Posts Tagged ‘irish times’

Bad for business

HKR Architects is restructuring its business and moving its headquarters to London, as correctly reported in Home News yesterday. However, in an article in the Property supplement, it was stated that the firm had gone into liquidation. That is not the case and the company continues to trade in Ireland, the UK and internationally. We [...]

Fun with photos

An incorrect photograph appeared in the Magazine of December 4th last. The photograph was of the late John O Donoghue, an author and former priest. The photograph should have been of John O Donoghue, the poet and MIND Book of the Year winner. The error is regretted. Link  Report an error

Apology

A report last Saturday, quoting Fine Gael TD Lucinda Creighton concerning party and personal fundraisers, referred to Michael O Flynn of the O Flynn Group in differentiating between developers who were or were not in Nama. The Irish Timesis satisfied that the article may have wrongly implied that Mr O Flynn was other than upstanding [...]

Language lesson

An article in the edition of June 24th, concerning the championships at Wimbledon, referred to the Belgian tennis player Kim Clijsters as Walloon-speaking. Walloon is not a language but is the French-speaking region of Belgium. Ms Clijsters comes from Flanders, the Dutch-speaking region. Link  Report an error

Death by media

An article in yesterday s Aviva Stadium magazine referred in error to the late Joe Delaney, father of FAI chief executive John. Mr Delaney is not deceased and the error is much regretted. Link  Report an error

Apology

An article published in the edition of January 18th 2010 referred to James White and his departure from AIB s corporate banking team in London in the context of a serious property fraud allegedly perpetrated in AIB by Achilleas Kallakis. We accept that James White had no involvement whatsoever with Mr Kallakis, the management of [...]

Fish war!

An item in the PriceWatch page in yesterday s edition, concerning value for money on tuna, made reference to the Spanish stealing Irish tuna. No Spanish fishermen have been charged with illegal fishing of tuna in Irish waters. Link  Report an error

Of snouts and troughs

A report, in yesterday’s edition, of the previous day’s proceedings in the Seanad, wrongly quoted Senator David Norris as saying that the “economic snout was rarely raised from a trough…” It should have said “executive snout”. The error occurred in transmission.  Report an error

And that’s all we’re telling you

In the Special Report on the Irish Antique Dealers Fair by Alanna Gallagher in the edition of September 20th, the comments on Irish art attributed to James Gorry of the Gorry Gallery on Molesworth Street in Dublin were not made by him. Link  Report an error