<HTML><PRE>Subj:	Fwd: News 10/21/97 0641 CDT - Unionist Return for Talks
Date:	97-10-21 23:31:23 EDT
From:	Buni1957
To:	DeeMcA, Love irela, RedAxe66, Browniette
To:	Connemara7, FenianBoyo


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Forwarded Message: 
Subj:	 News 10/21/97 0641 CDT - Unionist Return for Talks
Date:	97-10-21 07:45:15 EDT
From:	jdooling@worldnet.att.net (Jay Dooling)
Sender:	owner-ireland_list@email.rutgers.edu
Reply-to:	jdooling@worldnet.att.net
To:	jdooling@worldnet.att.net (Ireland News)


News from the Wire Services Re: Ireland & the Irish

PA 10/21/97 05:53 Lord Of The Dalliance' Splits From Wife And Lover
PA 10/20/97 21:56 An International Perspective On Ulster
PA 10/20/97 21:54 Unionists Return For Talks 

                 ******************************

	   Lord Of The Dalliance' Splits From Wife And Lover

PA   10/21/97 05:53   

Copyright 1997 PA News

  By Simon Holden, Showbusiness Correspondent, PA News

   Dance star Michael Flatley's affair with his Irish lover is over 
and he is divorcing his wife, he has revealed.

   Flatley, 38, had dated dancer Kelley Byrne, 21, for two years, and 
took her to the exclusive K Club on Barbuda in the Caribbean this 
summer.

   But the millionaire says it is impossible to have a proper 
relationship while he is on the road touring. 

   Flatley is about to divorce his Polish wife Beata, a make-up artist 
he married 11 years ago.

   "My wife is a fabulous woman. I will always love her, and Kelley. I 
believe in my heart they still love me. But how can you have a 
meaningful relationship when you're on the road?" the Lord of the 
Dance performer tells the latest edition of Radio Times.

   Flatley, nicknamed the "Lord of the Dalliance", says: "Many artists 
with enormous energy and determination have a very high sex drive, and 
I'm no different. It's one of the greatest pleasures in life."

   But Flatley, who earns more than  100,000 a week, adds: "I'm an 
endless romantic and think one day the right girl will sweep me off my 
feet.

   "Then maybe conquering the world won't be quite so important. I'd 
love kids."

                 ******************************

		 An International Perspective On Ulster

PA   10/20/97 21:56   

Copyright 1997 PA News

  By Maria Breslin, PA News

   A series of lectures will be launched today offering international 
perspectives on the problems in Northern Ireland.

   Leading statesmen will voice their views on the troubled province 
in Openings for Peace convened by the University of Liverpool's 
Institute of Irish Studies.

   The inaugural lecture entitled The South African Experience will be 
led by Dr Frederik Van Zyl Slabbert, former leader of the South 
African Progressive Party and co-founder of the Institute for a 
Democratic Alternative for South Africa.

   Other future speakers include Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the 
United Nations, and Dr Jan Egeland, Deputy Foreign Minister of Norway. 
They will address audiences at the University of Liverpool's Senate 
House, Dublin Castle and Belfast's Stormont Estate.

   The series of lectures was instigated by Lord Owen, Chancellor of 
the University of Liverpool and former British Foreign Secretary and 
European Union Co-Chairman of the International Conference on the 
former Yugoslavia.

   "Ireland is unique. There are no parallels and there will be no 
imported solutions," said Lord Owen. "Nevertheless, objective 
dispassionate evaluation of international experience can only be 
helpful."

   Professor Marianne Elliott, director of the Institute of Irish 
Studies added: "An important part of the Institute's work is to 
promote knowledge and understanding of the background to affairs in 
Northern Ireland.

   "The Openings for Peace lecture series represents a significant 
boost to our programme of activities."

                 ******************************

	 Unionists Return For Talks On Ulster's Political Futur

PA   10/20/97 21:54   

Copyright 1997 PA News

  By Ian Graham, PA News in Belfast.

   Ulster Unionists will be back at the Stormont negotiating table for 
today's peace process talks after a walkout yesterday during 
discussions on words in the Irish constitution which claim 
jurisdiction over the whole island.

   Today's talks are part of Strand One of the process, which 
concentrates on the internal political future of the province.

   Dublin ministers are not involved in the Strand One talks between 
the British Government and local parties on future Ulster political 
structures.

   At yesterday's session, Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble and 
his negotiating team had demanded a written guarantee that proposed 
changes to the Republic's constitution will be up for discussion at 
Stormont ahead of any final agreement.

   Unionists fear debate on two offending articles could be sidelined, 
but Irish foreign affairs minister, David Andrews, made it clear his 
government is prepared to discuss change in the substantive 
negotiations.

   He said they were deeply aware of the sincerely held views of the 
Unionist community on the articles which, he said, were also 
significant for the identity of the nationalist community.

   The Dublin minister said: "I have no illusions about the complexity 
and the difficulty of meeting the challenges, including that of 
finding a balanced constitutional accommodation.

   "But that is the challenge and that is the responsibility that has 
been given to all of us. The Irish government will not be found 
wanting in meeting this challenge and this responsibility.
 
-------
Jay Dooling (jdooling@worldnet.att.net)
Irish Aires - 90.1FM KPFT in Houston
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Irish_Aires/homepage.htm
Dooling & Mabe, CPA 
http://www.doolingmabe-cpa.com/
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