Papers anticipate hacking probe
- Published
The reopening of the police inquiry into phone hacking at the News of the World features on many front pages.
"The next turn of with the News of the World finally having abandoned its "rogue reporter" claim.
Police will look at whether evidence was missed in the
The for an investigation lasting up to two years and costing millions.
Pundits not archbishops
The headline writers faced something of an open goal with the resignation of Sky Sports presenter Richard Keys.
while the .
Keys and Andy Gray, who was earlier sacked over sexist comments, "will not be lamented for long",
The "this intolerant nation now expects football pundits to behave like the Archbishop of Canterbury".
Terror overhaul
"A case of two steps forward, one of the overhaul of anti-terror measures.
The "sensible balance of liberty and security".
The hitting back after calls that they should be broken up.
They have set out what the paper calls "their strongest arguments yet for keeping retail and investment banking operations under one roof".
'Misanthropic recluse'
大象传媒 World Service, facing savage cuts because of reduced government funding, gets some unlikely defenders.
The ... burns a torch for democracy" and is "trusted all over the globe".
The discovery of letters by US author JD Salinger counter his reputation as a
Among other things, they reveal a desire the writer had to see Tim Henman win Wimbledon.