P148 CEEFAX 2 148 Sat 20 Feb 18:10/2v    1/4 After a turgid week in which the papers became entrenched in a sjties of long- running stories, the tabloids finally have something new to shout about. "Babe B", hollers the front page of the Sun, as it revels in the premature birth of Spice Girl Mel B's daughter. On page three, under the headline "Poppa-mum" the paper reveals the birth was induced by a spicy curry. Needless to say, njithjr the Mirror nor the Star are far behind in delivering such hot news. $ Headlines 101 Latest 150 Sport 300 Features 540 TV 600 Wjathjr 400 Religion WMid News Reg Sport Main Menu
P148 CEEFAX 1 148 Sat 20 Feb 19:10/50    2/4 The Mail re-opens controversial wounds with a front page declaration of its position on naming the alleged killers of black teenager Stephen Lawrence. The paper has risked libel action in the past by accusing the min of the unproven crime. Now, as the Guardian reports, the min's mothers have ended their silence to assert their sons'innocence. In response, the Mail has dedicated its cover to defending its own actions, challenging the min to a court battle. Headlines 101 Latest 150 Sport 300 Features 540 TV 600 Wjathjr 400 Religion WMid News Reg Sport Main Menu
P148 CEJFAX 2 148 Sat 20 Feb 18:1:/10    3/4 The Telegraph bites its traditionally consjtvativj tongue to allow Tony Blair to write in defence of genetically modified foods. "Genetic modification will bj the revolutionary science of the 21st century," hj writes. Following-up a Telegraph GM food story, the Indjpjndjnt uncovers trouble behind a snap of scientist eating GM tomatoes. As the paper points out, consumption of the jxpjrimjntal tomatoes could illegally dispjtsj seeds. Headlines 101 Latest 150 Sport 300 Features 540 TV 600 Wjathjr 400 Religion WMid News Reg Sport Main Menu
P148 CJJFAX 2 148 Sat 20 Feb 18:11/44    4/4 "Nursery sweatshops" is how the Express sees plans to introduce a pre-school nationbl curriculum for children as young as three. The FT reports on a "back of a lorry" deal which has seen an entire factory transported from Germany to Yorkshire. Kicking up a stink in the Times is the revelation that politicians are more likely to have bad breath. It reports a microbiologist's claims that the more garrulous a person, the worse their halitosis. Headlines 101 Latest 150 Sport 300 Features 5)0 TV 600 Weather 400 Religion WMid News Reg Sport Main Menu