Prince William is being plagued by more than 200 stalkers, the Sunday Express claims, while elsewhere the news is still centred on Sven Goran Eriksson. The Sunday Express says the young prince has a problem so intense that Scotland Yard's Royal Protection Group has appointed a team of psychiatrists to protect him.
Doctors are said to be on call to assess people who have been arrested.
Psychological profiles are apparently being compiled of the worst offenders for Royal bodyguards to monitor.
Hi-tech scanning
The News of the World returns to the story of the England coach, Sven Goran Eriksson, and the chief executive of the Football Association, Mark Palios.
Last week, the FA said both men had had an affair with a secretary there.
But 56-year-old Eriksson later said he had neither categorically confirmed or denied whether the story had any truth to it.
On Sunday the News of the World makes a series of allegations under the tag: "Svengate Exclusive".
The Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir John Stevens, tells the Sunday Telegraph that schools will be offered hi-tech scanning equipment.
It is to help them to detect pupils carrying knives and follows the murder conviction of 16-year-old Alan Pennell, who stabbed to death a school pupil.
Life price
The machines - like airport luggage scanners - use low-level X-rays which penetrate clothes but not the body.
Sir John, who retires in January, says the devices could help avert tragedies.
In its front page the Independent on Sunday questions the price of life, picturing an eight-year-old Iraqi girl -- Hanan Saleh Matrud -- who was killed by a stray bullet fired by a British soldier last year, near her home in northern Basra.
The paper reveals that the Army has paid her family �390 by way of compensation after admitting that a warning shot "possibly" caused her death.
Under the headline Degrees For Sale, the Observer reports that cash-strapped British universities are awarding degrees to students who should be failed, in return for lucrative fees.
The paper claims that the scandal stretches from the most prestigious institutions to the former polytechnics and that some staff have been ordered to mark up students at risk of failing in order to keep the money coming in.
Breakfast off
One Oxford don, who isn't named, is quoted as saying: "It is nigh on impossible to fail a master's degree, regardless of the quality of the student."
There's also a warning in the Observer that it is last orders for all-day breakfasts at the classic British "caff".
A report says that the much-loved greasy spoons are being crushed by the coffee giants.
One cafe owner whose business is under threat is Lorenzo Marioni. His family has run the New Piccadilly cafe in Soho for half a century.
He tells the paper he is paying out �70,000 just to open his doors, but cannot make ends meet when he is selling cups of tea for 50p.