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Eileen and Dunne
" The apology was read on air by Eileen Dunne.
Since 2009, the presenting has been shared by Eileen Whelan, Aengus Mac Grianna, Clódagh Walsh, and John Finnerty with Kate Egan, Eileen Dunne, and Susan Byrne doing relief presenting duties.
Seán Duignan, who left his job as political correspondent, and Eileen Dunne were the first co-presenters.
Eileen Dunne moved to other positions in the news service and was replaced by Anne Doyle as co-presenter with Duignan.
Doyle became one of two sole anchors of RTÉ's flagship Nine O ' Clock News in 1997, alternating with Eileen Dunne.

Eileen and Irish
* July 7 – Eileen Lemass, Irish politician
Eileen O ' Casey, née Reynolds ( 1900 – 1995 ), the actress wife of Irish dramatist Seán O ' Casey, was another female friend of Macmillan, who published her husband's plays.
* Eileen Shanahan, Irish poet, lived with her family in Blenheim Gardens.
A " Dragons '" armchair by Irish furniture designer Eileen Gray sold for 21. 9 million euros ( US $ 28 million ), setting an auction record for a piece of 20th century decorative art.
* Irish in Michigan ( Discovering the Peoples of Michigan Series ) ( with Eileen K. Metress, 2006 )
Born and raised in the Turner's Cross area of Cork, Martin was the son of Paddy Martin ( 1923 – 2012 ), a former Irish international boxer and CIÉ employee, and Eileen " Lana " Corbett ( 1929 – 2010 ).
Eileen Desmond ( née Harrington ; 29 December 1932 – 6 January 2005 ) was an Irish Labour Party politician.
Kathleen Eileen Moray Gray ( August 9, 1878 – October 31, 1976 ) was an Irish furniture designer and architect and a pioneer of the Modern Movement in architecture.
Because Dallaglio's father, Vincenzo, is Italian, and his mother, Eileen, was half Irish, he was eligible to play for both Italy and Ireland, as well as England, and in the early 1990s he turned down an invitation to play for Ireland.
From 1947 into the 1960s his work was inspired by the south of France and he purchased a villa designed by the Irish Architect Eileen Gray at Menton in 1955.
Born the son of Lieutenant-Colonel Walter Francis Templer and Mabel Eileen Templer ( née Johnston ) and educated at Wellington College and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, Templer was commissioned into his father's regiment, the Royal Irish Fusiliers, on 16 August 1916 and fought in World War I.
* 7 January – Eileen Desmond, Irish Labour Party TD, Cabinet Minister, MEP and Seanad Éireann member ( born 1932 ).
*" Eileen Og ", a traditional Irish song
* Eileen Essell, Irish actress
* Eileen Gray, Irish furniture designer and architect
* Eileen Lemass, Irish politician
* Eileen O ' Keeffe, Irish hammer thrower
* Eileen Paisley, Baroness Paisley of St George's, Northern Irish politician
In a 2001 review of the modern Irish information economy, information sciences professor Eileen M. Trauth notes craic as an intrinsic part of the culture of sociability that distinguished the Irish workplace from those of other countries.
* Eileen Ivers-Traditional Irish Music ( 1994 )
* The story is also told within Irish Sagas and Folktales by folklorist Eileen O ' Faolain and first published by Oxford University Press in 1954.
Previously the March of the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers was Eileen Alannah, an Irish ballad.
Another tune by Connellan, Molly St. George, along with Molly MacAlpin and Eileen Aroon ( by Cearbhall O ' Dalaigh ), comprise the three earliest Irish harp tunes with extant lyrics.

Eileen and newsreader
Like RTÉ News: Nine O ' Clock, the programme is presented by a single newsreader with Aengus Mac Grianna, John Finnerty, Clódagh Walsh and Eileen Whelan working in rotation.

Dunne and Irish
* 1979 – Richard Dunne, Irish footballer
In the 1999 Irish dance show " Dancing on Dangerous Ground ", conceived and choreographed by former Riverdance leads, Jean Butler and Colin Dunne, Tony Kemp portrayed Fionn in a modernised version of " The Pursuit of Diarmuid and Grainne.
Bill's latest Celtic / Orchestral release The Connemara Suite, features the Irish Chamber Orchestra along with soloists Zoë Conway, Morgan Crowley, Colin Dunne ( Dance Percussion ) and Fionnuala Hunt.
In the 1999 Irish dance show, " Dancing on Dangerous Ground ", Diarmuid was portrayed by former Riverdance lead, Colin Dunne.
In 1997, Fahey appeared opposite Martin Dunne in the Irish short film Pinned.
What all Edward Delaney's work shares is robustness, in an Irish Times review of his 2004 retrospective, arts writer Aidan Dunne described his bronzes as robust, but having an awkwardness, a tenderness about them.
On 22 June 1922, two London-based volunteers of the Irish Republican Army, Reginald Dunne and Joseph O ' Sullivan, assassinated Wilson outside his house at 36 Eaton Square at approximately 2. 20pm.
Among the significant Irish poets to have emerged in recent years are: Pat Boran, Mairéad Byrne, Ciarán Carson, Patrick Chapman, Harry Clifton, Tony Curtis, Padraig J. Daly, Colin Dardis, Gerald Dawe, Greg Delanty, Séan Dunne, Paul Durcan, Eamon Grennan, Vona Groarke, Kerry Hardie, Randolph Healy, Seamus Heaney, John Hughes, Pat Ingoldsby, Trevor Joyce, Brendan Kennelly, Derek Mahon, Thomas McCarthy, Hugh McFadden, Paula Meehan, Billy Mills, Sinéad Morrissey, Paul Muldoon, Gerry Murphy, Bernard O ' Donoghue, Conor O ' Callaghan, Caitriona O ' Reilly, Justin Quinn, Maurice Riordan, Maurice Scully, Michael Smith, Geoffrey Squires, William Wall, Catherine Walsh.
The case was heard in October 2006 and in the judgment was delivered on 14 December 2006 Ms. Justice Dunne found that although a ' living document ', the Irish constitution had always meant for marriage to be between a man and a woman, that the definitions used in the Civil Registration Act of 2004 was an expression of the current attitudes of the state and that she could find no reason to change that.
Irish dancer Colin Dunne stepped into the role of lead dancer and went on to perform in subsequent productions before leaving the show in 1998.
Born in 1853, in Watertown, Connecticut, he was the son of an ardent Irish nationalist, Patrick William ( P. W .) Dunne ( 1832 – 1921 ), who emigrated to America in 1849 after the failed Young Ireland revolt.
P. W. Dunne was a prosperous businessman, active in both Irish and American politics.
In 1919, Dunne was appointed by the Irish Race Convention to serve on the American Commission on Irish Independence.
As part of this commission, Dunne traveled to the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 in order to voice Irish-American desires for an independent Irish nation.
* Tony Dunne and George Best become the first Irish footballers to pick up European Cup winners medals as Manchester United defeat Benfica in the final at Wembley Stadium.
Ben Dunne ( born 3 March 1949 ) is an Irish entrepreneur and former director of his family firm, Dunnes Stores, one of the largest chains of department stores in Ireland.
Mr Justice Brian McCracken, sole member of The McCracken Tribunal which was established by the Irish Government in 1997, found that Dunne knowingly assisted Lowry evade tax .< ref >
Thomas ' Tom ' Dunne is an Irish radio broadcaster with Newstalk.
He has also published three collections of his favourite songs by Irish or Ireland-connected artists, known as the Tom Dunne Collections.
An Experiment with Time is a long essay by the Irish aeronautical engineer J. W. Dunne ( 1875 — 1949 ) on the subjects of precognition and the human experience of time.
During the 1930s, the club won a further three League titles and five FAI Cups with Irish internationals, Paddy Moore and Jimmy Dunne playing key roles in their success, supported by crowds of up to 30, 000 people at Glenmalure Park.
Anthony Peter Dunne ( born 24 July 1941 in Dublin ), Irish football player who regularly appeared at left-back.
Famously, when a penalty was applied to Hannah Craig during the 2012 Summer Olympics, Carl Dunne, head of the Irish canoeing team, telephoned RTÉ's analyst to discuss the possibility of appealing the decision.

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