Journalist Keith Baker takes a look at what is making the headlines in Monday's morning papers.
The Irish News gives its main headlines to a story about trainee teachers.
It says many of them fear they will leave university with no prospect of employment. They're blaming retired teachers who continue to work part-time.
All of this is revealed in a survey carried out by the Irish News.
The new teachers say they are being forced to scramble for subbing shifts and many of them may have to find part-time work outside teaching in order to boost their income.
Unions describe the situation as demoralising.
The News Letter has a front page picture of the scene at Ardglass on Sunday where the search for the two missing fishermen continued.
It talks of "agony and relief" after the recovery of the body of Donall Gibson.
The paper says his family went to the pier later and thanked the divers for everything they had done.
Woman mugged
Daily Ireland reports on a Bloody Sunday parade in Glasgow. "Racists target protest march," says the headline.
And it describes how Scottish loyalists "waving Union flags and giving Nazi salutes" lined the parade route.
The Belfast Telegraph says two young people, aged 14 and 15, were questioned about the mugging of an 81-year-old woman in north Belfast.
She had her handbag stolen in the attack but was not injured. The boys have since been released.
The Mirror reports that a "suspected UVF gang" is being questioned after police foiled a kidnapping.
It says six men were arrested when the PSNI raided a flat on the Ballybeen estate in Belfast on Saturday.
The paper claims a known drug dealer was being interrogated by the gang when the police arrived.
The Dublin papers have a lot to say about the likely return to Ireland of the former Bishop of Galway, Eamonn Casey.
Much of the focus is on allegations of sexual abuse going back 20 years and made by a woman in November.
The Irish Independent talks to garda sources who say the investigation is very much alive.
But the Independent and the Irish Times both refer to Dr Casey's decision not to come back until the investigation is complete and he is been cleared.
The London Independent carries an interview with the Chief Constable, Sir Hugh Orde. Much of it, as you would expect, centres on the current status of the IRA.
He says there's a grey area around whether people are doing certain things on behalf of the organisation or on behalf of themselves.
But he says it is "unrealistic to think that the IRA might be open for business one day and shut the next".
"To run organisations you need money," he says. "They need an income stream."
Flu jabs
Many of the cross-channel papers, of course, follow up the shock revelations about Mark Oaten of the Lib Dems.
The Daily Telegraph says the scandal-hit party's in freefall.
The Guardian says that what they need now is steady nerves... although it thinks members and supporters must be close to despair.
And a columnist in the Times says the fall of Mr Oaten reduces the contest for the party leadership to a farce, rather than a drama.
The Mail turns its attention to the controversial topic of flu jabs for babies and asks: "How many jabs can toddlers cope with?"
And finally, the Sun has the story about the man from Articlave in County Londonderry who had the lucky numbers which would have provided a £7.5m lottery win - except his wife forgot to enter the ticket.
What's even worse - she works in a shop that sells them.
Her husband tells the paper: "I'm just trying not to think about it. If you dwelt on it too much it would do your head in".
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