1 July – Jacqueline Kennedy attended the Irish Sweeps Derby horse race at the Curragh with the taoiseach and his wife.[2]
September
4 September – Ireland's free secondary-school transport scheme began. The CIÉ transport company brought 38,000 pupils to 350 schools.
November
3 November – The Irish Republican Army hijacked the RTÉ Radio broadcasting frequency at midday, interrupting the news read by broadcaster David Timlin, to tell listeners that Ireland joining the Common Market would be "disastrous".[4]
4 December – A mainframe system described as "one of the most sophisticated computers in the world" was switched on by the minister for transport and power Erskine Childers in Shannon, County Clare. The Honeywell 120 computer cost £70,000 and was assigned to perform technical and accounting analyses for international clients. One hundred and fifty local women were needed to perform data preparation tasks to feed the machine.[5]
22 December – In a pre-Christmas message to Irish people living and working in the United Kingdom, Taoiseach Jack Lynch urged them not to return to Ireland for Christmas because of the foot-and-mouth outbreak in the UK.[8]
29 December – The minister for labour, Patrick Hillery, announced details of a new redundancy payments scheme which took effect from New Year's Day.
↑Clissman, Anne (1975). Flann O'Brien: a critical introduction to his writings. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. p.151. ISBN0-06-491215-9. OCLC2002815.; Hopper, Keith (1995). Flann O'Brien: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Post-Modernist. Cork University Press. p.48. ISBN978-1-85918-042-6. OCLC33189239.
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