Celebrations went on late into the night : Fans tell their stories of Ireland v Scotland in the Six Nations
Memorable trips to Edinburgh feature heavily in this week’s instalment of our ‘Hear The Roar’ series with William Hill. By William Hill Wednesday 10 Mar 2021, 9:14 AM Mar 10th 2021, 9:14 AM 2,845 Views 0 Comments
IRELAND ARE AWAY to Scotland this Sunday in a fixture that usually brings a party atmosphere and camaraderie between both sets of fans.
This year, however, it will be played in front of empty stands at Murrayfield.
In the penultimate instalment of The42′s ‘Hear The Roar’ series with William Hill our Six Nations coverage sponsor Ireland supporters remember previous outings with our Celtic cousins.
The long-missing nephew of a deceased Enniscorthy farmer was formally declared dead by Judge Alice Doyle at Wexford Circuit Court.
With his official passing, Herbert Latta lost out on inheriting at least €200,000 from the estate of his uncle, Francis.
The case was raised by Herbert s cousin, Charles Latta, who resides in the Ballycarney area.
Francis Latta died in 1980 but his estate, which included extensive farmland, was not divided up until after the passing of his wife Connie 38 years later.
Mrs Latta died in 2018, at which point the terms of her husband s will came into play, with two nephews and four nieces in line to a share of at least €1.2 million.
Over 600 were expected to attend and that number appeared to hold true as an impassioned band of bikers braved the rain to complete three 10-mile laps around the USAF communications station under an enthusiastic escort from Northamptonshire Police motorcycle division.
Local MP Andrea Leadsom spoke to the press alongside family representative Radd Seiger before the ride rolled out. I never had the pleasure of meeting him myself, but I can see how very loved Harry Dunn was, said Leadsom. Something terrible happened and the person who caused Harry’s death has walked away with the help and support of the United States government.
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The Rutnam saga has been settled, but there needs to be a lot of work to repair government actions of the past year
Boris Johnson shaking hands with cabinet secretary Mark Sedwill, who stepped down in September 2020. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA
Boris Johnson shaking hands with cabinet secretary Mark Sedwill, who stepped down in September 2020. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA
Tue 9 Mar 2021 08.13 EST
Last modified on Tue 9 Mar 2021 08.15 EST
The year-long Philip Rutnam saga, which started with his dramatic accusations about the home secretary’s bullying and briefing, fizzled out last week with the news that the two sides had agreed a settlement. A big cash sum, but no formal admission of liability from the Home Office. No comment from Priti Patel’s former permanent secretary.
The former top diplomat at the Foreign Office has warned it is “vital” for Britain’s reputation that the government ensure a contentious multibillion-pound cut to the overseas aid budget remains a temporary measure. In his first public remarks on the issue since leaving his role as permanent secretary, Sir Simon McDonald said the timing of the spending reduction “could not have been worse”, coming just months after the Department for.