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Gerard’s dream goes sky-high

A CLARE student, with dreams of reaching for the stars, is over the moon this week having seen his research launched aboard the last flight of the space shuttle.

Third-level student Gerard Newsham (24), a post-graduate student at Limerick Institute of Technology (LIT), is currently working at the Space Life Science Lab in Florida. On Friday, he was on countdown at the NASA Kennedy Space Centre for lift-off of the final space shuttle mission which has his science project onboard.

Speaking from the Space Centre, the Corbally student said, “I can’t describe how I feel; amazing is just not a strong enough word. Most of the time it just seems so unreal. I have to keep pinching myself.”

Gerard is working on a project entitled, ‘Symbiotic Nodulation in a Reduced Gravity Environment (SyNRGE)’, which set out to learn how plants and bacteria work together in space.

In an interview with The Clare People , Gerard revealed that his sights have always been on the heavens.

“Ever since I was younger, I always wanted to be involved in the space program but never thought it would happen. I had always told myself if I could just see the Kennedy Space Centre and see a shuttle launch, I’d be more than happy. Today and every day since October 2008, it’s to my delight I get to go there, do research and watch the shuttle launch.”

Gerard has been in Florida at the Kennedy Space Centre since October 2008, courtesy of an internship at the FÁS Science Challenge. His project was selected for flight in 2010, as his research at Limerick Institute of Technology at the Controlled Environment Lab for Life Science (CELLS) is directly linked to SyNRGE.

Staff and fellow post-graduate stu- dents from LIT watched live feeds from the Kennedy Space Centre, where the final mission for the 30year-program took off. The space shuttle Atlantis is destined for the International Space Station.

The Clare student says that he hopes to continue his exploration where no man has gone before.

“I hope to be here for the rest of my career. The staff and the facilities at the Kennedy Space Centre are worldclass and second to none,” he told The Clare People .

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Clare murder play hits Galway

‘MISTERMAN’, one of the most important theatre pieces at this year’s Galway Arts Festival, was inspired by a tragedy which led to Clare man Brendan O’Donnell being convicted in 1996 of the murders of Imelda Riney, her three-year-old son Liam, and Galway priest Fr Joseph Walsh.

The playwright Enda Walsh revealed in an interview this week that he was inspired to write the drama after reading about O’Donnell and the three tragic deaths in Whitegate.

“I like characters who are always on the edge and there’s something about a one-man show; it feels very, very concentrated and it’s like cracking open someone’s skull and dropping the audience in there and going, ‘There you are now, what do you think of that?’” he said.

O’Donnell was arrested after a massive manhunt following the disappearance of 29-year-old Imelda, her three-year-old son, Liam and local priest Fr Joe Walsh. All three had been shot and O’Donnell was subsequently convicted of killing them. He subsequently died in prison.

Clare author Edna O’Brien came in for a storm of criticism when she wrote In The Forest , a book based on the murders.

Landmark Productions and Galway Arts Festival’s co-production of ‘Misterman’ is written and directed by Walsh and stars Cillian Murphy. Walsh described the reworked version of the one-man show as a psychological examination of a sympathetic yet unnerving character living on the periphery of a small town.

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Recession bringing men back to school

THE demographic of Clare people taking park in adult education courses has changed dramatically in the last three years – with the recession leading to a dramatic rise in the number of young Clare men taking part.

That was the opinion of one of the county’s most experienced adult education coordinators who also believes that the demand for adult education courses will far outstrip supply in the years to come.

This comes following the launch of a free guide to adult education and training oppor tunities launched last week by Clare VEC.

“If you go back a number of years in Clare there was a tradition of lads leaving secondar y school early because the money was good for them to go and work in construction. It was very difficult to get some lads to continue on and finish their leaving Certificate,” said Marian O’Callaghan, Adult Education Co-ordinator in Lisdoonvarna.

“Now they have a real difficulty as there is nothing for them now in construction and they don’t have the skills or the qualifications to do something else. I have noticed the gender balance had change in recent years. A few years ago all of the course would have been very much dominated by females but that isn’t the case anymore.

“It is ver y hard to go anywhere without having some piece of paper. The choices at the moment around the North Clare area are they you either do training or you emigrate. That what is facing a lot of people at the moment. It is tough – but there is very very little out there for people now.”

The demand for adult education courses has also increased in recent years but so too has the range of qualifications that the courses open up for people.

“Quite a number of people involved with us have gone onto third level in Limerick or Galway and one person in now a lecturing in nursing, so the courses do give people a great scope,” continued Marian.

“I would say that at the moment we are all over subscribed for courses. All over the county I’d say that there is a huge demand.”

The Clare VEC Adult Education free guide is a comprehensive list of all courses available at the statutory and private education providers throughout the county.

The courses are broken down in to areas of interest from general education including Leaving Certificate to information technology to community healthcare and counselling.

The guide is available in libraries, shops, post offices, social welfare offices or local organisation around the county or contact the Clare VEC Adult Education Centre by calling 065 6824819.

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Clare couples joining year long queue for a civil wedding ceremony

CLARE couples who want to marry with the backdrop of a romantic view or to have a civil ceremony in the hotel where their reception is to be held will have to go join a queue more than a year long in Limerick.

At present, although some of Clare’s most beautiful spots would get the thumbs up as places where civil ceremonies would be allowed, staffing at the Clare registry offices is such that all civil marraiges are being dealt with through Limerick.

And with the recruitment ban in the public service, staff in the Limerick office can’t meet all the requests for civil ceremonies.

Bride-to-be Jennifer Flynn from Westbury was told the next date on which a registrar could come to her chosen hotel is a weekday a year from now.

“I was amazed because I was told three months notice was necessary but I never would have thought they were so booked up,” she told The Clare People .

Staff at the the Ennis registrar’s office confirmed that civil ceremonies for couples in Clare are currently being conducted in the Limerick office.

“We go through Limerick for the civil ceremonies at present. The couples have to contact the registrar there and give three months notice and the Limerick office will take it from there,” she said.

Sources in the registrars office also confirmed that the staff there are stretched and could not meet the growing demand in Clare for civil marraiges in situ.

For Jennifer, who plans to marry partner Colm next year, it means thinking it out again.

“We have the option of getting married in the registry office and then going to our reception and that’s probably what we will have to do. Neither of us are religious so we don’t want a church wedding. But the registry office seems so cold and impersonal and it means we’ll only be able to have our witnesses and a couple of other people at the actual marraige. I’m sure the registrar is very nice and will do everything possible to make it special but why make it legal to marry outside the office and then not have enough people to make that a possibility?” she said.

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Nine sent forward for trial following incident at Ennis apartment ‘Made a nuisance of himself in garda station’

A MAN who “made a nuisance of himself” at a garda station found himself before a court on a public order charge.

Seán Dobbin (22), of John Paul Avenue Ennis, was accused of public order arising out of an incident on November 15, 2009.

Inspector Tom Kennedy told Ennis District Court on Friday that the accused “made a nuisance of himself” at Ennis Garda Station.

He said he rang the bell for customer service and banged on the hatch. He said he would not leave when requested and “a struggle ensued; a schmozzle as would be described in sporting terms”.

He said that the accused arrived at the garda station in the early hours of the morning after a number of other people had been arrested.

Defending solicitor Tara Godfrey said;

“To be charged with refusing to leave the garda station seems somewhat perverse.”

Judge Joseph Mangan asked, “What’s perverse about that?” She replied, “Normally the gardaí are at pains to attract people to the garda station and charge them and deal with them.”

She said that her client was highly unlikely to be before the court again. Judge Mangan directed that € 50 be paid to the court poor box. This was done and the case was dismissed.

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Cannabis march set for Ennis

THE first march aimed at legalising cannabis ever to take place in Clare is scheduled to go ahead in Ennis on Wednesday, August 10.

The march, which is being organised by Bunratty woman Niamh O’Brien, will include a “peaceful protest” and march in the county town followed by an information session at a venue in Ennis yet to be confirmed.

Ms O’Brien, who operated her own business in Ennis, suffers from a painful and debilitating bent spine and uses medicinal cannabis to treat the pain. The use of medicinal cannabis is legal in many states in America as well as in a number of EU countries but is currently treated no differently from the use on recreational cannabis in Ireland.

The Clare branch of the Legalisation of Cannabis in Ireland organisation is encouraging people who have doubts about the movement to come to the meeting and voice their concerns.

“I am hoping to have a little peaceful protest march through Ennis to a place where we can have a meeting and a proper questions and answers session. I would hope that concerned parents, drugs councillors, politicians, nurses and doctors would come along to that. I am hoping to get a large group of people in to talk about this, especially people who are seeing people abusing drugs each day at the side of the street,” Niamh told The Clare People yesterday.

“This is an opportunity to question the Government on the current laws because we feel they are not working. I think it is more important that the people who don’t agree with us come along. It’s about opening up a dialogue and education. We want to show people that prohibition just doesn’t work and has always made things worse.”

One of the main speakers on the day will be Irish American Vincent Lavery, who was the personal secretary to assassinated US presidential candidate Robert Kennedy and a pro-legalisation campaigner.

“This is the first time that something like this will happen in Clare so I think it will be an important day for Clare people to come out and let their opinion on this matter be heard. We are still waiting to confirm the day of the march 100 per cent but when we do we will let people know,” continued Niamh.

Cannabis has been proved to have medicinal benefits as an anti-inflammatory, as a pain relief, to combat depression and anxiety, to promote appetite and to help people who have Alzheimer’s disease, MS and Parkinsons. The Facebook page of LCI, Clare now has just under 1,000 people following it.

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No hurling until January for Clare

Galway 4-25 – Clare 0-20 at Pearse Stadium, Salthill

IT STARTED badly, tailed off a little in the middle and the less said about the end the better.

What can you say about Clare’s forgettable championship exit to neighbours Galway? Revisiting what was Clare’s biggest championship defeat in seven years is made all the more painful by the fact that without a competitive game for the next six months, this will be the lasting impression of 2011 for players, management and supporters alike.

With expectations raised from the encouraging display against Tipperary, the reality soon hit home as a determined Galway side, with a considerable point to prove themselves after their highly criticised performance against Dublin in the Leinster semi-final, tore Clare apart in the opening twenty minutes.

Again it was the concession of goals emanating from green defending that did the damage and that more than anything else is the main reason for Clare’s heavy final defeat. For the third successive competitive game, they conceded four goals, making it 18 in only eight games while only scoring six goals themselves in the same period. Cutting out that deficiency, backed by the fact that Clare reached the 20 score mark for backto-back championship games would have made this a much more even tie. However, in the wake of Galway’s devastating firepower, the fact that Clare didn’t possess any goal threat and never troubled goalkeeper James Skehill for even a routine catch left Clare in a no-win situation. In addition all but five points of Galway’s 425 came from play while almost half of Clare’s total was from frees.

Those are indeed damning stats that tell their own tale as all Galway had to do was look at the DVD of the Tipperary game and employ the same fluid tactics up front. In truth, Clare showed that they had learned very little defensively from the Tipperary game as they allowed Galway to drag defenders out of position, leaving acres of space inside to exploit. Clare would have been better served by remaining more as a back six and defend zonally.

And yet despite the comprehensive 17 point defeat, there still is a niggling feeling that things might have been different had Clare won the toss and chose to play with the conditions. Both sides were vunerable confidence-wise following their recent provincial defeats and with a young side, Clare might have relished the aid of the conditions and taken the game to Galway like they did against Tipperary last time out.

Instead, however it was Galway who struck early and decisively by finding the net twice by the 12th minute. Clare should have heeded the warning sign when Joe Canning crashed a shot off the crossbar after only 90 seconds and as Galway dragged the Clare full-back line out the field, they left Damien Hayes free inside.

A Hayes point in the fifth minute cancelled out Nicky O’Connell’s first minute free and the Portumna man exploited the space again only two minutes later when seizing on a David Burke ball over the top to find the net.

With Clare slow to react, again it was Hayes who was the catalyst for the second goal in the 12th minute, collecting a defensive free before offloading for Iarla Tanninan to shoot against the post with Ger Farragher applying the finish.

Clare attempted to put out the fire but there were so many fires at that stage that the fire brigade should have been called but would have done well to get through the heavy traffic. Clare did manage to calm matters down however when employing Nicky O’Connell as a sweeper and while it took the visitors until the 19th minute to score from play through Fergal Lynch, the deficit was still only six points by the 20th minute following further points from the lively Conor McGrath and Caimin Morey.

That was until the mercurial talents of Joe Canning came to the fore with a full range of skills in an eight minute period. First he converted a straightforward free in the 21st minute, added an inch perfect lineball three minutes later from the 20 metre line but the highlight undoubtedly came in the 29th minute with Galway’s third goal. Picking up possession in the right corner, he shrugged aside the challenge of Nicky O’Connell, avoided the clutches of Cian Dillon by balancing the sliothar expertly on his stick before rifling a shot past Philip Brennan. The goalkeeper did ensure that there wouldn’t be further damage when somehow stopping a Joe Gantley point blank effort in first half injury-time but there was still a sizeable 10 point gap (3-13 to 0-12) for Clare to make up at the break.

With the breeze to come, Clare wounds were not life-threatening but within five minutes of the restart, they need a life-support machine after a high challenge by James McInerney on Joe Canning that saw the Newmarket man receive a straight red card.

With that, the result was merely an inevitability and the pace and intensity of the game dropped considerably. Clare never gave up and through the workrate of Cian Dillon and points from Conor McGrath, Caimin Morey and Nicky O’Connell’s unerring freetaking, they kept plugging away. However, they never looked like even getting a goal while Galway emptied the bench and grabbed a fourth goal at their ease in the 54th minute when Farragher supplied a teasing ball over the top for Alan Kerins to pull to the net.

The game had petered out long before the final whistle sounded as much like last year, Clare were left with a bitter aftertaste of a devastating defeat following encouraging displays in the Munster championship. It’s one step forward and three to the side it seems.

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Banner ‘need to be more savvy at the back’

CLARE TRAVELLED to Salthill expecting a Galway backlash but came away with severe whiplash after a 17 point beating. Little for Clare manager Ger O’Loughlin to do but swallow another frustratingly, disappointing defeat and ponder his own future as the Clare number one.

“We were totally exposed, the goals were killer punches and they took them very well. We were at sixes and sevens in the first twenty minutes playing into a strong breeze and again we were very naïve in a lot of the goals we are conceding but from our point of view, all we can do is try to go back, pick up the pieces and try to learn from it. The bottom line is we are actually scoring 20 or 21 points in most games but conceding three or four goals in every match and that’s something to try and see can we remedy somewhere along the way.

“It’s not easy and I think we are playing the best that’s available but we just need to get a bit more savvy about what we are doing at the back because we are just conceding goal after goal in every game and it’s costing us big time.

“In fairness to Galway, they were a class apart tonight and it probably shows the amount of work we have to do to get there. We were a lot better against Tipp but it was a different sort of game I suppose. Galway came at us from the start and we had done the same to Tipp. We were on the backfoot from the beginning and we never really recovered from it and that’s the bottom line really that we never really recovered from their early onslaught.”

And if the Clarecastle native felt that lady luck had deserted his side in the first half, Clare’s slim hopes of bridging the ten point half-time gap were soon dashed when they were reduced to 14 men after five minutes of the restart.

“We were chasing the game anyway once James [McInerney] was sent off but it was only eight or nine minutes into the second half and we were still hoping that we could perform a miracle but it was probably never going to happen. It just threw the game apart and we were completely gone then because they were just mopping up loose ball that came into their defence.

“I don’t have any qualms about tonight. We were outclassed on the night and it’s a learning process and another costly one for Clare but all we can do is be proud of the effort they put in for the year and hope that we will learn sooner rather than later. But it was a lovely evening for hurling so we can have no excuses.”

And yet perhaps the game could have hinged on the toss, such were the breezy conditions in Salthill that allowed Galway to build up confidence and a considerable early lead.

“The game could have been different. We were hoping we would win the toss but that didn’t even go for us tonight. They were always going to come at us early on and try to finish us off early and I suppose we had the rub of the green against Tipp when we won the toss and played with the breeze. It helped us settle and sometimes with young lads like we have on board, you need to settle for fifteen or twenty minutes to realise you can win a game.

“I think what happened tonight is that we were on the backfoot and they took their goals very well early on and we probably panicked a bit as well I think. A small bit of panic set in and we looked all over the place and it was very hard to actually fix the problems because there was so many problems.

“I have to admire the lads again because they tried awful hard and never gave up but we were just beaten and outclassed on the night with killer punches and as I say, we just have to learn from that in Clare because if we don’t, that’s going to be the case. But we are building slowly but surely.”

But would the Sparrow be willing to be the foreman for such a project going forward?

“I’ll tell you, it was the last thing in my head even, coming into the match tonight because I said to myself that it would be unfair to even think about that but I’ll have a very serious think about it because it’s like everything else, you give your heart and soul for the two years. When I went in, after a couple of weeks, I knew that we were starting off from a very low base with regard to experienced players and we have had to start from stratch but I think we have made progress even though the results are poor.

“ I think we actually have a nucleus built up to go forward but we need that injection again of five or six 18, 19 and 20 years olds over the next year or two. But Clare will win something I think in the next three years. It might take three years but I think they will win something.”

That silver lining seemed very far away on Saturday evening.

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What does the future hold for Clare hurling?

THE FIRST part of that question is easy to answer – Pairc Ui Chaoimh this Sunday for the Munster minor hurling final between Clare, the defending champions, and the up and coming Waterford. This is the second year in succession that we have both contested the Munster minor decider, another sure sign of an impending shift in the powerbase of Munster hurling. We have never defended our Munster minor crown, Sunday is a big day for Clare hurling.

After Sunday thoughts can turn to the Munster Intermediate Final which will be played in Cusack Park on Wednesday July 13th. We have some young hurlers betwixt and between the senior and U-21 panels and they should be to the fore in this Munster final.

Just one week later, back in Cusack Park we have our U-21s to look forward to. A home semi-final with Limerick, if won, will mean a final perhaps against the mighty Tipp back in the Park on August 3rd. So plenty of hurling to look forward to.

The dust has settled now on last Saturday night in Salthill. It was a desperately disappointing performance from literally the word go – but the panic button should not be hit. The bigger picture, as always, is the one that matters most.

Clare supporters only want to talk about whether ‘The Sparrow’ stays or goes this week. That’s not the conversation we should be having. That’s not the bigger picture. How many of the future stars of Clare hurling are now blooded? How many can we say with confidence, are senior intercounty hurlers, up to the task? That’s the conversation we need to hear more of.

My sixpence worth is that we are in a far better place than we think we are. We fell away against Galway and it was entirely predictable for a squad as light as this, for a squad as young as this. Tipperary was our game and we put everything into that – there was very little left for the likes of a fired up Galway, a stiff breeze and a sun at their backs in Pearse Stadium. It was never going to happen for us in 2011.

Facing into 2012 we can look to Conor McGrath, Cian Dillon, Conor Cooney, Nicky O’Connell, Patrick O’Connor, John Conlon and a rejuvenated Darach Honan to be nailed on starters, not rookies anymore, but fellas who know what it’s about. That’s half our team.

That’s the quality we have coming through and there’ll be more with that from Sunday in Pairc Ui Chaoimh and from our U-21s in Cusack Park, not to mention the odd intermediate or two.

Those instant gratification merchants that expect a Munster championship or All-Ireland every year need to cop on. That’s not how counties like Clare win things. We build, we do it right and we have patience. We have no choice. We’re not Cork, Tipp or Kilkenny and we don’t arrive overnight with a team. Bigger picture.

We’ve taken beatings before and we’ve come back stronger. Those with short memories can look to the Munster finals of 1993 and 1994. Those will longer will think of the National League Final replay of 1976, or the Munster final of 1974. No matter, the beatings hurt every time, but the spirit was never quenched. Dalo, Jamesie, Seanie, Sparrow, Lohan? Look what patience and focus on the bigger picture garnered for the county when those boys and their like were persevered with after ‘93 and ‘94. It will be the same with this bunch. So, a little perspective. It wasn’t the end of the world.

We’ll be up there again, like the class of ’95-’98. Within three years we will be contesting Munster SHC finals. A chunk of the team that played last Saturday night will be winning those coveted pieces of gold. The hurling fraternity knows Clare are coming. A little education along the way won’t hurt us.

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‘We’ve learnt from Waterford’s minor set-up’ – Donal Moloney

WHEN CLARE and Waterford match up for the fifth time in just over two years on Sunday, it is in the knowledge that Clare got a major helping hand from their opponents in getting to where they are today.

Following their crushing 3-09 to 0-12 defeat to the Deise in the semifinal two years ago, Donal Moloney and Gerry O’Connor dabbled with introspection before looking to their conquerors for assistance in forging a new look Clare minor set-up.

“We’ve huge admiration for Waterford”, admitted joint-manager Donal Moloney, “and two years ago when we decided that we needed to change our approach and change our tack in terms of how we actually did things, the first county we called was Waterford because the lesson they gave us two years ago in June in Cusack Park was the catalyst to say ‘things have got to change.’

“Waterford were the first county we engaged with because the level of preparation that they were doing all the way through their underage squads was way beyond anything any other county was doing and it’s still going on and they’re still moving it on.

“We still look back on the team of two years ago with a tinge of disappointment that we didn’t make more of that team and get to the final as a minimum. But since then we’ve brought in people who have had a huge influence in terms of how we prepare and that has been hugely, hugely important to sustain what we are trying to do. People like Jimmy Browne, Paul [Kinnerk], Diarmuid Horgan and another new addition this year, Joe McGinley. They have been hugely important because they have brought a lot of technical expertise.

“The game has moved on so much. We found out two years ago that we were way behind so with these guys, we have now got a level of knowledge with regards to how to train and how to prepare. Having those guys around this year was a huge help because all we had to do was lay out the same template, adjust a few things and away we go again. And the key lesson here for us is that having a player come in at 16 or 17, you can actually transform him in 17 or 18 months into an inter-county hurler if they have the basic skills and are willing to put in the work.”

Clare haven’t looked back since their quarter-final defeat to the same opposition in Walsh Park last year, usurping Waterford’s provincial throne by means of the backdoor route and there was an air of inevitability as the sides came through their respective semi-final clashes almost a fortnight ago to contest their second successive provincial decider. And for one, Moloney is bracing himself for another titantic struggle against undoubtedly their biggest rivals.

“We were down in Walsh Park last week watching them and the one feature that struck us about Waterford was that they brought on about six substitutes in the course of the game and everyone of them seemed to have an equivalent level of skill, an equivalent level of athleticism and the team never got weakened. It was actually strengthened if anything and I don’t know of many counties who can actually do that and that was the one thing that we really came home with.

“We are going to have a ferocious battle against them. They are going to be coming looking for revenge for last year; there is a bit of rivalry building up as well having met five times in two years and they are an extremely skilful outfit.

“They are also a lot better than Tipperary and people need to adjust and acknowledge that because that is the way hurling has gone in Munster. It’s Waterford and Clare who have been top of the pile for the last two or three years while Tipp and Cork have been following after that. So we know we are really facing a massive challenge against these guys but If we play to our potential, I think we’ll get there.”