BREAKING NEWS
 

Business and brains

Trusted article source icon
Friday, March 15, 2013
Profile image for The Bristol Post

The Bristol Post

BRISTOL companies competed for the chance to be crowned the city's brainiest business.

Marie Curie Cancer Care held its quiz event at The Bristol Hotel last night.

  1. Pictured at the quiz event, Marie Curie Cancer Care nurses Anne Brady and Catherine Le Roy, with designer Gill Cockwell of Gilly Woo, and guests and celebrities including Heart Breakfast presenters Ed, Troy and Paulina and former Casualty actor Tristan Gemmill   Photo: Jon Kent BRJK201302214C-005_C

    Pictured at the quiz event, Marie Curie Cancer Care nurses Anne Brady and Catherine Le Roy, with designer Gill Cockwell of Gilly Woo, and guests and celebrities including Heart Breakfast presenters Ed, Troy and Paulina and former Casualty actor Tristan Gemmill Photo: Jon Kent BRJK201302214C-005_C

Bristol businesses tested their brain power with the six-round quiz hosted by local celebrities.

Heart Breakfast presenters Ed, Troy and Paulina, former Casualty actor Tristan Gemmill and Bristol chef Dean Edwards were among the hosts at the fundraising event. The New York-themed event featured a cocktail reception, dinner, an auction and raffle as well as the quiz.

Business Cards From Only £10.95 Delivered www.myprint-247.co.uk

myprint-247

View details

Print voucher

Our heavyweight cards have FREE UV silk coating, FREE next day delivery & VAT included. Choose from 1000's of pre-designed templates or upload your own artwork. Orders dispatched within 24hrs.

Terms: Visit our site for more products: Business Cards, Compliment Slips, Letterheads, Leaflets, Postcards, Posters & much more. All items are free next day delivery. www.myprint-247.co.uk

Contact: 01858 468192

Valid until: Wednesday, May 22 2013

Marie Curie Cancer Care provides nurses to help care for terminally ill people so that they can die in their own homes.

There are 16 local Marie Curie nurses who provided 9,700 hours of care to 190 patients across Bristol last year.

Bristol Marie Curie nurse Catherine Le Roy describes the service as relieving the strain on tired families and helping them cope.

She said that the Brain Game enables the charity to "reach even more local people and can provide hundreds of additional hours of care".

"Together we will make an enormous difference for patients and give lasting comfort for their families," she said.

0
Tweet this article
Report

Your comments awaiting moderation

Be the first to comment

max 4000 characters
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tell us about your area

Got some interesting news? Write about it and let your whole community know.

  Write an article