Try to guess which newspaper wrote the below quotes, from the archives, and see if you can work out who they were writing about:
1) "Did this apology for a boss really believe that if she put on a sad face ...she'd get away with this? Did she believe that would be enough to satisfy an angry, repulsed nation and detract from her mind-boggling incompetence?
"Time and again she was given the chance to apologise but she didn't. Because she knows an admission of guilt would require her resignation - and nothing is worth that... not with her cushy ...salary and ...and her power.
Answer: That's right it was The News Of The World about Haringey Council's head of children's services Sharon Shoesmith. Shoesmith didn't actually commit any crimes herself, but The News Of The World argued that because criminal acts happened on her watch she was still guilty - as boss at the time - of such gross negligence that she should still have faced criminal charges.
OK, let's try another one...
2) If the top [of the business]...acts as if it is above the rules, what example does that set...[This person is] so widely derided and mistrusted that [they] have no ...stature to effect the root-and-branch investigation and change [needed]... If [this person] cannot be eased out so soon after his farce, [they] should have the common decency to resign.
Answer: That's right, it's The News Of The World demanding the resignation of FIFA chief Sepp Blatter after he presided over a deeply corrupt period within the organisation. Blatter's most senior colleagues backed him to continue in the top job - a situation The News Of The World described as a farce.
And a final one...
3) [This person] has become a figure of vilification or ridicule... brought into grave disrepute, dragged through the deep mud of scandal after scandal... if [this person] has even a sliver of leadership [they] should stand down... If [they] possesses an ounce of responsibility, [they] should resign, knowing [they] have brought dishonour to [their] office.
Answer: That's right it's The News Of The World again, this time calling for the resignation of then-England captain John Terry after he was linked to a string of scandals. The News Of The World claimed that losing the respect of junior colleagues and the nation-at-large made his position of responsibility and authority "untenable".
Comments