Investment in sectarianism

  • 31 October 1978
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How investment patterns in Northern Ireland reinforce discrimination against Catholics. By Ed Maloney

A Bogside woman and Provo justice

  • 1 October 1978
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THE Provisional IRA recently tied a 22-year-old mother of three children to railings outside a pub in Derry City and poured paint and feathers over her shaved head. She and the 17-year-old girl who was similarly punished alongside her had admitted to the armed robbery of two shopkeepers who had asked the IRA to intervene.

A SORT or SOCIAL Column

  • 1 September 1978
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PRESIDENT HILLERY has been on the dry for years ... but when it comes to entertaining in Aras An Uachtarain, he goes straight for taste. That's why An tUachtarain has stocked a crate of Genuine Russian Vodka in the Aras.

The Beit Collection at Russborough House

  • 1 September 1978
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Russborough House was really rather fortunate to survive at all. It was built by Joseph Leeson in the mid-eighteenth century, and was principally the work of Richard Castle, the German architect who came to Ireland in the late 1720s, and was responsible for Leinster House, Powersscourt House, Hazlewood in Sligo, and Summerhill in County Meath, as well as Carton, where he died in 1751. He was then in the middle of work on Russsborough, and his colleague and assistant, Francis Bindon, then finished the work.

Motoring: Facts on oil

IT'S ONE OF THE stranger facts about motoring in Irelland that many dealers don't stock the type of oil reecommended by their own manufacturers. This means that your car, which may run best on (say) Castrol GTX 20W-50, could receive instead a transfusion of Shell Super at its regular service. Now, Shell Super is an excellent oil but it may not be right for your car.

Pub review: O Briens, Sussex Terrace

O'BRIEN'S PUB in Sussex Tce., off Upper Leeson St., Dublin, has become one of the "in" swinging pubs of late, primarily because the lack of seating accommodation in the lounge encourrages social intercourse, as they say.

Car test - the Austin Allegro

The bad news that has dogged British Leyland over the years has largely obscured the fact that the UK giant offers a range of excellent, sometimes outstanding, cars. Although the pall-like cloud of economic uncertainty hanging over the State-owned company has dated some of the models, because new ones haven't been produced, at least the existing range has been around long enough to have proved its reliability.

The Rifles of the IRA

The Provisionals have graduated from the Thompson sub, to a gun that shoots down helicopters. By Kevin Myers

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