Geoff also worked as the occupational medical officer at the then Phillips television factory in Dunfermline. |
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Four years after his birth in Dunfermline, in 1600, it was thought a good idea to crown the boy King of Scots, but the Scots grandees objected. |
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Following the game, the fourth official apparently informed Dunfermline that the handball had been accidental. |
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Last season's cup final experience with Dunfermline still prompts an involuntary smile. |
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Next month he marks five years in the hot seat at Dunfermline and declares that he could not be happier. |
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Born in Dunfermline, Scotland, Carnegie was indoctrinated in the democratic, pacifistic tenets of his father, a Chartist radical. |
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Diane and Paul Brown are hell-bent on creating a cosy environment in this smart split-level restaurant just off the High Street in Dunfermline. |
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Also returning to the bosom of his family was Tod, who devoted eight years of his career to Dunfermline. |
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Dunfermline is fast becoming a boom town, where people aspire to more than being on benefits. |
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The Dunfermline player was sent off for a second bookable offence, a spot kick was awarded, and Miller blasted it home. |
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Dunfermline have had a horrendous start to the new season and entertain Celtic today, but their manager's enthusiasm remains unbowed. |
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Dunfermline are a club still suffering the aftershocks of financial turmoil. |
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It was Smith again who pressurised Dunfermline, this time turning inside from he left and keeping his shot low but it zipped just past the post. |
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Le Guen had rejigged his team significantly after two draws with Dundee United and Dunfermline had exposed some early glitches. |
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Those incidents provided welcome relief from a turgid second period that saw Dunfermline monopolise possession, but rarely convince anyone they knew what to do with it. |
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Dunfermline had more reason than most to approach the match warily. |
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Townsley's goal and then Ged Brannan's penalty, two minutes into injury time, represented a dramatic reversal for an unfortunate Dunfermline side. |
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During a home game against Dunfermline the player's misfiring performance was subjected to a sustained chorus of boos and jeers from his own fans. |
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The first abbot of Dunfermline was Geoffrey, prior of Canterbury, while David I's Cistercian foundation at Melrose was established by monks from Rievaulx. |
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She was buried before the high altar in Dunfermline Abbey in Fife, Scotland. |
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On 19 June 1250, after her canonisation, her remains were transferred to a chapel in the eastern apse of Dunfermline Abbey in Fife, Scotland. |
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In the next few years, while Celtic continued with their suicidal youth policy, Stein made bricks without straw at Dunfermline. |
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Fife is, of course, the home of the Regimental HQ, which is based in Dunfermline. |
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The king's body was sent north for reburial, in the reign of his son Alexander, at Dunfermline Abbey, or possibly Iona. |
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The former Dunfermline midfielder curled home a brilliant strike early in the second half, with Dutch striker Daal adding a late clincher. |
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Tradition has it that as the reliquary was carried to the high altar of Dunfermline Abbey, past Malcolm's grave, it became too heavy to move. |
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His body is buried in Dunfermline Abbey, while his heart was interred in Melrose Abbey. |
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Actually it was another fanciable guy hoping to make his home in Gordon's Dunfermline constituency who caught my eye last week. |
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Banks was born in Dunfermline, Fife, to a mother who was a professional ice skater and a father who was an officer in the Admiralty. |
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It has a headquarters in Dunfermline and offices in Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Inverness. |
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Special trains were run from Edinburgh and Dunfermline, and a steamer ran to Leith in the summer. |
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In 1250 Pope Innocent IV canonized her, and her remains were reinterred in a shrine in Dunfermline Abbey in Fife, Scotland. |
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She used a cave on the banks of the Tower Burn in Dunfermline as a place of devotion and prayer. |
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The tour began in Scotland in Aberdeen, then proceeded in England, before finishing back in Scotland at Velocity in Dunfermline. |
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In 1856, the burgh of Dunfermline resolved to use the title of city in all official documents in the future, based on long usage and its former status as a royal capital. |
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During the middle of the 12th century, the church was allowed to fall into disrepair, when most of the revenues were used by David I to fund Dunfermline Abbey. |
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The result saw 10th-placed Inverness, who also hit the post through Richie Foran, retain a four-point lead over Hibs, who moved a point clear of bottom club Dunfermline. |
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Robert had bequeathed sufficient funds to pay for thousands of obituary masses in Dunfermline Abbey and elsewhere, and his tomb would thus be the site of daily votive prayers. |
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A file of mourners on foot, including Robert Stewart and a number of knights dressed in black gowns, accompanied the funeral party into Dunfermline Abbey. |
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Successful Scottish stadium rock acts such as Simple Minds from Glasgow and Big Country from Dunfermline incorporated traditional Celtic sounds onto many of their songs. |
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When I met Barbara, she was about 15, singing at the Howf in Dunfermline. |
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Robert also arranged for perpetual soul masses to be funded at the chapel of Saint Serf, at Ayr and at the Dominican friary in Berwick, as well as at Dunfermline Abbey. |
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For the UK Parliament, Rosyth is located in the Dunfermline and West Fife Westminster constituency, currently held by Douglas Chapman MP for the Scottish National Party. |
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Now McCall wants to further strengthen his squad as Canadian internationalist keeper Lars Hirschfeld gets ready to play in tonight's reserve clash against Dunfermline. |
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Similarly, the direct main line to Edinburgh via Glenfarg, Dunfermline and the Forth Bridge was abandoned in 1970 in favour of the longer, more circuitous route via Stirling. |
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