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Getting back to the story

By accident or by design, eircom Dublin Theatre Festival opened on successive nights two shows that stand at the extremes of …

Fri Oct 12 2001 - 01:00

Taoiseach's finest hour is tarnished

As every fan of Star Trek knows, when you're heading for an asteroid belt, you reverse engines at warp speed

Tue Oct 09 2001 - 01:00

Facing the audacity of despair

One form that a lingering Irish provincialism often takes is the inflation of local heroes into global stars

Fri Oct 05 2001 - 01:00

A grotesque denial of bloodshed

On Sunday week, unless there is a last-minute outbreak of sanity, we will be treated to an extraordinary spectacle

Tue Oct 02 2001 - 01:00

Between horror and transcendence

If rooms reflect their inhabitants, Peter Brook's apartment in Paris seems an especially accurate mirror of its owner

Mon Oct 01 2001 - 01:00

Bush's stark terms are unreal

This year, the Bush administration has given tens of millions of dollars to what is now its number one enemy, the Taliban regime…

Tue Sept 25 2001 - 01:00

Shameful economy of outrage

You probably don't remember Mirsad Alispahic or Hajrudin Mesanovic or Hamed Omerovic or Azem Mujic or Ismet Ahmetovic

Tue Sept 18 2001 - 01:00

Iveagh's fate a symptom of our times

According to Sam Smyth's book Thanks A Million, Big Fella, Charles Haughey and Ben Dunne snr had a row at the Irish Trade Fair…

Tue Sept 11 2001 - 01:00

State's own version of Catch-22

Sometimes a phrase becomes a cliche because it is true

Tue Sept 04 2001 - 01:00

Public interest sacrificed to cute hoorism

For far too long in Ireland, it seemed to take a dreadful disaster before a problem was treated seriously

Tue Aug 28 2001 - 01:00

A history lesson for our times

Sometimes, history can seem like current affairs. While huge changes go on around us, some events happen again and again

Tue Aug 21 2001 - 01:00

Measuring success by growth rates only is a joke

If it really wanted to win a replay of the Nice Treaty referendum, the Government would have sent us all on European holidays…

Tue Aug 14 2001 - 01:00

Wooing of the IRA is grotesque

In the Westminster elections last June, Sinn Fein and the Democratic Unionist Party got a similar share of the popular vote

Tue Aug 07 2001 - 01:00

Sudden improvements in memory suggest a miracle amnesia cure

Like many men in love with power, Charles Haughey has long been a great admirer of Napoleon

Sat Aug 04 2001 - 01:00

`Reality TV' dumbs down democracy

Perhaps the most viscerally emotional image that live television can deliver is the prisoner emerging into freedom from a long…

Tue Jul 31 2001 - 01:00

Boom has weakened democracy

We are now at the end of an era

Tue Jul 24 2001 - 01:00

Spin meets shame in the Sinnott case

The Irish political system is sometimes accused of being slow to respond to serious developments. This is unfair

Tue Jul 17 2001 - 01:00

Part of a weaker RTE for sale soon

When Margaret Thatcher broke up the public sector of the British economy in the 1980s and flogged off its assets, she did so …

Tue Jul 10 2001 - 01:00

Loss of an honest and searing voice

How grimly appropriate that at this time of crisis for liberal unionism, one of the most essential voices to have emerged from…

Tue Jul 03 2001 - 01:00

Failures of beef tribunal haunt us yet

In his Irish Press column Brendan Behan once wrote of passing a large hole in the ground around which a gang of workmen were …

Tue Jun 26 2001 - 01:00

De Valera's heirs fail us in Europe

The line from Eamon de Valera's political heirs has been fairly consistent for a while now

Tue Jun 19 2001 - 01:00

Nice victors now have the floor

Here is the way it worked in magical, mystical Ireland

Tue Jun 12 2001 - 01:00

Despite our misgivings, a Yes vote makes sense

Last week, a nice middle-aged lady from the Christian Solidarity Party called to my door to canvass for a No vote in the Nice…

Tue Jun 05 2001 - 01:00

Untenable arguments against Nice

Chaos theory made its way into modern popular culture with the title of Edward Lorenz's paper delivered to the American Association…

Tue May 29 2001 - 01:00

O'Malley blessed in his enemies

Although he disagreed with him on most issues, W.B. Yeats had a soft spot for Henrik Ibsen

Tue May 22 2001 - 01:00

Healthcare inequality is entrenched

The man waits and waits to see the doctor

Tue May 15 2001 - 01:00

Civic pride for at-home tax exile

Last Friday Limerick City Council awarded its highest honour, the Freedom of the City, to the well-known and much-loved racehorse…

Tue May 08 2001 - 01:00

Reform of police must not stop at the Border

The past in Ireland is still unpredictable

Tue May 01 2001 - 01:00

Church must bear pain of restitution

This time last year, Father Chris Rush ton, provincial superior of the Oblate order in Canada, gave his usual Sunday sermon from…

Tue Apr 24 2001 - 01:00

Fianna Fail moves the goal posts

According to the Sunday Tribune, Beverley Cooper-Flynn got a lot of sympathy at the Fianna Fail parliamentary party meeting last…

Tue Apr 17 2001 - 01:00

Citizens don't have rights in this State

Last Friday night it emerged almost casually that the State is to give £60 million to the Gaelic Athletic Association in return…

Tue Apr 10 2001 - 01:00

Unnecessary demise of the local butcher

In her recent book, She Moves Through the Boom, Ann Marie Hourihane describes the fate of butchers' shops in the Dublin urban…

Tue Apr 03 2001 - 01:00

Sinnott case shows State at its worst

Unless there are last-minute delays, the Supreme Court will today begin hearing a case that ought to be unimaginable

Tue Mar 27 2001 - 01:00

ASTI action highlights inequalities

Ballymun in Dublin is being redeveloped but it is still one of the State's poorest areas

Tue Mar 20 2001 - 00:00

Esat deals cost CIE and Garda too dearly

Nearly four years ago The Irish Times, in common with every other Irish newspaper, wrote glowingly of a new deal between CIE …

Tue Mar 13 2001 - 00:00

A message to citizens on rights and means

Just when it seems that the last depths have been plumbed, they find a way to go even lower

Tue Mar 06 2001 - 00:00

The don't ask, don't tell principles of morality

David is a drug dealer in a prosperous country town

Tue Feb 27 2001 - 00:00

No cover for politicians in a sports shirt

For the first half of the 20th century the language of Irish politics was dominated by the vocabulary of nationhood: freedom, …

Tue Feb 20 2001 - 00:00

Getting a grip on your self

The central paradox of our times is that the triumph of individualism has been accompanied by a deep insecurity about what it…

Sat Feb 17 2001 - 00:00

Noonan's `regret' is not enough

First, an apology. Writing last Saturday about Michael Noonan's involvement with the Brigid McCole case, I stated that he had…

Tue Feb 13 2001 - 00:00

Marketing of politics at new low

It's all the fault of Yoplait, perhaps

Tue Feb 06 2001 - 00:00

Immigrants at home and abroad

On its website, the Irish Immigration Centre says it is "concerned with the current anti-immigrant sentiment and the impact of…

Tue Jan 30 2001 - 00:00

Writing the boom

Early on in Ann Marie Hourihane's splendid She Moves Through the Boom, her eye is caught by a sign at the Eason's bookshop in…

Thu Jan 25 2001 - 00:00

Stadium costs don't add up

With a TD behind bars and charred documents blowing in the winds of west Dublin, the issue of political truthfulness is in the…

Tue Jan 23 2001 - 00:00

Links between FF and the Iraqi regime

With a George Bush back in the White House, and Saddam Hussein still in power in Baghdad, it is hard to believe that 10 years…

Tue Jan 16 2001 - 00:00

Mary scripts tale of two Telecoms

In July 1999 the Minister for Public Enterprise, Ms O'Rourke, told the Seanad she was working on a book about the privatisation…

Tue Jan 02 2001 - 00:00

State plans to give away £2bn asset

It is a truth universally acknowledged that, ahead of tomorrow's Budget, Mr Charlie McCreevy has more money than he knows what…

Tue Dec 05 2000 - 00:00

Nostalgia is not what it used to be

Eaten bread, they say, is soon forgotten

Tue Nov 28 2000 - 00:00

No fudge is allowed on next-day pill

This is still, at times, a weird country, full of strange ambivalences and outlandish contradictions

Tue Nov 21 2000 - 00:00

Hypocrisy of abortion crusades

Johnny Paul Penry, like any six-year-old, believes in Santa Claus

Tue Nov 14 2000 - 00:00
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