A round up of the front pages from today's papers.
DAILY STAR: Ryan Giggs took over as Manchester United boss last night as sacked David Moyes lost out on £20million in pay-off cash.
DAILY MAIL: Border guards have been banned from asking EU national how long they intend to stay in the UK or even what they plan to do here.
DAILY MIRROR: An OAP died after it took two hours and seven 999 calls for an ambulance to arrive.
THE SUN: Manchester United will be investigated by Wall Street watchdogs over their handling of David Moyes' sacking, after which shares leapt seven per cent.
THE TIMES: Serious violent crime halved in a decades Britons cut down on binge drinking and move towards a less macho culture, research has found.
THE INDEPENDENT: Labour is to set up an "attack unit" to hit back at Conservative attempts to target Ed Miliband - in the clearest sign yet that the party is preparing for a 'dirty war' at next year's election.
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Christians in Britain are afraid to express their beliefs because they have been "turned off" by the "disturbing" and "very damaging" rise of religious fundamentalism, the Attorney General has warned.
THE GUARDIAN: Vince Cable last night issued a stark warning to Britain's leading boardrooms that they need to crack down on bonuses to restore public trust and avert the threat of fresh legislation to limit executive pay.
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