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Honor Roll Celebration - 9:00 am Curriculum Night - 5:30 - 7:00 pm Free Tutoring and Online Digital Resources Are Just One Click Away Homework Help - Title I Parent WorkshopUna O'Neill D'ArcyTish Myles McElduff.Ingrid Gallagher ChaouachiOrlagh Mc KeownFiona PotterAine KellyGerard O' KaneCharmain Mc GinleyBreda BaxterPatricia McveighJustin Mc QuaidMartina CoyleNiall McKennaLiam McNallySee allBegley's Sports added 8 new photos.O'Neills Sportswear 1/4 Zip tops in stock BLANK // PLAIN // NO LOGO'S or CRESTS Available in sizes: 3/4, 5/6, 7/8, 9/10, 10/11, Age 13 - £30 Small, Medium, Large, XLarge - £35Begley's Sports added 17 new photos — getting prepared.*SALE* Massive SKINS DNAmic Compression Pre-Season *SALE* Half tights - £35... was £50 Long Sleeve - £40.... was £60 Long tights - £45.... was £70 plus all other SKINS items on offerSee allBegley's Sports with Begley's Gifts and 3 others.Not long to go now for Darragh Begley and everyone else involved in the 24hour Marathon Match, they finish at 11am.

Fantastic effort by everyone. Cancer Focus Northern Ireland & Michaela Foundation have organised a superb event, made possible by 100's of amazing volunteers. #Begley's SportsGreat wee filler.... £8.99 Bernie wins the Match. A wonderful rhyming story packed with pace and excitement, starring Bernie, a little gaelic football-loving bear with a very BIG dream!Begley's SportsNEW ARRIVAL.... and it is a beaut! Tyrone GAA 1/4 zip squad top GREY (brushed steel effect) // FLO YELLOW Available in sizes: Adult - Small, Medium, Large, XLarge - £40 Kids - 3/4, 5/6, 7/8, 9/10, 10/11, Age 13 - £35 Begley's Sports shared Cancer Focus Northern Ireland's photo.DB's mug shot for the 24hour Marathon Match in aid of Cancer Focus Northern Ireland & Michaela Foundation Link to Darragh Begley's Everyday Hero Page : http://bit.ly/2gXj8ezCancer Focus Northern Ireland at Garvaghey Centre of Excellence.Omagh, United KingdomName: Darragh Begley Club: Dungannon Clarkes County: Tyrone Everyday Hero Page : http://bit.ly/2gXj8ezBegley's Sports added 5 new photos.

Ireland Rugby Jersey & Leisurewear in stock.Begley's Sports added 4 new photos.Lions 2017 Jersey & Leisurewear in stock.Begley's Sports was feeling festive.OPEN LATE NIGHT ALL WEEK 8:00PM MON / TUE / WED / THU / FRIBegley's Sports with St Ciaran's College and 2 others.NEW St.Ciaran's College Ballygawley Pink Jersey....
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Begley's Sports added 21 new photos.The NEW 2017 County Conall Range by O'Neills SportswearBegley's SportsWIN WIN WIN !!! The NEW NYPD GAA Hoodie.... Simply like and share this post for a chance to WIN! Make sure you like our page..... you wouldn't want to miss out on our next competition!
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the north face nimble hoodie - men'sHoodie avaiable in store now to buy: Kids - 9/10, 10/11 & Age 13 - £38 Adult - Small, Medium: £48Bowhunt or Die is the #1 show for people who are serious about bowhunting. Follow our team of real world bowhunters through the ups and downs of their season as they balance family and work with their passion for bowhunting. New episodes are posted every Friday morning throughout the hunting season.

, Roku, YouTube, and iOS through iTunes podcast. Todd Graf was turned onto hunting at a young age by his father hunting in the marshes of central Wisconsin. But, he quickly realized that the rifle seasons were just too short to feed his rapidly growing obsession of chasing whitetails. With the bowhunting season starting in early September and lasting through December he became addicted to spending time hanging in a tree with a bow in his hands. Justin Zarr was born, raised and currently lives in Northern Illinois. His father, a mechanic by trade, also owned an archery shop where he spent his evenings after school and which helped fuel his passion for bowhunting from a young age. and co-hosting Bowhunt or Die. When he’s not working or hunting you can usually find him chasing after his gaggle of children or picking up dog poop in his backyard.Harriet Sergeant is my dream guest at any party. A bright, blonde and bubbly journalist, she can do Plato with the Oxford philosophy don, dissect the latest NHS reforms with the family GP, and flirt with the single men.

Harriet is also as much at home on a sink estate as in my kitchen. Even before last summer’s riots, she had decided to investigate Britain’s gang culture. With her plummy accent and Prada dresses, she stuck out a mile on the housing estates in Brixton, yet she befriended a gang of young black men there. She’s written about her experience in Among the Hoods, published in a couple of weeks. It’s a joy to read how Harriet slowly wins the boys’ confidence over meals at Nando’s (they’re all hungry) and heart-to-hearts about prison life (jail provides the boys with their only experience of authority – and they love it). On one excursion, she takes them to Tate Modern. The boys have never seen a painting before and are agog when they realise how much a Picasso fetches. “I’m going to have a change of career,” Tuggy Tug, the gang leader and a robber, tells Harriet. “I’ll make more money as a painter.” They also rate the pretty Sloanes who throng the gallery – and think they’ll try to make friends.

However, one look at the black youths in hoodies has the girls in flight. Among the Hoods is inspiring, but tragic. Abominable schooling means these boys can barely read and write (one is completely illiterate). Dads are conspicuous by their absence (the benefits system penalises parents who live together). The same skewed system teaches the boys at an early age that they’re better off out of work than in. The most revealing incident takes place at the youth centre on the gang’s sink estate. Two middle-class suits appear, council high-ups come to “monitor” the place. Spotting the posh lady on the premises, they instantly subject Harriet to a barrage of questions: who is she, what’s she doing, and has she been checked by the Criminal Records Bureau? Her book has many messages, but perhaps the most depressing is this: don’t do any good unless you’ve filled in the forms first. • The Sloaney girls at Tate Modern may not have liked the gang from Brixton – but I doubt they would have liked a gaggle of Bullingdon boys, either.

Not if Posh, the play we saw on Saturday night, is anything to go by. This political satire shows private-school products at their worst: “How do you make an Eton mess? Tell him he only got into Bristol.” What intrigued me, though, was that playwright Laura Wade had added topicality, by updating some of her gags. Could other dramas benefit from freshening up, I wonder? Matilda could have our heroine never raising her nose from a Kindle, while Julius Caesar could be rendered more topical with an Ed Miliband character exclaiming, “Et tu!” while Ed Balls, lurking in the shadows, wipes his blade clean. • To celebrate the end of exams, my husband took the 16-year-old to Iceland. Not my idea of a dream holiday, but the two were delighted with the geysers and (the teenager particularly) the Phallological Museum in Reykjavik. They also decided to import some Icelandic delicacies: my fridge is now stinking with putrefied shark, pickled ram’s testes and smoked whale. On Saturday, the Icelanders go to the polls in their presidential election.