1. There is no mystery over David Kelly's death (Sunday Times)
David Aaronovitch argues that an inquest into David Kelly's death would cause unnecessary distress to his family. A body, a knife, pills, a cut wrist -- conspiracy theorists and campaigning doctors must accept the truth.
2. Labour needs to find a retort to Osborne's anti-scrounger rhetoric (Observer)
The Tories cast the opposition as the party for the feckless and reckless, says Rafael Behr. So far, the strategy is working for them.
3. The graduate tax is a Tory idea whose time has come (Sunday Telegraph)
If we are going to base future economic growth on intellectual enterprise, we need universities capable of doing the job, argues Matthew d'Ancona.
4. My country needs help, not disapproval (Independent on Sunday)
Why is the world not responding to Pakistan's current turmoil caused by the floods? Ayesha Siddiqa says Britain could pay a heavy price for showing little understanding of Pakistan's history and present plight.
5. Should British soldiers be dying for the rights of Afghan women? No (Observer)
The plight of Afghan women is often used as a justification for war. But, says James Fergusson, an expert who knows the Pashtuns intimately, we are wasting our time trying to change their society.
6. David Cameron's coalition looks desperately underprepared for the hard task of government (Sunday Mirror)
The editor of the New Statesman, Jason Cowley, assess Cameron's first 100 days. What is clear, he says, is that the coalition is in a great hurry.
7. Labour can rise again as a party of the people (Sunday Telegraph)
The authoritarian Big State is as much a threat to Labour's values as right-wing ideals, argues Janet Daley. There are things to be said by the left that could be adding a substantial moral dimension to our political discourse.
8. Seven futures are possible. Which will it be? (Sunday Times)
Margaret Atwood looks at the possible outcomes of the Israel-Palestine conflict. Wiped out by nuclear bombs? Constant war? There is also the potential for peace.
9. A champion for Scotland -- and the world (Independent on Sunday)
The Scottish First Minister, Alex Salmond, remembers Jimmy Reid, a passionate advocate of important local and global causes who changed many lives for the better.
10. Judge us on five years, not 100 days (Observer)
Nick Clegg defends the coalition's record so far, arguing that it has been a much more radical first 100 days than conventional wisdom predicted. The coalition, he says, is here to stay.

















