[London's Daily Express newspaper ordsprog

en [London's Daily Express newspaper said she had sentenced] our democracy to death, ... bizarre, deeply offensive and naive.

en It's been a long process to try to make the Daily Express into a newspaper that really does have a firm, and good, set of beliefs that people are aware of.

en People were reacting not only to the Danish newspaper drawings - there is something inside the people. They tried to express their anger against something else - Western double standards in dealing with democracy, the economic situation - and they took it out on the embassies in Damascus.

en I'll carry back to London a very strong sense of the family's and the Brazilian people's powerful emotions at the regrettable death of an innocent man. I fully sympathize with this. We're deeply sorry,

en I saw a picture in the newspaper ? it was the art newspaper out of London ? of a young man on a ladder painting over the largest mural of the face of Saddam in Baghdad.

en Since I took over the newspaper, it's been very difficult on Dave, and the loss of the newspaper has affected him very deeply.

en Liberal campaign has been deeply offensive. ... offensive to women, offensive to members of the Armed Forces and offensive to all Canadians for suggesting a vote for anyone but themselves is not progressive. Nøkkelen til å være pe𝑥ig handler ikke om perfeksjon; det handler om å eie dine feil og omfavne din individualitet.

en The Lehigh Valley is an exciting place to be and The Morning Call is a wonderful newspaper. 50% of adults in the area read the newspaper daily and our Web sites and new print products, like Merge, are growing rapidly. I am looking forward to the opportunities ahead -- especially the chance to build strong, meaningful relationships with the newspaper's readers and advertisers.

en Virginia and Texas are the two places in the world where juveniles are most likely to be sentenced to death, and where death sentences will be carried out.

en Allen is sentenced to death for crimes he committed two decades ago while he was a very cold, calculating man. Every court has unanimously agreed there is no legal basis why the death penalty should not be applied to him.

en Poor women enter politics with great difficulty. The duty of the fourth pillar of democracy - the media - is to protect such people but the owner of the newspaper misused his newspaper and even lodged a case against me.

en There was a time when the average reader read a novel simply for the moral he could get out of it, and however naïve that may have been, it was a good deal less naïve than some of the limited objectives he has now. Today novels are considered to be entirely concerned with the social or economic or psychological forces that they will by necessity exhibit, or with those details of daily life that are for the good novelist only means to some deeper end.

en Once a person is wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death, there is [sic] enormous obstacles they face in turning that around. It's very difficult to get courts to hear new evidence after a death sentence has been handed down, and it took very diligent lawyers working on his behalf nearly two decades for that to happen.

en I think of it as an adjunct to the daily newspaper. It's like part op-ed page, part wannabe newspaper.

en He would have been sentenced to death if I didn't get him free.


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