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Truck Driver Geordi from Peterhead takes a break. Picture: Ian Rutherford

Truckers have a special affection for Stracathro services – perhaps it should become a world heritage site

I DROVE through the darkness and I drove through the dawn, mist lying thick on golden fields of oilseed rape, and I came at last to Stracathro Services, off the A90 just north of Brechin.

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Would you leave your new born baby to cry itself to sleep?

New research reveals high levels of stress hormones in babies left to cry themselves to sleep leaving new parents with a dilemna

AS IF the sleep-deprived husks of humanity otherwise known as new parents didn’t have enough to worry about, new research has emerged to plunge them further into a baby-brain stupor about how to get their screaming bundles of joy off to sleep.

Nile Rodgers

He’s in mourning for Donna Summer and Robin Gibb, but Nile Rodgers survives against all the odds

IBIZA is hosting its annual gathering of the great and the good of dance music and Nile Rodgers is due to give the keynote address – yet more evidence of his status as the king of disco. But at three o’clock on his beachfront hotel balcony on a sizzling hot afternoon he only has thoughts for disco’s queen.

Les Gray

Revealing past convictions may bring justice for some victims of crime, but how many innocent people will it condemn?

RETIRED Chief Inspector Les Gray still recalls the frustration of seeing “career” criminals being presented as lily-white by defence lawyers who are all too aware of their client’s past history.

DVD review: The Artist

What is it? Surely this one can’t have passed you by? This is the modern-day silent movie that hoovered up awards this year, and made stars of both its leading man, Jean Dujardin – playing a silent movie star whose career flounders as talkies take over – and his dog.

Game review: Max Payne

This grim and gritty noir sees Max Payne now working as private security for a rich family in Brazil. Burnt out, Max dulls the pain with pills.

Claire Black: “She looked confused. I probably did too – maybe she had a pet rabbit?”

STANDING in the supermarket queue the other day, I concentrated on lining up my groceries by order of size and density – with attention paid to the order in which they would be packed into my bag (What? Isn’t that what everyone does?).

Fordyce Maxwell: Liz wondered up to the last minute why a 12-year-old was getting married

AS A festivity-closer, Loch Lomond was new to me. It involved a lot of jumping up and down and several in-and-out rushes similar to Auld Lang Syne melees while the band belted out “You tak the high road…” at a tempo Kenneth McKellar would not have recognised. Along with, I seem to remember amid the mayhem, an occasional burst of the Proclaimers’ “I would walk 500 miles”.

The Shaint Islands are breeding grounds for puffins and razorbills

Book review: The Old Ways: A Journey

THIS volume completes a rough trilogy – Mountains Of The Mind, The Wild Places and now The Old Ways – and confirms Robert Macfarlane’s reputation as one of the most eloquent and observant of contemporary writers about nature; although a new term is increasingly necessary.

Andrew Eaton-Lewis: Antony Hegarty wants to change the world, and it’s life-affirming to see

HERE’S a challenge. Whatever kinds of cultural events you enjoy going to – comedy shows, concerts, exhibitions, plays, films etc – try, between now and August, only to go to ones that are not part of a festival.

Book review: Sidney Chambers And The Shadow Of Death

‘AND is there honey still for tea?” When the hero is a learned young country vicar, and one of two love interests is named Hildegard, after the 12th century Christian mystic Hildegard of Bingen, you know you’re in pretty refined company for a detective series. Opera-loving Inspector Morse would appear to have a rival.

Album review: Scissor Sisters

Has Jake Shears recovered his mojo after misplacing it so carelessly before Night Work, an album on which he seemed to forget what the day job was? In parts, yes he has, but Magic Hour still strays off message occasionally.

The Ampera only registered 45.4 miles per gallon on the test drive, but the consumption figures were far better when taking into account battery miles

Motoring review: Electric Vauxhall Ampera a gas

You may run out of power, but you won’t run out of steam with the Ampera, although finding the cash to buy it could prove a problem, writes Frederic Manby

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Fiat Panda

My first car ... Ashley Smith, actor

MY FIRST car was a Fiat Panda. My parents bought it second hand for me before I passed my test, which would have been about eight years ago; I got it as a Christmas present.

Life cycle: Neil from 56 Up is no longer traipsing around Scotland, but he still dreams of becoming a writer

TV review: 56 Up | Tales of Television Centre | Silk

PHEW, that’s a relief. Always with the 7 Up series there’s anxiety over how we’ll find the subjects, another seven years down the line.

Ewan MacGregor on a visit to UNICEF Special Care Newborn Unit in Vaishali, Bihar. Picture: Byrajiv Kumar

The bountiful game: Ewan McGregor on the fragile existence of babies who owe their lives to Soccer Aid and Unicef in India

WRITING exclusively for Scotland on Sunday, Ewan McGregor recounts an emotional visit to a pioneering unit saving tiny lives in one of the poorest parts of India

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Fordyce Maxwell: On Apollo 13 they weren’t still having to use central heating in May

YOU can have too much information, and I’ve just switched off an example of that. Nothing to do with a DVD in questionable taste or a website called up by mistake. All to do with the good intentions of our gas and electricity supplier.

Alice Wyllie: Lauding Prince Philip for his crass comments is cap-doffing at its worst

YES, Prince Philip, you would be arrested if you unzipped that dress. Or at least you should be.

Barney Harwood, Helen Skelton and Barney. Picture: Rachel Joseph

Does exile on CBBC prove Blue Peter has finally lost its appeal for the young?

THE air of gloom was palpable. As news filtered through that Blue Peter – that custodian of myriad childhood memories – was to be axed from BBC1, generations raised on silver bottle tops and totalisers took to Twitter to lament its passing.

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Trisha Grant of the Glasgow Room at the Mitchell Library, Glasgow. Picture: Robert Perry

Notebook: Glasgow’s shelf life

IN A southern state of America lives a young girl. Named Ruchazie: as in Ruchazie Jones or Ruchazie Martinez – Ruchazie as in her Christian name. This Ruchazie (perhaps her friends just call her Ruch) must be around ten by now and reaching that age when kids start to get inquisitive. So how, she may soon be coming to wonder, when all her friends sport names like Christy-Lou and Shannice, did she come to be called Ruchazie?

Book review: Ramshackle, by Elizabeth Reeder

LITERARY chins have, for a while now, wagged about Chicago-born Elizabeth Reeder, a teacher on the much-admired University of Glasgow Creative Writing Programme, and now based in Scotland.

Alan Warner. Picture: Jayne Wright

Book review: The Deadman’s Pedal, by Alan Warner

IT LOOKS, at the outset of his seventh novel, as if Alan Warner is going to follow Donna Tartt, Alan Hollinghurst, Naomi Alderman and countless others down that well-trodden path back to Brideshead: callow, curious boy is transformed by exposure to exhilaratingly depraved toffs.

Book review: Why Spencer Perceval Had To Die, by Andro Linklater

SPENCER Perceval, although he is hardly a household name, occupies a unique and unfortunate position in British history: he is the only Prime Minister to have been assassinated. If that piece of trivia is pub-quiz obscure, then the name of his murderer (John Bellingham) is certainly worth more than a bonus point.

Book review: Dark Dawn, by Matt McGuire

THERE’S no messing with Matt McGuire and the blunt, hard-nosed opener to his debut crime novel: “It was January. It was raining. The kid was dead.”

Will Ferrell as Armando Alvarez in Casa di mi Padre.

Interview: Will Ferrell, actor and comedian

Proud of his new Mexican spoof in Spanish, funnyman Will Ferrell tells Siobhan Synnot why learning the language was such a serious business

DVD of the week: The Descendants

What is it? In Alexander Payne’s Hawaii-set comedy drama, George Clooney is a workaholic who has to face up to some difficult truths about his family when an accident leaves his wife in a coma and him in charge.

Do the hump: Cameron Diaz joins in with some pre-natal exercises

Film reviews: What To Expect When You’re Expecting | Free Men | Iron Sky |

A FACT-filled, best-selling, self-help guide to pregnancy is the basis of this new domesticated comedy, a new level of desperation in page-to-screen that should at least grab the attention of Jean Marie Stine, author of How To Write A Bestselling Self-Help Book.

Game of the week: Starhawk

Set during a gold rush on a distant planet, Starhawk is sci-fi dressed in classic Western trappings.

Masterpieces from Mount Stuart: The Bute Collection.

Art review: Masterpieces From Mount Stuart: The Bute Collection, Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh video

MONEY as well as taste is at the root of an impressive collection that bears witness to generations of connoisseurs

Paul Buchanan

CD reviews: Paul Buchanan | John Mayer | Admiral Fallow | Folk | Jazz | Classical video

The voice of the Blue Nile emerges with his first solo album, a selection of short but certain songs which sound like the soundtrack to a melancholy black and white Sunday afternoon.

Andrew Eaton-Lewis: George Wyllie, you gave and continue to give inspiration to all of us

WHEN George Wyllie died last week, Scotland seemed suddenly drained of a little energy and colour. It reminded me of March 2006, when Ian Hamilton Finlay and Ivor Cutler died within weeks of each other. All these men were, in their different ways, mavericks – eccentric, subversive, not always appreciated for it, but irreplaceable once lost.

Julie Delpy. Picture: Mark Mainz/Getty

Interview: Julie Delpy, actress, screenwriter and director

SHE’S piled on the pressure by writing and starring in her own films, but Julie Delpy tells Siobhan Synnot it’s worth it to avoid sexy Latina and bimbo roles

Brad Pitt: 'Probably smells like a sawmill' (Reuters)

Alice Wyllie: Brad Pitt probably smells like a sawmill, with notes of Oscar disappointment

THE olfactory world has been rocked by the news that a stinky man is to become the hairy face of the most famous fragrance on the planet. Chanel has announced that the new campaign for its signature scent, Chanel No 5, will be fronted by formerly-handsome hat wearer Brad Pitt.

Vidal Sassoon, pictured in 2003. Picture: AP

Hair to the throne

CAN any of today’s stylists make as profound an impact on fashion as the late great Vidal Sassoon did in the 60s? Emma Cowing examines the contenders

Fordyce Maxwell: The car washer and inveterate grass cutter might think the same about me

MOST of us have chores to do to keep house and home ticking over. Some we don’t mind, some we dislike, a few we might rather enjoy.

Book review: Opposed Positions by Gwendoline Riley

THE references to literary greats may be flattering but Gwendoline Riley’s distinctive style puts her beyond compare, says Stuart Kelly

Book review: Curiosity by Philip Ball

WHAT do we mean by curiosity? What do we mean by the terms scientific thinking or scientific method? How have these things changed over the centuries, and what should we even be curious about? Is anything off limits?

Book review: Remembering Che by Aleida March

THE heroes of Cuba’s Rebel Army had their needs too. In this memoir, Aleida March, widow of Che Guevara, recounts her relationship with the revolutionary icons.

Book review: Reality, Reality by Jackie Kay

WHAT’S most pleasing in this story collection by one of Scotland’s most celebrated writers is the quality of exuberance.

Two groups of 120 runners will create the bulk of the illuminated extravaganza every evening for 19 days, with audiences holding light sticks to add to the overall effect

Charge of the Light Brigade to dazzle at Edinburgh’s International Festival

ARTHUR’S Seat is the stage for an ambitious, illuminated walking and running spectacle as part of the Edinburgh Festival – and anyone can play a part, finds Gabe Stewart

One of the visitor boats, Antonine, going through the Falkirk Wheel. Picture: Jane Barlow

The Falkirk Wheel: A decade of quiet revolution in Scottish tourism video

TEN years ago, on 24 May, 2002, Her Majesty the Queen officially opened the Falkirk Wheel as part of her Golden Jubilee celebrations. A decade later, they both still appear to be in decent working order, performing fairly repetitive functions at a stately pace.

Tom Gabel, pictured here in 2008, has announced that he is to become Laura Jane Grace. Picture: AP

Andrew Eaton-Lewis: Good luck to Against Me!’s new female singer, Laura Jane Grace

‘PUNK star to change sex but will stay married,” went one typical headline on Thursday, as the American rock band Against Me! was suddenly introduced to a whole new audience.

Moyna Flannigan adds a new twist to the story of Adam and Eve in The First People

Visual art review: A Parliament Of Lines, City Art Centre, Edinburgh

DAD is sitting in his study, idly tapping away at his Apple Mac when, somewhat snaggle-toothed and wild-eyed, young Robert asks him the question that all parents dread: “Daddy, where did I come from?”

Dictatorship of the desert: Baron Cohen flaunts his medals as dictator Aladeen on a visit to address the UN

Film review: The Dictator video

YOU loved him as Borat, you were OK with him as Ali G, and we don’t really talk about Bruno. Now after a three-year absence and equipped with a magnificent Edward Lear beard, Sacha Baron Cohen reunites with director Larry Charles with a new comic persona.

The Raid

Film review: The Raid

IN THE exotic, blood-drenched, slice-em-up world of Indonesian martial arts mayhem, the villains of The Raid could have maybe avoided fighting a Police SWAT team in a tower block, floor by floor, by holing up in the basement rather than the penthouse – but then we might be denied snapped necks and smashed knees in our introduction to the fighting discipline of pencak silat.

Film reviews: Dark Shadows | The Source | Two Years at Sea | 2 Days in New York

Syiobhan Synnot reviews the rest of this week’s forthcoming cinema releases

A screenshot from The Walking Dead

Game review: The Walking Dead: A New Day

ZOMBIES are a perennial favourite in gaming, and now Telltale Games has linked up with Robert Kirkman’s excellent comic-turned-TV series The Walking Dead.

Album reviews: The Gossip | Tenacious D | Alan Reid and Rob van Sante | Jazz | Classical

REVIEWS of the rest of this week’s longplayer releases

Garbage, fronted by Edinburgh-born Shirley Manson

Album review: Garbage - Not Your Kind of People

RUMOURS of Garbage’s demise have been much exaggerated, and this first new material in seven years makes a fist of blending the spiky and snuggly sides of the band.

Revelation: Morgan Saylor with Damian Lewis as Brody, who has toyed with us as Homelands hero or villain

TV review: Homeland | Great Ormond Street | Cardinal Burns

SO THERE I was, pen poised for the last episode of Homeland, absolutely convinced that the “Sarajevo ’84 Moment” would occur, the only issue being when. An hour and three-quarters later I was obliged to write: “Didn’t happen – this one’s been too cool, even for that.”

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Sunday 27 May 2012

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