Tensions with the U.S. will heighten under the new left-wing president.
Robert C. O’Brien
Source link
Tensions with the U.S. will heighten under the new left-wing president.
Robert C. O’Brien
Source link
A 25-year-old Dublin woman pleaded not guilty Tuesday to helping her boyfriend in the killing of the manager of San Francisco’s historic Condor Club outside his Santa Rosa home.
A Sonoma County judge allowed Asia Lozano Morton to await trial outside jail under strict supervision and set her next court date for Dec. 4, according to court records.
Morton must wear a GPS ankle monitor, surrender her passport and get permission from the court before leaving California. She’s also barred from owning guns or using drugs and from contacting her boyfriend, Richard Lund.
Tuesday’s hearing was Morton’s first court appearance since her arrest Friday in the Oct. 3 shooting death of Mark Calcagni.
Lund, 43, remains in custody without bail. Police say he’s accused of shooting Calcagni five times near Calcagni’s home on Brookwood Avenue before driving off in a Toyota RAV4.
Investigators believe the killing was planned and may be connected to Calcagni’s decision to fire Lund and Morton from their jobs at the Condor Club, a North Beach landmark known as the nation’s first topless bar.
Police arrested Lund at his home in Dublin. Morton was taken into custody at San Francisco International Airport when she returned from a trip to Spain.
Police said Calcagni had returned home from work around 5 a.m. when he was shot. A passerby found his body on a nearby sidewalk about 90 minutes later.
Colin Atagi
Source link
Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.
Re: “Trump must be a disrupter in the Middle East” (Page A7, Oct. 16):
The writer seems to think that Donald Trump isn’t up to the task of dealing with the problems in the Middle East because he went to business school, not the School of Foreign Service. Well, all of those people who went to the right schools don’t seem to have done very well in the Middle East.
On the face of it, things haven’t changed that much, but it’s apparent that significant change is now possible. In league with Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump has quieted the Iran threat for now. Trump then talked Netanyahu into stopping the firing of further missiles into Iran unnecessarily. Then Trump persuaded Netanyahu to publicly apologize to the leader of Qatar.
Any progress could disappear as quickly as another Oct. 7 event takes place, but at least this is a promising step in the right direction.
Daniel Mauthe
Livermore
How do we justify pulling support from life-saving measures in order to save billionaires money?
Certain members of Congress support our president in punishing poor people in our country and around the world, because they were not lucky enough to have a father who could give his son a real estate empire.
Donald Trump has taken SNAP (food vouchers) and Medicaid from working families, and also fired people who work for the government. He destroyed foreign aid that supports worthwhile programs like the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, which have saved over 70 million lives and billions of dollars of medical care since its inception.
I believe we should help the poor people in the U.S. and the world, not the richest people who could not have made their fortunes without healthy, educated workers who make a living wage.
Bill Nicholson
Martinez
How do you tell the difference between people acting like mature adults or like overgrown children? Mature adults accept that things don’t always go the way we want them to go and that other people have the right to have things the way they want them, at times, even when it’s not the way we like them.
When President Biden took office, there were Democrats who proclaimed that “the adults were back in charge,” but I see plenty of Democrats acting childishly these days, with Proposition 50 being a prime example. Most Democrats today seem to think that “preserving democracy” equals dominance by Democrats on all levels. (And, yes, many Republicans wrongly seek GOP dominance.) But either would actually be the destruction of democracy. And many seem to think that even the courts should always rule the way they think they should rule. Sorry, people, but that is childishness.
Christopher Andrus
Dublin
Climate change threatens our planet through extreme weather, melting ice and rising sea levels, all stemming from excessive greenhouse gases.
This environmental degradation endangers resources, with rising temperatures leading to droughts that harm crops and water supplies. NASA reports a 1-degree Celsius temperature increase since the late 19th century, causing significant impacts. Climate change also intensifies extreme weather events, displacing communities and causing economic damage.
The direct cause is burning fossil fuels, while deforestation and unsustainable farming practices indirectly contribute. A key solution involves investing in renewable energy, such as solar and wind power. Governments, businesses and individuals must act to promote clean energy policies and reduce carbon footprints.
I urge support for climate-change solutions to protect our planet for future generations.
Aidelen Lara
Hayward
Letters To The Editor
Source link
TCU Horned Frogs quarterback Josh Hoover (10) points against the Arizona State Sun Devils in the first half Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, at Mountain America Stadium in Tempe, Ariz.
Imagn Images
Neale Richmond, Ireland’s deputy minister for foreign affairs and trade, on Friday visited TCU’s campus, where he spoke to the economic, educational and cultural benefits of the Frogs’ game in Dublin next August.
Richmond was joined by former Aer Lingus CEO Stephen Kavanagh, and together they talked with TCU Chancellor Daniel Pullin and Athletic Director Mike Buddie about the reasons for exporting American football from Fort Worth to Dublin. The Horned Frogs will face the University of North Carolina.
“It’s much more than a game,” said Richmond. He described the annual Aer Lingus College Football Classic as a key to strengthening Irish-American relations.
For one, Richmond said the games are a tourism driver, attracting upward of 30,000 visitors to Dublin each August. And last year alone, he said, Ireland welcomed roughly 50,000 guests from Texas. Richmond hopes to see that number grow before, during and after TCU’s Dublin game, which is scheduled for Aug. 29.
Richmond added that Texas is Ireland’s largest U.S. trading partner, and he believes the game will serve to bring together more Texan and Irish businesses.
From Pullin’s perspective, competing in Dublin will help elevate TCU’s profile on the international stage. He pointed out that TCU already has a robust partnership with University College Dublin, and Pullin’s hope is that seeing the team play overseas will encourage more students to take advantage of study-abroad opportunities.
“I think there’s a high return on investment,” Pullin said of the payoff for moving a home game to Dublin.
Because it’s held during “week zero” of the season, when there are only a handful of other games, the Dublin matchup typically draws high ratings. Pullin feels those tuning in will not only view TCU as being competitive on the field, but from an academic standpoint as well.
“Our commitment to be driven as an academic enterprise should resonate all over the world,” he said.
When asked about American football’s place in Irish culture, Richmond said it’s popular and only becoming more so.
“It’s certainly bigger than you think,” he said of Irish fandom. “You find a lot of Irish people who, every weekend, will watch college football and the NFL. They are passionate about the teams they follow.”
Richmond said those traveling from Fort Worth next year to see TCU play will be met with a high level of excitement and energy, and he assured fans that Dublin is “ready for a purple invasion.”
Those planning to make the trip are encouraged to visit a new website, frogs2ireland.com, for ticket and travel package details.
This story was originally published October 3, 2025 at 6:04 PM.
Matthew Adams
Source link
Since the 1970s, the Tri-Valley region of the Bay Area has seen significant growth. In places like Dublin and San Ramon, the population has tripled. Meanwhile, other cities in the region have seen their populations double. The Tri-Valley is nestled into the Diablo Mountain Range and is made up of the cities of Pleasanton, Livermore, Dublin, San Ramon and Danville and the surrounding communities. “We saw a growth that changed the community,” said Alameda County District 1 Supervisor David Haubert. “We literally saw Dublin change.”Haubert and his family moved to Dublin 25 years ago. They raised their daughters there and were active in the community, including joining the school board. Haubert went on to become the mayor of Dublin before becoming a county supervisor. “When I left as mayor in the city of Dublin, I said, ‘We’ve seen a lot of great things to happen. But, I want you to know our best days are yet to come.’ Dublin has continued to progress, I say we have even greater days yet to come,” Haubert said. Some of the reasons people are choosing to move to the Tri-Valley include the open spaces, great school districts, and cheaper housing costs. Nearly 10,000 single-family homes have been built in the Tri-Valley in the last 15 years. Developer Trumark Homes currently has approvals for more than 1,500 homes in the Tri-Valley, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. One of Trumark’s biggest developments is Francis Ranch in Dublin. That development has 573 homes under construction. And as the population has grown, communities have seen their demographics shift as well. “Twenty years back, there were not that many people from the South Asian community,” said Prasad Ramakrishnan. Ramakrishnan moved with his family from Fremont to San Ramon two decades ago. He still commutes to Silicon Valley for work, but was drawn to the open spaces and parks in the Tri-Valley.Ramakrishnan is on the board of the Indian Community Center and says the diversity of San Ramon is one of the reasons he’s grown to love the city so much. According to census data, 23% of residents in San Ramon identify as Indian, including Ramakrishnan.”It doesn’t matter where you’re from. All of us are humans, let’s all get together. San Ramon creates that kind of an environment where you have people from different ethnic backgrounds kind of coming together,” Ramakrishnan said. “We celebrate Diwali, we celebrate Christmas, we celebrate the Muslim functions.”But of course, growth doesn’t come without growing pains. Many of those pains can be found along the highways. “680 is the only real highway from here to South Bay. These are called bedroom communities, and then they work in the South Bay. Giving them an easy way by which to get there would be a nice thing,” Ramakrishnan said. However, Haubert is betting on a future without so many people having to commute outside of the Tri-Valley for work. “I truly believe businesses will locate here,” Haubert said. “I understand that’s often the decision of the CEO. So a lot of CEOs live in Silicon Valley, but a lot of future CEOs live in the Tri-Valley. That’s my belief.”See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
Since the 1970s, the Tri-Valley region of the Bay Area has seen significant growth. In places like Dublin and San Ramon, the population has tripled. Meanwhile, other cities in the region have seen their populations double.
The Tri-Valley is nestled into the Diablo Mountain Range and is made up of the cities of Pleasanton, Livermore, Dublin, San Ramon and Danville and the surrounding communities.
“We saw a growth that changed the community,” said Alameda County District 1 Supervisor David Haubert. “We literally saw Dublin change.”
Haubert and his family moved to Dublin 25 years ago. They raised their daughters there and were active in the community, including joining the school board. Haubert went on to become the mayor of Dublin before becoming a county supervisor.
“When I left as mayor in the city of Dublin, I said, ‘We’ve seen a lot of great things to happen. But, I want you to know our best days are yet to come.’ Dublin has continued to progress, I say we have even greater days yet to come,” Haubert said.
Some of the reasons people are choosing to move to the Tri-Valley include the open spaces, great school districts, and cheaper housing costs. Nearly 10,000 single-family homes have been built in the Tri-Valley in the last 15 years.
Developer Trumark Homes currently has approvals for more than 1,500 homes in the Tri-Valley, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
One of Trumark’s biggest developments is Francis Ranch in Dublin. That development has 573 homes under construction. And as the population has grown, communities have seen their demographics shift as well.
“Twenty years back, there were not that many people from the South Asian community,” said Prasad Ramakrishnan. Ramakrishnan moved with his family from Fremont to San Ramon two decades ago. He still commutes to Silicon Valley for work, but was drawn to the open spaces and parks in the Tri-Valley.
Ramakrishnan is on the board of the Indian Community Center and says the diversity of San Ramon is one of the reasons he’s grown to love the city so much. According to census data, 23% of residents in San Ramon identify as Indian, including Ramakrishnan.
“It doesn’t matter where you’re from. All of us are humans, let’s all get together. San Ramon creates that kind of an environment where you have people from different ethnic backgrounds kind of coming together,” Ramakrishnan said. “We celebrate Diwali, we celebrate Christmas, we celebrate the Muslim functions.”
But of course, growth doesn’t come without growing pains. Many of those pains can be found along the highways.
“680 is the only real highway from here to South Bay. These are called bedroom communities, and then they work in the South Bay. Giving them an easy way by which to get there would be a nice thing,” Ramakrishnan said.
However, Haubert is betting on a future without so many people having to commute outside of the Tri-Valley for work.
“I truly believe businesses will locate here,” Haubert said. “I understand that’s often the decision of the CEO. So a lot of CEOs live in Silicon Valley, but a lot of future CEOs live in the Tri-Valley. That’s my belief.”
See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
Justin Jefferson has something special planned for Dublin when the Vikings face the Steelers at Croke Park.
It’s the first time Ireland is hosting a regular-season NFL game, so the Minnesota wide receiver wants to make it memorable with a new twist to his touchdown dance.
“We’ve got a little addition to the Griddy, a little Ireland edition. Hopefully, I’ll get to bust it out Sunday,” Jefferson said Friday after practice at the campus of Sport Ireland. “I definitely want to put on a show, especially since this is the first time we’re playing in front of people from Ireland.”
An Irish Times reporter asked: “Will you call it the O’Griddy?”
Smiling, Jefferson responded: “I might. I might take that, actually.”
Jefferson, who hasn’t scored since Minnesota’s 27-24 win over the Chicago Bears in the season opener, said he’s combined some research with his knowledge of Irish culture to add to his routine.
The Vikings, like the Steelers, landed in Ireland on Friday morning and the team will be sticking around afterward because they play the following week in London against the Cleveland Browns. It’s the first time that an NFL team has played back-to-back games in different international cities.
“It’s such a cool opportunity for our organization,” head coach Kevin O’Connell said of playing abroad.
The Vikings are 4-0 in regular-season international games — all in London. In the two international games he’s played, Jefferson has 16 catches for 239 yards, plus a rushing touchdown.
They beat the Aaron Rodgers-led New York Jets 23-17 last season at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. In that game, the Vikings had three interceptions — including a pick-6 by Andrew Van Ginkel, who has been ruled out for the Dublin game.
CBS Minnesota
Source link
The U.K.’s National Crime Agency (NCA) said on Wednesday that a man was arrested in connection to the ransomware attack that has caused delays and disruptions at several European airports since the weekend.
The hack targeted check-in systems provided by Collins Aerospace on Friday, causing delays at Brussels, Berlin, Dublin, and London’s Heathrow airport, which lasted until yesterday.
While the NCA did not name the man, it said he is “in his forties” and that he was arrested in the southern county of West Sussex on Tuesday. The man has been released on conditional bail, the agency said.
“Although this arrest is a positive step, the investigation into this incident is in its early stages and remains ongoing,” said Paul Foster, deputy director and head of the NCA’s National Cyber Crime Unit.
NCA spokesperson Richard Crowe told TechCrunch that the agency had nothing else to add to the press release.
Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai
Source link
Purple faithful will be seeing green this weekend as thousands of fans descend on Dublin, Ireland.
After a successful weekend hosting college football, it’s now time for the pros to invade the Emerald Isle for the first-ever NFL regular-season game.
“With the Dublin games, this is brand new territory. Going to bring the energy. It’s going to be fun times,” Richard Dawson, co-president of the Vikings UK and Ireland Fan Club.
Fan leaders say they’re excited to welcome Minnesotans to Ireland and want to help ensure fans have a great time while being respectful to a culture that may be new to American football customs.
“Don’t do an Irish accent, because that won’t ingratiate you with anyone,” Tom Parry-Jones, the fan club’s content lead, said. “But, you know, be respectful. Enjoy the surroundings. Don’t be too loud.”
Feel free to pack the horns and war paint; Dublin won’t mind.
“If you’ve got a costume, please wear it,” Parry-Jones said.
Expect a compact, walkable city with a big-event atmosphere.
“Dublin is a small, compact, European city. You’re going to see tailgates. They want to make this a big party. You’ll be part of something big,” said Conor Brophy of the Irish NFL Show.
Temple Bar is the popular first stop for visitors, but Brophy said locals often point guests toward smaller pubs nearby.
“I’d say you have to experience Temple Bar, but if you asked a Dubliner, they’d give you a favorite tucked away,” he said.
One game-day note at Croke Park: late alcohol sales will be limited.
“You can drink in the stands. Fourth quarter purchasing of alcohol in the stands is not going to be allowed,” Dawson said.
A final reminder for travelers: be mindful of the geography.
“Understanding the difference between the UK and Ireland. You’re not in the UK,” Brophy said.
Bottom line: bring the purple, bring the manners, and bring your curiosity. Do Dublin right — and the city will meet you with music, conversation and a weekend built for memories.
The Vikings are slated to play the Steelers at 8:30 a.m. CT on Sunday.
Nick Lunemann
Source link
DUBLIN — A narcotics sales investigation into a convicted felon culminated Thursday in the 49-year-old woman’s arrest in Dublin, as well as the seizure of three kilograms of cocaine and $15,900 in cash, authorities said.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency served a warrant on behalf of the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office at a residence on Markleeville Road, according to the sheriff’s office.
The woman, who was on federal probation, was at the home with her small child, the sheriff’s office said.
In addition to the drugs and money, authorities recovered two assault rifles, one handgun, scales, packaging materials, kilogram wrappers with cocaine residue and evidence consistent with the manufacturing of cocaine base, according to the sheriff’s office.
The woman was booked into the Santa Rita Jail in Dublin on felony charges related to narcotics sales and weapons violations, as well as child endangerment, the sheriff’s office said.
Jason Green
Source link
Three Alameda County sheriff’s deputies will face criminal charges in the 2021 in-custody death of Maurice Monk at Santa Rita Jail in Dublin, while charges were dismissed against six other deputies and two civilian employees, prosecutors said Thursday.
District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson announced Thursday that the decision follows an evaluation of the case after being appointed to the office earlier this year to succeed Pamela Price, who was recalled by voters.
“This review included witness statements, body-worn cameras of the deputies involved, medical records, the reports of the pathologists on the time and cause of death, as well as the policies and procedures that control the Santa Rita Jail. What we found was very disturbing,” Dickson said in a statement.
Following the review, charges were dismissed against deputies Troy Hershel White, Syear Osmani, Ross Burruel, Andre Gaston, Mateusz Laszuk and Christopher Haendel. Charges are also being dropped against Dr. Neal Edwards of Alameda County Behavioral Services and David Everett Donoho, who worked for Wellpoint, the jail’s medical provider.
Three deputies, Donall Rowe, Thomas Mowrer, and Robin Hayer, continue to face charges.
“The DA’s office will vigorously pursue justice on behalf of Mr. Monk and his family as we prosecute this case,” Dickson added.
According to authorities, Monk was found dead in his cell on Nov. 5, 2021 after being dead for at least 72 hours. Monk was arrested a month earlier on suspicion of disorderly conduct for allegedly refusing to get off an AC Transit bus and failing to appear on a misdemeanor warrant for another alleged altercation on a bus.
Former District Attorney Pamela Price charged the 11 employees following last November’s recall election.
Monk’s family expressed disappointment in dropping charges against the eight employees.
“It has been nearly four years since Mr. Monk’s deteriorating medical condition was ignored, causing his death, when all that the guards and the jail’s medical contractors needed to do was their jobs, and to consider Mr. Monk as someone whose life was valuable,” attorneys representing the family said in a statement. “The family looks forward to obtaining justice against the three remaining guards who still face criminal trials for their roles in Mr. Monk’s untimely death.”
A wrongful death lawsuit the family brought against Alameda County was settled for $7 million.
The Sheriff’s Office said in a press statement Thursday that it has made significant changes at the Santa Rita Jail, reaching substantial compliance with a federally mandated consent decree in place at the jail to ensure improved outcomes for all inmates.
Tim Fang
Source link

Thousands in the East Bay are without power on Tuesday, according to PG&E.
The power outage is affecting residents in Castro Valley, Pleasanton, San Ramon and Dublin.
At least 11,214 residents are without power, and there is currently no estimated time for when power will be restored.
PG&E said they had crews and equipment on standby as the Bay Area is hit by a heat wave.
KPIX First Alert Weather: Current conditions, alerts, maps for your area
The National Weather Service said the heat wave will last through the 4th of July holiday, the weekend, and into next week.
Jose Fabian
Source link

Amanda: I got to the Portal in Manhattan’s Flatiron District a little before 11 am New York time, and found that there’s now a fence keeping people several feet away from it (but the same isn’t happening in Dublin). This is part of the new security the organizers have implemented: If someone steps on the Portal or blocks the camera, the livestream will blur for both sides, organizers say. For the next hour, a steady stream of people stopped by the Portal, with usually about 30 there at any time. They waved, they smiled, they danced YMCA and the Macarena on both sides. People brought dogs, and a group of preschoolers in a line walked by and waved.
David: Dublin’s Portal, located facing Dublin’s main thoroughfare, O’Connell Street and the historic General Post Office building, has one permanent observer—James Joyce. A statue of Ireland’s most celebrated writer and author of the archetypal Dublin novel, Ulysses, stands just meters from the video screen. But rather than reciting Joyce, it was a 20th-century American rapper that particularly inspired one Portal visitor. A woman dressed head-to-toe in white danced silently before the screen for a few minutes, before turning around and singing: “You better lose yourself in the music, the moment, you own it, you better never let it go. You only get one shot, do not miss your chance to blow. This opportunity comes once in a lifetime.” Joyce and Eminem may not seem like natural bedfellows, but in Dublin and in front of the Portal, it seemed oddly fitting to lose oneself in the moment.
Amanda: While we couldn’t hear the Eminem lyrics on the New York side of the Portal, the crowd enjoyed watching the woman’s energy and dance moves. Even without sound, people were able to convey emotion, and all eyes were on the silent performance broadcast from Dublin.
David: The police in Ireland did finally move on the Eminem tribute act, but one of the “Dublin Portal Ambassadors” —who told me clearly that they were not security—felt that the woman was doing no harm. Though the ambassador, who refused to give his name, added that the night before, things did get a bit more rowdy after 6 pm, with some groups on pub crawls around the city briefly disrupting other people’s interactions before things quickly returned to normal. As part of the measures introduced for the Portal’s reopening, opening hours have been limited to 6 am until 4 pm ET (11 am to 9 pm Dublin time).
The Portals stand 3.4 meters tall and weigh “multiple tons,” the organizers say, but they won’t give details about the camera and screen technology being used, adding: “It’s like the paint used to paint a painting—we want the audience to focus on the result.”
Amanda: Those working on the New York side handed out signs that read “I ‘heart’ Dublin” and “I ‘shamrock’ Dublin” for people to hold up, artificially ramping up the perceived goodwill between the two cities. One of the people working told me he hasn’t seen issues since it reopened—it’s been nothing but love and good vibes.
David Gilbert, Amanda Hoover
Source link

A large crowd of people came out to watch the Dublin Lions Club St. Patrick’s Day Parade Saturday morning.
“The whole sense of community,” said Dublin resident Joe Gutierrez. “We come and watch this every year and it’s good to see all these people.”
It was a weekend festival that was also the place to be at the Dublin Civic Center. This year, the city of Dublin is marking its 40th St. Patrick’s Day celebration.
Just beyond Dublin, this weekend southbound Interstate 680 is closed in Pleasanton between the 580/680 connector to highway 84 for some long-planned roadwork. Crews are repaving the road.
Dublin city leaders said planning for this year’s celebration included planning around the closure. They are confident it won’t affect the estimated 80 thousand visitors.
Freeways may be impacted but all access roads to Dublin will be open on I-580 and I-680. Northbound 680 is open along with all entrances to Dublin.
Christie Smith has the full report in the video above.
Christie Smith
Source link


JetBlue has expanded its transatlantic offerings with new, nonstop flights from New York and Boston. Daily summer-seasonal service from New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) and Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) to Dublin Airport (DUB) will operate through September 30, 2024.
JetBlue first entered the transatlantic market with flights to London in 2021. Since then, JetBlue has expanded its portfolio to include Paris, Amsterdam and now Dublin, and will continue its growth in Europe with seasonal flights to Edinburgh and additional frequencies to Paris later this spring.
JetBlue wills service the new route with its Airbus A321neo with Mint aircraft. The airline’s Mint premium experience offers customers fully lie-flat private suites with a sliding door and a custom-designed seat cushion developed by innovative mattress company Tuft & Needle. In addition to countless intuitive design touches, every customer will feel at home in the air with the newly launched Mint amenity kits.
JetBlue’s industry-leading core experience offers a new level of service to customers who generally fly “coach” but still want a great experience at an attractive fare. Core customers enjoy the most legroom in coach as well as innovative, fresh meals crafted specifically for the A321neo with Mint aircraft.
JetBlue worked with NYC-based culinary partner DIG to design an innovative and high-quality menu that more closely aligns with the beloved culinary experience on JetBlue’s A321 Long Range transatlantic routes. Upon launch, options for core customers will include crepes with smoked turkey, brie and caramelized onion jam; herb and cheese frittata; pesto pasta salad with grilled chicken; and sesame noodles with ginger garlic tofu, carrots and daikon.

To celebrate the launch, seats on the Dublin routes are on sale starting today with low fares for U.S.-originating travelers starting at $399 roundtrip from Boston and $499 from New York for the airline’s award-winning core experience and starting at $1999 and $2499 for JetBlue’s premium Mint experience.
Ireland originating travelers can enjoy special introductory roundtrip fares starting at €399 ($439) to Boston and €499 ($549) to New York for core and €1999 ($2179) and €2499 ($2729) for Mint available only on jetblue.com (c).
|
Daily seasonal service starting March 13 (Eastbound) & March 14 (Westbound) |
|
|
JFK- DUB Flight #841 |
DUB – JFK Flight #842 |
|
8:47 p.m. – 9:00 a.m. (+1) |
10:45 a.m. – 1:22 p.m. |
|
Daily seasonal service starting March 13 (Eastbound) & March 14 (Westbound) |
|
|
BOS – DUB Flight #353 |
DUB – BOS Flight #354 |
|
8:42 p.m. – 8:20 a.m. (+1) |
10:55 a.m. – 12:57 p.m. |
Flights to Dublin will operate daily on JetBlue’s Airbus A321neo with Mint aircraft with 16 redesigned Mint Suite® seats, 144 core seats and Airbus’ Enhanced Cabin with XL Bins. The A321neo with Mint features a 20 percent increase in fuel efficiency and up to 500 nautical miles in additional range.
For more details on JetBlue’s transatlantic service, visit: https://www.jetblue.com/flying-with-us/uk-and-europe.
DDG
Source link

A 90-year-old man who hadn’t been seen by neighbors for over a week was found dead in his pickup truck Sunday after an apparent crash into a creek, the California Highway Patrol said.
At about 2 p.m., CHP in Dublin received a call reporting a vehicle in a creek off Eden Canyon Road near Hollis Canyon Road.
The man in the pickup had been missing for about one and half weeks, and his neighbors had gone out to search for him around his property, CHP said. They found him nearby in his Ford F-150, which had overturned into the creek.
CHP does not know why his truck left the roadway and traveled down an embankment, but from a tire track mark on the embankment, it appeared the man was leaving his property and was traveling toward his driveway entrance when the crash occurred. The man was unrestrained and when his truck flipped over, his head apparently hit the windshield, CHP said.
An investigation is currently underway and it is not known if drugs or alcohol played a factor in the man’s death.
Bay City News
Source link

It should be no surprise. Shane MacGowan, erstwhile songwriter and singer for the Pogues, had over the years downed oceans of whiskey and porter and ingested enough recreational drugs to get the whole bloody EU bolloxed.
Although news of his death was long expected, it was still a shock to learn that MacGowan died today. And even more so because it came not four months on the heels of the majestic Sinead O’Connor‘s death. The cause of Shane’s death wasn’t specified, but decades of abuse surely played a part. One is reminded of the famous description of Bob Dylan in the 1960s: “He wasn’t burning the candle at both ends. He was using a blowtorch on the middle.”
Dylan’s famous motorcycle accident in 1966 afforded him the chance to step away from his incendiary habits. MacGowan never found – or didn’t take advantage of – such an opportunity. The tales of wretched excess are legendary and play all-too-neatly into the “drunken Irish poet” cliché epitomized by Brendan Behan and, latterly, by Mister MacGowan. Genius is often used as an excuse for addiction and the damage to oneself and to others that follows in its wake. MacGowan’s descent was a long, slow, and painful one to observe.
Born in Kent, England on Christmas Day, 1957, MacGowan’s parents were Irish. He spent a portion of his boyhood in Tipperary. Back in England as a young man, he was one of many inspired by the punk movement to start a band. One thing led to another and the eventual result was the Pogues. (As their fans know, Pogue Mahone, the band’s original name, is Irish for “kiss my arse.”)
Much ink will be spilled recounting epic tales of the Pogues and MacGowan’s atrocious habits and even worse behavior. Such as quotes from Neil McCormick of The Telegraph, who describes Shane’s songs as “succinct narratives of the Irish diaspora in Britain and America that drew on the poetry and culture of his homeland. His songs were peppered with finely observed details, and had, at their heart, a bittersweet romantic longing for a shattered community clinging to its historical identity, and a beautiful empathy for outsiders and the downtrodden.” And the best description of that snicker, “he laughed frequently, emitting a sound halfway between white noise and an industrial accident.”
I could go onnn, but let’s focus instead on the reasons we loved – and worried about – Our Shane in the first place.
MacGowan and company officiated at the shotgun wedding of Irish Trad and Punk Rock. He brought a cold eye and a gift for the vivid detail to his lyrics, evoking the listeners’ sympathy for the rebels, runaways, and misfits who live on the rough margins of cities. “The Old Main Drag” is about a rent boy’s decline and fall:
In the cold winter nights the old town it was chill
But there were boys in the cafes who’d give you cheap pills
If you didn’t have the money you’d cajole or you’d beg
There was always lots of Tuinol on the old main drag
One evening as I was lying down by Leicester Square
I was picked up by the coppers and kicked in the balls
Between the metal doors at Vine Street, I was beaten and mauled
And they ruined my good looks for the old main drag…
The Pogues – The Old Main Dragwww.youtube.com
“A Rainy Night in Soho” offers a far more tender remembrance:
I’m not singing for the future
I’m not dreaming of the past
I’m not talking of the first times
I never think about the last
Now the song is nearly over
We may never find out what it means
Still, there’s a light I hold before me
You’re the measure of my dreams
The measure of my dreams
The Pogues – A Rainy Night In Sohowww.youtube.com
Years of hard living exacted a toll on MacGowan. His notoriously rotten teeth were (finally!) replaced in 2015. A fall that same year resulted in a hip injury that put him into a wheelchair. In December 2022 he was hospitalized with viral encephalitis. He’d been released from another hospital stay shortly before his death. He’s survived by his wife, the journalist Victoria Clarke, his sister, Siobhan, and his father, Maurice MacGowan.
We at Popdust adore Shane. He was one raucous lad. And this one’s for…the Mighty Kevin.
Joe Goodrich
Source link


JetBlue today announced entrance to two new transatlantic destinations, Dublin and Edinburgh. These new flights are already available on sale starting today.
Daily seasonal service from New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) and Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) to Dublin Airport (DUB) will begin March 13, 2024, and continue through September 30, 2024. Daily seasonal service from New York’s JFK to Edinburgh Airport (EDI) will begin May 22, 2024, and is scheduled through September 30, 2024. These mark JetBlue’s fourth and fifth transatlantic markets. The carrier currently offers daily nonstop service to London, Paris and Amsterdam from New York and London and Amsterdam from Boston.
“The success of our transatlantic service proves customers don’t have to choose between great service and low fares and can have them both with our award-winning Mint and core products,” said Robin Hayes, chief executive officer, JetBlue. “Our summer seasonal service to Dublin and Edinburgh will bring a new level of service and affordable fares to these markets that have been dominated by high-fare legacy carriers for decades. We look forward to introducing the JetBlue experience to business and leisure customers traveling this summer to and from Ireland and Scotland.”
|
Daily seasonal service starting March 13 (Eastbound) & March 14 (Westbound) (through September 30, 2024) *all times local |
|
|
JFK- DUB Flight #841 |
DUB- JFK Flight #842 |
|
9:30 p.m. – 8:15 a.m. (+1) |
11:45 a.m. – 3:25 p.m. |
|
Daily seasonal service starting March 13 (Eastbound) & March 14 (Westbound) (through September 30, 2024) *all times local |
|
|
BOS – DUB Flight #353 |
DUB – BOS Flight #354 |
|
10:30 p.m. – 8:45 a.m. (+1) |
11:30 a.m. – 2:45 p.m. |
|
Daily seasonal service starting May 22 (Eastbound) & May 23 (Westbound) (through September 30, 2024) *all times local |
|
|
JFK- EDI Flight #73 |
EDI- JFK Flight #72 |
|
10:15 p.m. – 10:25 a.m. (+1) |
12:30 p.m. – 3:15 p.m. |
Flights to Dublin and Edinburgh will operate daily on JetBlue’s Airbus A321neo with Mint® aircraft with 16 redesigned Mint Suite® seats, 144 core seats and the sleek and spacious Airspace cabin interior. The A321neo with Mint features a 20 percent increase in fuel efficiency and up to 500 nautical miles in additional range.
Seats on the Dublin and Edinburgh routes are on sale starting today with low fares for U.S.-originating travelers starting at $399 and $599 roundtrip for the airline’s award-winning core experience and starting at $1,999 and $2,499 for JetBlue’s premium Mint experience. Ireland and Scotland originating travelers can enjoy special introductory roundtrip fares starting at €399 ($423) and £399 ($485) for core and €1,499 ($1,588) and £1,499 ($1,822) for Mint available on jetblue.com.
Following the successful entry into Paris this summer, JetBlue will be launching its highly anticipated year-round service from Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) to Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG) starting April 3, 2024, and will add a second daily flight from New York’s JFK to CDG on June 20, 2024.
To celebrate service from Boston to Paris, seats are on sale today with low fares for U.S.-originating travelers starting at $599 roundtrip for the airline’s award-winning core experience and starting at $2,499 for JetBlue’s premium Mint experience. France-originating travelers can enjoy special introductory roundtrip fares starting at €399 ($423) for core and €1,999 ($2,118) for Mint available on jetblue.com.
DDG
Source link

CNN
—
Katie Taylor is one of women’s boxing’s ‘Mount Rushmore’ figures.
The undisputed lightweight world champion, Taylor holds 18 gold medals – including an Olympic gold – and sits second in the Ring’s women’s pound-for-pound rankings.
Yet, at 36 years old, Taylor has never fought professionally in her native Ireland.
She’s fought in England, Wales and the US but featuring in a major event in Ireland has been a long time coming – until now.
On May 20, national hero Taylor will face Chantelle Cameron – the undisputed super-lightweight world champion – at the 3Arena in Dublin in front of a partisan home crowd as she attempts to become a two-weight undisputed world champion.
With two undefeated fighters at the peak of their powers, the event is one of the most highly-anticipated bouts of the year.
However, Saturday’s fight is also another landmark moment for Ireland – major boxing promotions moved away from the country after gunmen killed one person during a weigh-in for a boxing match in a Dublin hotel in 2016.
Gunmen, including two disguised as police and another one as a woman, fired shots inside and outside the weigh-in room killing one and injuring two others.
The shooting was not an act of terrorism, a police representative told CNN at the time. Investigators were looking into whether it was gang-related.
Two years before the Dublin hotel shooting, Jamie Moore – Cameron’s trainer – was shot in Marbella, Spain, in 2014, outside of the house of Daniel Kinahan, according to the BBC.
On an appearance on ‘The All or Nothing Podcast in 2021, Moore said that he has nerve damage in his leg and a bullet in his hip from where he was shot twice. He said his shooting was a case of “wrong place, wrong time.”
Kinahan was named as one of the leaders of the Kinahan Transnational Criminal Organization by the US Department of State last year. The US Treasury Department described the group as “a murderous organization involved in the international trafficking of drugs and firearms.”
Kinahan’s lawyers have denied any criminal wrongdoings. CNN has not been able to independently confirm the allegations made against Kinahan.
Moore trained fighters for MTK Global, a boxing agency who Kinahan had ties to.
MTK Global ceased operating in April 2022.
Before it ceased operations, MTK Global said that it would “comply fully with the sanctions made by the US government against Daniel Kinahan … We will cooperate fully with all authorities and assist with any ongoing investigations.”
According to media reports, Moore refused to answer any questions on his links to Kinahan in a press conference in March. CNN has reached out to Moore via his gym in Salford, in northern England, to offer him a right of reply to his alleged links to Kinahan.
Cameron, the 32-year-old from Northampton, United Kingdom, was previously signed to MTK Global but is now signed to Matchroom Boxing alongside Taylor.
Four international boxing promotions have been held across Ireland over the last six months, according to Mel Christle, chairman of the Boxing Union of Ireland.
“It is true to say that there has not been a boxing event of this magnitude ever in Ireland,” Christle told CNN of the bout between Taylor and Moore.
“There are no fewer than three world title events on the 3Arena bill. The presence of Katie Taylor headlining the bill, in her hometown, is making it a huge sporting event for Ireland,” added Christie.
The Irish police, An Garda Síochána, told CNN in a statement that it “puts in place appropriate and proportionate policing plans for major events.”
Taylor has developed into the biggest name in women’s boxing, beating allcomers, including a mammoth clash against Amanda Serrano in April last year – the first women’s boxing match to headline Madison Square Garden.
But outside of all her achievements so far in her career, coming home to fight in front of a home crowd in a professional bout for the first time – she has previously fought in amateur fights in Ireland – means even more to her.
“This is absolutely incredible. One of the things that I wanted to achieve when I first turned pro six years ago was to fight here at home,” she said during a pre-fight press conference. “And this is a nation who love their sport, who love their boxing.
“For a very small nation, we’re very, very good at it as well so its amazing to be bringing bigtime boxing back to this nation again where it belongs. And this isn’t any normal fight. This is undisputed champion vs. undisputed champion. This is a very special fight, one of the biggest fights of boxing I believe.
“I think we’re definitely turning over a new leaf for Irish boxing. Hopefully this is the first night of many nights here in Ireland.
“And even looking at the public workout the other day, just looking at so many young fighters there, young girls watching there watching the public workout, they’re looking up to myself and Chantelle and all these other fighters, it’s absolutely fantastic. It’s great to be in the position where you’re influencing the next generation of fighters. They’re going to grow up with big dreams and big ambitions as well which is absolutely as well.”
According to the 3Arena website ticket prices to watch Saturday’s event range from €80 ($86) to €750 ($808), with a VIP package costing €1,500 ($1,616).
Eddie Hearn, chairman of Matchroom Sport, said that the promoters had originally wanted the fight to be staged at Croke Park, which has a capacity of 82,000, but had to settle for the 3Arena which has 10% the capacity.
Hearn said Taylor’s appearance in Dublin is just the first of many boxing events that he wants to bring to the city.
“What we love is to come to cities and places that have passion, love a great night out, love entertainment, make noise, produce great TV, great visuals and great atmospheres and nights we’ll never forget,” he said during an interview earlier this week.
“And as far as I’m concerned, Dublin is the No. 1 place for that. It’s amazing to think that world championship, big time boxing is back in the city this Saturday.
“It’s a brilliant night of boxing and I believe it’s going to be the first of many back in this city.”