Mr Gray called for Mr Salmond to "sack or back" the deputy first minister.
Mr Gray began by accusing Mr Salmond of being "scared" to hold an early referendum.
He said he saw Mr Gray and told him "Craig is gone, get back".
Mr Gray proved that there remains a significant role for the opposition, even in these majoritarian days.
They probably overstate the danger, but in any case we leave Mr Gray to speak for them.
Mr Gray said while his party did not oppose a freeze, it would have to be "fully funded".
Mr Gray was never confirmed as FBI director, and in 1973 William D Ruckelshaus took over the bureau.
Mr Gray claimed that top of the list was one of the smallest UK universities, Abertay in Dundee.
Mr Gray served with the Suffolk Regiment in Burma during World War II.
Mr Gray issued the demand when he clashed with Mr Salmond at first ministers questions on 20 January 2010.
Asked for dates and times of the resignation meetings, Mr Gray responded from memory, before referring to notes in front of him.
Mr Gray said the extra police were being used to fill civilian jobs and were not out on the beat.
Mr Brown was subsequently given a job in the administration, though Mr Gray says there was no quid pro quo.
ECONOMIST: A secret effort tainted the mayoral election of 2010
Mr Gray chided Ministers for dismissing the report, noting that "there are none so deaf as those who will not hear".
Mr Gray, Conservative member for North Wiltshire, said the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Planning, Nick Boles, had contacted him.
Mr Gray said mandatory sentences for carrying a knife would be part of the Labour manifesto for the next Holyrood election.
Mr Gray, formerly of Oxford and now professor of European thought at the London School of Economics, is an extremely clever man.
Often Mr Gray is a formidable opponent, and the contest is profitable.
The sons of Mr Gray heckled Dr Ubani at a medical conference in Bavaria in June, forcing him to abandon his speech.
Mr Gray said consequently the firm could not have committed the crime.
Mr Gray called on Skills Development Scotland to spend the money on apprenticeships instead, during first minister's question time on 27 May 2010.
Mr Gray said that the Scottish government must bring forward its funding solution now during first minister's question time on 4 November 2010.
Following Mr Gray's death, Dr Ubani was handed a nine-month suspended sentence by a German court after he admitted causing death by negligence.
The trouble is, as well as being clever and provocative, Mr Gray is often confused, always given to hyperbole and is occasionally plain crass.
Alex Salmond would not be drawn directly on the matter and said Mr Gray had misinterpreted Mr Russell's plans for college and university mergers.
Mr Gray said the first minister had "no consensus with himself on this issue" and was guilty of "dither delay and dodging" on the decision.
Speaking to the BBC at the Scottish Labour conference, Mr Gray also warned the highest paid civil servants could see their pay cut by 5%.
Mr Gray was as big a celebrity among computer geeks as Mr Fossett is among thrill-seekers, and the story played out in the same way.
Mr Gray said the first minister's interview in Holyrood magazine had contained "crass personal attacks" and it had demeaned the office to which Mr Salmond had been elected.
However, it was also intriguing to note her tone - which was to the effect that Mr Gray was "talking Scotland down" and underplaying Scotland's potential.
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