Another set of excavations, under the direction of Gary O. Rollefson and Zeidan Kafafi took place in the early 1990s.
His articles have appeared in a number of journals including American Antiquity, Current Anthropology, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology and Holocene.
Gary Cooper | Gary Moore | Gary Allan | Gary Gygax | Gary, Indiana | Gary Burton | Gary Lineker | Gary Player | Gary Numan | Gary Hart | Gary Snyder | Gary Cole | Gary Busey | Gary Panter | Gary Oldman | Gary Paulsen | Gary Sinise | Gary Johnson | Gary Hughes | Gary Brooker | Gary | Gary Valenciano | Gary Peacock | Gary Owens | Gary Locke | Gary Husband | Gary Graffman | Gary Gilmore | Gary Condit | Gary Coleman |
Shortly after the 1980 follow-up "Manoeuvres", Gary formed the band Kid Rainbow, which included Margo Davidson, later of The Parachute Club and musician, producer, and songwriter John Jones (record producer) of Duran Duran Roy Wood, Fleetwood Mac, Dan Hill, Alan Frew, and Celine Dion.
O'Donoghue joined the BBC on graduation, becoming a junior reporter on BBC Radio 4's Today programme; at one time, he was asked to bungee jump off Chelsea Bridge.
Following his retirement from football, he has made a career in sports broadcasting and appears periodically on BBC Five Live's Fighting Talk, which he seldom wins; when asked by host Colin Murray when he last won an episode of FT, O'Reilly replied "God was ten".
Gary O'Shaughnessy represented Ireland in the 2001 Eurovision Song Contest in Copenhagen after winning the national final selection.
The group shot a promotional video for the song "What's It Gonna Take", written by Gary O'Connor, which also appears on Molly Hatchet's No Guts...No Glory album.