Monthly Archives: July 2011

Model Isabelle Traber wears a Rachel Zoe tux
Jude Nabney wears a Victoria Beckham trapeze magenta dress
Isabelle wears a Tom ford Black Velvet shift dress
Jude wears a Roksanda Illincic Roksa dress.
Isabelle wears an Alexander McQueen full length red jersey gown.
Jude (left) wears a Dolce and Gabbana full length black sequined gown and Isabelle wears a Stella McCartney black fitted dress with spotted lace shoulder.

Should you happen to be a woman, shop in BTs and can afford to be the first person in Ireland to wear a Victoria Beckham blankie ‘trapeze magenta dress’.

Autumn/Winter 2011. Taken this afternoon.

(Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland)

Come alongside Bishop John Magee as he shares his life with the last three popes.He relates his fascinating and heartwarming experiences as the private secretary to Pope Paul VI, Pope John Paul I, and Pope John Paul II.Bishop Magee gives us a rare view into their lives and endearing personalities, revealing the fidelity, humility, and humanity of the men to whom Christ entrusted the Keys of St. Peter.

The Untold Story Of The Last Three Popes, Bishop John Magee (Amazon)

Customers who liked this will hate this:

Andrew Madden, of One In Four, with the Cloyne Report this afternoon at the Alexander Hotel, Dublin.

Cloyne Report: Who Is John Magee (BBC)

(Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland)

* The Vatican was “entirely unhelpful” to any bishop who wanted to implement procedures for dealing with allegations of child sexual abuse in the Irish church.

* The response of the Diocese of Cloyne was “inadequate and inappropriate”.

* Primary responsibility for the failure to implement agreed child sexual abuse procedures lies with then-bishop of Cloyne John Magee.

* Bishop Magee (above with Pope Benedict) “took little or no active interest” in the management of clerical child sexual abuse cases until 2008, 12 years after the framework document on child sexual abuse was agreed by the Irish Bishops’ Conference.

* That some child sexual abuse allegations were not reported to gardaí was the diocese’s “greatest failure”.

* There were 15 cases between 1996 and 2005 which “very clearly” should have been reported by the diocese, of which nine were not.

More findings here

Bishop Magee ‘Deliberately’ Misled Inquiry (RTE)