Newspaper review: Papers resigned to police pay cut
- Published
The - but "we are where we are".
"Labour left Britain on the brink of ruin and cuts are being made everywhere," says the paper.
But , David Cameron is showing he knows the price of everything and the value of nothing when it comes to public services.
The but to be resilient on the question of pay.
The that "the time has come to reform police pay".
Town ruins
The , west of Tripoli, as forces loyal to Colonel Gaddafi unleashed their fiercest attack so far on rebels.
The paper has been told by residents: "Zawiya is in ruins."
As talk continues of a possible no-fly zone, argues that is just a euphemism for war - and we would be mad to try it.
"However embattled Obama and Cameron feel," he says, "they should find other paths to glory."
Travel woe
The and lead on the disruption facing air travellers because of planned strikes by Spanish airport staff.
The walkouts, starting in the run-up to Easter, would wreck the holiday plans of families hoping to grab some spring sunshine, the Telegraph says.
The paper reminds readers that British Airways cabin crew are being balloted on further strike action too.
"British holidaymakers face travel hell," says the Express.
Unfancied horses
Most of the papers have a picture of happy punter Steve Whiteley who won 拢1.4m on the horses with a 拢2 bet.
Mr Whiteley, 61, scooped the rollover Tote Jackpot after picking all six winners at a meeting at Exeter.
The : "I'm not a horse-racing man, I'm a heating engineer - well, I was!"
The - meaning he was the only winner of the giant prize fund.