Cause for celebration in the Daily Mail, under the headline "The debt we owe her".
In the past six weeks his cause has been further bolstered by a high-profile campaign in the Daily Mail newspaper.
If acerbic comments in the Daily Mail matter to Barclays' non-executives, they will pause for a moment before offering him the post.
Writing in the Daily Mail, Melanie Phillips said there might be a case "for some kind of basic testing of jurors' cognitive abilities".
In the Daily Mail , readers can see the same woman is walking barefoot and clutching her handbag as she is guided to safety.
The question of who bankrolled Mr Blair's office in opposition resurfaced with the serialisation in the Daily Mail newspaper this week of Mr Robinson's memoirs.
An article he wrote about the Prince of Wales in the Daily Mail last year was headlined "Why I believe it would be madness for him to be king".
BBC: Royal wedding: What next for William after the wedding?
But writing in the Daily Mail, Lord Carey - who was Archbishop of Canterbury between 1991 and 2002 - said the bishops "cannot lay claim to the moral high-ground".
This is perhaps why you wrongly stated that the article was published in the Daily Mail, a newspaper for which I have never written so much as a semicolon.
"Add to that some iffy performances, gloomy backdrops and a lamentably slow start, and you have the makings of a notable West End flop, " added Letts in the Daily Mail.
Morgan recently wrote a column in the Daily Mail saying that for every critic, he has had many Americans thank him for speaking up in favor of gun control.
Tom Otley of Business Traveller magazine wonders in the Daily Mail whether British passengers will suffer because of the lack of room for expansion at the airport, which is BA's base.
Similarly, Max Hastings says in the Daily Mail that future success of the economy will be thanks to her and if the economy continues to stagnate it's because she is being ignored.
That followed Mr Thompson's admission, in an article in the Daily Mail, that there were "manifestly too few older women broadcasting on the BBC, especially in iconic roles and on iconic topical programmes".
"It's loud, it's soupy, it is as predictable as the tides - yet it makes for a pumpy, undemanding evening, " agreed Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail, labelling it "a modern romantic classic".
As reported in the Daily Mail, Choudary, who has declared, "the flag of Islam will fly over the White House, " has announced that he will lead his protest in front of the White House on March 3rd.
Atkinson's comments come a fortnight after Mark Thompson admitted, in an article in the Daily Mail, that there were "manifestly too few older women broadcasting on the BBC, especially in iconic roles and on iconic topical programmes".
Meanwhile, the BBC said it could reconsider naming a new wing of its Broadcasting House in central London after the late DJ John Peel after allegations he had sex with a 15-year-old were published in the Daily Mail.
Mr Sigai, 37, managed to escape with cuts to his back and hand, as pictured in the Daily Mail, by poking the creature in the eyes - which experts agree offers the only possible chance of fending off such an assault.
During a stop in Blackburn, Straw summoned up his Beatles trivia to tell Rice that Lennon -- who was murdered in New York by a deranged fan in 1980 -- penned those words after reading a story in the Daily Mail newspaper.
Mr Clarke accused his predecessors David Blunkett and John Reid of governing with "a cheque book in one hand and the Daily Mail in the other".
BBC: Clarke: 'Time to get back to more intelligent sentencing'
The best performing daily paper in the Scottish market was the Daily Mail, with its December 2011 sales higher than the year before, at 107, 400.
Two determined British bidders, the Daily Mail and General Trust Group, which owns the Daily Mail in Britain, and Richard Desmond, owner of Express Newspapers, will be particularly disappointed.
Sociological explanations about the decline of the working class do not quite suffice: newspapers can reinvent themselves, as the Daily Mail did in the 1970s, when it turned itself into the middle-class women's paper.
Carpenter worked for the Greyhound Express and Daily Mail in the early years of his career before joining the BBC.
"We've given our children all these opportunities to communicate in private, but we've lost the confidence to actually get involved in that, " she told the Daily Mail.
In April, Tevez gave a wide-ranging interview to the Daily Mail in which he criticised the Italian's training methods and at half-time in this season's victory over Newcastle they are reported to have clashed in the dressing room.
It came at the end of a summit at which the prime minister hailed a package of support for countries of North Africa and the Middle East and made a passionate defence of his commitment to keep increasing Britain's overseas aid budget in the face of the opposition of the Daily Mail.
Not from what I can see in either the Gawker or Daily Mail pieces.
However, that pike was more than four times the size of its prey, according to an article in the UK's Daily Mail newspaper.
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