DublinGazette OCTOBER 11-17, 2018
DUBLINMAGAZINE: Autumn’s finally here and making its mark – and you won’t want to ‘leaf’ our great magazine section! PAGE 13
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THE LATEST NEWS & SPORT FROM THE DUBLIN CITY COUNCIL AREA
Battle plans METROLINK plans mean the end of the College Gate apartments at Townsend Street – but “Not so fast” say residents and locals, who are determined to save their homes and have vowed to stop the deal from claiming the property. SEE PAGE 2
SPORT
HURLING: Vincent’s lose out in tight battle as Ballyboden and Kilmacud Crokes advance to Senior Hurling Final after a Parnell Park cracker. SEE P39
A GLOVE-LY BUNCH
THE Lord Mayor Nial Ring had a knockout time at the launch of Smithfield Box Fest 2018 at DCC’s Aughrim St Sports Centre, where he met world silver medallist Kellie Harrington, Kirill Afanasev and Ciara Walsh, Smithfield Boxing Club. Picture: Kevin McFeely
property
WE LOOK AT SOME PRIME HOMES AND PROPERTIES ACROSS THE CITY P24-25
City stops as Emma makes final journey RACHEL D’ARCY
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Emma Mhic Mhathuna
A FUNERAL mass for Emma Mhic Mhathuna, a high-profile figure in the Cervical Check controversy, was held in St Mary’s Pro Cathedral in Dublin city centre yesterday. After the mass, the cortege passed by Dail Eireann and the Department
of Health as a final farewell. It also passed by Aras an Uachtarain prior to her burial in Kildare. An Taoiseach Leo Varadkar requested that flags outside Government Buildings be flown at halfmast in Emma’s honour, and to mark respect for all those affected by the scandal. It was the second mass for the
mother of five, following an Irishlanguage funeral mass that was held near her home in West Kerry on Tuesday. Emma passed away last Sunday, five months after being told her cervical cancer was terminal. She was 37 years old. Emma is survived by her five children: Natasha, Seamus, Mario, Oisin and Donnacha.
Rambling Scotland with his microwave WE ALL love our microwaves – but one man found an unusual use for one: helping a sick teenager by lugging his beloved kitchen appliance around the Scottish Highlands. Diarmuid Cleary, AKA ‘the Microwave Express’, took to the high road to help fundraise for Robyn Smyth, to help her seek medical treatment in Michigan. Boiling some trusty beans was out of the question, but Diarmuid’s plan certainly helped to cook up some cash for Robyn’s cause, with thousands of euro already in the bank from his unusual fundraiser for the brave girl.
SEE PAGE 3