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Newspaper review: Riots aftermath dominates papers

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Papers

Violence at the students' demonstration is on all front pages with a picture of a demonstrator kicking in a window at Millbank Tower widely used.

The whipped up a mix of middle-class students and younger college and school pupils into a frenzy.

describing: "The yobs who hijacked uni demo AND the Met chief who let them".

Police were caught out by the

'Weaken arguments'

For the

The impact of the demonstration was to

For the the riot diverted public attention away from the issue of children of low and middle income families being priced out of education.

It said the law-abiding majority would be sickened by the disorder.

'Oxbridge scarves'

According to the Times, ministers are watching for any sense that the disorder represents a change of mood.

The by some of the most violent scenes on the streets of London since the poll tax riots in 1990.

Its writer than their predecessors, with some sporting new Oxbridge scarves.

Neat hijabs reflected modern Britain's multi-cultural face, he observes.

Miners' demands

The how to observe the two-minute silence on Armistice Day in a busy office.

It reports a survey has suggested that while two-thirds of people intend to refrain from talking, nearly half consider it acceptable to send e-mails.

The to visit the Holy Land.

But it says they want Israel to pay for them to take 70 companions with them.

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