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Education

The O’Malley Library

By Irish America Staff
December / January 2003

December 1, 2002 by Leave a Comment

On Saturday, October 5, Manhattan College, New York, dedicated the Mary Alice and Tom O'Malley Library in honor of longtime benefactors Tom O'Malley, a graduate of 1963 and his wife, Mary Alice of Greenwich, Connecticut. Throughout his business career, Tom O'Malley has been a generous supporter of Manhattan College. Now through a gift of $7.5 million, the largest in the … [Read more...] about The O’Malley Library

Enrollment Down
at Holy Cross

By Brendan Anderson, Contributor
October / November 2002

October 1, 2002 by Leave a Comment

A catholic school whose pupils were forced to run a daily gauntlet of sectarian hatred last year is in danger of closing because of falling student numbers. Fr. Aidan Troy, chairman of the board of governors of Holy Cross Girls Primary School in north Belfast, warned that the intake for the new academic year had fallen by a third. Holy Cross was at the center of Loyalist … [Read more...] about Enrollment Down
at Holy Cross

Paddy Clancy Scholarships

By Irish America Staff
June / July 2002

June 1, 2002 by Leave a Comment

A number of scholarships in honor of musician and folk singer Paddy Clancy are available to students with an interest in pursuing studies in folk song, sean nós and the traditional ballad. American students may apply the scholarship toward study at the Irish World Music Centre at the University of Limerick. Paddy Clancy and his brothers had a huge influence on folk music on … [Read more...] about Paddy Clancy Scholarships

The Travelling People

By Emer Mullins, Contributor
By Derek Speirs, Phoyos
February / March 2002

February 1, 2002 by Leave a Comment

In a small village in County Galway, a group of parents decided to keep their children home from school. Their school has just 12 pupils between four and 12 years old, but parents closed it down for a week last September, because they wanted to keep other children out. The children they wanted to keep out were also Irish. Their parents had grown up in the area, Ballinruane … [Read more...] about The Travelling People

Surfin’ FirstUSA

By Irish America Staff
October / November 2001

October 1, 2001 by Leave a Comment

Freshmen Chris Barrett and Luke McCabe, two New Jersey 18-year-old surfers are even smarter than their SATs show: they figured out how to get their education paid for by turning themselves into walking advertisements. Setting up a website which featured their good-looking blond selves in t-shirts or with surfboards saying 'YOUR LOGO HERE,' they offered to be 'spokes-guys' for … [Read more...] about Surfin’ FirstUSA

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December 14, 1715

Thomas Dognan, the 2nd Earl of Limerick, member of the Irish Parliament and governor of the colony of New York, died on this day in 1715. Dognan was born to a Catholic family in County Kildare. Because of their religion, they fled to France. He served in an Irish regiment in France and achieved the rank of colonel in 1674. Due to the order that called all British subjects serving in France back to England, Dognan returned to London. He was given a high ranking commission by the Duke of York in Flanders. James, the Duke of York, had become Lord Proprietor of New York after the English had acquired the colony from the Dutch. He then appointed Dognan as the first provincial governor (1683-1688) of the colony.

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