Category Archives: Misc

Kevin writes:

The Galway City Council u-turn on the Salthill cycle lane (background here) calls to mind another Salthill related City Council u-turn (background here, here and here) which provoked the poem below.

Newly Elected Face Makes Maiden Speech

I am an idea someone else had
when they weren’t thinking;
a fat bouquet from my mother
who always knew it would come
to something like this;
a ventriloquist’s dummy
that hasn’t yet said anything.

I have nothing against homosexuals,
but am not in favour of them either.
Now you’ve told me Ché Guevara
was a Communist and Adolf Eichmann
a very bad man, I’ll bear those facts
in mind, when talking about septic tanks,
a subject on which I’ve loads to contribute.
I’m against nuclear war and the Spanish
Inquisition, except when they actually happen.

Kevin Higgins

From The Ghost In The Lobby (Salmon Poetry, 2014)

Image: Galway City Coiuncil

Previously: War Path

Glug*.

There’s only one thing for it.

Taller buildings on stilts.

* might not actually happen

Slightly Bemused writes:

They say a picture paints a thousand words. Well, if photographs count, they certainly spawn a thousand words.

I have been gradually cleaning out the house and getting rid of the rubbish, one box at a time. In one cupboard in my back bedroom, I made a renewed acquaintance with an old friend of my childhood – the kitchen radio (above). I shared a photo with the family group in case anyone wanted it, and it sparked a tide of memories. Some from before I was born, some I recall vividly.

An old valve set, it sat on top of the fridge in our house in Dublin, then later in the new house in the town where I still live in Kildare. I understand it sat in my Dad’s house in Cork when he was a lad growing up, but I am not sure if it sat atop his fridge, though. That lore has not been shared.

In the morning it was the start of the wake up ritual before school, as my Dad would get up with his trusty transistor radio (my brother calls it his ‘shaving radio’, although it doubled as the car radio on the dashboard of the whenever Dad drove) tuned to Radio Éireann, as the rousing tones of O’Donnell Abú signalled the start of a new day.

Then the sober tones of Charles Mitchel or Don Cockburn would read out the tidings of the hours since Closedown, and into morning programming. I forget what was that first programme, but it was replaced by Morning Ireland in later years.

As the radio signalled that Dad now had full control of the bathroom (separate in the early house from the toilet) , a waft of ciggy smoke before the door opened and the maternal alarm clock got into full swing. Time to get up, get dressed, and down for breakfast, where the kitchen radio was now in full voice, and the valves nicely warmed up.

After breakfast, it was up to the now vacant bathroom to wash faces (including behind the ears and the back of the neck) as teeth. My toothbrush of the time was a translucent purple handled Colgate model. No idea why I remember that.

Then we moved, but little had changed. Still only one bathroom, but a separate loo outside for the desperate as Dad shaved. The kitchen radio was once again ensconced above our heads on the fridge, obtained from our aunt Nuala when she sold her house in Dublin and moved to live with her husband in Connemara. And the continuity announcer effectively changed channels as the programming moved from news (ugh) to light entertainment (phew).

Mitchel and Cockburn gave way, and O’Donnell Abú now signals the transition from nighttime programming to the day schedule for Rising Time and Morning Ireland, but I do not recall who at the time. Somewhere in my early secondary school days, Anne Doyle‘s dulcet tones started to grace the airwaves, and Éileen Dunne joined soon after, and the male-dominated programming gained more female representation.

So off to school in the new house in particular, as the first notes of The Gay Byrne Hour started. School was close enough to come home for lunch. Greeted by the tail end of the One O’Clock News, we ate our lunch to the dramatic events of Harbour Hotel.

It was to these stories I learned to make French Toast, Sliced Bread Pizza and quick spaghetti, cooking up just the packet of sauce to go with the pasta. We knew it was Summer when Mum made egg spread to have with slices of tomato between two fresh slices of Brennan’s bread, and listened to the seaside shenanigans.

The old radio, which worked the last time it was plugged in, had this ‘magic eye’ that showed two arcs on either side, with the same centre point. As you tuned in, the arcs got bigger, the gaps between them lessened, until at last they met, and you were properly tuned on station. I remember wondering as a kid how it knew when you were tuned in, and would pull a chair over to the fridge to wiggle the tuning knob and watch the green eyed arcs vary.

Before we moved, I recall that my eldest brother found a damaged similar radio. The electronic chassis was intact. After checking it out, he used our working one as a model, bought the new valves, made up a new wooden casing, and sold it.

He was, and still is, extremely gifted with anything electronic. Recently his latest chip design was taken up for upcoming deep space explorers. From repairing a valve radio, to making an oscilloscope from an old broken valve TV set (because Dad would not buy him a real one), to making chips to explore the universe! I just might be able to tune your new TV, but only if it has auto mode :-)

But the magic eye will work no more. The set only received AM signals, and when the final move was made to FM, the old kitchen radio was put aside, and replaced by a newer transistor radio. I don’t know where it travelled over the years, but it was a surprise to find it at the back of my cupboard.

So after offering the radio around, and getting a no from every one, I donated it to our local drama group. They were delighted as they often do shows set in the 30s/40s/50s, and the radio would fit any of those periods.

I was told, also, that many drama groups share props, so it is my hope that our kitchen radio, which was the background to my childhood, will entertain many a house across the country for years to come.

The magic eye may no longer work, but the magic is still there.

Slightly Bemuseds Column appears here every Wednesday

Pic by Slightly

This morning.

A man in Scotland who said he was sexually abused as a boy by Christian Brothers has been awarded almost £1.4 million in damages – said to be a record sum for a victim in the UK.

Via The Herald (Scotland):

The man, identified as AB, who has not been named for legal reasons, said he was repeatedly sexually assaulted by Brothers Ryan, Farrell and Kelly while attending St Ninian’s School in Falkland, Fife, about 40 years ago.

The claimant, now 54, said his brother, who is 14 months older than him, also claimed to have been sexually abused by the same men at a similar time without him knowing.

The Christian Brothers, a religious sect that ran the school, tried to have the legal case thrown out but, in a written judgement released on February 4, a sheriff dismissed the attempt and ordered them to pay just short of £1.4 million in damages to AB.

Speaking after the ruling, AB said he hopes the landmark decision will inspire other abuse victims to fight for justice.

He said: “Finally, after nearly 40 years, I’ve been acknowledged and those responsible can be exposed.

St Ninian’s School in Falkland, Fife: Former pupil paid £1.4m damagaes over monk abuse (Herald Scotland)

Previously: Christian Brother Stories

Alamy

Thanks Breeda

Why the long faces?

This morning.

Dublin 2.

Wage-stuffed HSE CEO Paul Reid and salary-happy Secretary General at the Department of Health Robert Watt (above) arrive at Kildare House before a meeting with the Joint Committee on Health to discuss the oversight of Slaintecare following the publication yesterday by the Minister for Health, Stephen Donnelly the ‘Sláintecare Implementation Strategy and Action Plan Progress Report 2021’.

Minister for Health publishes Sláintecare Progress Report 2021 (Gov.ie)

RollingNews

This morning.

You think it’s all over?

Via The Irish Times:

With 95 per cent of adults in Ireland having received two Covid-19 vaccine doses, and more than two-thirds having had a booster, the flow of people passing through the country’s vaccination centres has slowed to a trickle. A system that had built up enough capacity to provide more than 500,000 jabs in one week in December is now called on to administer just a few thousand every week.

The success of that programme, which gave Ireland one of the world’s highest vaccination rates, has saved many lives, spared countless others from serious illness and was a key factor in enabling the Government to lift most public health restrictions last month.

Yet, at home and abroad, it is vital that the focus remain on vaccines. The potential for the emergence of new Covid variants and the likelihood that further boosters may be required means that states must maintain stocks and rollout infrastructure for rapid use.

Efforts to reach communities that have so far resisted vaccination must continue, and the misinformation spread by Covid deniers and conspiracy theorists must be fought with facts, reassurance and scientific rigour.

Seem to be taking it well.

Maintaining Momentum (Irish Times)

Rollingnews

Last night/this morning.

No wait, come back.

What about the war?

FIGHT!

Movement of Russian forces alone does not confirm withdrawal, NATO says (Reuters)