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  • NEWS
  • Martin wades into abortion debate

    As the Dáil committee hearings continue on the abortion bill, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has waded into the debate saying it is important that Christian believers "be, and seen to be, on the side of life, especially when life is most vulnerable".

  • Payment cuts see families pay rent shortfall

    Limits on rent supplement payments set by the Government are forcing thousands of families to make undeclared top-up payments to landlords to secure places to live.

  • WORLD
  • Anger as North Korea launches another missile

    North Korea fired a short-range missile from its east coast, a day after launching three more of these missiles, a South Korean news agency said.

  • How Star Trek predicted the future

    WHEN Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry first dreamed up the concept of a television show based in the unexplored universe of Outer Space in 1964, the world was a very different place.

  • BUSINESS
  • Warnings over future of eurozone

    The eurozone is heading towards a break up unless there are moves towards much closer political and fiscal union, according to chief economist with State Street Global Advisers, Chris Probyn.

  • Bruton defends corporate tax rate

    Ireland will be able to maintain its current corporation tax code in the face of international pressure to prevent multinational corporations avoid paying their fare share of tax, Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton said yesterday.

  • SPORT
  • Mayo’s statement of intent

    Galway 0-11 Mayo 4-16 Five minutes to go in Salthill yesterday and James Horan was still cajoling his men to sew it into Galway.

  • Wilkinson inspires Toulon to glory

    ASM Clermont Auvergne 15 Toulon 16 Not for the first time this season, a matchday performance and the result have made a mockery of the statistics.

  • LIFESTYLE
  • What Lenny did next

    LENNY Abrahamson has directed three feature films: Adam & Paul, Garage and What Richard Did.

  • Clothes maketh you mad

    Trying on clothes, said Ewart, produced "sensations which bring deep peace and perfect contentment" to the female mind.





 




Cool Leona excels at Carnoustie

Teenage star Leona Maguire is in position at Carnoustie to grab a prominent place in the matchplay stages of the Ladies British Open Amateur Championship after yesterday’s second qualifying round.

But her 17-year-old twin sister Lisa had a nightmare, slumping to one of her worst competitive scores — 83 — and she will need a minor miracle today to survive.

Leona, the Curtis Cup player who has recently won her second Irish title, fired an opening one over par 73, a score bettered by only a handful of players. A double bogey six on the short 320-yard par four third was her major hiccup, although she recovered pretty quickly with two birdies in three holes from the eighth.

Out in 36, Maguire came back in 37 and was fuming at having two bogeys in the last three holes.

“I played pretty well today keeping the ball out of trouble most of the time,” said the hugely-talented Irish international from Slieve Russell.

Her sister Lisa, meanwhile, had three double bogeys, six bogeys and just one birdie. “This course punishes you so much if you are wayward, and I was today,” said Lisa.

Stephanie Meadow, the Royal Portrush golfer, came into the tournament with so many expectations after she holed the putt that gave Great Britain and Ireland the Curtis Cup at Nairn earlier in the month but she too was very disappointing.

A nine over par 81, which included three double bogeys, has made her task of making progress to the knockout phase very difficult and Castletroy’s Chloe Ryan recorded five double bogeys in an 81.

Leading the way after the first round were Parisienne Celine Boutier and Italian Giulia Molianro. Both mastered what is considered to be one of the toughest links courses in the world to post brilliant two under par 70s.

Following today’s second round, the leading 64 players go forward to the knockout phase, ending in the final over 18 holes on Saturday. Home

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