed colleague Jack Thoms who
ski-ed for Aberdeen University to be poached by the Lambert Smith
Hampton London office team.
If you are interested in taking on the Auld Enemy on the ski slopes
give Mike a ring on 041 332 1133.
Whisky
galore
VISITORS to the RSA in November will be forgiven if they think
Scotland's artists and craftsmen are besotted by our national drink as
they admire paintings, figures, and tapestries all of which have a
whisky theme.
It is not an indication that the 400 plus members of the Scottish
Artists and Artist Craftsmen Association are motivated by drink, but it
may be an indication of what the prospect of winning a #2,000 prize can
do to stimulate creative thinking.
The whisky theme is the result of the sponsorship by Whyte & Mackay of
the Association, and that to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Scotch
whisky the company has put up #2000 as a prize for the best work with a
whisky theme as well as a #1,000 prize for the best student work.
But I am told by Gordon Mitchell, President of the Association that we
should not expect to find paintings of figures with a bottle of whisky
grasped in their hand.
''Hopefully there will be a little more imagination applied, and the
whisky theme will be quite flexible,'' Gordon told me.
The competition will only be a part of the exhibition which will
include around 400 works chosen from more than 2,000 submitted by
Scottish artists and craftsmen.
At the same time as the Edinburgh exhibition the Scottish Artists and
Artist Craftsmen Association are also putting on a satellite show in
Aberdeen Art Galleries which will have the sea as its theme.
Despite the Craftsmen title Business Diary is told that not only is
the majority of the Association members women, but that the Association
originated from the Society of Scottish Women Artists.
Our ears it would appear are not yet attuned to Craftsperson, although
it sounds OK to me, but then I know nothing about art!
Bottle
stations
OUR drinking habits are causing the glass industry problems. The
British penchant for medium dry German wine, which invariably arrives in
a brown or green bottle, is giving the glass recycling industry a
headache of a different type.
There is an imbalance of glass colours, the DTI tells us, arising from
drink imports in green and brown bottles. We import 400,000 tonnes of
green glass into this country and for technical reasons green glass and
mixed glass cannot be used in furnaces making green glass containers,
nor can it be recycled into clear glass.
British Glass has been carrying out a three year research programme
funded by the DTI to find alternative uses for waste glass and have come
up with some alternatives such as garden furniture. Oops.
At the same time Sainsbury have been attempting to dissuade European
countries from sending us their wine in green bottles.
It all brings a new meaning to the children's song -- ''There was ten
green bottles standing on the wall.''
PS: The DTI's Environmental Technology Innovation Scheme are holding a
seminar for potential users and suppliers of the new applications on
September 27 in Wakefield.
Having a
plasma ball
MARGARET Finnie and her colleagues at the Glasgow Chamber of Commerce
have a pretty good record of sourcing material and products for members,
but they have asked Business Diary to help find three items which a
Chamber member would like to borrow for a week.
The difficult-to-find items are a solar panel, Vandegraph generator
and a plasma ball.
Margaret explained that a company within the Glasgow area are holding
an environmental week aimed at educating employees on global
environmental issues and would like to include the three items in the
week's programme which starts on Monday, September 12 .
Anyone who can help Margaret out should give her a call on
041-204-2121.
Deflated
Portugese
WHILE on the subject of sourcing, Business Diary has to report a
failure. Made in Scotland, the Beauly based marketing and promotion
organisation for the Scottish craft and gift industry, received a
request via the DTI from a Portuguese company who were looking for
someone who could supply ''inflatable dolls and erotic items''.
Kathleen Hardie, managing director of Made in Scotland had to
disappoint the Portuguese as none of the 500 odd members of her
organisation could supply the goods.
Priests join
the Circus
THERE has been speculation and comment in recent months in the
property sections of the media about the possibility of the Park Circus
area of Glasgow returning to residential use, as companies seek modern
custom-built office accomodation designed to cope with modern
technology.
Business Diary can report that the first sign of this happening has
occurred with the purchase of a property in Woodside Place by the Jesuit
order of the Roman Catholic church.
The property has been used by a firm of solicitors for the past 15
years but once the necessary renovation work is carried out, up to ten
members of the Jesuit order will move in. The priests at present live in
a tenement block in Garnethill near St. Aloysuis Church. Lynn Arnott of
Lambert Smith Hampton, who handled the sale, was of the opinion that we
are now likely to see a ''trickle back'' of residents into the area as
commercial firms move out.
Why are you making commenting on The Herald only available to subscribers?
It should have been a safe space for informed debate, somewhere for readers to discuss issues around the biggest stories of the day, but all too often the below the line comments on most websites have become bogged down by off-topic discussions and abuse.
heraldscotland.com is tackling this problem by allowing only subscribers to comment.
We are doing this to improve the experience for our loyal readers and we believe it will reduce the ability of trolls and troublemakers, who occasionally find their way onto our site, to abuse our journalists and readers. We also hope it will help the comments section fulfil its promise as a part of Scotland's conversation with itself.
We are lucky at The Herald. We are read by an informed, educated readership who can add their knowledge and insights to our stories.
That is invaluable.
We are making the subscriber-only change to support our valued readers, who tell us they don't want the site cluttered up with irrelevant comments, untruths and abuse.
In the past, the journalist’s job was to collect and distribute information to the audience. Technology means that readers can shape a discussion. We look forward to hearing from you on heraldscotland.com
Comments & Moderation
Readers’ comments: You are personally liable for the content of any comments you upload to this website, so please act responsibly. We do not pre-moderate or monitor readers’ comments appearing on our websites, but we do post-moderate in response to complaints we receive or otherwise when a potential problem comes to our attention. You can make a complaint by using the ‘report this post’ link . We may then apply our discretion under the user terms to amend or delete comments.
Post moderation is undertaken full-time 9am-6pm on weekdays, and on a part-time basis outwith those hours.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article