Incorrectly declared milk in specific batches of Lidl Red Hen Tempura 4 Chicken Steaks.
Food Safety Authority of IrelandAlert SummarydatedFriday, August 1st, 2025,
Allergy Alert Notification: 2025.A28. Allergen: Milk. Product Identification: Red Hen Tempura 4 Chicken Steaks; pack size: 380g. Batch Code: Best before dates: 11/12/2026, 16/12/2026, 22/12/2026 and 30/12/2026. Country Of Origin: Poland.
Message: Milk is not emphasised in the ingredients list of the above batches of Red Hen Tempura 4 Chicken Steaks. This may make the batches unsafe for consumers who are allergic to or intolerant of milk and therefore, these consumers should not eat the implicated batches. The affected batches are being recalled from Lidl stores.
Fund to support the integration and employment of people, who have moved here as migrants, announced.
Up to €2.7 million available under the Employment, Inclusion, Skills and Training (EIST) Programme.
Fund is open to non-government and community organisations providing projects to increase the employability of people who moved here as migrants.
Fund helps people overcome barriers to employment including language difficulties, lack of training or social exclusion.
The Irish government yesterday announced funding of up to €2.7 million for projects that aim to increase the integration and employability of people who have moved here as migrants. Funding is being made available under the Integration and Employment of Migrants action of the Employment, Inclusion, Skills and Training (EIST) Programme 2021-2027.
The Programme is jointly funded by the European Union, through the European Social Fund Plus (ESF+), and the Government of Ireland.
Organisations can apply for funding for projects supporting:
EEA Nationals who are resident in Ireland;
Third Country Nationals with permission to enter employment in Ireland, including people who are Beneficiaries of Temporary Protection fleeing the war in Ukraine.
The funding will support a small number of significant projects and €200,000 is the minimum grant that can be applied for. All applications must be submitted by email to iem@justice.ie. Applications for funding will remain open until noon on Thursday September 11th, 2025.
Applications will be assessed according to the following criteria:
Strength of proposal;
Strategic fit and achieving the goals of the Integration and Employment of Migrants activity of the Employment, Inclusion, Skills and Training (EIST) Programme 2021-2027;
Capacity of applicant organisation to deliver work programme;
Value for money.
Previous successful projects. In Tipperary, Limerick, Clare, Galway, Westmeath, Longford and Laois, DORAS’ – “Gateway to Employment for Third Country Nationals” project, works with migrants and employers to overcome some of the most significant barriers to employment faced by migrants in Ireland including language barriers, lack of local work experience and limited social networks.
Further information and the application form are available online at gov.ie
Pre-deceased by his parents James and Mary, his brother John Joe and sister May; Mr Clancy passed away peacefully while in the care of staff at Tipperary University Hospital, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary. (Medical 2), surrounded by his loving family.
His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving and heartbroken wife Martina, sons James and Denis, James’s partner Emma, his brothers Lory and Stephen, brother-in-law and sisters-in-law, nieces, nephews, extended relatives, neighbours and many friends.
Requiescat in Pace.
Funeral Arrangements.
The earthly remains of Mr Clancy will repose at O’Connell’s Funeral Home Killenaule, Thurles, (Eircode E41 HH66) on tomorrow afternoon Saturday, August 2nd, from 4:00pm until 7:30pm, before being received into the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Drangan, Thurles, (Eircode E41 YD73) at 8:15pm same evening. Requiem Mass for Mr Clancy will be offered on Sunday morning, August 3rd, at 11:00am, followed by interment in the adjoining graveyard.
The extended Clancy family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
Note Please: House strictly private. Family flowers only. Donations in lieu, if desired, to Bru Columbanus in memory of Mr Paddy Clancy.
The first recorded race meeting at Thurles took place in 1732 and it has been in the hands of three generations of the Molony family since the early 1900s..
Thurles Race Course.
The Press Release states:
The end of an era for Thurles Racecourse, Thurles Racecourse, Ireland’s only privately owned racecourse, has closed with immediate effect. Today, (Friday 01 August) Mrs Riona Molony officially announced the family’s decision to retire from racing at the Tipperary track.
“An iconic venue steeped in history and tradition; Thurles Racecourse has long been a cornerstone of National Hunt Racing in Ireland. The first ever recorded race-meeting at Thurles took place in 1732 and it has been in the hands of the Molony family since the early 1900’s. Riona’s late husband Pierce took over from his father Doctor Paddy Molony in 1974, and together with their family they have worked hard at the business for the last 50 years.
As the Molony family prepare to embark on their next chapter, Riona expressed sincere gratitude for the support of their “extended racecourse family”; the staff, sponsors, racing community, local businesses, and the many racegoers who have contributed to the rich legacy of Thurles Racecourse.
Riona commented “It has been an honour and a privilege for our family to have run Thurles Racecourse, and I am officially announcing our retirement today. We are very proud of the immense contribution our family has made to racing and we are most grateful to our extended racecourse family, our dedicated staff, generous sponsors, loyal patrons and the wider racing community for all your support. Horse-racing is part of the fabric of our family, and we have been very fortunate to have made so many great friends within the industry over the years. My family and I look forward to going racing with you again, as spectators.”
She continued, “Since my beloved husband Pierce passed away in 2015, with the help of our four daughters Patricia, Helen, Ann Marie and Kate and our wonderful staff, we’ve managed to keep the show on the road and I know he would be very proud of us for that. The girls all have their own families, careers and lives to live. Ever increasing industry demands and the cost of doing business has also been a major factor.”
Although, Thurles Racecourse is fully licenced to race until December 31st and has 11 prominent fixtures in the 2025/26 racing calendar, the Molony Family will not race again. Riona commented, “We’re going to enjoy this time together and relax now the decision is made and the news is out before we consider our options.”
The racecourse hit the headlines earlier this year when, sadly, 24 year old Irish jockey Mr Michael O’Sullivan, died from catastrophic head injuries sustained in a fall during a race meeting at the venue.
So, what now for Thurles Racecourse, will same now be sold as a building site or will Horse Racing Ireland step in to restore harmony and continue with long held relationships?
Thurles supporters of Daniel O’Connell used their bare hands to grab food at subscription dinner.
On March 25th, 1925, the Scottish inventor John Logie Baird gave the first public demonstration of televised silhouette images, shown in motion at Selfridges department store in London.
But now a new stamp launched by An Post yesterday, July 30th, appears to deny that above statement. The background of this new stamp appears to show a television aerial on the chimney of a Dublin house, behind the nationalist leader Daniel O’Connell; latter known as “The Liberator”, (1775-1847). Daniel O’Connell, is correctly acknowledged as the political leader of Ireland’s Roman Catholic majority, during the first half of the 19th century.
One stamp, of two launched yesterday, costing €1.65 each, shows O’Connell travelling through our capital city, seated on a rather elaborate golden chariot/sled, possibly depicting his release from Richmond Prison in 1844. He had been released following a three months jail sentence, having proposed a monster meeting in Clontarf, Dublin, latter which had been declared illegal. The proposed meeting, due on the 8th of October, was declared illegal by the then government and banned. O’Connell was afraid there would be violence, if the meeting went ahead so he cancelled it. This disappointed many of his following resulting in a decline in O’Connell’s popularity.
The background to the left-hand-side of one of these two new stamps, directly behind O’Connell, shows the front of the General Post Office, (O’Connell Street, Dublin), while the background on the right-hand-side (See image framed in red hereunder) depicts a building with a chimney which displays an old style television aerial.
One of the newly launched Daniel O’Connell commemorativestamps.
Television was not imported into Ireland until 1949, some 104 years after the image and times depicted on the stamp.
We understand that the stamps were developed by the Irish designer/artist Mr David Rooney, without the use of AI during the stamps design.
Some 12 years previous, in 2013, the Central Bank of Ireland issued a silver €10.00 commemorative coin in honour of James Joyce, latter which misquoted a famous line from “Ulysses”, despite being warned on two occasions by the Department of Finance over difficulties with design.
Ireland’s Central Bank later stated, after 10,000 coins were minted and launched, that the error was “an artistic representation of the author and text and not intended as a literal representation”. The author himself had written: “Signatures of all things I am here to read.”. The Central Bank included a “that” in its final sentence, with their coin design reading: “Signatures of all things that I am here to read”, possibly if the truth was know to avoid copyright.
But down here in Tipperary, “The Liberator” was well known and much loved, both prior to and after his death on May 15th 1847 in Genoa, Italy.
He first came to Thurles as a guest of Mr Nicholas V. Maher M.P. in 1829, attending at Maher’s home (Today Thurles Golf Club), for a banquet given in his honour. He also attended at Stephen Smee’s Corn-store, on lower Kickham Street, (In front of the present Pallottine College) to attend a subscription dinner. The large attendance of both agricultural labourers and small landowning farmers, who came to show support, was afterwards seen as an embarrassment by O’Connell, as those Thurles people in attendance were seen to behave in somewhat of a voracious and ravenous fashion, used their bare hands to grab food from the available containers.
A Memorial plaque (pictured above) in the Pallottine College grounds records this latter event.
It reads: “This stone marks the location of Stephen Smee’s Corn-store in which, according to legend, a subscription dinner was given to Daniel O’Connell during the Repeal Movement. The Old Pallottine College, known as “Jerusalem” (later) stood here from April 1911 to July 1984.”
The Repeal Movement/Association was a mass Irish political movement set up by the same Daniel O’Connell in 1830, to campaign for a repeal of the Acts of Union of 1800, between Great Britain and Ireland. This Association’s aim was to revert Ireland to the fully devolved government which had briefly been achieved by Henry Grattan and his patriots, in the 1780s.
Perhaps local councillors and their officials, who have successfully destroyed most of the rich history of Thurles, might contact The Pallottine College Phone: 0504 21202, E mail: pallottinefathers@gmail.com and arrange to have this plaque professionally cleaned, to honour the 250th year of O’Connell’s birth.
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