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NUI Galway Sell It’s Wares In Thurles

S. Hennessey, Cloughjordan,with B. Seoige, Marketing Officer at NUI Galway

Secondary school students interested in attending NUI Galway are invited to an information evening in Thurles Co Tipperary on Thursday, 14 April.

Parents and guardians are also particularly welcome to the event which runs from 7.00 to 9.00pm in the Anner Hotel, Thurles.

The evening will begin with short talks about NUI Galway and some of the 60 courses it currently offers students. Afterward, current students and NUI Galway staff will be on hand at information stands to answer any individual questions visitors may need to have further clarified.

Seamus Hennessy, from Cloughjordan, is currently studying Commerce with Accounting at NUI Galway and will be there on the night to answer some of your questions.

Air France Plane Wreckage Located

Dr Aisling Butler

French investigators, aboard the expedition ship Alucia, have located the bodies of some of the passengers who perished when an Air France plane crashed off Brazil in 2009 and these bodies and wreckage will be brought to the surface in the next few weeks.

Air France flight 447, an Airbus 330-203 plane, plunged into the ocean en route to Paris from Rio de Janeiro in June 2009.

All 228 passengers and crew on board died, after the flight hit severe stormy weather and vanished.

Three Irish women were on board the ill fated flight that day, including  26 year old Roscrea, Co Tipperary native and  Trinity College graduate Dr Aisling Butler. Dr Butler had also been a much loved and a star pupil at the Ursuline Secondary School here in Thurles, and all our thoughts and prayers are with Aisling’s parents, John and Evelyn and her sister Lorna, at this difficult time.

The body of 27 year old Dr Jane Deasy, from Rathgar in Dublin, was recovered during the initial search operation. The body of  Dr Eithne Walls, from Ballygowan, Co Down, has also not yet been found.

Air France flight 447 wreckage

French Environment Minister, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, told a news conference that “bodies had been found and they will be recovered and identified.

Transport Minister Thierry Mariani said the ‘black box‘ flight recorders has not yet been located.

BEA chief Jean-Paul Troadec has said “we can only be happy that two years after the event there is now the hope we can find an explanation of what happened.

This the fourth search attempted since the crash, which is being carried out using unmanned submarines. Searchers can not yet quantify the number of bodies captured on photographs by these unmanned submarines, but families will be informed of the findings at a meeting at the end of this week and no further details would be made available to the public before then.

The discovery of chunks of the Air France wreckage in a vast search radius of some 10,000 square kilometres, has raised hopes that the aircraft’s black boxes might also be located during this search.

Air France and Airbus are financing the estimated €8.7m cost of the new search.

The plane disappeared after hitting stormy weather over the Atlantic a few hours into the flight and speculation about what caused the accident has, up until now, focused mainly on the possible icing up of the aircraft’s speed sensors.

Last month a French judge filed preliminary manslaughter charges against Air France and the plane’s manufacturer, Airbus.

South Tipperary General Hospital Ban Visitors

In the interests of patient care and as a precaution, a ban on visitors is in place at South Tipperary General Hospital in Clonmel, in a bid to curb 16 suspected cases of the Winter Vomiting Bug.

All infection control precautions are in place. Relatives of patients are encouraged to use mobile phones for contact as an alternative to visiting (some exceptions may be made, e.g. in respect of those critically ill or for partners re. maternity and parents re. paediatrics).

South Tipp General Hospital

The ongoing situation is being monitored by the management and infection control team on a daily basis. The hospital regrets this inconvenience but it is necessary at this time.

South Tipperary General Hospital General Manager Breda Kavanagh said a range of infection control measures have been put in place to stop the spread of the highly contagious bug.

She urged the public to co-operate with the visitor ban and requested relatives of critically ill patients to telephone the relevant ward via the hospital switchboard number (052) 77197) before visiting loved ones.

The bug is currently widespread in the community and people may unknowingly bring it into the hospital when visiting sick relatives or friends. An appeal to the public to fully co-operate with the restrictions, also advises anyone affected by vomiting and/or diarrhoea, or anyone who has been in contact with persons with these symptoms not to visit the hospital until they have been symptom free for 72 hours.

According to the HSE, the virus is spread by direct contact with vomit or diarrhoea; from someone who is ill, especially if personal hygiene is not good; from the air around someone who has just vomited and from contaminated food.

People affected by the virus should drink plenty of fluids, maintain strict hygiene and because of its highly contagious nature, avoid visiting hospitals or nursing homes.

If symptoms persist, the HSE advises people to contact their GP by telephone and advise him/her of your condition before going to the surgery so as to limit the spread of the virus.

Family Game Night 3 Computer Game Winner

Winner Miss Evelyn Brereton

Our March EA PS3 free computer game Family Game Night 3 sponsored by Europe’s fastest growing Irish and Thurles Gaming website – The Gaming Liberty. com has been won by Miss Evelyn Brereton, Loughmore, Co.Tipperary who is branch manager at Pat Hickey Tiles, 1 Ikerrin Road, Thurles, Co. Tipperary. (Tel: 0504 28601).

Miss Brereton, we suspect, spent this weekend spinning the wheel of fate in the GAME OF LIFE, or finding out “whodunit” in CLUE.

Either way congratulations to Evelyn on her win.

Over the coming months we will have many other free competitions, so keep us checked out or better still, subscribe to Daily News To Your Inbox , by placing your Email address in the appropriate box, on right sidebar of our home page and thus ensure you receive our news, by mail, on a daily basis.

Vandals Target Train Signalling Equipment

Irish Rail services between Heuston Dublin, Cork, Kerry and Limerick train stations are now operating almost as normal, following only minor delays, after signalling equipment was targeted by mindless vandalism overnight.

Irish Rail

There were delays of up to 45 minutes on these routes earlier, after vandals had caused a signaling fault at the Limerick and Thurles junction.

Iarnród Éireann spokeswoman, Jane Cregan stated that engineers were working to immediately rectify the situation.

Irish Rail are also warning of possible delays to Cork/Limerick/Tralee services from Monday 4th – Monday 11th April, due to essential alterations to Emly Level Crossing in the Limerick Junction/Charleville section of the network.

Iarnród Éireann regret any inconvenience this may cause, but warn that services may be delayed by 10 – 15 minutes.