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Gazette WIN CLONDALKIN

June 16-22, 2016

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Cairns case develops following Cooke death  ian begley and emma nolan

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Cook Up a storm this summer

The case of missing Rathfarnham boy, Philip Cairns has developed in recent days following the death of Clondalkin paedophile Eamon Cooke..

Sources have revealed to The Gazette that five years ago two women reported to gardai that they saw Philip Cairns under Templeogue Bridge a week after he went missing. This rumour has not been confirmed, it does however

link in with the fresh details that have emerged surrounding his disappearance. The 13-year-old vanished as he was walking home from school at lunchtime in on October 23 1986. Hundreds of sightings of Philip were reported over

the years but no trace of the schoolboy has been found. A woman, who had contacted gardai in 2011, came forward with new information in May which saw gardai open new lines of enquiry into the case. She said that Eamon Cooke may have

killed the child at the studios of his pirate radio station. Philip’s schoolbag was found dumped in a laneway just yards from his home in Rathfarnham by two schoolgirls six days later. Full Story on Page 2


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New gardai welcomed  ian begley news@gazettegroup.com

Eight new Gardai will be allocated to the Clondalkin and Lucan districts following the recent graduation of Garda recruits from Templemore. This increase in Garda numbers has been welcomed by local residents and representatives who are concerned about an apparent increase in antisocial behaviour and burglaries in some areas around the county. The number of burglaries fell by 3% last year in Dublin’s Western Garda Division. The Central Statistics Office (CSO) data for 2015

shows 2,390 burglaries and related offences were recorded in the division – a drop of 73 on the 2,463 reported the previous year. Burglaries in Lucan dropped from 283 to 280 last year while Ballyfermot saw a decrease of five incidents – from 275 to 270. However, there were increases in Clondalkin and Ronanstown, which saw rises of 33% and 14% respectively. Speaking at the graduation ceremony for the newly recruited gardai, local Minister Fitzgerald said: “The bond between An Garda Siochana and the community depends on trust and confidence. Public trust is earned by

honesty, accountability, respect and professionalism. That is what the community expects from An Garda Siochana. “In tandem with accelerated Garda recruitment there will be a fresh recruitment drive aimed at doubling the Garda Reserve and increased recruitment of civilians to free up Gardaí to front-line policing duties. This investment in personnel will be supported by an additional €205million in new technology and ICT to equip An Garda Siochana for the digital era and continued investment in the Garda fleet and in Garda stations.”

Cooke linked to Cairns case Continued from page 1

important ruins need clean up COUNCILLOR Francis Timmons (Ind) is calling on South Dublin County Council to clean up the ruins of St Cuthbert’s Church and Old Tower Castle and is forwarding motions on the subject for the Clondalkin Area Committee Meeting on June 22. Graffiti The motion for the Old Tower Crescent, calls for graffiti to be removed, and a fence be put around the Tower to protect it, with a sign to be erected detailing the history of the structure. The Old Tower Caste and St Cuthbert’s Church are both protected structures in South County Dublin. According to the council’s website, each owner and occupier of a protected structure is legally obliged to ensure that the structure is maintained and safeguarded from endangerment.

The advance in the case came last month when the woman, who was nine years old at the time of the incident, told detectives that Cooke had knocked the schoolboy unconscious after hitting him in his studio. Gardai believe that the woman was terrified to give information while Cooke was still alive, but when she found out he was on his deathbed, she spoke more freely. Gardai interviewed Cooke before he died where he admitted that Philip had been in his radio studio in Inchicore but he did not admit to killing him. Other former victims of the notorious paedophile will be traced by investigating gardai regarding the disappearance of the missing schoolboy. In a statement, gardai said: “We would appeal to these people who would have been children when Philip went missing on October 23, 1986, to come forward. “Eamon Cooke abused very many children who were so terrified of him that they have never come forward. Now that he is dead and they see the 30-year nightmare that has been endured by the Cairns family, these people may be in a position to come and talk to the gardai.” Gardai are also trying to trace the location of a property in south Dublin that Cooke used to site a signal repeater for his pirate radio station Radio Dublin. Officers will interview former staff at Radio Dublin and examine land registry documents in a bid to trace the property, which Cooke leased more than 30 years ago. The investigation will also focus on three separate DNA samples found on the schoolbag. They will be cross-referenced with Cooke’s DNA, which is stored on a database in Garda HQ.


16 June 2016 CLONDALKIN Gazette 3

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TO CELEBRATE Ireland’s French adventure, The Gazette has teamed up with B&Q to give a lucky reader the chance to win a fantastic Weber Q2000 2 burner gas barbeque, worth €476. To enter, all you have to do is like Dublin Gazette’s Facebook page, and then just like and share our #GazetteGiveaway BBQ promotion post. Boost your chances of winning by tagging a pal or two you think might like to win this fantastic prize, and as the French say: “Bonne Chance!”

Lucan girls Danielle McNamee, Rachel Lynch and Sinead Croft may have forgotten their ballgowns, but they’re still able to make more than a oui fuss over Ireland

Gendarmes get an Eiffel of supporters’ passion IRELAND got off to a decent start with an unlucky 1-1 draw with Sweden in Paris on Monday – but that hasn’t stopped the Boys, and

Girls, in Green from having the time of their lives in France. With the Green Army heading south to Bordeaux for the clash with Belgium on Saturday, Gazette readers have been posting photos of their French adven-

tures over on our Facebook page. Keep your shots coming in – there’ll be prizes for the best photos we receive, with winners to be announced on our Facebook page and in the paper after the Euros end on July 10.

following the green river EURO brothers Peter and Tiernan Reilly tagged along with the nation’s hopes and followed the team over to France. Here’s their match dispatch, filed just after our 1-1 draw with Sweden ...

DAY after the match – the lead up to the match in Montmartre was really lively, so much so that we couldn’t fit onto the Metro! The Harp bar has been the centre of the craic since we arrived, and yesterday was no different. We ended up having to take an UBER [user-organised taxi] to the stadium as the queue for the metro

was two hours of green! Once inside, the place was hopping, with a wall of green met by a wall of yellow. Having got some hotdogs in at halftime, we didn’t have long to wait for Wes’ opener. Shame we couldn’t hold on, but on to Bordeaux! We have to catch the train at 2pm tomorrow, and then the green river flows south ...


4 CLONDALKIN Gazette 16 June 2016

Man jailed for list of offences  ian begley news@gazettegroup.com

A former taxi driver caught with €600,000 of drugs and stolen art when his apartment was searched after he was involved in a cash-intransit robbery has been jailed for seven and a half years. Jonathan Rafferty (38) was later involved in a second cash in transit robbery as well as a burglary which ended in the getaway car ramming two vehicles in an attempt to escape. Dublin Circuit Criminal Court heard Rafferty was using cocaine every day at the time of the offences and was under “significant pressure” due

to a €6,000 “drug debt.” Rafferty, of Brookview Lawn, Tallaght, Dublin pleaded guilty to robbery of a security cash box containing €19,000 and possession of an imitation firearm at Cookstown Road, Tallaght on October 21, 2013. He further pleaded guilty to possession of cannabis resin and cannabis herb and of stolen artwork at Hazel Grove Court, Tallaght on October 26, 2013. He also admitted robbery of a second security cash box containing €230 and possession of an imitation firearm at Cheeverstown Luas Stop, Tallaght on March 21, 2014. Finally, Rafferty pleaded guilty to burglary at

Sunrise Dry Cleaner, City West Business Park on February 10, 2015. He also admitted dangerous driving and criminal damage to a car on the same occasion. Judge Patricia Ryan noted Rafferty had not become involved in criminal activity until his late twenties after developing a cocaine habit. She noted he had made efforts to rehabilitate himself and had not come to any further garda attention. Judge Ryan imposed consecutive sentences totalling eleven years and suspended three and a half years of the total term. Rafferty, who has 12 previous convictions, had written a letter of apology

to the court. At the first sentence hearing last April Colm O’Briain SC, defending, said his client’s involvement in the offences had arisen from drug use which led to a drug debt and onwards to criminal activity. He said Rafferty had left school early and gone into full time work restoring kitchens before becoming a taxi driver. He developed a serious cocaine habit around 2004 which led to personal and financial difficulties and the loss of his taxi. Mr O’Briain said Rafferty had previously attempted to address his drug problem but had relapsed.

contest

U2 winners revealed

waste charges to be hiked up A protest is took place outside Thorntons Recycling Plant in Ballyfermot this week over the new pay by weight charges. It’s been organised by People Before Profit after it emerged that the yearly service charge for customers is going up to be over €150. Over the last few weeks, Dubliners have been contacted by their bin companies to tell them about the new pay by weight rules coming into force on July 1st. While many of the letters are telling people about the charge per kilo for their black and brown bins, it’s the cost of the yearly service charge that has some up in arms.

THE Gazette had a great response to our U2 DVD giveaway contest, with lots of entries received from all across the city. However, there can be only one winner – or five, in this case – with the DVDs going out to Paul O’Callaghan, Tallaght; Cindy Redmond, Celbridge; Vincent Kearns, Rathfarnham; Paula Roche, Lucan and Igor Jankucic, Ballymun. Look out for our terrific €2,000 Cannes holiday to give away on P21!


16 June 2016 CLONDALKIN Gazette 5


6 CLONDALKIN Gazette 16 June 2016

Gazettegallery | stylish ladies turned out in their best summer couture

Models wearing creations from designers at The Design Centre Dublin pictured at The Goal and Design Centre Mariona Cunningham and Jeanette Sung

Brent Pope and Izabela Chudzick

Charity Fashion lunch at Saba, Clarendon Street, Dublin. Pictures: Brian McEvoy

Fashion, food & fundraising I

Ruth Bergin and Blathnaid Bergin

Theodora Sutra, Irma Mali and Laura O Shea

T was a very fashionable affair at the Design Centre’s Annual Summer Lunch & Fashion Show in aid of GOAL. Commentating legend Brent Pope acted as MC at the event, introducing the models. Guests tucked into a delicious three course Thai Summer Banquet courtesy of Paul Caden and his team at Saba. Last week’s event raised much needed funds for Goal Ireland.


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8 CLONDALKIN Gazette 16 June 2016

shop local | The Gazette focuses on Clondalkin Village and calls on

Feast on some

 ian begley

T

he annual Clondalkin Festival will soon be hitting the village once again and with a great line-up of family fun events taking place it is certainly not something you would want to miss. Now in its sixth year, the festival which takes place from June 17 – 19, has gotten bigger and better year on year with people looking forward to it with great anticipation. Over the weekend, there will be various events hosted by The Tower’s GAA Club, Aras Chronain, and a number of local pubs. On Saturday, the Fun

Cycle starts out from The Laurels at 12noon, along with an interesting display of retiles at Dave’s Jungle, in Newlands Garden Centre between 4 – 5.30pm. O n S u n d ay, J u n e 19, Clondalkin Village will be pedestrianised between 2 – 6pm to host a day filled to the brim with fun events – 90% of which are free. Excitement

Dublin City Centre will be quieter this day, as the village will attract the cream-of-the-crop in Street Performance. The profile of the Festival has reached far and wide – with an Australian performer coming in this year on the recommendation

of a performer from the UK, who he met in Australia. These performances bring incredible colour and excitement to the streets, and really celebrate the freedom of walking about our pedestrianised village for the day. The Street Performers

Competition is also back this year and has generated huge interest from international and local performers. The competition means that since the artists do not receive a fee from the festival, they will be really glad if you show your appreciation of their efforts with

a contribution. The main stage has a packed programme of fantastic local talent and includes a magic show, set dancing, martial arts and karate displays, dance performances and Zumba displays. Continued on Page 10

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the community to ensure the area thrives

fun at festival

Colm Gavin is set to perform at the Clondalkin Festival


10 CLONDALKIN Gazette 16 June 2016

shop local | The Gazette focuses on Clondalkin Village and calls on

Supporting our

Continued from Page 8

The music acts during the festival include the return of Colm Gavin, who is promoting his new album ”A Voice for the Urban Darlings”. The Album is set to be released on December 18 and is getting Colm a good bit of attention from across the water in the States along with back home in Ireland. In the build up to the release Gavin has been releasing 30 second previews on his sound cloud account. Also performing, for the first time at Clondalkin Festival, is The Voice UK star and Clondalkin native Lauren Lapsley-Browne. Lauren wowed judges at The Voice UK with her take on the Rufus

and Chaka Khan’s classic Ain’t Nobody. Judges will.i.am and Paloma Faith both turned almost immediately after the 18-year-old started to sing. In response, will.i.am said: “She’s like a Charlie’s Angel and I would like to be her Charlie.” Once again, there will also be a spectacular per formance from the ever popular Clondalkin Youth Band, who are rushing back to Clondalkin from an earlier engagement that day, and to close our Festival in great style. Interest

Local businessman Thyes Kavanagh, who is part of the organising committee told The Gazette that the festival has a huge amount of

interest from local artists, clubs and groups wishing to participate. He also wished to thank the many local sponsors who helped to fund the annual festival

once again. Roads will be closed to facilitate the festival from 2 - 6pm on June, 19. The roads closed will be the main street from the junction at

New Road and Tower Road from Tescos to the Round Tower. For more on the festival on the festival, see w w w.facebook.com/ inclondalkin.

Lauren Lapsey Browne

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the community to ensure the area thrives

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business

3 Irish companies Granted awards  emma nolan

Three innovative Irishled research projects have just been awarded large grants from the EU’s research and innovation programme, Horizon 2020. Based in Limerick, Dublin and Galway, the Irish companies are leading research on systems and products which are close to being ready for commercial exploitation. The EU funding they have been awarded supports getting their systems and products tested, and bringing this innovative research to market. The companies awarded the

grants are three of just 16 businesses to have come through a highly competitive process involving 263 projects and 1057 companies, from across the EU, pitching for the funds. Carlos Moedas, Commissioner for Research, Science and Innovation, said: “Through Horizon 2020, we want to support innovative businesses to compete in global markets. These results bring the total investment to nearly €135 million in fast-access EU funding for close-to-the-market innovation activities, helping European R&D reach successful commercialisation.”

The Dublin company is OpenHydro Group Ltd (www.openhydro. com) and they are leading a group of European researchers in a project called OCTTIC (Open-Centre Tidal Turbine Industrial Capability), which will receive total EU funding of €2,996,327. Their project looks at wave energy and aims to find ways to make it as cheap as wind energy so that it is more practical to use in the electricity grid. The project being led from Dublin involves partners from Belgium, United Kingdom and the Netherlands.

Writer in residence  emma nolan

Investment for the favourite 5 Ulster Bank Invests €68,000 in Five Irish Community Projects. Investment is the first round of Ulster Bank’s Skills & Opportunities Fund. Pictured were Emma Wheatley, Programme Coordinator of the Early Learning Initiative and Stephen Galbraith, Ulster Bank with Liam Duffy (age 6) a pupil from National College of Ireland Dublin, Early Learning Initiative at the announcement of the Irish winners of the first round of the RBS Skills and Opportunities fund. The Skills and Opportunities Fund will see an investment of €68,000 into five community projects across the country – part of the first round of the €280,000 Skills and Opportunities Fund for the island of Ireland.

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Bu s i n e s s t o A r t s and corporate law firm A&L Goodbody have launched a new Writer in Residence programme under the Docklands Arts Fund. The programme will see a writer work with children at St. Joseph’s Co-Ed Primary School in East Wall to develop their creativity and literacy skills. The venture marks the first time that a business in Ireland has engaged a Writer in Residence programme with Business to Arts and Dublin City Council. As part of the partnership, A&L Goodbody will also provide funding for the programme worth €30,000.


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feature P16

travel P21

asdfsdaf P27

dublinlife Let Dublin Gazette Newspapers take you on a tour of the news and events taking place across the city and county this week

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diary P15

help happy heidi find a loving new home

Hailing from Mullingar, the lads in The Academic are firmly on the up, with their upcoming gig at Bulmers Live adding to their increasingly impressive track record

gigs: the academic on committing to their growing music career

They’re all four their band  karl graham

UP-AND-COMING Irish band The Academic will bring a bit of indie/rock style to Bulmers Live at Leopardstown this year. With the band-members’ mutual love of artists such as The Strokes and the recently departed from our shores Bruce Springsteen, the guitar-heavy sound that’s popular with the former helps the band put on an impressive live performance. Due to take the stage tonight (Thursday, June 16), the Mullingar men will join the list of musical legends – comprising the likes of Johnny Marr, The Charlatans, and The Happy Mondays – to have

played at the racing festival. The band was signed up by Global Publishing last year to help showcase their music worldwide. Guitarist Matthew Murtagh spoke to The Gazette about how their lives have changed since. He said: “We’ve gotten to do some amazing things, such as supporting some big acts, headlining our own shows, and releasing music, so it’s been really cool.” Matthew’s brother, Stephen, plays bass in the band alongside vocalist/ guitarist Craig Fitzgerald and drummer Dean Gavin. The foursome have been playing together since they were 14. Matthew says they have not felt any added pressure since they signed the

Publishing deal, although there was one conversation that had them hot under the collar. He said: “The big pressure was leaving school and deciding to do it full-time – that conversation with the parents is a hard enough thing to do, but we all made the decision to put college on the back burner and work on this, which has so far worked out.” It has indeed worked out for the band as they have already supported The Pixies and appeared on stage at festivals in countries all across the world – an experience they are all fully enjoying. Matthew said: “We recently played at the Europavox festival in France and I was really surprised when the French

crowd went crazy for us. You never know what crowd you are going to get.” The Academic released their first EP last week and, after receiving a positive reception, they hope to have their first album on record shelves early next year. Matthew added: “At the moment we are kind of going day-by-day, but we really want to get an album out there and we are hoping to put one out at the start of next year.” The band will join the likes of Nathan Carter, The Strypes and Dublin rock gods Aslan at this year’s Bulmers Live at Leopardstown event, which started on June 9 and will be wrapped up by The Boomtown Rats on August 11.

OUR Dog of the Week looking for her #SpecialSomeone* is happy Heidi, a gorgeous two-year-old female American Bulldog cross. Heidi loves her walks, food and gentle fuss and cuddles. She will benefit from a home with adults or older children who will understand that whilst she enjoys human affection and attention, she also needs peace and quiet when she is resting in her bed, which she loves. Long naps are one of her favourite things in life! If you can be Heidi’s #SpecialSomeone*, then please contact Dogs Trust on 01 879 1000. They are based in Finglas, just off Exit 5 on the M50. Map and directions can be found on their website, www.dogstrust. ie. You can also find them on Facebook, at www.facebook.com/ dogstrustirelandonline, or on Twitter @ DogsTrust_IE. *Dogs Trust has launched their new TV ad; the #SpecialSomeone campaign aims to bring to life just how important a new owner is to the dogs they rehome.


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14 Gazette 16 June 2016

dublinlife Gardai Paul Priestley and Laura Caffrey

Conor and Grace Harney

Molly Murray meets Lady Longbottom and Little Miss

Filling up on fun at Maxol

Chloe and Layla Storey

Sunshine at the Maxol forecourt. Pictures: Peter Houlihan

F

AMILIES came pouring in to Maxol Mulhuddart for its official opening recently, with locals joining staff and special guests to celebrate the opening of the chain’s largest service station. Representing an investment of €6m, the Mulhuddart station at the M3 has created 50 jobs, with the addition of a number of extra features – including Insomnia, Chopped and Supermacs fare – adding to the own-brand Maxol fresh food. A range of entertainment and colourful characters were on hand for the opening, with children delighted to try their hand at a range of games and acitivities, while their parents and grown-ups had a bite to eat inside the spacious station.

Gleneagle Group set to manage luxury houses SHEEN Falls Country Club, a unique development of luxury selfcatering accommodation in Kenmare, is to be managed by The Gleneagle Group from this summer. The development comprises 20 town houses and a further six detached houses set among mature woodland alongside the River Sheen. Patrick O’Donoghue, managing director of The Gleneagle Group, said: “Sheen Falls Country Club is a stunning development in an incredible setting, and we look forward to

making it a major contender in the Irish self-catering market and contributing visitor numbers to Kenmare.” Guests of Sheen Falls Country Club can avail of a number of local activities, including horse riding, fishing, cycling and hill walking, but they also get to enjoy the many benefits of holidaying at a Gleneagle Group property. For bookings or further information, see www.sheenfallscountryclub.ie, email info@sheenfallscountryclub.ie or call 064 667 1512.


16 June 2016 Gazette 15

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call 01 60 10 240 Brand ambassador Alison Canavan and her son, James, having a wheelie fun time launching National Bike Week. Picture: Marc O’Sullivan

On yer bike! (For a week) NATIONAL Bike Week is here once again, celebrating and promoting all that is great about cycling. Cycling is environmentally-friendly, as it cuts congestion and has zero emissions, and it is also much lower in cost than travelling by public transport or a car. Even if you spend as little as €1.20 daily on travel costs (such as a bus fare, Luas fare or petrol), you could save €200 a year by switching to a bike. Demonstrating the social, health and environmental benefits of cycling, Bike Week is coordinated at a national level by the Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport. For further information, see www.bikeweek.ie, follow Bike Week on Twitter @BikeWeekie or on Instagram @BikeWeekie, or like Bike Week on Facebook at www.facebook. com/bikeweekie. For your nearest Bike Week event, and to join in this June, be sure to see www.bikeweek.ie.

oh mummy – have you a funny story? MUMMY bloggers are being given the chance to win a spa break – just by sharing a funny story. Broadcaster and journalist Maia Dunphy is inviting Irish women to share their funniest stories on the trials of being a mum on The M Word, the space for women who happen to be mothers. Maia said she has “wrangled” a relaxing night for two at the Killeshee House Hotel, Killeshee, after being hosted by the Kildare hotel as a celebrity guest. Now, she wants to give The M Word readers a break just by sharing their stories. Kilashee have offered a night for two at their relaxing Kildare bolthole to the mummy who shares the funniest story. The prize includes breakfast and dinner in the Turner’s fine dining restaurant, and a treatment in the hydrotherapy suite of the hotel’s award-winning spa. For further information, see killasheehotel.com or

The M Word at Facebook. com/themwordtoday.

step up to 24 hours of riverdance WITH Riverdance’s summer season starting once again, participants from its legendary troupe will dance for 24 continuous hours on the plaza outside The Gaiety Theatre. Starting at noon on July 21, a large digital clock will hang from the canopy and count down the hours. Over the following 24 hours, Riverdancers and Irish dancers from a number of dance schools will take part, ensuring that the dance goes on. Those passing by are invited to donate to the charity and maybe even join in the occasional ceili. You can follow the event as it unfolds on social media using the tags #Riverdance #DanceAthon. Held in association with The Irish Hospice Foundation (IHF), the 24 hours of Irish dancing aims to highlight the round-the-clock work carried out by the IHF.

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16 Gazette 16 June 2016

Rachel Wyse and her best friend, Ryan Crowley – the pair feature in a new Barry’s Tea campaign

Why June 16 became known around the world as Bloomsday JUNE 16 is unique in literature in that it actually has a day named after it – Bloomsday. The day is named after the main character – Leopold Bloom – in James Joyce’s most famous work, Ulysses. The date was

One of the stars of the upcoming Laya Healthcare City Spectacular festival

deliberately chosen by the author, as it was on this

Green and greet a fantastic family festival in the city

day in 1904 that he and Nora Barnacle, his future lover and wife, went on their first date. By that October, she would leave Dublin and accompany him to France, where they struggled until his eventual breakthrough and international recognition. Joyce had stayed in the Martello Tower, in Sandycove, with his friend Oliver St John Gogarty (who had rented the building) for a short time before leaving hurriedly after a gun was fired late one night. However, he chose to set the opening scene of his book in the building, and Gogarty is immortalised in the first line: “Stately, plumb Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead, bearing a bowl of lather on which a mirror and a razor lay crossed.” Celebrating Bloomsday has become big business, and events are now held in many cities around the world, bringing a new audience to Joyce’s works. However, the original Bloomsday (in 1954 – the 50th anniversary) celebrations were rather prosaic by today’s standards, involving a number of Dublin’s literati and two horse-drawn carriages. The group – John Ryan (owner of The Bailey pub and founder of Envoy art magazine), Flann O’Brien, Anthony Cronin, Patrick Kavanagh, Tom Joyce (a cousin) and AJ Leventhal (registrar of Trinity College) – had planned a “pilgrimage” along the circuitous route set out in the book.

interview: sky sports GAA presenter rachel wyse

wyse words on presenting gaa OVER THE WATER

However, after a number of stops for “refreshments”, the adventure was abandoned due to “inebri-

 Karl graham

ation and rancour”, and they retired to The Bailey, on Duke Street. You may very well see some horse-drawn carriages on the big day but as to whether they will be ferrying such an illustrious group, well, I guess that’ll be another story. Happy Bloomsday!

Don Cameron

www.donsdublin.wordpress.com

The picturesque Martello Tower in Sandycove, forever immortalised by James Joyce in Ulysses

SKY Sports’ face of GAA – Rachel Wyse – sat down with The Gazette to discuss the hectic life of a sports broadcaster, living in London, and her love of horses. Rachel is unique in the media sector in that her love of sport provided her with a different career path from the traditional Irish model-turned-TV presenter journey. Working in a media environment can rarely result in a normal nineto-five work life, and this is particularly true if you are a TV broadcaster at one of the world’s largest

news organisations. She said: “I don’t have a typical day because every day can be different. Working at Sky, your hours can vary because if you’re on an early [shift] you are up at two or three in the morning. “During the GAA season from June to September, the closest to a typical day would be up at 7am, straight into work and into a makeup chair, so I’m lucky I can just roll out of bed and into a chair.” From here, she takes part in a pre-shoot meeting before hitting screens at 10am. The early morning start sometimes gives her the afternoon to relax

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‘During the GAA season from June to September, the closest to a typical day would be up at 7am, straight into work and into a makeup chair, so I’m lucky I can just roll out of bed and into a chair’ --------------------------------------------------------

and unwind. Despite how much she enjoys her life on TV, it was not her first love. Rachel began show jumping at the age of 10 and represented Ireland at the European Showjumping Championships. Rachel, who grew up near Leopardstown

Racecourse in Stillorgan, has seen her profile rocket both at home and abroad since she joined Sky Sports six years ago. Barry’s Tea has taken advantage of this and will feature Rachel and her best friend, Ryan Crowley, in their new advertisement campaign.

While Ireland may always be her spiritual home, Rachel is now settled enough in London to call it home. “My mam and dad live in Blackrock now, but my brother, sister and I have been in London for six years so London is home now,” she said. Rachel and Cork native Ryan met in London after they got chatting to each other in a pub during an Ireland versus England rugby game five years ago, and they now live together. Ryan believes that Rachel has remained the same down-to-earth person since her career has

 ken phelan

taken off, and told a funny story about her at an RDS festival to prove his point. “I think Winter Wonderland was the funniest moment when she got off the dropzone thing there. “It was huge, so myself and Natalie, who works with Rachel, wouldn’t go on it. There was an Irish guy standing at the bottom, and when she got off her hair was all over the place and she was pale as a ghost. “She was saying: ‘I think I’m going to get sick’, and this guy was like, ‘Rachel, can I get a photo?’” She duly obliged. In typical Irish fashion, the two friends like

nothing more than a cup of tea (or a glass of wine) and a chat. Ryan said: “We actually, honestly, have Barry’s Tea in our apartment all the time. They sell it in Sainsburys in the Irish section, but my mum used to send it over in envelopes!” Rachel is very happy with her career at the moment and hopes to continue at Sky for as long as they’ll have her. She said: “TV can be quite a fickle industry, so it’s nice to have that security and people seem to go there and stay for a long time. I still feel like the new girl and I’m there six years.”

Reporter Karl Graham with Rachel Wyse

REPTILE-tattooed superstar The Lizardman, contortionist “The Human Knot” Alkazam, 8-foot tall fully-animated Titan the Robot, and mad German scientist Doctor Kaboom will all appear in July’s family-friendly Laya Healthcare City Spectacular festival in Merrion Square. More than 300 shows are due to appear at the festival, which runs over three days in Dublin. The festival will showcase the best in international street performance, interactive family events and workshops, delicious artisan producers and international street food. New additions to this year’s festival – an entirely free family event – include Laya Healthcare’s Greatest Place on Earth, where families can “play, dance and create together”, an international street food festival, live music stage, waiter service and DSPCA pet wellness area.

A spokesperson for Laya Healthcare said: “We are delighted to announce our three-year sponsorship of Laya Healthcare’s City Spectacular, which is the biggest free family summer festival in Ireland. “Each year the festival has grown and developed and we look forward to having the best festival yet in 2016.” Family health, fitness and wellbeing will be central to “The Greatest Place on Earth”, where kids’ aerobics, yoga and dance classes will be held. The legendary puppet Bosco will also make an appearance to support the festival’s official partner, LauraLynn Ireland’s Children’s Hospice. The “Pet-acular” area with the DSPCA invites visitors to bring their beloved dogs along, where they may become the star of the Scruffs Dog Show, and star in their very own photo shoot, showing that the event not only welcomes families, but also their four-legged friends.

Meanwhile, Just Eat Street invites visitors to devour more than 25 different cuisines from around the world, enjoy music from international acts, and relax in the sunshine with family and friends. Just Eat will also provide a waiter service that will take and deliver orders for festival-goers, bringing the best of its online ordering service to life for visitors. The ESB Spark Your Imagination area is a feast for the senses, with creative writing workshops from Fighting Words, fun and games from Imaginosity, and science and electricity shows from mad German scientist Doktor Kaboom. The Laya Healthcare City Spectacular will also once again bring their Kid’s Court event to the family festival, where children can put their parents on trial, who may be sentenced to a custard pie in the face, or a bucket of iced water thrown as punishment.


Gazette

18 Gazette 16 June 2016

OUT&ABOUT

STYLE

Drawing on African elegance  emma nolan

ZIMBABWE-born Irish designer Tina Williams, of the Valennci couture clothing line, will launch her debut collection, F.A.I.T.H., in Cafe en Seine on June 16. Tina harnessed her love of fashion from an early age, taking sewing lessons and inspiration from the elegant women in her life. In 2004, she landed an internship with an African-American brand based in the UK and USA where she learned how to master accessory design and beading, as well as making her own garments.

Inspiration Taking inspiration from African culture, and combining this with contemporary Western trends, Tina has gone on to create a collection which tells a story and cultivates her heritage, faith, and creativity. The collection represents “confidence and freedom of expression”. Through her choice of fabric and textile details, this collection combines features of both African and Western Culture. Tina is also hoping to raise emergency funding for widows, orphans and homeless people in her native Zimbabwe at the event.

Some designs from the degree collection by budding Dublin designer William Shannon Doyle. The collection was inspired by the people of the Harlem Renaissance.

Bringing Renaissance inspirations to Dublin  emma nolan

Style Editor

THE Gazette sat down with budding Dublin designer William Shannon Doyle (right) to talk about his degree collection, winning the River Island bursary, and why he intends to nurture Dublin’s fashion industry. Having just finished his four years at NCAD, William’s degree collection is inspired by the people of the Harlem Renaissance. He says: “I was inspired by the photographer, Aaron Siskind. He had a lot of

images of working-class people in New York. “I liked his photos of people at work and was particularly inspired by an image of a butcher, so I used the apron as a starting point and mixed it with tailored items to get new shapes from old classic garments.” The 22-year-old Templeogue native spent some time in New York doing an internship with designer Charles Warren. While he was there, he visited a photographic exhibition by Jacob Laurence. He says: “One of the main things I took from the exhi-

bition was the colour story – the yellows, corals and greens that run throughout the collection.” The look book for the collection (shots shown above) was shot in a house on Henrietta Street where television productions such as Penny Dreadful are shot. The background was intended to imitate the derelict housing captured by Siskind in his photography. William will be travelling to London in September to being working with River Island for three months, but it could be for longer. While he wants to go

back to New York after London, William is certain that Dublin will be where he is based in the future. He says: “My ultimate end goal is to work as a designer, but to be based in Dublin. “I feel that the fashion industry in Dublin is really starting to grow and that’s really exciting. “A lot of our most talented designers move to New York and London and I feel like if those people would have stayed, we would have grown here. We’re almost not giving Dublin a chance.”


16 June 2016 Gazette 19

Gazette

CINEMA ReelReviews warcraft

Not a very magical tale

MOTHER’S DAY

An overcooked turkey JUNE is traditionally when all kinds of grade-A turkeys get released into cinemas and, true to form, here comes the internationally slated Mother’s Day (Cert 12A, 118 mins), starring Jennifer Aniston, Julia Roberts and Kate Hudson. Hoping to tug on maternal heart strings, the film clumsily tugs on stomach muscles instead, with a mawkish, sub-soap opera plot about a disparate group of women’s lives coming together in unexpected ways. Even the hypnotic sight of Roberts’ terrible wig won’t sustain your attention here in this weak film.

Cormac Moore, Simon Delaney and Thomas Crosse

Amy Grant and Jenny Markey Fox

Lorraine and Luke Brennan. Picture: Brian McEvoy

Therese Walsh and Shane

Up for a scarily good night out David Delacey and Hannah Lynch

H

Conor McMahon and Ali Doyle

Morgan

ORROR fans were out in force for the premiere of The Conjuring 2 at the Lighthouse Cinema. Building on the success of the first film, The Conjuring 2 is a similar period horror film with strong religious undertones, and is based on Britain’s famous Enfield haunting incident in the 1970s, in which a family claimed they were being haunted by the malevolent spirit of an old man. Already the subject of a number of television programmes and films, the Enfield poltergeist had more than a ghost of a chance of being made into a big-screen movie, with director James Wan crafting an interesting horror that has received generally favourable reviews.

WHILE Warcraft, as a long-running videogame franchise, has millions of fans around the world, can the first film based on the games recreate that success? On the basis of Warcraft: The Beginning (Cert 12A, 123 mins), the answer is “No”. With lots of lore to cram into a two-hour running time, the end result is a bit of a curate’s egg that fails to fully satisfy gamers, fantasy fans or regular cinemagoers. It’s not all bad – some stirring action sequences lift things – but for such a strong franchise, the film fails to put up much of a fight.

The Boss

Fire the scriptwriters MELISSA McCarthy has proved she has plenty of comedic chops, but there’s little for her to bite into as the star of The Boss (Cert 15A, 98 mins). It’s a motormouth role for the popular comic, as she takes on the brash part of a stunningly rich woman sent back to square one after a bout of insider trading. However, ‘The Boss’ won’t let a little thing like having to start again stop her from clawing her way back to the top, whatever it takes ... McCarthy does what she can, but it’s an unsubtle role that just requires her to be obnoxious, and little else.


20 Gazette 16 June 2016

Gazette

FOOD&DRINK OUT&ABOUT BITESIZEDNEWS The Picky Eater Westin Hotel

Jacobs launch a delicious new range of Italian sytle biscuits

Biscuit lovers will be delighted to hear that Jacob’s has launched a new range of Italian style wafer biscuits called Caffe Di Milano. They are available in three flavours – chocolate, hazelnut and vanilla – with each biscuit described as light and crispy, the perfect Italian luxury. Caffe Di Milano biscuits are available in stores nationwide now priced at €2.50.

Afternoon Tea Westmoreland Street If you’re looking for an Afternoon Tea with a difference, head for The Westin on Westmoreland Street. The five star hotel is running a Mad Hatter’s Afternoon Tea inspired by Alice in Wonderland. Hosted in their newly refurbished suites overlooking the city, the Picky Eater spent an wonderful afternoon sampling the best of what was on offer from the wonderlandinspired party. The food is a mixture of treats that Alice herself would be proud of such as quail’s egg and tarragon mayonnaise in

a brioche roll and crispy basil baskets with marinated goat’s curd, drizzled in balsamic pesto. Everything is served on a unique set of handmade crockery and tea is served in matching cups and saucers. It’s the kind of thing little girls (and big girls) dream about. The desserts cannot be overlooked either with treats including the zesty green tea cone with lemon yuzu cream and my personal favourite, the caramel moussefilled chocolate cup. Classic tea party offerings such as fruit scones, preserves and creams are also up for grabs along with deca-

dent red velvet cake while guests can also indulge in a Red Rose Queen cocktail for an additional €8.50. A special nod must go to the very attentive staff and chefs at the Westin Hotel for providing a nut free Mad Hatter’s Afternoon Tea option for me, which I hugely appreciated as I have quite a severe allergy to nuts. T he Mad Hatter ’s Afternoon Tea caters for private groups of at least 18 people with an introductory offer priced at €49.50 per person. It’s one not to be missed. For more information visit www.thewestindublin.com

Mad Hatters afternoon tea, truly delicious

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16 June 2016 Gazette 21

fast

TRAVEL King Tut’s dagger was a gift from the heavens

 ian begley

france: mimozas resort will charm you on your Cote d’Azur holiday

Cannes you find a better way to relax in the sun?  ian begley

IT HAS been revealed that a dagger inside the tomb of King Tutankhamun was made from a meteorite. Since the discovery of King Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1925 by Howard Carter, there has been a mystery surrounding one of his iron blades (below) that hadn’t rusted. Scientists compared the iron found in the dagger with two meteorites that fell within 2,000km of the Red Sea, and found that there was a match between the knife and a meteorite known as “Kharga”. It was found at the seaport city of Mersa Matruh, 150 miles west of Alexandria. The findings were published in the Journal of Meteoritics and Planetary Science. In 2013, nine odd black beads were excavated from a cemetery near the Nile and were found to have been beaten out of meteorite fragments. The beads are thought to date back to 3,200BC. Because of the existence of the beads and the knife, researchers have speculated that the ancient Egyptians ascribed a lot of value to meteorites.

Gazette

TRAVEL

Travel Editor

WE’RE almost halfway through 2016, and what better way to recharge the batteries for the next six months than a trip to Mimozas Resort Cannes this June? Ideally situated just a 10 minute drive from the glamorous centre of Cannes, Mimozas Resort offers guests a choice of studio or one-, two- or three-bed apartments overlooking either a beautiful lake or a stunning golf course. Prices start at just €1,265 for a five-night family stay in June. From the resort, you’re perfectly placed to explore all that the Cote d’Azur has to offer, on foot, by bike, car or train.

Take a stroll into the picturesque town of La Napoule, 15 mins by foot from Mimozas and home to a breathtaking chateau right on the Mediterannean which, like Mimozas Resort itself, has an Irish connection. Adam Clayton, of U2 fame, was married there in 2013, and the views across the bluest of waters to Ile St Marguerite and Ile St Honorat are nothing short of spectacular. Mimozas Resort offers electric bikes for guests who wish to explore the region faster than their feet will carry them. Available at reception, these bikes take all the effort

out of cycling as you let the motor do most of the work. Take a trip into Cannes and bike the famous La Croisette seafront boulevard. Park up, and enjoy lunch in one of the many restaurants or cafes, making sure to sit outside as you never know who you will see as you drink the finest of French wines. If you fancy a trip further afield, La Napoule has a TGV (fast train) station which will allow you to explore renowned cities such as Nice, Monaco and Monte Carlo. All of these destinations are less than an hour’s journey from Mimozas

Resort, and you’re sure to find plenty to do no matter which you decide to visit. If all of the exploring has you ready to expire, it’s time to kick back at the resort, where endless indulgence is right at your fingertips. Take time to treat yourself by booking an appointment at the luxurious Yon Ka spa, or unwind with a round of golf on the adjacent Old Course – the oldest golf course on the Mediterranean. At the end of a long day, enjoy dining on your balcony and watch the sunset cast a warm glow over Mimozas Resort while you eat delicious local cuisine and have another glass of that glorious French wine ...

WIN

a FREE five-night holiday for two to the Mimozas Resort

worth €2,000!

IT’S your last chance to win a fantastic holiday at Mimozas Resort! To celebrate the Boys in Green’s French adventure at EURO 2016, The Gazette could be flying you and a pal to the beautiful Cote d’Azur town of Cannes for a luxury holiday worth €2,000! Enjoy five nights at the 4-star resort - FREE! To have a chance to win this fantastic holiday, courtesy of Mimozas Resort, just visit our Facebook page and Like and Share our #YesOuiCannes competition post. Hurry – our competition closes on June 24 ...

terms and conditions

Relax at the pool or your balcony at Mimozas Resort - or head off to Cannes itself and feel like a movie star

THIS Competition is run by Mimozas Resort Cannes, a trading name of Splash Hospitality, an Irish company. Information on how to enter the Competition forms part of these terms and conditions of entry. Participation in this Competition is deemed acceptance of these terms and conditions of entry. This prize consists of 5 nights in a two bedroom apartment in the 4* Mimozas Resort Cannes, with return flights for two people. This prize must be taken between 1st September 2016 and 31st March 2017. Unless otherwise stated in the competition text, all bookings must be made at least 6 weeks in advance of arrival date. Travel Insurance is not included in the prize. The value of the two return flights combined must not exceed €400. Flights are for Dublin – Nice only. Employees of Mimozas Resort Cannes, their family members or anyone else connected in any way with the competition or

helping to set up the competition shall not be permitted to enter the competition. Mimozas Resort Cannes reserves the right to cancel or amend the competition and these terms and conditions without notice in the event of a catastrophe, war, civil or military disturbance, act of God or any actual or anticipated breach of any applicable law or regulation or any other event outside of the promoter’s control. Any changes to the competition will be notified to entrants as soon as possible by the promoter. Mimozas Resort Cannes is not responsible for inaccurate prize details supplied to any entrant by any third party connected with this competition. No cash alternative to the prizes wil be offered. The prizes are not transferable. Prizes are subject to availability and we reserve the right to substitute any prize with another of equivalent value without giving notice. The closing date for this competition is June 17.


Gazette

22 Dublin city gazette 16 June 2016

OUT&ABOUT

TECH

Illustration: Shane Dillon

 shane dillon

Tech Editor

WHILE today, most of us think of technology as a tool that changes how people are preparing and adapting for the future, it is also a truly invaluable way to learn how people lived in the past. The more we move forward as a species, the more we can look back, and learn. This point was made crystal-clear last weekend with the announcement that laser mapping had turned somewhat less than crystal-clear dense jungles in northern Cambodia into what was probably the Medieval world’s largest empire, thanks to the discovery of the remains of not just one, but several lost cities beneath the tropical forest floor. In an extensive lidar (light detection and ranging, similar to radar) airborne study of the region carried out last year, researchers bounced special lasers off the ground and then carefully analysed the results. They were able to extensively map out the region, with their lidar scan able to filter out the vegetation and other data

to peer under the forest – thus uncovering the long forgotten cities’ remains and workings. It’s all a far cry from how Angkor was first presented to the world, when a young French explorer, Henri Mouhot, captured the public imagination with the posthumous publication in 1863 of his journals detailing temples and a lost city swallowed by the jungle.

Although Monsieur Mouhot died more than 150 years ago (of fever, aged just 35), he would recognise the same public interest in the region today, with modern researchers driven by the same timeless curiosity that once led the young Frenchman to slice his way through the jungle. Today, and while similar ground-breaking (no pun intended) surveys

This lidar scan of Angkor Wat shows how lasers can detect subsurface remains

Although well-known to locals, Angkor’s quiet slumber was shaken off with the public interest aroused by Mouhot’s writings (see boxout, right) and atmospheric drawings – images still instantly familiar to any modern Instagrammer and Selfie fan visiting Angkor Wat today.

have b e e n carried out in recent years with impressive results of their own, none had been carried out on this scale, or with this success. Building on similar surveys of the region, the lidar survey revealed even more of the complex, elaborate canals and reservoirs which the region is already famous for.

Already world-famous for the incredible ruins and sprawling remnants of the once formidable Khmer empire – most notably on show in Angkor Wat’s UNESCOlisted temples – this latest discovery completely rewrites the history of south-east Asia. Not only do the remains show that the Khmer empire was much larger and even more organised than previously know n, but that it would have been a hugely important East-West trade gateway – all lost following the empire’s swift collapse. These significant finds have an enormous impact on our knowledge of the region at the time, with these latest findings acting as the tip of the iceberg of what is yet to come. At least part of these cities will undoubtedly be uncovered and take their rightful place beside (or even in front of) Angkor Wat in the history books and tourist trails – and it’s all thanks to the intersection between technology and archaeology, and the same quest for knowledge that continues to drive us forward to learn, invent and explore ...

The UNESCO-protected ruins of Angkor Wat (inset) are world famous – could the discovery of several lost cities’ remains nearby, under the jungle floor, become just as world famous, and rewrite history?

Reactions to modern tech echo findings from the past WHETHER drilling into the depths of the planet or its oceans, peering beyond our fragile atmosphere into the depths of space, or even just scanning rocks for chemical traces to learn more about lost peoples and cultures, technology is the key to so much of our recent achievements and knowledge. However, whether availing of technology or old-fashioned footwork, the human reaction to discovery remains the same. Consider French explorer Henri Mouhot’s (right) writings on the ancient ruins he stumbled across deep in the Cambodian jungles back around 1860, with those of a modern counterpart, Charles Higham – a research professor at the University of Otago, New Zealand, and the leading archaeologist of

mainland south-East Asia. Mouhot “One of these temples – a rival to that of Solomon, and erected by some ancient Michael Angelo – might take an honourable place beside our most beautiful buildings. It is grander than anything left to us by Greece or Rome ... “At Ongcor, there are ... ruins of such grandeur ... that, at the first view, one is filled with profound admiration, and cannot but ask what has become of this powerful race, so civilised, so enlightened, the authors of these gigantic works?” Higham: “It is as if a bright light has been switched on to illuminate the previous dark veil that covered these great sites. Personally, it is wonderful to be alive as these new discoveries are being made. Emotionally, I am stunned. Intellectually, I am stimulated.”


16 June 2016 dublin city gazette 23

Gazette

MOTORING motorbikes: THE YAMAHA R1M

Get ready for astonishing performance  ken phelan

The superbike is a beauty from all angles

BIKERS are a funny lot. Some people think they cause a nuisance on our roads, dress in ill-fitting leather suits, exhale petrol fumes and generally cause a menace wherever they go. However, they suffer a disproportionate number of automobile accidents, insist on driving through torrential rain, and can be the bane of many an unsuspecting sheep nationwide. So what, you may wonder, is the appeal? What makes these scoundrels more evil than Evel? Well, the Yamaha R1M is perhaps a good place to start ... Since 1998, the Yamaha R1 has been the company’s flagship sportsbike, leaving competitors for dirt with its winning combination of all-out power, precision handling and killer looks. In fact, as if to illustrate the point, Ian

Hutchinson took his 12th TT win last week when he dominated the Monster Energy Supersport race on his R1. T he Yamaha R1M took things a step further. Boasting 200bhp and a top (restricted) speed of 186mph (due to a manufacturers’ gentlemanly agreement not to exceed 300kph for production bikes), the R1M was clearly something different.

With its MotoGP-derived electronics package, blistering power-toweight ratio, and antiwheelie technology, it was possible to go Back To The Future with just the twist of a throttle. So you’ve just spent your last million on a “supercar” that reaches 0-60 in 2.8secs? Tut,tut. Pass your test and invest in something a fraction of the cost, offering better performance. The R1M achieves 0-60mph

The Yamaha R1M is a superbike that more than lives up to its hype

in a gut-w renching 2.3secs; while it’s entirely possible to overtake the Starship Enterprise on the way to the shops, it’s unlikely you’ll be doing the school run any time soon. The R1M, being the posher version of the R1 and R1S models, is therefore full of juicy add-ons. The front mudguard, fairing and tail centre are made of carbon to save weight, in case that’s an issue. The upgraded bike also comes

with exclusive Ohlins suspension front and rear, which automatically adjusts to riding conditions. Like the R1 and R1S, the R1M has – as mentioned - a MotoGP-derived electronics package, including riding modes, traction control, slide control, launch control and wheelie ‘rate-of-lift’ control. The R1M truly offers astonishing performance, and all in a road-legal machine. All being said, the R1 and R1S models are perfectly sufficient for breaking the sound barrier, but if you have those extra euro lying around, you could treat yourself to the upgraded M model. Now, what are you waiting for? Grab your helmet and gloves and tell your partner you’ll be back ... yesterday! But if you are lucky enough to own one of these magnificent bikes, in the words of Fr Ted Crilly: “Careful now”, and mind those speed limits.


Gazette

22 clondalkin gazette 16 June 2016

OUT&ABOUT

TECH

Illustration: Shane Dillon

 shane dillon

WHILE today, most of us think of technology as a tool that changes how

people are preparing and adapting for the future, it is also a truly invaluable way to learn how people lived in the past.

The more we move forward as a species, the more we can look back, and learn. This point was made

crystal-clear last weekend with the announcement that laser mapping had turned somewhat less than crystal-clear dense jungles in northern Cambodia into what was probably the Medieval world’s largest empire, thanks to the discovery of the remains of not just one, but several lost cities beneath the tropical forest floor. In an extensive lidar (light detection and ranging, similar to radar) airborne study of the region carried out last year, researchers bounced special lasers off the ground and then carefully analysed the results. They were able to extensively map out the region, with their lidar scan able to filter out the vegetation and other data

The UNESCO-protected ruins of Angkor Wat (inset) are world famous – could the discovery of several lost cities’ remains nearby, under the jungle floor, become just as world famous, and rewrite history?

to peer under the forest – thus uncovering the long forgotten cities’ remains and workings. It’s all a far cry from how Angkor was first presented to the world, when a young French explorer, Henri Mouhot, captured the public imagination with the posthumous publication in 1863 of his journals detailing temples and a lost city swallowed by

the jungle. Although Monsieur Mouhot died more than 150 years ago (of fever, aged just 35), he would recognise the same public interest in the region today, with modern researchers driven by the same timeless curiosity that once led the young Frenchman to slice his way through the jungle. Today, and while similar ground-breaking (no pun intended) surveys have been carried out in recent years with impressive results of their own, none had been carried out on this scale, or with this success. Already world-famous for the incredible ruins and sprawling remnants of the once formidable Khmer empire – most notably on show in Angkor Wat’s UNESCOlisted temples – this latest discovery completely rewrites the history of south-east Asia.

Not only do the remains show that the Khmer empire was much larger and even more organised than previously known, but that it would have been a hugely important East-West trade gateway – all lost following the empire’s swift collapse. These significant finds have an enormous impact on our knowledge of the region at the time, with these latest findings acting as the tip of the iceberg of what is yet to come. At least part of these cities will undoubtedly be uncovered and take their rightful place beside (or even in front of) Angkor Wat in the history books and tourist trails – and it’s all thanks to the intersection between technology and archaeology, and the same quest for knowledge that continues to drive us forward to learn, invent and explore ...


16 June 2016 clondalkin gazette 23

Gazette

MOTORING motorbikes: THE YAMAHA R1M

Get ready for astonishing performance  ken phelan

BIKERS are a funny lot. Some people think they cause a nuisance on our roads, dress in ill-fitting leather suits, exhale petrol fumes and generally cause a menace wherever they go. However, they suffer a disproportionate number of automobile accidents, insist on driving through torrential rain, and can be the bane of many an unsuspecting sheep nationwide. So what, you may wonder, is the appeal? What makes these scoundrels more evil than Evel? Well, the Yamaha R1M is perhaps a good place to start ... Since 1998, the Yamaha R1 has been the company’s flagship sportsbike, leaving competitors for dirt with its winning combination of all-out power, precision handling and killer looks. In fact, as if to illustrate the point, Ian Hutchinson took his 12th TT win last week when he dominated the

Monster Energy Supersport race on his R1. The Yamaha R1M took things a step further. Boasting 200bhp and a top (restricted) speed of 186mph (due to a manufacturers’ gentlemanly agreement not to exceed 300kph for production bikes), the R1M was clearly something different. With its MotoGP-derived electronics package, blistering powerto-weight ratio, and anti-wheelie technology, it was possible to go Back To The Future with just the twist of a throttle. So you’ve just spent your last million on a “supercar” that reaches 0-60 in 2.8secs? Tut,tut. Pass your test and invest in something a fraction of the cost, offering better performance. The R1M achieves 0-60mph in a gut-wrenching 2.3secs; while it’s entirely possible to overtake the Starship Enterprise on the way to the shops, it’s unlikely you’ll be doing the school run any time soon.

The R1M, being the posher version of the R1 and R1S models, is therefore full of juicy add-ons. The front mudguard, fairing and tail centre are made of carbon to save weight, in case that’s an issue. The upgraded bike also comes with exclusive Ohlins suspension front and rear, which automatically adjusts to riding conditions. Like the R1 and R1S, the R1M has – as mentioned - a MotoGP-derived electronics package, including riding modes, traction control, slide control, launch control and wheelie ‘rate-oflift’ control. The R1M truly offers astonishing performance, and all in a road-legal machine. All being said, the R1 and R1S models are perfectly sufficient

for breaking the sound barrier, but if you have those extra euro lying around, you could treat yourself to the upgraded M model.

Now, what are you waiting for? Grab your helmet and gloves and tell your partner you’ll be back ... yesterday! But if you are lucky enough to own one of these magnificent bikes, in the words of Fr Ted Crilly: “Careful now”, and mind those speed limits.

The Yamaha R1M is a superbike that more than lives up to its hype


24 clondalkin Gazette 16 June 2016

Gazettegallery

| A special new ‘forest’ has sprouted over at the

GO HANG WITH  emma nolan

AN ORANGUTAN forest habitat has opened at Dublin Zoo. The Orangutan Forest, which was inspired by the tropical rainforests of Borneo, will be home to the group of Bornean orangutans at the Zoo. Sibu (37), his mate, Leonie (35), their daughter, Riona (10) and niece, Mujur, born in Dublin Zoo in 2005, have made the Forest their new home along with some Siamang Gibbons, also native to South East Asia. Their new three-dimensional habitat is five times bigger than their old home, extending to 1,300sq m. It includes a new island some 80 metres long and 20 metres wide. Orangutans are arboreal animals that spend the majority of the time in the trees of their rainforest home. A stand-out feature of the new habitat are 11 trees, between seven and 12 metres high, that will encourage the orangutans’ natural climbing behaviour. Speaking about the new habitat, Leo Oosterweghel, director of Dublin Zoo, said: “The opening of Orangutan Forest is another milestone on our journey to continue to develop Dublin Zoo into a world-class zoo and provide an excellent visitor experience. “Every detail of Orangutan Forest has been considered carefully with the wellness of the orangutans in mind.

The design was always inspired by their natural habitat. “This wonderful new habitat will add complexity to their lives and stimulate their natural behaviours.” Bornean orangutans are classified as endangered, with only an estimated 54,000 animals remaining. The main threat to the species is deforestation, and over the past 30 years, 80% of the natural orangutan habitat has been destroyed due to widespread forest clearing for oil palm plantations, illegal mining and forest fires for “slash-and-burn” agriculture. To raise awareness of the plight of the orangutans, Dublin Zoo has launched a major fundraising initiative for their partners, The Orangutan Foundation, which is currently running. Until this Sunday, June 19, Dublin Zoo will donate €2.50 from every ticket purchased to the foundation. Dublin Zoo is also calling on the Irish public to get involved by texting “Save” to 50300 to donate €2.

The Bornean orangutans have taken to their impressive new ‘forest’ like ducks to water, with plenty of simian pals and neighbours also swinging over for a look


16 June 2016 clondalkin Gazette 25

much-loved dublin zoo, to the delight of all the creatures there

THE ORANGS

Pictures: Dublin Zoo


26 Clondalkin Gazette 16 June 2016

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28 clondalkin gazette 16 June 2016

SPORT Video view crucial for Rio pursuit

FastSport

boxing: katie taylor looking to learn lessons from rare defeats

flynn records big steeplechase victory:

CLONLIFFE Harriers’ Dave Flynn won the 3000m steeplechase at the European champion clubs cup in Leira, Portugal. The steeplechaser from Blanchardstown was competing against athletes from nine other countries and took the win with a time of 8.55 minutes, racking up maximum points on behalf of the black and amber club. Flynn, who just got back from a two month altitude camp in California, attributes the improvement in his recent performances is his new coach. “I got a new coach six months ago, Andrew Kastor, one of the best marathon coaches in the world. “I am happy with my win last weekend, beating some of the best steeplers in Europe, and I will now try to qualify for the European Championships and hope to win the Irish Olympic trials on June 26.”

 james hendicott sport@dublingazette.com

KATIE Taylor’s preparation for the Olympics in Rio hasn’t been ideal with the superstar boxer needing a semi-final appearance at the recent World Championships – duly achieved – to belatedly confirm her trip to

Brazil. That Taylor’s build up has included two defeats has come as something of a shock to the boxing world. The losses over the last couple of months are her first since before the London 2012 Olympics, but she remains optimistic. “The losses might be a

blessing in disguise,” Taylor argued, adding that “I wasn’t getting out-boxed in either defeat, so I just learn from them and move on. I’ve got Rio to focus on now. Maybe the losses will take a little bit of pressure off me.” Not that Taylor is taking any pressure off herself: “I’m going to be

Katie Taylor, centre, at the New Balance Olympic kit launch with Ciara Mageean and Chloe Magee. Picture: James Crombie/Inpho

Katie Taylor is looking to make amendments in pursuit of second Olympic gold

expecting to get a gold medal, and that’s it,” she says of the Games with a bravado that suggests silver would mean very little. “It’s important you see it yourself,” Taylor said of reviewing the losses, before admitting she hasn’t actually watched the World Championship defeat back yet, but did learn from rewatching her earlier loss to Yana Alekseeva. “I’m glad I actually sat down and watched that fight,” she said of the Alekseeva footage. “I haven’t watched the World Championship fight back yet, but I will eventually. Every round was close. It was a close fight. It’s important you see these things back

yourself instead of anyone telling you. “ Yo u c a n ’t r e a l l y argue with the results,” Taylor said of the two fights, “but they could have gone the other way, too. They were extremely close fights, and I’ll come back stronger.” Despite recent events, Taylor goes into the Rio Olympics as hot favourite, having won 18 golds and one bronze medal in major tournaments over the course of her career. Among a strong team, she remains Ireland’s most likely triumph. Taylor dismissed concerns in her camp over the rapidly-spreading zika virus and its impact on her preparation and a p p e a r a n c e , s ay i n g

she’s “not really thought about it too much,” and suspects the other athletes haven’t either, despite Rory McIlroy’s concerns. Taylor also used the chance to criticise the inclusion of professional boxers at the Olympics, after they were controversially allowed entry to a late qualifying tournament. “I don’t think it’s the right things to do,” Taylor argued. “Some of the things said about amateur boxers have been very insulting.” Taylor will be bringing in a range of sparring partners to prepare for Rio, with the bid to maintain her Olympic title getting underway in early August.

Football for All progamme gets boost from Tetrarch  sport@dublingazette.com

Martin O’Neill with John Delaney and members of the Football for All programme. Picture: David Maher/Sportsfile

THE FAI has announced Tetrarch Hospitality as the new title sponsor for the Football For All programme, which caters for anyone with a disability who wants to play football. With over 3,500 players participating in the programme, and significant plans for expansion, Football For All caters for players of varying disabilities, such as blind, deaf, powerchair and amputee players. Tetrarch Capital is an Irishowned company that is a market

leader in real estate investment and development with an extensive property portfolio across several asset classes. FAI chief executive John Delaney welcomed the deal: “The FAI are delighted to work with Tetrarch for the next two and a half years. The FAI works incredibly hard to cater for as many people as possible who want to play football, so our Football For All programme is an initiative that we treasure greatly. “To have a company of Tetrarch’s esteem come onboard as title sponsor for that

programme will prove invaluable.” Damien Gaffney, Managing Director of Tetrarch Hospitality, remarked: “With Euro 2016 kicking off this week, it is important we don’t forget that football is a game that can be played and enjoyed by everyone. “As an Irish-owned company we are extremely proud of our sponsorship of the FAI’s Football For All programme and we look forward to helping John Delaney, Oisin Jordan and their FAI colleagues to expand the programme’s reach and number

of events. “This is a particularly important initiative for all of us in Tetrarch and we will be actively involved in the promotion of the programme throughout our period of sponsorship.” Oisin Jordan, National Coordinator for Football For All, added: “This new sponsorship deal with Tetrarch Hospitality is a fantastic opportunity to increase the FAI’s investment in creating an environment of inclusivity in its sport in Ireland and will continue to ensure opportunities for players with disabilities.”


16 June 2016 clondalkin gazette 29

Clondalkin teenager’s astonishing series of results on the European stage have raised hopes that she can one day grace the highest stage; JAMES HENDICOTT reports KYM DOYLE, at thirteen years old, is amongst the best kickboxers in her age and weight category in Europe. The Clondalkin girl, fighting out of Palmerstown Bushido, travelled to the Hungarian WAKO World Cup last month, pulling off an astonishing series of results as she medalled in all four of the categories she entered. Still more impressively, those came in two different weight categories. She took a gold medal in the 46kg light contact division, a silver in the 42kg point fighting division and two further bronze medals. The medals follow a bronze in the European Championships in Spain last August, two Irish national titles won this time last year and, again this year, taking the national title in light contact and runner-up in the point fighting division.

It’s not all about the trophies, though. When GazetteSport visits the Stewart’s Centre in Palmerstown to check out one of Doyle’s training sessions, her passion for the sport shines through, with Doyle the star of an energetic training group. “I started about four and a half years ago,” she tells us. “Throughout the year I train three nights a week, increasing to five times leading up to big tournaments. “I like the confidence you get from competitions, and the satisfaction from doing well in them. I’m extremely lucky with the coaches I have; they are very helpful and give up so much time to train. “There are two different, styles of fighting,” she explains. “In points fighting, if a point is scored by either kick or punch, then the ref stops it after awarding the point, then repeat. For light contact

Kym Doyle shows off her wealth of recent titles

[continuous fighting] you fight non-stop with judges counting up the score as you go along. “In Hungary [where Doyle had her recent success], it was done by weight and age. I fought in points and continuous, and in the 13-15 age group, so I was one of the younger fighters. “The sport is really starting to grow and develop in Ireland, with a lot more competition in all age groups. There is the possibility of it becoming an Olympic sport, but not for a few years. I hope I’ll be still young enough to do it when it eventually does.” Claire Louise Sweetman - Doyle’s long-time coach - is optimistic about the future of the sport. “The level has gone really really high in Ireland, and across the world, really, over I’d say the last ten years,” she explains. “These guys have come

in at a really good time. We’ve been doing this for years, and only now is there starting to be talk of Olympic recognition. The Irish Sports Council have acknowledged us as a sport recently as well.” Doyle is taking a sensible approach to her development. Her father,

– there is a clear underlying message. Following the world championships, which are fortunately located in Dublin’s Citywest in August, issues with funding these trips to competitions are going to be a hindrance to Kym’s development.

--------------------------------------------------------

‘We have been doing this for years but now there is talk of Olympic recognition’ - Coach Claire Louise Sweetman --------------------------------------------------------

Conor, is keen to emphasise that she’s too young to manipulate her weight, preferring to go up a division if necessary. Kym herself is yet to make a decision on going into the full-contact version of the sport, preferring instead to build in the two styles in which she already competes. “When she reaches the age of 16, she can make that decision for herself,” Conor explains. With kickboxing on quite a long-term agenda for the Olympics, however, sponsorship is the greatest issue for those wishing to compete at an international level. While Conor is keen to thank those who have already contributed to Kym’s competitive outings – including Naas Road Autos and DRL, who have been involved

“It’s taken us to Spain, Italy and Poland over the last few years,” Conor explains. “It’s not bad this year with it being in Ireland, and KBI [Kickboxing Ireland] have subsidised the rates for the competitors, which is fantastic. But from a money point of view, it can be tough for parents to enable kids to compete. “I am currently trying to find one or two companies who might be able to fund all of Kym’s foreign travel. Advertising on Fighting gear is permissible, which helps.” As she bounces lightly off both feet before us, delivering uninhibited smashes to a sparring pad shaking in coach Sweetman’s hands, it’s easy to see the potential for a leap onto the Olympic stage for this dedicated young star.

Gazette

Kickboxing Kym’s Olympic ambition

FastSport

Sundrive to host world cycling stars in July THE fourth edition of the Dublin track cycling international will further embed itself firmly on the international race calendar, with two days of world class racing taking place in Sundrive Track, Dublin on July 2 and 3. It is one of only two UCI International events on the Irish cycling calendar, along with the An Post Ras, and is used by riders to gain qualification points for the World Cup Series and World Championships later on in the year. With this being the Olympic year, this year offers a great opportunity to see some of the top names in international cycling battle it out for medals and points in the centre of Dublin. The event is supported by Dublin City Sport & Wellbeing Partnership, with the local interest likely to be on the competition between the young local riders who will be honing their bike skills in the Future Stars Programme in the coming weeks. This year’s event has already attracted some of the world’s top riders from Germany, Belgium and Italy, along with a strong Irish team. At last year’s event, boosted by the home crowd, Caroline Ryan came home with gold in the Individual Pursuit, beating scratch world champion Kirsten Wild (NED) in doing so. Ryan will be competing in the event this year, and looking back at last year’s race, she said “Last year the individual pursuit was my highlight, I raced against Kirsten Wild in the final, and came out with the gold medal in that, I was absolutely delighted. “Kirsten is a fantastic rider and I’ve huge respect for her, she’s very strong. We travel all over the world against top riders, and to have them to come here to Ireland, to your home ground where your friends and family can watch you race and cheer you on, it’s absolutely fantastic. “It’s a really well run event, and great to see riders come back again and again to it. There’s not a lot events where you can measure exactly where you are.” Entry is free for spectators, with racing taking place all day on both Saturday, July 2 and Sunday, July 3. The full racing programme can be seen on www.trackcycling.ie.


Gazette

30 clondalkin gazette 16 June 2016

SPORT

FastSport

soccer: first time’s a charm for Lucan over-35s in the AFL

Lucan United’s Over-35s side that won the AFL South Division 3 title

Clon gymnasts shine on All-Ireland finals stage CLONDALKIN Gymnastics Club were well represented at this year’s All-Ireland National Acro Finals which were held over two days in the University of Limerick. The women’s trio of Sophie Toomey, Fiona Tapley and Orna Lamon competing in the Out of Age category which requires the gymnasts to perform two floor routines. The first routine on the first day was their dynamic routine followed on the second day by their balance routine. The scores from both routines are added together to give the final score and the trio were delighted to place second to take the silver medal for Clondalkin. The Grade 4 women’s trio of Grace Carey, Katie Cowzer and Leah Scales performed one combined routine and fought their way through a tough group with an extremely good routine to win the silver medal, narrowly missing out on first place. The men’s pair of Reece Ward and Rian Bailey also competed at Grade 4 level, performing a combined routine and impressed hugely to take the gold medal. Finally, the club’s Grade 3 mixed pair of Morgan Carroll and Sarah Lynch in their first All-Ireland final as a partnership at this level and placed second for silver. This brings to a close another very successful competition season for Clondalkin Gymnastics Club but there is no rest for the gymnasts as they must train hard through the summer months to prepare for an international competition in the UK at the beginning of October. There, the west Dublin club will be represented by sixteen gymnasts.

United’s golden oldies  karl graham sport@dublingazette.com

LUCAN United’s over 35 side have gelled instantly to win the AFL South Dublin Division 3 title at the first time of asking. The team was only formed last year but that didn’t stop them putting in a string of impressive performances to win 17 of their 20 games, scoring 79 goals in the process. After initial inquiries to the amateur football league, Kevin O’Toole and Jason Kavanagh went ahead with plans to set-up Lucan United’s

first ever over 35s side. A lot of the players in the team are ex-players of Lucan United who turned 35 and wanted to continue playing, while others hadn’t played the game for four or five years. United winger Gavin Nolan spoke to the Gazette about how the team came together. “A lot of the lads would have played at a decent level and we were going into the bottom league,” he said. “I’m not going to say it was easy for us but we had a lot of experienced lads who played the likes of Leinster sen-

national champion O’Loughlin adds pair of titles to growing list moyle Park’s Louis O’Loughlin con-

tinued his excellent run of form as he claimed gold at the 800m All-Ireland schools final in Tullamore at junior level with a time of 2.00.78. He followed up a day later with victory in the Dublin clubs event in Tallaght. It adds to a string of fine performances from the Clondalkin student in 2016 to date both on the track and also on the cross-country circuit.

ior league football. “We were also helped greatly by a few of the lads from Liffey Valley Rangers who came to us when their team folded.” After an impressive season, the team came up against Cottage Celtic with three games remaining – Celtic being the only team who could stop them winning the title. “We beat them at home 4-0 earlier in the season but we lost this game 5-3, meaning we had to win both our remaining fixtures to secure the title,” said Nolan. Lucan’s golden old-

ies weren’t to be denied, however, and when they followed up a hard fought 5-3 win away to Terenure, with a 6-0 thrashing of Killinarden in their own backyard, the title was theirs. The team’s success sees them move up to division 2 and Nolan thinks that a second successive promotion is more than possible. “We played a lot of the top teams in friendlies and put up good performances against them.” Among those friendlies, they drew 2-2 with Cherry Orchard

and losing narrowly to Peamount United, both of whom are in the top division. Nolan insists that a management structure of O’Toole supported by Kavanagh and Mat Finlay has been the key for United this season, and with them expecting to have a Saturday and Sunday team next season and further success for the side looks likely. ** Lucan United over 35s are currently looking for new players and further information can be found on their Facebook page.


16 June 2016 CLONDALKIN gazette 31

Gazette

on the rise

Conroy makes Dublin debut against Laois

Club Noticeboard Round tower, clondalkin

amy Conroy, pictured right, added to her

recent list of achievements last weekend when she made her Dublin senior championship debut in the 3-15 to 0-4 win over Laois. The Round Tower woman came off the bench in the Leinster first round encounter and will hope to push for a place in the next round against Westmeath.

OUR senior footballers followed up

or by contacting Catherine at 086

last week’s win over St Anne’s with

8303207.

a win on Sunday morning against

Our very own Round Tower Fairy

Ballinteer St John’s. Our junior As

Door is available to purchase. Check

were defeated by Templeogue Synge

out the club website for a picture of

Street and the junior Bs by Liffey

the special creation. We’ve a lim-

Gaels.

ited number available and they are

We are delighted to once again support Clondalkin Festival.

Picture: Peter Hickey/GAAPics.com

football: clondalkin club up to fourth in afl2

priced at €25. Purchase them from the club

On Sunday, we have live music with

shop by contacting Jessica on 087

Joey Murphy to round off the festi-

2806273, Betty on 087 6752238 or

val. It starts at 5pm and there is no

Catherine on 087 8303207.

admission – an excellent finish to the day of celebration in Clondalkin.

Round Tower lotto (June 6) jackpot was €10,000. Numbers drawn

Details of the Round Tower host-

were 2, 3, 19 and 22; the bonus ball

ed summer camps: the Kelloggs Cul

was 7. There was no overall winner

Camp will run Monday, July 4 to Fri-

and no bonus ball winner.

day, July 8 at Monastery Road. The

Three €100 winners: Noel Brennan,

club camp will take place Monday,

Martina Callinan, Eamon McCabe.

July 11 to Friday, July 15.

Thank you to all who continue to

Large numbers expected and we ask parents to book early. Further details on our website

support Round Tower lotto. Play it online for as little as €2 per week.

ST pat’s palmerstown THE lotto numbers for this week

the Saturday, June 25 so hope to see

were 10, 21, 28 and 29 for the first

everyone there.

draw and 9, 11, 15 and 25 for the

A huge congrats to our five St

second draw; neither draw was

Pat’s ladies who represented Dublin

won so next week there will be two

in the Dublin schools camogie team.

draws with jackpots of €10,000 and €2,800. The draw takes place in the PalmRound Tower’s senior footballers produced a late

Walsh to the fore as Tower’s see off BSJ

afl division 2 Round Tower 2-11 Ballinteer St John’s 1-10  sport@dublingazette.com

ROUND Tower produced a commanding display to defeat a battling Ballinteer St John’s side by four points at Monastery Road on Sunday morning to leave the Clondalkin men fourth in AFL2. The final score would not have been predicted after the opening 12 minutes, however, which saw Towers trail Ballinteer by 1-3 to no score. They finally registered a score when James Kelly kicked over a free won by

Micheal Walsh, who was dragged to the ground after outpacing his marker. Shortly afterwards, Tower’s were well and truly back in the game after Niall Lanigan took a pass by Moran and broke free from his marker to side foot the ball past Ballinteer’s keeper. Towers started to dominate the midfield and Lanigan almost scored again 30 seconds later when he was set-up by Kelly, only to see his strike deflected by the keeper and eventually cleared off the line. Tom Lyons scored a fantastic free kick from

the left of the 40 metre line to reduce Ballinteer’s lead to just one point. Two more scores from Tower’s moved them ahead for the first time only for St John’s to level matters once more. Thomas Galvin and Tower’s had the last say in the first half when he scored just before halftime after a cross field pass from Walsh set up the chance, leading to a narrow 1-5 to 1-4 halftime lead. Ballinteer equalised within two minutes of the restart and then almost had the ball in the net after a ball cross the box was

narrowly palmed wide by a St John’s forward. Ballinteer regained but the crucial moment came when Jason Joyce was bundled over in the square and as Kelly scored Tower’s second goal from the ensuing penalty. Stephen McGibney was introduced by Tower’s management and had an instant impact by kicking a score straight off to strengthen the lead T he two teams exchanged points for the rest of the half but it was Towers who ran out winners after points by Lanigan, McGibney, Moran and Walsh.

erstown House every Sunday night at 10pm and tickets cost €2. Thank you to all our sellers and to all that support our lotto every week. Tickets are available from all the usual sellers including Moriarty’s SuperValu, Palmerstown House and Manor Hair Studios. Our Friday hurling/camogie skills continues on Friday and will be on from 6-7pm next week. Everyone

They had a super win against Antrim on Friday. A big well done to Denise and all the girls. Our Under-13 hurlers battled hard with plenty of skill losing out to Faughs. Hard luck lads. Well done to the Under-8 hurlers who had an impressive win over Cuala with plenty of hard knocks but no end of talent and effort. Congratulations to our man of the match Tadgh and a huge effort from Sean Carey and Thomas Kamara. Thanks to Jack and Eamon in the engine room too. Brilliant display.

welcome. It’s a great chance for

Tough game for our Under-9 hurl-

the kids to learn from experienced

ers playing away against St Kevin’s

coaches.

in Dolphin’s Barn. Keep up the good

Memberships are overdue so anyone that hasn’t paid can you please do so urgently.

work lads and enjoy the game. We were delighted to hand over a cheque for €7,200 to the Children’s

Our boot camp is on at 6pm in

Heart Unit in Our Lady’s Hospital as

Glenaulin (meet at the club house)

a result of our joint fundraiser The

for all interested parents, every

Kube organised by Aidan Glennon.

Wednesday night.

Big thanks to everyone that sup-

All levels of fitness welcome. The

ported this event and to Aidan and

cost is €3 for the hour. A qualified

Nollaig McGill who put in so much

instructor will put you through

work to make it happen.

your paces. Hope you can all make

Thanks to Frances Fitzgerald for

it, great way to keep fit together as

supporting us and the hospital and

part of a team

thanks to our president Andy Slater

The summer camp dates have been confirmed for July 11 to 15 and July 18 to 22. Our family fun day will be held on

and to Luke Moriarty our juvenile sponsor. Great to be able to help this great cause.


32 clondalkin gazette 16 June 2016


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