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Daily and Mail
* 1934 – The " Surgeon's Photograph ", the most famous photo allegedly showing the Loch Ness Monster, is published in the Daily Mail ( in 1999, it is revealed to be a hoax ).
On November 18, von Hindenburg testified in front of this parliamentary commission, and cited a December 17, 1918 Neue Zürcher Zeitung article that summarized two earlier articles in the Daily Mail by British General Frederick Barton Maurice with the phrase that the German army had been ' dagger-stabbed from behind by the civilian populace ' (" von der Zivilbevölkerung von hinten erdolcht .").
Furthermore, Ribbentrop had the German Embassy in London provide translations from pro-appeasement newspapers like the Daily Mail and the Daily Express for Hitler's benefit, which had the effect of making it seem that British public opinion was more strongly against going to war for Poland then was actually the case.
The British historian Victor Rothwell wrote that the newspapers that Ribbentrop used to provide his press summaries for Hitler, such as the Daily Express and the Daily Mail, were out of touch not only with British public opinion, but also with British government policy in regard to Poland.
Supposedly taken by Robert Kenneth Wilson, a London gynaecologist, it was published in the Daily Mail on 21 April 1934.
Woolworths with a head and neck made of plastic wood, built by Christian Spurling, the son-in-law of Marmaduke Wetherell, a big game hunter who had been publicly ridiculed in the Daily Mail, the newspaper that employed him.
Spurling claimed that to get revenge, Marmaduke Wetherell committed the hoax, with the help of Chris Spurling ( a sculpture specialist ), his son Ian Marmaduke, who bought the material for the fake, and Maurice Chambers ( an insurance agent ), who asked surgeon Robert Kenneth Wilson to offer the pictures to the Daily Mail.
The Daily Mail reports that Edward has had the photograph independently verified by specialists like a Loch Ness Monster sighting devotee and a group of US Military monster experts.
" As critic Jack Tinker noted in the Daily Mail: " The performance is not so much downright bad as heroically ludicrous.
After Clinton's autobiography My Life appeared in 2004, Lewinsky said in an interview with the British tabloid Daily Mail:
Compared to 1979, the Daily Mail published " Blocked: The Arctic ice, showing as a pink mass in the 1979 picture, links up with northern Canada and Russia.
* 1924 – The forged Zinoviev Letter is published in the Daily Mail, wrecking the British Labour Party's hopes of re-election.
In the United Kingdom, " political correctness gone mad " is a catchphrase associated with the conservative Daily Mail newspaper.
He in particular criticized Daily Mail columnist Richard Littlejohn for his overzealous use of the phrase.
* A list of examples cited by the Daily Mail of political correctness in the UK
The Daily Mail picked up the term four days later, and the BBC then brought it into common use internationally.
* Risk Management Solutions, a catastrophe risk modeling company, subsidiary of Daily Mail and General Trust
The term compact was coined in the 1970s by the Daily Mail, one of the earlier newspapers to make the change, although it now once again calls itself a tabloid.
The early converts from broadsheet format made the change in the 1970s ; two notable British papers that took this step at the time were the Daily Mail and the Daily Express.
The readership also differs greatly ; one of Britain's most well-known tabloids, the Daily Mail, boasts a mostly female readership, whereas that of The Morning Star, in keeping with its political leanings, is of unionised labourers.
In the UK, three previously broadsheet daily newspapers — The Independent, The Times, and The Scotsman — have switched to tabloid size in recent years, and two — Daily Express and Daily Mailin former years, although all of the above call the format " compact " to avoid the down-market connotation of the word tabloid.

Daily and reviewer
However, Slate reviewer David Edelstein called it " a two-hour-and-six-minute snuff movie ," while Jami Bernard of the New York Daily News called it " the most virulently anti-Semitic movie made since the German propaganda films of World War II.
From 1958 to 1990, he was a regular reviewer for The Daily Telegraph, resigning after a vitriolic personal attack on him by Auberon Waugh appeared in that newspaper.
An unnamed reviewer in the Daily Mirror of January 16, 1936 said, " I'm thanking heaven I've got a name that begins with a letter near the end of the alphabet!
In the 1930s, he had launched the career of the future record producer John Hammond, hiring him as a reviewer for the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
He also appears frequently on various other BBC TV programmes, including Daily Politics, Sunday Politics & Newsnight, ITV ’ s Late Debate ( panellist since 2009 ) and Sky News as a newspaper reviewer.
Reviewing the DVD release in September 2008, The Daily Telegraph reviewer Philip Horne described the film as a " richly suggestive, bleakly terrifying fable — and Brynner's performance is chillingly pitch-perfect.
Johnson is a regular contributor to The Daily Telegraph, mainly as a book reviewer, and in the United States to The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Commentary, and the National Review.
Similarly, the reviewer in the Daily Herald felt,The whole thing is daft and full of stilted dialogue.
The reviewer in The Daily Telegraph found Professor Quatermass “ far too unheroic and unresourceful to carry much interest ” while The Times found the serial to be “ a so-so affair ”.
The Los Angeles Daily News placed the album on their list of the 10 worst albums of 2000, the reviewer wondering what made a swing band " think it could get away with an album of recycled psychedelic pop ".
The New York Daily News reviewer described her as " newcomer Sutton Foster, who has the pert look, the silver voice and the dazzling legwork to make an extraordinarily winning Millie.
Past writers for Hot Press have included ninth President of Ireland Michael D. Higgins, the authors of BAFTA award-winning Father Ted, Graham Linehan and Arthur Mathews, Sunday Times television reviewer Liam Fay, author and Daily Telegraph columnist Neil McCormick, the late Bill Graham, The Sunday Business Post US correspondent Niall Stanage, Irish Examiner soccer correspondent Liam Mackey, The Irish Times columnist John Waters, food writer John McKenna, Sunday Independent journalist Declan Lynch and The Guardian football writer, Football Weekly regular Barry Glendenning and Daily Mail writer Jason O ' Toole.
" The Daily Mirrors reviewer, Alexander Muir considered the book to be " an exciting, violent, sadistic and sexy piece of reading matter ", although, partly because of Amis ' abilities as a writer, Colonel Sun " is altogether too meticulous and well written-Fleming was a hypnotic but slapdash writer.
An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of 7 November 1942 said, " The Moving Finger has for a jacket design a picture of a finger pointing out one suspect after another and that's the way it is with the reader as chapter after chapter of the mystery story unfolds.
In 1969, he was appointed senior Daily Book Reviewer for The New York Times, a position he held until 1995, when he became a regular daily book reviewer.
* Material in The Brown Daily Herald, Brown University, 1966-1969 ( film reviewer, arts editor, editor in chief )
An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of 21 March 1942 said, " It doesn't take long to read this one, but the two killings in it are made so mysterious that you will not want to lay the book down until the killer is caught.
An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of April 10, 1948 said, " Hercule Poirot, whose eggshaped cranium is crammed with lively gray cells, proves himself a bit of a mug before he sorts out all the details of Arden's death and other even more baffling mysteries.
An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of September 30, 1950 said, " A Murder is Announced displays all the adroit and well-bred legerdemain one has come to expect from Agatha Christie ... This jubilee whodunit is as deft and ingenious a fabrication as Agatha Christie has contrived in many a year.
An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of 6 December 1947 said, " Hercule Poirot ... here emulates his Olympian namesake, Hercules ... As the old-timer tackled the 12 classical labors ... so Mrs. Christie turns her dapper sleuth loose on 12 modern counterparts in the detection-mystery line.
He has also written a number of short stories and novellas in addition to a non-fiction book about the American novelist Armistead Maupin, with whom he has a close friendship, He is also a book reviewer for The Daily Telegraph.
" The Observer, in 2005, reports that the play " got stinking reviews " according to folk singer Martin Carthy, adding that the Western Daily Mail reviewer was " baffled " and The Listener had " noted that Dylan had ' sat around playing and singing attractively, if a little incomprehensibly '".

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