Proclaimers have faces painted on bra for charity

Proclaimers Bra

By ALEXANDER LAWRIE

SCOTLAND’S most famous twins are helping to raise cash for a charity – by having their faces portrayed on a bra.

The 500 Miles stars have given their full backing to this year’s 26-mile Moon Walk marathon and have even prepared a special video message for all the participants to be screened just before the start of the event.

The Hibs-daft musicians, Charlie and Craig Reid, have had their caricatures drawn onto both cups of the bra by cartoonist Malky McCormick.

The garment will now be sold off at a charity auction after the night walk in aid of breast cancer.

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Proclaimers’ spec-tacular stage-side fight

ProclaimersBy Michael MacLeod

SINGING Scots twins The Proclaimers have revealed they once came close to blows after a gig.

Lenses went flying as the bespectacled duo fell out and had an offstage battle following a concert in Canada.

But siblings Craig and Charlie Reid, both 47, say it only took one beer for them to iron out their differences.

The “500 Miles” stars launch their new album, Notes and Rhymes, today (Monday) – the eighth of their career.

But they revealed in a weekend interview that they’ve not always been completely in harmony.
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Top Scottish song revealed as 500 miles

By Karrie Gillett

 A LEADING homeless charity has revealed the number one song which reminds Scots of home.

The Proclaimers’ favourite I’m Gonna Be (500 miles) grabbed the number one spot in the online poll conducted by Shelter Scotland.

Today outside Holyrood, the charity handed over two guitar cases stuffed with 4,000 postcards to Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon as part of their campaign to end homelessness by 2012.

Graeme Brown, Shelter Scotland director, said now was a crucial time to raise awareness of homelessness as the credit crunch was actually forcing more people out of their homes.

He said: “Last year in Scotland 40,000 people in Scotland were assessed as homeless.

“This is a critical time for housing and we are here to remind MSPs of the 2012 target in Scotland that everyone that is homeless will have a permanent home.”

The charity poll on Scotland’s most heartfelt song was started in July to mark the beginning of their Hometime Scotland campaign.

Members of the public, MSPs and celebrities voted in their thousands with 500 miles grabbing the top spot, followed by Dougie MacLean’s Caledonia.

First Minister Alex Salmond – who voted for MacLean’s 1979 hit – called it “the complete modern anthem of home and homecoming” while Nicola Sturgeon opted for a more modern Scottish song voting for Paolo Nutini’s These Streets.

 Joining the campaign today was 28-year-old Carrieann Davies of Edinburgh who lived in temporary accommodation with her three children before being helped and re-homed by Shelter.

She said: “The temporary accommodation was really miserable, it wasn’t homely and there wasn’t much room for me and my young family.

“Just because you have a roof over your head doesn’t mean it’s a home.

“Shelter were able to help me speak to the right people and get a house for us. Now I have our first Christmas as a family in my own home to look forward to.”

Health secretary Nicola Sturgeon said homelessness was a problem which conflicted with the building of a modern and successful economy.

She said: “In this, the 40th year of Shelter Scotland, the campaign underlines the need to provide the unintentionally homeless with settled accommodation, which can be a base for themselves and their family.

“This Government’s commitment to the homelessness 2012 target is unwavering, as are our ambitions for housing more generally. “

Shelter’s Hometime Scotland campaign aims to achieve 10,000 affordable rented homes a year being delivered by housing associations and local authorities.

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