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In This Issue 1992

JFK The Movie

By Michael Pakenham

February 1992

June 29, 2026 by Leave a Comment

"It is distressing, and saddening," said Senator Edward Kennedy about the movie JFK. "Obviously it's a very painful experience to have, you know, the advertisements, the pictures, the scenes," Kennedy told an interviewer on WGMC-TV. The memory of the assassination of a much-loved President is distressing and saddening to all of us. Oliver Stone's movie drew fire even before it … [Read more...] about JFK The Movie

The Green, Green Greens of Home

By John Redmond

February 1992

June 29, 2026 by Leave a Comment

There is a lovely story told about a day in the hospitable south of Ireland when a couple of American tourists rolled into the car-park of Lahinch golf club in a gleaming, rented limo. When they asked if a club member might be available to accompany them on their round, a caddie was dispatched up the village to fetch the local butcher. He duly arrived and when the game got … [Read more...] about The Green, Green Greens of Home

First Word: Another Year, Another Scandal

By Niall O’Dowd, Founding Publisher
February 1992

June 29, 2026 by Leave a Comment

DUBLIN: Now comes Sean Doherty, former Minister for Justice in the Irish government, the point man in a major scandal in the early 1980s involving the illegal tapping of phones of leading journalists. Doherty recently declared that he tapped the phones with the full knowledge of party leader Charles Haughcy, and that he personally handed over transcripts of the tapes to … [Read more...] about First Word: Another Year, Another Scandal

Canada Recognizes Irish Famine Memorial

By Michael Quigley

May/June 1996

May 16, 2025 by Leave a Comment

The Irish in Canada have won a major victory over the Canadian Government on how the national historic site at Grosse Ile should be developed. The small island in the St. Lawrence River, 48 kilometers downstream from Quebec City, once served as a quarantine station, and is the burial site of thousands of Irish immigrants who died of cholera in 1832, and of typhus, ship fever, … [Read more...] about Canada Recognizes Irish Famine Memorial

Remembering Alice James

By Fernando G. Carneiro

September 1992

May 16, 2025 by Leave a Comment

When William of Albany, as he came to be known, left County Cavan in 1789 in search of the American dream, he could never fathom that his grandsons would become America's foremost novelist and philosopher respectively. But aside from Henry and William James, this extraordinary clan had in its midst an equal and perhaps a tad superior (as claimed by a majority of Jamesian … [Read more...] about Remembering Alice James

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July 31, 2007

After 38 years of occupation in Northern Ireland, the British Army officially withdrew their forces at midnight on July 31, 2007. “Operation Banner,” England’s longest continuous military operation, saw 300,000 British soldiers stationed in Northern Ireland through out the 38 years. Operation Banner concluded on July 31st, with 762 English soldiers dead in the wake of the campaign.

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