Sunday, January 18, 2009
News round-up
Irish Times begins stealth advertising
The Irish Times let 30 staff go in December. Still feeling the pinch, Geraldine Kennedy has decided to allow advertising take the form of articles. This weekend, Miriam Lord reports on a Mediterranean cruise. She was a guest of the Travel Department.
(http://www.thetraveldepartment.ie/ , or call 01-6371600). Costs from €1,099 for eight nights.
Dunlop to be accountable for small beans
Former Government press officer Frank Dunlop faces to seven years in jail and/or a fine of €50,000. Among the 16 counts, Mr Dunlop has pleaded guilty to giving £3,000 to one former senator, £2,000 to one councillor and £1,000 to another.
‘The full rigour of the law must be brought to bear on these abuses,' said bank manager Sean FitzPatrick last November. Bertie Ahern too has called for full penalties: 'that's just the kind of guy I am.' Bishop of Cloyne John Magee has said he will offer up a novena for the disgraced press officer.
One door doesn't close, but another opens...
The Dublin Docklands Authority has said it will not be going ahead with Antony Gormley’s 46m steel sculpture of a human figure in the river Liffey because of the cost of the project (€1.6 million). Meanwhile, plans to turn ‘Kearney’s Gardens,’ the ancestral home of Barack Obama in Moneygall, into a heritage centre are going ahead.
Labels:
Bishop Magee,
DDDA,
Frank Dunlop,
Kearney's Gardens,
Miriam Lord,
Sean Fitzpatrick
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