Catherine J. Kasulke, 72, of Clinton Street, Watertown, passed away May 5, 2021, at the home of her beloved caregivers, Sarah and Matt Marino.
She was born March 11, 1949, in Queens, NY, the daughter of Maurice and Theresa (Godich) OâConnell.
Catherine graduated from The Academy of Mount St. Ursula in the Bronx in 1967. She then attended Thomas More College (now Fordham University), where she received her Bachelor of Science in Biology and Education. She received her Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSRN) at Columbia Universityâs College of Nursing in New York City and her Master of Arts in Nursing (MAN) from New York University in 1976.
Advice bighospitality.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bighospitality.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
LONDON, ONT. Hugh and Thelma Schomburg had a plan after getting their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in London. “We’re going for breakfast!” an elated Hugh told CTV News Friday morning. The pair acknowledge health officials recommend they still practice physical distancing and take precautions, but after a year inside, they wanted to give themselves one brief outing. The Schomburgs, both in their 80s, were among the first seniors to line up at the Western Fair District Agriplex, the largest vaccination centre in the London region. “Waiting a long time for it, so, we’re quite happy to be getting here and getting here early. Our son set it all up for us,” Hugh says.
Ambush remembered: Historian recalls one of Limerick's bloodiest episodes limerickleader.ie - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from limerickleader.ie Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Reporter:
5 Feb 2021
Matt Barry, great grandson of David Guerin, who was centrally involved in the ambush, with his daughter Aisling Barry, and historian Eddie O Dea, at the Dromkeen Memorial | PICTURE: Brendan Gleeson );
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After the 1916 Easter Rising, sixteen of the Irish Republican leaders were executed and thousands of Irishmen were arrested and interned.
Trials had been held in secret and many Irish people were angered at their harsh treatment and their resistance against British rule grew. There was an escalation of emotion. General Tom Barry, who was a prominent Irish Republican Army (IRA) leader during the War of Independence, blamed the actions of his British opponents for the shift in Irish people’s attitudes and said, “We are now hard, cold and ruthless, as our enemy has been since hostilities began… they (the British) have gone down into the mire to destroy us and our nation, and down after them we had to go”.