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Topics - stephenite

#41
General discussion / A couple of bob to lodge
November 22, 2007, 05:52:34 AM
I know the money in the safe was already known about - but don't anyone try and say that there is not something completely dodgy about this mans finances

Fomr the Indo : Lorna Someoneorother


TAOISEACH Bertie Ahern told his banker that he wanted to lodge "a couple of bob", and then turned up with IR£22,500.


Mr Ahern made the lodgement a week after he had taken out a loan of IR£19,000 to cover bills associated with his marital separation.

The "couple of bob" was IR£15,000 in cash, a bank draft for IR£5,000, which was made out to Fianna Fail's then chief fundraiser Des Richardson, and a cheque for IR£2,500, made out to cash and signed by Mr Richardson, the Mahon tribunal heard yesterday.

That money is now known as the "first goodwill loan" -- or dig out -- to Mr Ahern from his friends in Dublin.

It has also emerged that Mr Ahern had over IR£32,000 in the Irish Permanent Building Society account, but he only declared having IR£5,000 when the loan he got from AIB to pay bills associated with his marital separation was up for review in 1995.

In total, the Taoiseach lodged IR£72,500, mainly in cash, in an eight-month period between December 1993 and August 1994, to various saving accounts, and this was before he had begun to make repayments on his IR£19,115.97 loan.

Philip Murphy, the banker who handled Mr Ahern's loan of IR£19,115.97 at the AIB branch on 37/38 O'Connell Street, Dublin, said that Mr Ahern came into his office and told him he wanted to lodge "a couple of bob" on December 30 1993.

He said he wasn't surprised when Mr Ahern arrived in his office saying he had money to lodge, even though this was only a week after he had taken out the loan.

He thought he might have suggested to Mr Ahern that the minister should pay off his loan with the cash he had, "but he obviously didn't do that" and, instead, went ahead and opened a Special Savings Account.

Mr Murphy said he didn't remember the cheques which Mr Ahern brought in but he did remember the cash.

The following April, he went out to St Luke's in Drumcondra, Mr Ahern's constituency office, after Mr Ahern phoned him and told him that he wanted to open an account for "the girls" (Mr Ahern's two daughters).

"He told me he had money in the safe and I told him he was stupid to keep it in the safe," Mr Murphy recalled. He said the minister also told him that he had other money in another safe in Government Buildings.

"I wasn't hugely surprised when he told me he had IR£30,000 in the safe in St Luke's. I didn't get overly excited about it," Mr Murphy added.

Of the IR£30,000, IR£27,164.44 went to top up the Special Savings Account, which had a limit of IR£50,000, and the balance of IR£2,835.56 was lodged to a current account in Mr Ahern's name.

The following August Mr Murphy went again to St Luke's, where Mr Ahern handed him IR£20,000 in cash, to open an account for his daughters.

#42
GAA Discussion / New DG announced
November 21, 2007, 02:12:44 AM
Not a surprise - good luck to him...


Duffy to be new GAA director general

By Tony Leen
PAURIC DUFFY'S appointment as the GAA's new director general will be ratified today by Croke Park's Management committee.


The association's Player Welfare manager has beaten off the challenge of Croke Park stadium manager Peter McKenna and former Dublin footballer and company managing director Pat Gilroy. The Monaghan man will be formally unveiled as the replacement for Liam Mulvihill tomorrow.

Duffy is a former chairman of Croke Park's Games Administration committee and is well regarded by officials and players. He also has a good relationship with the Gaelic Players Association, lauding the organisation recently for their work on behalf of players.

"When I got the (player welfare) job I didn't know how much time would be used up solving individual problems with individual players, and I have spent less time on that than I expected for a couple of reasons — like some players would go to the GPA. That has given me time to look at some of the bigger issues."

Earlier this year Duffy controversially called for the abolition of the U21 championships on the basis that the competition may be contributing to the issue of player burnout.

"My own view is, and this is not widely accepted, I would get rid of all inter-county competitions outside minor and senior," said Duffy. "We have to do something radical. Under 21, junior and intermediate — they will all have to go."

The principal of St. Macartans College in Monaghan, Duffy will bring a wealth of experience to the post. He is a former chairman of the Monaghan County Board. He has chaired many GAA committees including the National Audit Committee (2006).
#43
GAA Discussion / Connacht Club Championship
November 06, 2007, 01:00:54 AM
Ballina down to take on Sligo Champs Tourlestrane this weekend. Ballina coming into the game showing serious dodgy form, a loss to Claremorris in the league with a full strength team does not bode well for this match, Tourlestrane seemed to be able to do enough to get over Leitrim Champions - will Eamonn O'Hara make a return from injury to mark his first cousin Pat Harte in a centre field battle?
Hopefully the Stephenites can turn it around to make a Connacht final - if the likes of Eanna Casey can continue the form he appears to be in and gets a helping hand from the 3 Bradys, Hughes and McGarry the forwards will be a handful for anyone. With Harte and Mcgarrity probably the centrefield pairing they should be able for most other clubs but will the presence of his first cousin have an effect of Pat? Doubt it.
Hoping for a big game from Martin Wynne in the full back line.

Should be a great game
#44
General discussion / For anyone in Oz
November 02, 2007, 02:17:52 AM
Sick of having to head out to the pub at 1am on a Sunday to watch your County play? Sick of having a stinking hangover most Mondays during the championship season?

Setanta Sports now available on Foxtel - watch all the GAA action live from home. Can't fecking wait for the Championship to start
#45
 ;)
#46
General discussion / Seagate sheds 900 jobs in Derry
October 30, 2007, 03:37:25 AM
http://www.rte.ie/news/2007/1029/jobs.html

Ouch - this is not good news for these people, but could have major ramifications elsewhere, will be interesting to see if some of the large US Tech firms based down South follow suit. Imagine Lexlip/Celbridge if Intel and HP were to up sticks, ditto Limerick and Bray for Dell
#47
General discussion / The Catalpa Rescue
October 26, 2007, 01:18:11 AM
So there I was last night, stuck in a crappy motel in a town in country NSW called Cobar on a work trip. Practically in the desert and the wireless broadband card was as useful as tits on a bull. Flicked on the telly and came across a documentary on ABC about the Catalpa Rescue.
6 Fenians who were also members of the British army were transported to 'the establishment' prison in Fremantle, Western Australia. They got a message to John Devoy in New York who put a rescue plan into operation.

Fantastic story which was produced in association with RTE so just wondered if anyone else had seen it - hope Aerlik got a chance to watch it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalpa_rescue
#48
General discussion / Vista Business
October 15, 2007, 07:16:46 AM
Anyone running the business edition of Windows Vista - have been for the last few months. Logged onto an XP machine over the weekend, logged into this site and had about 5 PM's that Vista still doesn't seem to know about - any ideas ??? ???
Firewall etc. on the OS doesn't seem to have anything that would be blocking it.


Congratulations by the way - you know who you are.

Owenmoresider - if you need a hand with that (old info or anything) drop me a line to stephenite@gmail.com
#51
Lads and Lassies,
You may have read about it and the majority of you I'm sure are not bothered in the slightest.

The Irish Superleague have taken the extraordinary step of moving the Ballina club (Team Merry Monk) to the Southern conference of the Superleague competition.
The knock ons from this decision is that Ballina will not realistically be able to compete in the league due to huge increased travel costs.

The club has long been the standard bearer for Basketball in the West of Ireland and of course Ballina Stephenites and Mayo have seen the benefit of having players from Basketball grace our fields during the off season ( Liam MacHale and Ronan McGarrity the obvious ones ) but the amount of others that don't make the headlines is quite large, there is a lot of goodwill between the GAA clubs of the region and the basketball club
The club provides enormously for the community and the young people of the town, would appreciate all who could take the time to sign this petition.

http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/save-ballina-basketball.html
#52
GAA Discussion / The Psychology of it all
June 18, 2007, 08:01:01 AM
Watched the Tyrone Donegal match last night on the laptop before turning in for the night, couldn't sleep for an hour thinking about it so thought I'd open it out to the forum.

What are the little things that turn a game in Gaelic Football, do they have a bearing on the end result,could it have gone differently?

What I mean in a nutshell is, if Donegals first goal had rightly been allowed to stand, added to Cassidys second strike a few minutes later - would it have made a big difference to the final result? Would Tyrone have carved them open so easily? Would it have made a substantial difference?

I know that the signs for Donegal around the middle were ominous from the throw in but if they opened up the lead with the goals could they have kicked on?

Probably a load of old bollox but it's something I've become more interested in and wondered what others thought
#53
'I was on the sideline when he called my name and head-butted me in the face'

By Colm O'Connor
ANOTHER GAA disciplinary controversy has erupted in Kerry with local Gardaí asked to investigate an alleged assault which occurred during a junior game on Tuesday night.


Clounmacon manager Enda Murphy claims he was head-butted in the face by a St Senan's player towards the end of a North Kerry League Division 3 semi-final in Finuge. Murphy, 31, alleges he was knocked to the ground by the player who came from the dug out and was unconscious for a few minutes. He now wants GAA chiefs to put down a marker to prevent similar incidents happening in future. Mr Murphy was taken for medical assessment to South Doc in Listowel and then to Kerry General Hospital for an x-ray at 1am.

His injuries included severe swelling on the side of his face, loose teeth and a suspected fractured jaw.

Following the alleged incident Clounmacon mentors took their team off the field. There were eight minutes remaining and St Senan's were leading by four points.

Mr Murphy told the Irish Examiner: "We were awarded a free close to the St Senan's goal. I was on the sideline when a player jumped from the dug out, called my name, and as I turned around, he head-butted me in the face. I was shocked and unaware of what was happening until I was on the ground with team officials around me.

"It was the most frightening experience of my life. While the physical pain of the incident is just about bearable, the mental pain, humiliation and embarrassment resulting from the incident is terrible. To be attacked in this manner is not in keeping with the spirit of sport and I left the field in tears.

"This was an unprovoked attack and someone has to take action to stamp this sort of thuggery out of the game."

Murphy feels it is vital that more and more people speak out against such incidents.

"The main reason I have come forward with this is that no other manager, or anyone involved in helping out or playing GAA, will have to suffer the same fate as this.

"The punishment has to start somewhere. If this happened outside a disco in Listowel it would be treated as a criminal offence. That's the attitude that must come from the GAA. It is getting out of hand all over the country. There are very few places that the punishment fits the crime.

Mr Murphy also revealed that no officials from either the North Kerry Board or the St Senan's club had contacted him since the incident which has forced him out of work.

"I have received 100% support from everyone in the club which I am thankful for. I am definitely taking time out of football. I have stepped down from the Feale Rangers U21 side. I was due to be playing with Clounmacon B this week but I will be staying away from football for a while. I am going on ten years in management and never had as much as a shoulder on the sideline.

"It is tough enough managing a team without something like this happening. The GAA at the highest level need to get more serious about incidents like this."

North Kerry GAA Chairman Liam Dennehy confirmed an incident took place during the game "While I was not at the game, I understand that an incident did take place. I am awaiting the referee's report on the matter and once I receive that, we will deal with the matter."

Gardaí say once they receive a complaint, an investigation will be launched.

It is the second high profile case of ill discipline this week. Westmeath football panelist Paddy Martin could be facing a one-year ban following an alleged altercation with a referee in a club game last weekend. Martin, who made an appearance as a substitute in the Lake County's All-Ireland quarter-final defeat to Dublin last year and featured in this year's National League, was involved in an incident which felled Moate referee Tom Duffy during Ballymore's IFC clash with Ballynacargy on Sunday.
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Time to start handing out life bans I feel, there have been too many incidents over the past five years for this sort of behaviour to be described as isolated incidents.
Life ban for the player in this case, life ban for the player in Westmeath. And life ban meaning no entry to any GAA events, stadia etc for life.
#54
From todays Examiner

   


29 May 2007

Leinster reject Dubs' 'insensitive' Croker bid

By Brendan Coffey
LEINSTER Council chiefs yesterday flatly rejected a cheeky bid by Dublin officials to have Sunday's second replay of the football championship clash between Wicklow and Louth moved from Croke Park.


A formal request was submitted to the provincial council yesterday morning, seeking that GAA headquarters host only the eagerly awaited Dublin-Meath quarter final clash on the basis of incredible ticket demand in the capital and because 'the Louth Wicklow game could be accommodated elsewhere.'

Leinster Council chairman Liam O'Neill described the move as "insensitive" to GAA people in Wicklow and Louth. Asked if the move amounted to arrogance on Dublin's part, O'Neill said: "I don't disagree with that view."

Wicklow manager Mick O'Dwyer agreed, saying: "They are of course (arrogant). The stadium is there for all the counties to use, not just the Dubs. We had a huge crowd in Parnell Park on Sunday and if we were in Croke Park we would have had a way bigger crowd."

The request to have the stadium given over to Dublin is not the first time the metropolitans and the Leinster Council have clashed over venues. Last year Dublin pushed to have their first round Leinster clash with Longford moved from Pearse Park to Croker because of a similar demand for tickets.

"It's a huge promotional opportunity for us to have Wicklow and Louth children in Croke Park to see their heroes. We're about fair play, we're not about money," said O'Neill, a candidate for next year's GAA presidency.

"The original fixture was for Wexford to play the winners of Louth and Wicklow anyway. We only got the (Dublin) request this morning. We take a very strong view on fair play and we're not even entertaining it. My view would be if the Dublin County Board wants to go to Wicklow and Louth people, explain why they shouldn't play in Croke Park and get an agreement from both, then we might listen," added O'Neill.

So far Dublin have been given nearly 22,000 tickets. They originally received all 8,000 tickets for Hill 16 and 9,000 stand tickets. Last week they requested an extra 1,200 tickets on Tuesday, 1,000 on Wednesday and another 7,000 on Thursday. Yesterday morning they asked for another 2,000 and with the vast majority of 10,000 family tickets destined for the capital, they have received 30,000 in total so far.

"It's only when the soccer is over that the Dubs get interested," said one Wicklow official.

Louth and Wicklow will be meeting for the third Sunday in a row and it's expected that the winners will be given a two-week break before their meeting with Wexford in the quarter-final.

Wexford football manager Paul Bealin has suggested that the game be played as a double header in Croke Park with the Leinster SHC meeting of Wexford and Dublin on June 9, which is fixed for Nowlan Park.

However Croke Park is unavailable for nearly three weeks from June 5th for pitch maintenance which gives rise to an interesting problem if Meath and Dublin draw at Croke Park on Sunday — that of where to play the replay.

The next game scheduled for HQ is the winners of Dublin/Meath and Offaly/Carlow in the Leinster SFC semi-final on Sunday June 24.
#55
Good, delighted for the snivelling little scum bag ;D


From SMH.com.au

World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz said he would resign at the end of June, ending a month-long scandal over a pay and promotions deal he awarded to his girlfriend.

In a statement issued at the end of three days of deliberations by the World Bank board, Wolfowitz said he was resigning in the best interests of the institution.

"I am announcing today that I will resign as president of the World Bank Group effective at the end of the fiscal year (June 30,  2007),'' Wolfowitz said in a statement today.

His decision came as White House support appeared to crumble, with US President George Bush earlier expressing "regret'' over the favouritism scandal, despite having stood resolutely behind his former Pentagon number two.

Bush, speaking at a joint White House news conference with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, failed to reiterate earlier statements that Wolfowitz, whom he named for the World Bank post in  2005, should stay in the job.

"I applaud his vision, I respect him a lot, and I regret it's come to this,'' Bush said.

Wolfowitz, 63, a longtime Bush ally and former deputy defence secretary, reportedly was trying to negotiate a compromise deal that would recognise the bank's flawed advice in resolving a conflict-of-interest crisis with his girlfriend, Shaha Riza, a bank employee.

An internal World Bank report made public Monday concluded that Wolfowitz violated bank rules in arranging a generous promotion and pay package for Riza shortly after he assumed the bank presidency in June 2005.

The report also said the bank had given him cloudy instructions on how to resolve the matter.

European countries have led the drive for Wolfowitz's departure from the 185-country bank for more than a month, and White House support waned in recent days as the controversy deepened.

A fresh call came on Thursday in the Slovenian capital of Bled, where an annual World Bank conference on development economics opened.

Wolfowitz, who had planned to deliver the keynote address tonight, cancelled his appearance.

"Now this scandal has been dragging on for too long, which is undermining the credibility of the institution,'' Slovenian Finance Minister Andrej Bajuk told journalists on the sidelines of the meeting.

World Bank vice president Francois Bourguignon assured the Bled conference that despite the controversy, the institution "remains firm in its commitment to eliminate poverty around the world''.

On Tuesday Wolfowitz had pleaded with directors to let him keep his job, in which he has made fighting corruption a priority.

"I have said I am not without fault in the matter,'' Wolfowitz said of the scandal surrounding Riza, who ended up earning almost $US200,000 ($243,000) a year when she was transferred to the State Department, still on the World Bank's payroll.

Wolfowitz acknowledged he had relied too heavily on outside advisers he brought in to the bank, and pledged to change his management style "to regain the trust of the staff''.
#56
General discussion / Miss D case - Free to travel
May 09, 2007, 11:42:36 PM
Very surprised that there has been no discussion on here about this case. My own views are that  the fact that the HSE intervened in this case and the trauma visisted on this young girl at a very difficult time was a terrible disgrace - but again I have been reading press reports and listening to an odd bit of radio so I accept I may not be fully informed.

But as I understand it this young girl was pregnant, and medical opinion was generally in agreement that even if the foetus managed to survive the length of the pregnancy it has pretty much no chance of survival once it was born, the girl in question was of the legal age to make her own decision in the regard, but someone decided that she shouldn't be allowed to travel to have the termination. Whilst there was some concern about her mental state given some domestic, physical abuse that occured it certainly wasn't to the extent that allowed the authourities act in the way they did.

Now that's a rather simplistic interpretation of the events as I understand them so feel free to correct me if they're wrong, but what are peoples views on this?
#57
General discussion / Government about to fall
May 06, 2007, 06:35:54 AM
Interesting watching this from abroad ..... www.politics.ie are reporting that the PD's are about to walk on the back of explosive new allegations from Jody Corcoran, Mail on Sunday poised to air fresh allegations and call Bertie a liar.
Any views on this, voraciously hoovering up any info I can from afar but can't seem to get the mail on Sunday online, anyone able to give a run down on what it says, any confirmation that the PD's will actually walk?

Looks like the most devious and cunning of them all might be caught out - what is it with Northside Taoisigh?
#58
From RTE :


The GPA have released a statement in which they reacted angrily to an open letter by the Tyrone County committee urging GAA president Nicky Brennan not to grant the body official recognition.

The letter from the Tyrone board to GAA president Nickey Brennan was damning in its criticism of the GPA, insisting that they do not deserve official recognition from Croke Park.

However the GPA and several senior Tyrone players have hit back at the comments from the county board, with the GPA calling the letter 'misleading, ill-informed and malicious.'

In a statement, the GPA said: 'By posting the letter publicly on their website, the Tyrone County Committee has now deliberately decided to initiate a row while negotiations between the players' body and the GAA are reaching a critical juncture.

'Let there be no mistake on this issue. This is a scurrilous attempt by Tryone officials to regain and assert total control on players wearing the county jersey.

'The GPA wholly rejects all the assertions made in this document. We will be raising the issue at the highest levels of the GAA and will be seeking redress on this serious matter.'

Tyrone footballer Seán Cavanagh said: 'I totally reject the comments made by the Tyrone county board in this letter. They were not speaking for me or the Tyrone footballers or even, I would venture, the majority of GAA people in this county.

'The players have earned the right to be officially recognised through the GPA.'

Tyrone hurling captain Barry Winters also stood firm in his backing for the GPA, saying: 'The GPA has been hugely beneficial to the Tyrone hurling squad and was there for us when we needed support. This letter is a slight on all inter-county players.'
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I highlighted Sean Cavanagh's comments regarding his second guessing of the majority of Tyrone GAA people - maybe the Tyronies on here can give their own thoughts??

#59
What would be the best way to spend monies earned from IRFU / FAI use of Croke Park
#60
GAA Discussion / Ladbrokes 2007 GAA Specials
December 20, 2006, 03:40:08 AM
Is this your work Lone Shark?



As we draw the curtain on 2006, Ladbrokes looks forward to the potentially big stories of GAA in 2007. Those who fancy an outside flutter would notethat Mick O is 7/1 to lead Wicklow to a Leinster Final and Eric Miller's at 10/1 to make a championship appearance for the Dubs. In hurling Setanta Ó'hAilpín is 10/1 to help his hurl again for Cork and its 3/1 on an all Munster All Ireland final...

Gaelic Football
4/6 The All Ireland Winner to complete their championship unbeaten
11/10 No team to finish the season unbeaten
7/1 Mick O'Dwyer's Wicklow to appear in either a Leinster Final or an All Ireland Quarter Final
2/1 Dublin and Kerry to meet in the Championship
5/4 Any previous All Ireland Senior Championship winning manager to win again in 2007
10/1 Eric Miller to play a senior championship game for Dublin in 2007
8/1 Both All Ireland Finalists to be Ulster teams
1/1 Neither All Ireland Finalist to be an Ulster team
33/1 Tadgh Kennelly to play for Kerry in any Championship game
50/1 No fans to invade the pitch after the All Ireland Final

Hurling
4/7 The All Ireland Winner to complete their championship unbeaten
5/4 No team to finish the season unbeaten
6/4 Ger Loughnane's Galway to reach the All Ireland Final
1/1 Kilkenny and Cork to meet in the Championship
1/1 The All Ireland Winning manager to be a first time winner
10/1 Setanta Ó'hAilpín to hurl for Cork at any stage in the Championship
3/1 Two Munster teams to meet in the All Ireland Final
6/1 No Munster Team to reach the All Ireland Final
10/1 The Ulster Final to be held outside of Ireland