
The missing toddler in Portugal dominates the headlines in the Sunday's this morning
MADDIE SUSPECT says the front of the News of the world
The search was redirected as the detective leading the hunt said his team had a good idea who the kidnapper was — and that he believes Maddie may still be ALIVE.
A source close to the Portuguese investigation also told the News of the World that the abductor is believed to have spent days watching Maddie and staking out the McCann family's apartment at the Ocean Club resort in the seaside village of Praia da Luz.
Meanwhile more than 500 British tourists, expats and locals have joined in the ongoing search for the blonde youngster along a six-mile stretch of the coastline
THE NET'S CLOSING IN says the Sunday Mirror
DETECTIVES were last night closing in on a man they suspect of snatching little Maddy McCann from her holiday apartment.
They said they believed she was being held within three miles of the complex where she had been staying at Praia da Luz on Portugal's Algarve.
Guilhermino Encarnacao, chief of police in the region, said he had an artist's impression of the abductor but he feared that releasing it may put the three-year-old's life in danger.
He said he believed that Maddy had been taken by a sex offender, but there was also a possibility she had been kidnapped for a ransom - Maddy's parents are both doctors, her father a highly-paid heart specialist.
WE KNOW MADDY MONSTER says the Express
A prime suspect has been identified, thanks to more than 30 witnesses contacting police with his description and a desperate hunt to find him was under way yesterday. But detectives were last night refusing to release copies of a sketch of Madeleine’s kidnapper in case he panics for fear of being caught and kills her.Dozens of tourists in Praia da Luz in the western Algarve abandoned their holidays yesterday to join police search teams and local residents looking for golden-haired Madeleine.And volunteers from more than an hour’s drive away from the seaside village of Praia da Luz have been turning up at the Mark Warner resort in the village offering their services.
The story takes the Mail on Sunday's scope off the front pages
The TRUE story about Lord Browne - by ex-rent boy lover
At the time it all seemed too much - too plainly far-fetched - for Jeff Chevalier to take in. But here he was, a 25-year-old once-penniless Canadian male prostitute, sitting down to dinner with the Prime Minister of Great Britain.
And the two men were liberally helping themselves from a £3,000 bottle of claret.
The wine was the personal choice of Lord Browne of Madingley - the boss of British Petroleum, Britain's most senior businessman and host of the dinner party in question.
"Mr Blair didn't know what it was but he absolutely loved it," Mr Chevalier recalls. "It was a 1983 French claret."
Other revelations include
He was flaunted before business and political contacts, diplomats and artists; there were holidays in private compounds in Barbados and opera in Salzburg and Venice (enjoyed alongside Prince and Princess Michael of Kent in their private box).
In Venice, Mr Chevalier would find himself chinking glasses with Elton John and Jude Law.
Travel would routinely be by private jet - which the businessman appeared to regard as a private plaything.
Amongst the quality papers the Observer leads on the story that
Doctors admit: NHS treatments must be rationed
British doctors will take the historic step of admitting for the first time that many health treatments will be rationed in the future because the NHS cannot cope with spiralling demand from patients.
In a major report that will embarrass the government, the British Medical Association will say fertility treatment, plastic surgery and operations for varicose veins and minor childhood ailments, such as glue ear, are among a long list of procedures in jeopardy.
Junk food nation reports the Independent
Alarming levels of malnutrition have been recorded in Britain, The Independent on Sunday has learned, prompting further medical concern at the effects of the nation's addiction to salty, fatty, junk food.
Despite high-profile campaigns by the Government and celebrity chefs to improve eating habits, new figures reveal that there has been a 44 per cent increase in hospital cases of malnutrition over the past five years.
Amid estimates that up to 3.6 million people are suffering from malnutrition, including conditions found in sub-Saharan Africa, MPs and doctors last night called for action to tackle poor diets, and for all patients to be screened for malnutrition. They called for the Government's National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice) guidelines to be made compulsory.
According to the Telegraph
Brown to inherit Blair's surrender to Brussels
Tony Blair intends to use his remaining weeks in office to surrender British powers to Brussels as part of his drive for a European "legacy", senior Whitehall officials claim.
Leading civil servants fear the Prime Minister will effectively bind the hands of Gordon Brown by signing Britain up to a rewritten version of the European Union constitution days before he finally resigns at the end of June.
Mr Blair's plan to forge closer links with France and Germany - something he has wanted to do since coming to power in 1997 - are causing consternation in Whitehall and the Chancellor's camp.
Much speculation about the political scene after Thursday,the Sunday Times leads with
Cameron ‘on course’ for No 10
David Cameron would win a general election by 54 seats, based on voting patterns in last week’s local elections, according to a study published this weekend.
The study shows that the problems faced by Gordon Brown as he is poised finally to become prime minister are worse than first thought.
Labour took comfort last week from snap assessments suggesting that its vote held up, but the research shows that the party’s performance was weaker than initially believed in the south, while the Tories gained more ground in the north.
Thursday’s voting shares — 40% for the Conservatives and 26% for Labour — would be enough to give Cameron 352 Commons seats, 54 more than all other parties in a general election. The study is by Professors Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher, directors of Plymouth University’s elections centre
MPs pour scorn on Blair's new mission to act as 'faith healer' says the Independent
Tony Blair is preparing a mission to build bridges between the major world religions when he leaves office, and plans to act as an ambassador for multi-faith dialogue in Britain and abroad.
Friends of the Prime Minister have told The Independent on Sunday that he is planning to set up a Blair Foundation soon after leaving No 10, and one of its main aims will be to promote communication between Christianity, Islam and Judaism.
But the plan has been greeted with incredulity among MPs who say he has done more to create divisions between Islam and the West than any Prime Minister in living memory. Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrat MP, said: "He may want to build bridges between the world religions but the fact is he has already burnt them. He has been seen to be partisan in the Middle East, slavishly following Bush, and will have no credibility with the Islamic world. It shows how deluded he is. His bridge will at best be a pier."
RATTLED MPS BACK BROWN'S BID reports the Express
LABOUR last night attempted to close ranks round Gordon Brown amid fears that continued infighting will hand the next general election to a resurgent Tory Party.
As the Chancellor laid low, digesting a disastrous night at the polls, leading Blairites indicated they had abandoned a leadership challenge in the interests of the party, despite continuing concerns about Mr Brown’s fitness to govern
Labour bid to overturn SNP claims the Telegraph
The strange case concerns an eight-hour boat ride from the Isle of Arran, wet voting papers and claims of a mysterious extra 100 ballots.Labour officials say the crucial seat, which was won by the Scottish National Party by only 48 votes, should have gone to Labour.
A successful challenge in court would reverse the SNP's one-seat lead and make Labour the largest single party in the Scottish parliament. The allegations have drawn parallels with the "hanging chads" row in Florida in the 2000 US election that gave George W Bush the presidency.
The People claims that
BROWN CUTS THE NHS FREE
GORDON Brown plans to make the NHS independent when he is PM, The People can reveal.
Hospitals would be free of state control and have their own boardroom HQ, just like large multinationals such as BP and BA.
But critics warn the move means a worse deal for longterm sick, like the elderly, those on dialysis and drug addicts.
They claim the NHS management board will be more interested in quick-fix ops, like hip replacements, and in making money out of medical tests.
The Royal College of Nursing also warns of possible charges for certain ops, like tattoo removal and fertility treatment.
Staying with the Prime Minister in waiting,the Observer claims
Brown to abandon Chequers weekends
Gordon Brown will become the first Prime Minister in more than 80 years to dispense with Chequers as a regular weekend retreat as he seeks to place 'clear blue water' between himself and Tony Blair.
As Blair finally endorses Brown as his successor today, the Observer understands that the next Prime Minister is planning a fresh start by returning home to his young children in Scotland on Fridays.
Chequers, the official country residence of the Prime Minister since the era of Lloyd George, will instead be used for international summits and brainstorming sessions with civil servants. Brown's decision to become the first Prime Minister since Andrew Bonar Law in 1923 not to make regular use of Chequers will be a sign of his determination to distance himself from the era of Blair, who speaks warmly of how he winds down in the grand 16th-century house.
Your bin could give you the Black death say the News of the World
BUGS from the same family of bacteria that killed 75 MILLION people in the Black Death plague epidemics have been found in dustbins which are only emptied once a fortnight.
Samples taken during a scientific study tested positive for yersinia bacteria which wiped out whole communities in the Middle Ages.
And we can reveal that government health chiefs have known about the study for EIGHT MONTHS... but instead use a separate probe — which they funded — to support their claims that two-week collections are safe.
KYLIE'S MAN
EXCLUSIVE KYLIE & THE FILM DIRECTOR is a top story in the Mirror
KYLIE Minogue has been whisked away to an exclusive holiday resort by a handsome married film director.
Pop superstar Kylie, single since she was dumped by love-rat Olivier Martinez three months ago, is on a sunshine break in South America with dashing Alexander Dahm, 39.
Kylie burst into a radiant grin when collected by father-of-one Dahm at Santiago Airport in Chile on Wednesday after flying 7,000 miles around the world to be with him. He cuddled her and fondly stroked her hair.
The People leads with
TV APPRENTICE FRAUD PROBE
LOUDMOUTH Apprentice favourite Tre Azam was last night at the centre of a major benefits fraud investigation.
He is said to have pocketed thousands of pounds in housing benefit - while raking in thousands more as a marketing consultant.
The reality TV star could even face full-scale criminal proceedings over the alleged scam, which carries a maximum jail term of seven years.
Cocky Tre, 27, last night tried to dismiss the inquiry and insisted he was not a crook.
And he then even offered to do a deal with The People - promising us an exclusive interview later if we didn't publish.
114 missing after Kenyan plane crashes is featured in most of the papers
The Observer reports that
A Kenya Airways plane with 114 people on board, including five Britons, is thought to have crashed in dense forests of southern Cameroon.
The almost brand new Boeing 737-800 was reported missing shortly after taking off in poor weather late on Friday from Douala, the largest city in Cameroon, en route to Nairobi. Kenya Airways officials said yesterday that a distress signal had been picked up, but that wreckage had not been found. People living in several of the villages dotted through the forests of the sparsely populated area have reported hearing a loud boom.
One of them reports the Express is
A FORMER Daily Express journalist was among those missing last night after a jet carrying 114 people crashed in dense African rainforest.
Anthony Mitchell, a foreign correspondent, was on board a Kenya Airways flight along with four other Britons – believed to be aid workers.
MADDIE SUSPECT says the front of the News of the world
The search was redirected as the detective leading the hunt said his team had a good idea who the kidnapper was — and that he believes Maddie may still be ALIVE.
A source close to the Portuguese investigation also told the News of the World that the abductor is believed to have spent days watching Maddie and staking out the McCann family's apartment at the Ocean Club resort in the seaside village of Praia da Luz.
Meanwhile more than 500 British tourists, expats and locals have joined in the ongoing search for the blonde youngster along a six-mile stretch of the coastline
THE NET'S CLOSING IN says the Sunday Mirror
DETECTIVES were last night closing in on a man they suspect of snatching little Maddy McCann from her holiday apartment.
They said they believed she was being held within three miles of the complex where she had been staying at Praia da Luz on Portugal's Algarve.
Guilhermino Encarnacao, chief of police in the region, said he had an artist's impression of the abductor but he feared that releasing it may put the three-year-old's life in danger.
He said he believed that Maddy had been taken by a sex offender, but there was also a possibility she had been kidnapped for a ransom - Maddy's parents are both doctors, her father a highly-paid heart specialist.
WE KNOW MADDY MONSTER says the Express
A prime suspect has been identified, thanks to more than 30 witnesses contacting police with his description and a desperate hunt to find him was under way yesterday. But detectives were last night refusing to release copies of a sketch of Madeleine’s kidnapper in case he panics for fear of being caught and kills her.Dozens of tourists in Praia da Luz in the western Algarve abandoned their holidays yesterday to join police search teams and local residents looking for golden-haired Madeleine.And volunteers from more than an hour’s drive away from the seaside village of Praia da Luz have been turning up at the Mark Warner resort in the village offering their services.
The story takes the Mail on Sunday's scope off the front pages
The TRUE story about Lord Browne - by ex-rent boy lover
At the time it all seemed too much - too plainly far-fetched - for Jeff Chevalier to take in. But here he was, a 25-year-old once-penniless Canadian male prostitute, sitting down to dinner with the Prime Minister of Great Britain.
And the two men were liberally helping themselves from a £3,000 bottle of claret.
The wine was the personal choice of Lord Browne of Madingley - the boss of British Petroleum, Britain's most senior businessman and host of the dinner party in question.
"Mr Blair didn't know what it was but he absolutely loved it," Mr Chevalier recalls. "It was a 1983 French claret."
Other revelations include
He was flaunted before business and political contacts, diplomats and artists; there were holidays in private compounds in Barbados and opera in Salzburg and Venice (enjoyed alongside Prince and Princess Michael of Kent in their private box).
In Venice, Mr Chevalier would find himself chinking glasses with Elton John and Jude Law.
Travel would routinely be by private jet - which the businessman appeared to regard as a private plaything.
Amongst the quality papers the Observer leads on the story that
Doctors admit: NHS treatments must be rationed
British doctors will take the historic step of admitting for the first time that many health treatments will be rationed in the future because the NHS cannot cope with spiralling demand from patients.
In a major report that will embarrass the government, the British Medical Association will say fertility treatment, plastic surgery and operations for varicose veins and minor childhood ailments, such as glue ear, are among a long list of procedures in jeopardy.
Junk food nation reports the Independent
Alarming levels of malnutrition have been recorded in Britain, The Independent on Sunday has learned, prompting further medical concern at the effects of the nation's addiction to salty, fatty, junk food.
Despite high-profile campaigns by the Government and celebrity chefs to improve eating habits, new figures reveal that there has been a 44 per cent increase in hospital cases of malnutrition over the past five years.
Amid estimates that up to 3.6 million people are suffering from malnutrition, including conditions found in sub-Saharan Africa, MPs and doctors last night called for action to tackle poor diets, and for all patients to be screened for malnutrition. They called for the Government's National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice) guidelines to be made compulsory.
According to the Telegraph
Brown to inherit Blair's surrender to Brussels
Tony Blair intends to use his remaining weeks in office to surrender British powers to Brussels as part of his drive for a European "legacy", senior Whitehall officials claim.
Leading civil servants fear the Prime Minister will effectively bind the hands of Gordon Brown by signing Britain up to a rewritten version of the European Union constitution days before he finally resigns at the end of June.
Mr Blair's plan to forge closer links with France and Germany - something he has wanted to do since coming to power in 1997 - are causing consternation in Whitehall and the Chancellor's camp.
Much speculation about the political scene after Thursday,the Sunday Times leads with
Cameron ‘on course’ for No 10
David Cameron would win a general election by 54 seats, based on voting patterns in last week’s local elections, according to a study published this weekend.
The study shows that the problems faced by Gordon Brown as he is poised finally to become prime minister are worse than first thought.
Labour took comfort last week from snap assessments suggesting that its vote held up, but the research shows that the party’s performance was weaker than initially believed in the south, while the Tories gained more ground in the north.
Thursday’s voting shares — 40% for the Conservatives and 26% for Labour — would be enough to give Cameron 352 Commons seats, 54 more than all other parties in a general election. The study is by Professors Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher, directors of Plymouth University’s elections centre
MPs pour scorn on Blair's new mission to act as 'faith healer' says the Independent
Tony Blair is preparing a mission to build bridges between the major world religions when he leaves office, and plans to act as an ambassador for multi-faith dialogue in Britain and abroad.
Friends of the Prime Minister have told The Independent on Sunday that he is planning to set up a Blair Foundation soon after leaving No 10, and one of its main aims will be to promote communication between Christianity, Islam and Judaism.
But the plan has been greeted with incredulity among MPs who say he has done more to create divisions between Islam and the West than any Prime Minister in living memory. Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrat MP, said: "He may want to build bridges between the world religions but the fact is he has already burnt them. He has been seen to be partisan in the Middle East, slavishly following Bush, and will have no credibility with the Islamic world. It shows how deluded he is. His bridge will at best be a pier."
RATTLED MPS BACK BROWN'S BID reports the Express
LABOUR last night attempted to close ranks round Gordon Brown amid fears that continued infighting will hand the next general election to a resurgent Tory Party.
As the Chancellor laid low, digesting a disastrous night at the polls, leading Blairites indicated they had abandoned a leadership challenge in the interests of the party, despite continuing concerns about Mr Brown’s fitness to govern
Labour bid to overturn SNP claims the Telegraph
The strange case concerns an eight-hour boat ride from the Isle of Arran, wet voting papers and claims of a mysterious extra 100 ballots.Labour officials say the crucial seat, which was won by the Scottish National Party by only 48 votes, should have gone to Labour.
A successful challenge in court would reverse the SNP's one-seat lead and make Labour the largest single party in the Scottish parliament. The allegations have drawn parallels with the "hanging chads" row in Florida in the 2000 US election that gave George W Bush the presidency.
The People claims that
BROWN CUTS THE NHS FREE
GORDON Brown plans to make the NHS independent when he is PM, The People can reveal.
Hospitals would be free of state control and have their own boardroom HQ, just like large multinationals such as BP and BA.
But critics warn the move means a worse deal for longterm sick, like the elderly, those on dialysis and drug addicts.
They claim the NHS management board will be more interested in quick-fix ops, like hip replacements, and in making money out of medical tests.
The Royal College of Nursing also warns of possible charges for certain ops, like tattoo removal and fertility treatment.
Staying with the Prime Minister in waiting,the Observer claims
Brown to abandon Chequers weekends
Gordon Brown will become the first Prime Minister in more than 80 years to dispense with Chequers as a regular weekend retreat as he seeks to place 'clear blue water' between himself and Tony Blair.
As Blair finally endorses Brown as his successor today, the Observer understands that the next Prime Minister is planning a fresh start by returning home to his young children in Scotland on Fridays.
Chequers, the official country residence of the Prime Minister since the era of Lloyd George, will instead be used for international summits and brainstorming sessions with civil servants. Brown's decision to become the first Prime Minister since Andrew Bonar Law in 1923 not to make regular use of Chequers will be a sign of his determination to distance himself from the era of Blair, who speaks warmly of how he winds down in the grand 16th-century house.
Your bin could give you the Black death say the News of the World
BUGS from the same family of bacteria that killed 75 MILLION people in the Black Death plague epidemics have been found in dustbins which are only emptied once a fortnight.
Samples taken during a scientific study tested positive for yersinia bacteria which wiped out whole communities in the Middle Ages.
And we can reveal that government health chiefs have known about the study for EIGHT MONTHS... but instead use a separate probe — which they funded — to support their claims that two-week collections are safe.
KYLIE'S MAN
EXCLUSIVE KYLIE & THE FILM DIRECTOR is a top story in the Mirror
KYLIE Minogue has been whisked away to an exclusive holiday resort by a handsome married film director.
Pop superstar Kylie, single since she was dumped by love-rat Olivier Martinez three months ago, is on a sunshine break in South America with dashing Alexander Dahm, 39.
Kylie burst into a radiant grin when collected by father-of-one Dahm at Santiago Airport in Chile on Wednesday after flying 7,000 miles around the world to be with him. He cuddled her and fondly stroked her hair.
The People leads with
TV APPRENTICE FRAUD PROBE
LOUDMOUTH Apprentice favourite Tre Azam was last night at the centre of a major benefits fraud investigation.
He is said to have pocketed thousands of pounds in housing benefit - while raking in thousands more as a marketing consultant.
The reality TV star could even face full-scale criminal proceedings over the alleged scam, which carries a maximum jail term of seven years.
Cocky Tre, 27, last night tried to dismiss the inquiry and insisted he was not a crook.
And he then even offered to do a deal with The People - promising us an exclusive interview later if we didn't publish.
114 missing after Kenyan plane crashes is featured in most of the papers
The Observer reports that
A Kenya Airways plane with 114 people on board, including five Britons, is thought to have crashed in dense forests of southern Cameroon.
The almost brand new Boeing 737-800 was reported missing shortly after taking off in poor weather late on Friday from Douala, the largest city in Cameroon, en route to Nairobi. Kenya Airways officials said yesterday that a distress signal had been picked up, but that wreckage had not been found. People living in several of the villages dotted through the forests of the sparsely populated area have reported hearing a loud boom.
One of them reports the Express is
A FORMER Daily Express journalist was among those missing last night after a jet carrying 114 people crashed in dense African rainforest.
Anthony Mitchell, a foreign correspondent, was on board a Kenya Airways flight along with four other Britons – believed to be aid workers.
According to the Times as France votes today
Riot alert for Sarkozy victory
Thousands of riot police will be deployed in Paris tonight after warnings that victory for Nicolas Sarkozy, the conservative candidate in today’s presidential election, could spark violent protests.
Fears of a repeat of the rioting that swept France two years ago intensified as the final opinion polls pointed to an overwhelming victory for Sarkozy. A crowd of up to 40,000 Sarkozy supporters was expected on the Champs Elysées in central Paris to celebrate the result. Police believe that gangs of youths from the suburbs might confront them.
Sarkozy has promised a “fraternal” republic but said last week that he did not regret having described young delinquents as “scum” in 2005 in remarks widely believed to have ignited the rioting.
Fears of a repeat of the rioting that swept France two years ago intensified as the final opinion polls pointed to an overwhelming victory for Sarkozy. A crowd of up to 40,000 Sarkozy supporters was expected on the Champs Elysées in central Paris to celebrate the result. Police believe that gangs of youths from the suburbs might confront them.
Sarkozy has promised a “fraternal” republic but said last week that he did not regret having described young delinquents as “scum” in 2005 in remarks widely believed to have ignited the rioting.
The Independent reports from Baghdad where
The Great Wall of Baghdad may be going up, but there's still carnage on the streets
The first thing Said, a small contractor, did on visiting a military prison in west Baghdad was to pay a $2,000 bribe. The money went to an officer in return for a promise not to torture Said's brother and business partner, Ali. The main payment comes later. For Ali's release, Said will pay a further $100,000.
The brothers are Sunni, and the police commandos who arrested Ali are Shia. What happened to him explains why the US military "surge", the dispatch of 20,000 extra troops to Iraq announced by President Bush in January, is failing to end the Sunni-Shia sectarian civil war in the capital.
The US and the Iraqi government are having some success in cultivating divisions between the fanatical partisans of al-Qa'ida in Iraq and the rest of the Sunni community. But overall, the five million Sunni community supports armed resistance to both the US and the Shia-Kurdish government.
The brothers are Sunni, and the police commandos who arrested Ali are Shia. What happened to him explains why the US military "surge", the dispatch of 20,000 extra troops to Iraq announced by President Bush in January, is failing to end the Sunni-Shia sectarian civil war in the capital.
The US and the Iraqi government are having some success in cultivating divisions between the fanatical partisans of al-Qa'ida in Iraq and the rest of the Sunni community. But overall, the five million Sunni community supports armed resistance to both the US and the Shia-Kurdish government.
The Observer reports from Turkey where
Behind the billboard lies the true struggle
On busy Istiklal Avenue in Istanbul's Beyoglu district, the paradox of Turkey in the 21st century is played out. Two women - one in early middle age, one younger - emerge from a shop with a provocative lingerie window display. Both wear the headscarves and long skirts denoting them as conservative and observant followers of Islam.
In the suburbs of featureless apartment houses that radiate for tens of kilometres out from the city centre, five-storey-high billboards depict models in underwear and bikinis. A steady stream of women with covered hair pass beneath the hoardings clutching shopping bags and children, oblivious to the half-naked women.
In the suburbs of featureless apartment houses that radiate for tens of kilometres out from the city centre, five-storey-high billboards depict models in underwear and bikinis. A steady stream of women with covered hair pass beneath the hoardings clutching shopping bags and children, oblivious to the half-naked women.
On 22 July, when Turkey votes in early elections called to defuse the dangerous political and constitutional crisis that threatened last week to overwhelm the Turkish state, this contrast between the headscarf and the free, modern woman will again be pushed to the fore of the country's debate.
The news of Paris Hilton's forthcoming incarceration is also widely reported.
How to punish Paris Hilton? Put her in solitary says the Independent
For a lady who loves the high life, Paris Hilton is about to gain an unwelcome insight into the American penal system.
The 26-year-old hotel heiress, party animal among the international glitterati and all-round modern celebrity, is to spend 45 days behind bars, possibly in solitary confinement amid fears that she may be attacked by other inmates.
After a judge ruled on Friday that Hilton must go to jail for violating probation, the cell she is expected to occupy at the Century Regional Detention Centre in Lynwood, California, is 12ft by 8ft, with toilet, sink and a window 6ins wide. She is likely to have the cell to herself, segregated for safety.
Captain Alice Scott, who oversees the Centre, said Hilton will have three meals a day, one of which will be hot. She will be allowed out of her cell for at least an hour a day to shower, watch television or participate in outdoor recreation. She told the Associated Press: "[It's] a very nice place."
Finally the Telegraph claims
Hitler was ordered to trim his moustache
How to punish Paris Hilton? Put her in solitary says the Independent
For a lady who loves the high life, Paris Hilton is about to gain an unwelcome insight into the American penal system.
The 26-year-old hotel heiress, party animal among the international glitterati and all-round modern celebrity, is to spend 45 days behind bars, possibly in solitary confinement amid fears that she may be attacked by other inmates.
After a judge ruled on Friday that Hilton must go to jail for violating probation, the cell she is expected to occupy at the Century Regional Detention Centre in Lynwood, California, is 12ft by 8ft, with toilet, sink and a window 6ins wide. She is likely to have the cell to herself, segregated for safety.
Captain Alice Scott, who oversees the Centre, said Hilton will have three meals a day, one of which will be hot. She will be allowed out of her cell for at least an hour a day to shower, watch television or participate in outdoor recreation. She told the Associated Press: "[It's] a very nice place."
Finally the Telegraph claims
Hitler was ordered to trim his moustache
His moustache is the most instantly recognisable - and sinister - in history.
Yet, according to new research into Adolf Hitler's early life, the distinctive, toothbrush shape that adorned his scowling face was not his first preference.
Yet, according to new research into Adolf Hitler's early life, the distinctive, toothbrush shape that adorned his scowling face was not his first preference.
A previously unpublished essay by a writer who served alongside Hitler in the First World War trenches reveals that the future Führer was only obeying orders when he shaped his moustache into its tightly-clipped style. He was instructed to do so in order that it would fit under the respirator masks, introduced in response to British mustard gas attacks.
Had that order never been issued, the tyrant who brought most of Europe to its knees would be remembered as a man with a large Prussian moustache.
Had that order never been issued, the tyrant who brought most of Europe to its knees would be remembered as a man with a large Prussian moustache.
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