Mobile telephone photographic exhibition. By Don Mullan. From 23rd September to 29th October 2010. Alliance Francaise Cork It was my... [read more...]
12/04/2011
President Barack Obama may take a detour to University College Cork to honour a former African-American slave when he visits... [read more...]
12/04/2011
20-03-2010 ASDas
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20-03-2010 ASDas
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmo
Within days of the killing of thirteen unarmed civilians and the wounding of fourteen others on Bloody Sunday, over 500 eyewitness testimonies were recorded for presentation to the Widgery Tribunal – but only 15 were considered. Officially ignored for more
On 27 June 1969 in a controversial move, Donal de Roiste was ‘retired’ from the Irish Defense Forces ‘in the interests of the service.’ In this investigative book Don Mullan explores the hypothesis that Donal de Roiste was framed because
Don Mullan was a young dyslexic boy growing up in a Northern Ireland being violently torn apart by The Troubles. Having witnessed Bloody Sunday he was tempted to join the IRA, as many of his contemporaries did. But the boy
At 5.30pm on May 17, 1974, three car-bombs exploded in the centre of Dublin. 90 minutes later, another bomb exploded in Monaghan Town. Between them, the attacks killed 33 people, one of the worst death-tolls of the Troubles. The bombings