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December January 2004 Issue

Terrorists Plotted
Against Kennedy and Hill

By Irish America Staff
December / January 2004

December 1, 2003 by Leave a Comment

Irish Sunday Independent journalist Alan Murray unearthed a plot by loyalist terrorist Johnny "Mad Dog" Adair to assassinate Courtney Kennedy, daughter of Robert Kennedy and her husband Paul Hill when they were in north Belfast in 1994. Adair had planned to attack the couple with a rocket-propelled grenade while they were driving in their car. Hill and three others spent 15 … [Read more...] about Terrorists Plotted
Against Kennedy and Hill

Filmmakers Threaten
to Leave Ireland

By Daisy Carrington, Contributor
December / January 2004

December 1, 2003 by Leave a Comment

Recently Hollywood and the Irish government have come to blows over taxation. The debate is over the section 481 tax allowance, otherwise known as the film-tax incentive that has bolstered the film industry in Ireland by 18 percent over the last 10 years. The incentive is due to expire at the end of 2004, and though the film industry is placing pressure on the Department of … [Read more...] about Filmmakers Threaten
to Leave Ireland

A Tribute to Courage

By Frank Shouldice, Contributor
December / January 2004

December 1, 2003 by Leave a Comment

Thousands turned out in lower Manhattan on a rainy Sunday morning on September 28 to remember relatives and friends lost on September 11, and to retrace the final steps of Stephen Siller, a firefighter from Brooklyn. Siller, of Squad 1 in Park Slope, was off-duty when he strapped on 60 pounds of gear and walked to Manhattan through the Battery Tunnel to West and Liberty … [Read more...] about A Tribute to Courage

Into Africa,
Seeing and Believing

By Frank Shouldice, Contributor
December / January 2004

December 1, 2003 by Leave a Comment

We're juggling with numbers here. Every five seconds someone in the world loses his/her sight; a child goes blind every minute. That amounts to seven million cases a year. Add that to 45 million people already blind and another 135 million with limited vision. Patricia Hallahan, regional director with Sight Savers International, confesses she's not very good at figures but … [Read more...] about Into Africa,
Seeing and Believing

Heaney Donates
Letters to Emory

By Irish America Staff
December / January 2004

December 1, 2003 by Leave a Comment

Seamus Heaney, Ireland's Nobel Prize-winning poet, is donating his papers and letters to Emory University in Atlanta. While Heaney's manuscripts will stay in Ireland, his letters and papers will further enrich Emory's impressive collection of Irish papers. Emory currently holds the correspondence, as well as manuscripts, of poets Michael Longley, James Simmons, Ciaran Carson … [Read more...] about Heaney Donates
Letters to Emory

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Today in History

October 4, 1941

Anne Rice, the best-selling American author of Interview with the Vampire and other occult novels, was born on this day in 1941. Rice was born Howard Allen Frances O’Brien to Irish Catholic parents Howard and Katherine Allen O’Brien. She hated her name and changed it to Anne when she started Catholic school. She grew up in what was described as the Irish Channel, an Irish ghetto of sorts in New Orleans. After her mother died when she was just 14 years old, her and her sisters were placed in St. Joseph’s, an orphanage. Anne moved with her sisters, father and stepmother to Texas where she met husband and poet Stan Rice. Her most successful series is The Vampire Chronicles.

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