She hit the headlines in 2011 when she unexpectedly came second in a by-election in the neighbouring Labour stronghold of Barnsley.
But at times Sir Michael's style has been controversial and his methods hit the headlines in 2007 when he banned pupils from hugging each other.
He hit the headlines in 2008 when he put his "entire life" up for sale on auction site eBay after he split from his wife.
The condition hit the headlines in the UK when six-year-old Sally Slater was found a donor heart with only hours to spare before her own heart failed.
Equatorial Guinea hit the headlines in 2004 when a plane load of suspected mercenaries was intercepted in Zimbabwe while allegedly on the way to overthrow President Obiang.
The case hit the headlines in December 2012 when his mother disappeared with him sparking a police search and leading to a court order allowing him to be named by the media.
BBC: Neon Roberts: 'Good progress' of boy in brain tumour case
In other words, is current selling providing traders and active investors with the opportunity to buy financials on sale before the profit reports, revenues, and guidance hit the headlines in a few days?
Mr Shayler hit the headlines in 1997, when he made a series of claims about the activities of MI5, including revelations that it had kept files on current politicians, including Home Secretary Jack Straw.
Sir Robert also hit the headlines in 1896 when he became the first doctor to use X-rays to diagnose a fracture, and was the co-founder of the Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital in Gobowen, Shropshire.
But economics eventually hit the headlines in the days before the vote when it emerged that Israel's budget deficit had grown to 4.2% of GDP in 2012 - twice the level predicted a year earlier, in essence because revenue from taxes had fallen short of predictions.
She has never missed the cut in eight majors, and first hit the headlines when she tied for ninth as a 13-year-old in the 2003 Kraft Nabisco Championship.
The accolade, awarded by the Guernsey Adolescent Smokefree Project, came as Le Tissier hit the headlines for his part in a failed betting scam.
The finances of the Scottish Premier League, which broke away from the SFL in 1997, have this week hit the headlines because Setanta is believed to want to renegotiate its television deal.
Second, fearful that bad weather might ruin their well laid plans, consumers tend to avoid booking cruises when big storms hit the headlines like Hurricane Irene did in the US in late August.
The death of Savita Halappanavar in a hospital in Galway in October last year hit the headlines around the world and reignited the debate.
The 130ft trawler hit the headlines having gone aground twice - in Lochinver on Sunday and then on Lewis early on Monday.
He hit the headlines by taking 9-16 in an under-19 one-day match against Bangladesh during a four-nation tournament in Pakistan earlier this month.
Despite a sponsorship deal with Premier League football club Tottenham Hotspur and once being a constituent of the FTSE 100 index of the largest companies listed in the UK, the firm has rarely hit the headlines.
The prince hit the headlines after he was photographed naked while in his swanky Las Vegas hotel suite with friends and a group of women they had met.
The only thing that will hit the headlines hard enough to force a change is a big proportion of protest votes in the form of spoilt papers.
Four years ago he hit national headlines after telling a racist joke in front of the island's media.
BBC: Guernsey's Deputy Chief Minister fails to get re-elected
In a previous life I played base in the band Blur and I recently hit the headlines for writing about how I spent a million pounds on champagne and cocaine.
He also hit the headlines two years ago when he prepared one of the hottest curries in Scotland.
Not since it lost to Porto in the 2003 UEFA Cup final had Celtic hit the European headlines, that was until this year and its shock victory over Barcelona.
The figures show impressive increases across the board in a year where e-book popularity - in particular the likes of Fifty Shades of Grey - hit the headlines for racking up massive sales.
Raisa first hit the international headlines when she accompanied Mr Gorbachev, as a likely next leader, to London in 1984.
The claim that Peter and I are somehow at war is in any event undermined by the fact that when the papers carrying these headlines hit the streets last night, Peter was at my home attending a family birthday party organised some time ago.
Prydie, 18, hit the headlines when he became the youngest player to play for Wales when he was selected by coach Warren Gatland in the Six Nations clash against Italy in March.
BBC: Wales starTom Prydie in Commonwealth Games sevens squad
And he blames the Andrew Wakefield case for undermining public confidence in the US and the UK, even though it is a decade since the MMR scare hit the headlines.
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