Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Enda Cunningham, Darragh Clifford, Colin McGann, Neil Henderson, Aidan Ellis, Barry Duggan, Mike Hogan 4FM and Joe Donnelly
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Enda Cunningham, Darragh Clifford, Colin McGann, Neil Henderson, Aidan Ellis, Barry Duggan, Mike Hogan 4FM and Joe Donnelly
ECB financial supervisor job likely to go to a woman http://t.co/eTWtriJ2EX via @IrishTimesBiz
— The Irish Times (@IrishTimes) October 21, 2013
Good girl yourself, Daniele.
Previously: What About Teh Menz?
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Neil Henderson, Mike Hogan 4FM, Motley Magazine, Meliosa Fitzgibbon, Barry Duggan and Joe Donnelly
A unique 46-million-year-old mosquito fossil with a belly full of dried blood has been found in a Montana riverbed, according to United States researchers. “It is an extremely rare fossil, the only one of its kind in the world,” Dale Greenwalt, lead author of the study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), said.
Quick! Start up the centrifuge. Somebody fetch a frog.
Cutting-edge instruments detected the unmistakable traces of iron in her engorged abdomen, but just what creature that blood came from is a mystery since DNA cannot be extracted from a fossil that old.
Damn. So close.
Rare mosquito fossil found in Montana riverbed shows insect’s blood-filled belly (ABC News)
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Neil Henderson, Enda Cunningham, Iain Henderson, Barry Duggan, Meliosa Fitzgibbon and Joe Donnelly.
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Enda Cunningham, Iain Henderson, Nick Sutton, B Malone, Kevin Doyle, Mike Hogan 4FM, Meliosa Fitzgibbon and Joe Donnelly
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Nick Sutton, Iain Henderson, Aidan Ellis, Mike Hogan 4FM, Kevin Doyle, Meliosa Fitzgibbon and Joe Donnelly
(Enda Kenny and members of young Fine Gael in 2009 with passports and suitcases to “outline alternatives to the worrying trend in emigration”)
Via Welfare.ie:
Providing for an additional intake of 1,500 young people to the JobBridge national internship scheme.
In parallel, the Department is announcing changes to income support for young people.
With effect from January 2014, people without children aged 18-24 years in receipt of Jobseeker’s Allowance will receive €100 per week unless they are an existing claimant on a higher rate, in which case their rate will not change.
People without children aged 18-24 years in receipt of Jobseeker’s Allowance or Supplementary Welfare Allowance will receive €100 per week unless they are an existing claimant on a higher rate, in which case their rate will not change.
People without children aged 25 years in receipt of Jobseeker’s Allowance or Supplementary Welfare Allowance will receive €144 a week unless they are an existing claimant on a higher rate in which case their rate will not change.
This weekly €144 rate will increase to €188 when they reach 26 years of age. All jobseekers aged 18-25 years who participate in the Back to Education Allowance scheme will receive €160 per week.
Anon writes:
What I can see from these proposals is if you’re unemployed and aged between 18-26, you have a choice of emigrating (if you can afford to) or go to work on JobBridge for an extra €50 a week (for up to 18 months!).
As far as I know, JobBridge was intended for highly skilled jobs, how many of these positions will be like that?
If you’re aged between 18 and 26 and lose your job, how will you get to pay rent, pay bills and things like a car loan? Not everyone has the option of moving back to live with their parents.
Previously: It’ll Be Instagrand
(Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland)