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Paul Martin is an English editor of the Irish Mail on Sunday and was best known for his appearances in Celebrity Come Dine With Me and boxing show Charity Lords of the Ring. He regularly appears on the BBC Nolan radio show, News Night and Sky News as a panelist on the newspaper review section.
The Donegal People's Press (formerly Donegal People's Press and Derry and Tyrone News) is a weekly local newspaper in north County Donegal, Ireland. The paper is published every Tuesday in the north of the county, and a separate edition of the paper, with some alterations, is published in the south of the county, as the Tuesday edition of the ...
Iconic Newspapers; Inish Times; Inishowen Independent; Iris Oifigiúil; Irish Daily Star; Irish Examiner; The Irish Family; Irish Independent; The Irish Press; The Irish Times; The Irish Workers' Voice
The Irish Catholic is a 40-page Irish weekly newspaper providing news and commentary about the Catholic Church. The newspaper is privately owned by editor-in-chief Garry O’Sullivan, managed by a private limited company and independent of the Catholic hierarchy in Ireland. Unusual among nationally-available newspapers, it is not a member ...
The Nation (Irish newspaper) New Ireland (newspaper) Northern Star (newspaper of the Society of United Irishmen) S. The Shan Van Vocht; Sinn Féin (newspaper)
Labour Party MP Clare Short (photographed in 2011) began campaigning against Page 3 in the 1980s.. Page 3 was controversial and divisive throughout its history. Its defenders often characterised it as an inoffensive British cultural tradition, as when Conservative Party MP Richard Drax in 2013 called it a "national institution" that provided "light and harmless entertainment".
Irish Magdalene Laundry, c. early 1900s The Magdalene Laundries in Ireland, also known as Magdalene asylums, were institutions usually run by Roman Catholic orders, [1] which operated from the 18th to the late 20th centuries.
The Irish Daily Mail is a newspaper published in Ireland and Northern Ireland by DMG Media (the parent company of the British Daily Mail). The paper launched in February 2006 with a launch strategy that included giving away free copies on the first day of circulation and low pricing subsequently. [2] The 2009 price was one euro.