Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 31/12/2000

2000; Gale Group;

Autores

Alastair Reid, Jonathan Northcroft, John Dugdale, Dr Helen Watt, Raymond Palmer, Mark Stretton, Barbara Hall, Jason Long, David Brown, James Clark, Nicholas Rufford, Emma Moore, Jonathan Miller, M Baker, John Jay, Susan d'Arcy, MacBeth, Paul Gill, Jennifer Thatcher, Ivo Tennant, Mark Wylie, Alistair Scott, John Elliot, Sally Payne, S Magill, David Smith, Kirstie Hamilton City Editor, Humphrey Carpenter, Edin Hamzic, Rory Godson, Ann Wells, Terry Ward, Neil Wormald, Clive Davis, Vincent Kearney, Matthew Mervyn Jones, Guy Dennis, Mary Wilson, Lynne Truss, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Robert Sandall, Tom Walker, Anthony Sattin, Christmas plumbers, Robert Winnett, Wendy Holden, Irwin Stelzer, Peter Wilson, Mark Richardson, Jerry Wright, Robert Durward, Mrs M Barber, Philip Kingsley, Sue Clayton, Gerald Sacks, Sarah Toyne, Mark Hunt, Mrs P A Barclay, Dr Surinder Bakhshi, Jonathon Carr-Brown, Margarette Driscoll, Hugh Canning, E James, Colin Mehigan, Edward Porter, Louise Taylor, Jenny Shields, Eben Black, Lorna Luft, John O'Donnell, Richard Davis, T Hollins, Robert Tyrell, J David Jones, Phil Craigie, Inga Clendinnen, Victoria Hervey, Charles Clarke Mp, Geoffrey Wheatcroft, Susan Simpson, Paul Ham, John Armstrong, Stuart Wavell, Stella Bingham, Paul Donovan, Alastair Hendy, Frances Spalding, Barbara Dorf, Lucinda Kemeny, Paul Driver, Vanessa Green, Simon Fanshawe, John Humphrys, Ian Hawkey, Shelley Von Strunckel, Christopher Morgan, David Leppard, Diana Knight, Paul Durman, Jaqui Bleach, Mitterrana, Michael Dibdin, Kirstie Hamilton, Mrs M Watson, Sarah Gracie, Susan Clark, Eben Black Chief Political Correspondent, Amir Shivji, K Jackson, Phil Baker, Victoria O'Brien, Lois Rogers, Michael Riding Managing Director, Alan Combes, Raymond Keene, Douglas Alexander, Arthur C Clarke, Stanley Stewart, Cosmo Landesman, Don Backhouse, Diana Wright, Andy Knott, Michael Bell, David Orr, Stephen Jones, Stephen Bleach, Uzi Mahnaimi, Nick Cain, Michael Wright, Peta Bee, Simon Culmer Director, Robin Simon, Lois Rogers Medical correspondent, Keith Wheatley, David Walsh, Terry Hyde, Clarissa Dickson Wright, Mandy Francis, Lois Rogers Medical Correspondent, Stephen Armstrong, Ron Clarke, Paul Kavanagh, Michael Sheridan Far East Correspondent, Roland White, Neel Khagram, Maurice Chittenden, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, David Hirst, Richard Rae, Mark Franchetti, Jonathan Powell, Ray Hutton, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Jim Cotton-Betteridge, Jonathan Leake, Sian Rees, Anthony Frais, Michael Sheridan, Margaret Walters, John Harlow, Godfrey Smith, Matthew Reisz, John Urbanek, Dipesh Gadher, Hilary Lowe, Jonathan Ross, John Waples, Harold Briggs, Nicole Lampert, Andrew Lynn, K Whitty, A A Gill, Brian Glanville, Peter McVean, Tom Robbins, Claudia Croft, Seumas Leahy, Cherry Norton, Angie Buttrose, Sally Kinnes, Sophie Petit-Zeman, Angus Kennedy, David Wickers, Roger Dobson, Tom Rhodes, Jackie Ashley, John Aizlewood, Mike Langston Managing Director, Alastair Dean, Andrew Frankel, Graham Norwood, Joe Lovejoy, Rupert Steiner, Theo Richmond, Gordon Brown, Hugh Pearman, Roy Ritchie, Simon Sebag Montefiore, David Parsley, David Smith Economics Editor, Tom Deveson, Matt Whiskles, Simon Crerar, Martin Blackburn, Peter Roebuck, Joanna Simon, Chris Feetenby, India Knight, Steve Grant, Peter Gilbert, Dan Pearson, Dominic Rushe, Ken Lunt, Boris Schapiro, Karen Robinson, John Watson,

Resumo

Contents Straw plan to expose past crimes Juries may hear defendants' records Taxmen probe Fayed over cash in brown envelopes Contents British Airways Contents Ambush victim: Charlotte Wilson, 27, the voluntary… Contents Police cleared crazed man to fly on jumbo Teachers fear tackling unruly black pupils Contents At www. sunday-times. co. uk Contents Newspapers Support Recycling Contents Britain gets warning of big freeze Brown wants to see 250,000 new firms Parents join search for rower Christopher Wray Lighting Final farewell for bomb victim McCartney unveils poems for Linda New English golf star turns professional to stalk Tiger Woodhead is both hero and villain of the year Debenhams Hijack Afghans cost Britain £4m BT Morning-after pill shortage Britain kept secret nuclear arsenal on Cyprus DNA pioneer hit by race-sex row Moscow shooting linked to Formula One deal Girl, 6, injured by letter bomb Graves reveal George III offspring British Airways Motorists lose the plot on Ken's magic roundabout Gerbeau tipped as business saviour Clone scientists can grow sperm in laboratory New roundabouts are designed to combat annoying queues The new Waterloo junction has failed to ease congestion The 'third way' for drivers Fujitsu Siemens Systems Murdered aid worker leaves vaccine legacy BT plans the call box with everything Vauxhall The complete box of tricks Artist claims 'ancient' icon is 1940s fake Castaways plot new life as dropouts Magnet Damilola hunts boys charged in assault case Margaret suffers 'severe depression' Crisis of the Britain is struggling to recruit enough teachers, nurses, and police for its basic services. Jonathan Carr-Brown, John Elliott and Edin Hamzic report on the thousands of public sector jobs the young no longer want AOL Situations Vacant: How Public Services Have Become the Jobs that Nobody Wants Intelligent Finance Roar of the Big Cats Today six giant catamarans, the fastest yachts ever built, set off in a dash round the world, come hell or high water. Keith Wheatley reports Gateway The truth is out there . . . and he saw it first Profile I'm from the Henry V school of management Bose Slow progress Mortgages for Business Limited In search of an American spirit of enterprise How absurd that the pubs continue to shut us out Irvine will blow his horn to the tune of £4m Atticus Servicemen without honours in a land full of funny titles Atticus Livingstone laid low by the rich man's cuisine Atticus The public has to play a part in the fight against crime Old English Inns Powerful media must control their cynicism PC World Legions of contractors have been pressganged by… This naked body demeans men Useless Targets: I enjoyed Melanie Philips'… Clarkson's clanger Embryo confusion Points Birthdays Bush to pull US troops out of Balkans Woman who fell 18,000ft ends silence The miraculous survivor Larissa Sovitskaya was the only passenger to survive a mid-air collision and 18,000ft fall Becker faces wealth exposé Egg Spy plane secrets passed to Russians France's scandal trail leads to US Liverpool Victoria The Angolan arms connection Zimbabwe farmers warned 'don't sell out to the devil' The Angolan arms connection Israelis fear war plot by far right Manila police arrest Muslim suspect after bombing spree Jamie Oliver is toast of American TV EasyJet India's beauties caught in battle of the puritans Little Caesar takes the war to phone firms Currys Aborigines fight to stop uranium mine Freeserve That's a bit rich Mother Mary nets her prey Inside Los Angeles Weather and Travel Outlook Hunting move Driver injured in rail incident Murder charge Jail inspector attacks sentencing Store tragedy Stadium terror Two tickets share £6.7m jackpot Multiple Display Advertising Items Police ads spark terror fears News in Brief Carey heartache Air crash Conmen hunted Sales fear Fans clash Gunners Freeze Arsenal caught cold by late strike Contents Winter takes toll of sport Bramble's a thorn in Spurs' side Jack Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey Another bad day at the office for George The manager faces a long, cold winter at White Hart Lane after another meek capitulation Morrison levels unlucky Rangers Derby sunk by Beattie's perfect 10 Flying Glass hits Barthez Devlin inspires the Blades to comeback triumph FA Carling Premiership Nationwide First Division Nationwide Second Division Nationwide Third Division Other Football Football Extra What the Papers Say Pools Nationwide Conference Leading Goalscorers Scotland The sky falls in on sad Royle Wigan keep up pace Cold comfort for struggling Norwich Roberts robs Wanderers Jewell happy to grab a point Dogged Durie saves brave Hearts Last orders for Boro Hibs penalty win sparks fury Lethal Jansen shoots down Crewe Late Owers Williams saver Dagenham win Brechin go top Carrick's capital show A Geordie boy who found his feet in east London is the young player to watch in 2001 Veteran Marshall takes his chance as a happy Wanderer The Bolton striker has a key role to play in tomorrow's derby with Preston after having the last laugh on his critics. By Louise Taylor Joe Lovejoy . . . The Big Interview Key to the great all-rounders just a question of balance Brian Glanville recalls the legendary Ferenc Puskas and other all-round past masters who had the world at their twinkling feet Renault Left Foot Forward for England An endangered species for too long, the left-sided English player is making a comeback Taking on the Giants Rotherham's prized boss Ronnie Moore relishes the FA Cup clash with Liverpool. Richard Rae reports Carlisle primed to shoot down high-riding Gunners An ownership lifeline has buoyed spirits at Brunton Park in time for Arsenal. By Louise Taylor FA Cup Third round: Where the Mighty May Fall Winners are losers in game of high stakes Clubs waste frozen assets Letters to the Sports Editor American Football Q & a Picks of the week Sport on TV Book Review The Wayward Lad Graham Bradley with Steve Taylor Greenwater Publishing, hb, £17.99 Bestsellers Is this the Greatest Bowling Attack Ever? Australia possess an awesome pace attack and have Shane Warne waiting in the wings Four Attacks who Put Fear in their Opponents Sports Calendar The Sunday Times Battle for the Ashes: England V Australia World Cup Qualifiers Stars in their eyes Memories are Made of this: The Best Moments of 2000 Making the Links The Future's Bright: Names to Watch out for in 2001 Champagne Cork . . . And the Worst Keith Wheatley Mann counts cost of high life He attempted to sell a submarine to a land-locked African nation but eventually found success as a trainer. by Jonathan Powell How They Line up in the Race around the World Sailing close to the wind Six catamaran crews take their lives in their hands as they set off in The Race around the world today The Sunday Times Pride of Lions ready to roar Graham Henry's men know that immortality beckons if they defeat the world champions Our Lions Squad Four Young Guns Hoping for a Ticket to Australia Four Old Stagers Battling to Stay in the Hunt King dents Saints' title hopes Cool Catt gives Sarries a chill Leicester fight Johnson suspension The decision to appeal against the RFU panel's 35-day ban could backfire and hurt both club and Country, says Stephen Jones Radcliffe freezes out rivals to take victory Results Round-Up This Week's Fixtures Peugeot 406 Coupe Rugby Union Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Best of 2000 Andrew Frankel selects his favourite cars of the year It's not only good, it's outstanding The Seat Leon is great value—and it's pleasingly rare Enjoy a day at the races Tomorrow's world Hybrid fuel cars do not yet make money or sense—but they soon will, reports Ray Hutton Multiple Classified Advertising Items Trade-Sales Rolls-Royce My best Christmas present was a lovely open road Lloyds seeks green light for Abbey bid Britain set to sustain solid growth in 2001 Forecasters believe Footsie will top 7,200 next year Hargreaves Lansdown Contents FTSE 100 Forecasts Contents Going It Alone? . . . Barbara Cassani, Go's chief… MG Rover warns of price rises as BMW forces up cost of parts Contents Dome takes eight months to pay bills Boots leads our ten top tips for 2001 The Shares to Buy next Year Power Leisure St. James's Place Capital Stagecoach EMI Group Invensys Dotcom crash wreaked havoc on the year's predictions John Jay looks at how the companies we tipped for the past year performed British Airways SCi Arcadia Hays plc The Business Services Group Corus closures to cost 10,000 steel jobs WH Smith poised to surrender in battle with magazine publishers Receiver probes timeshare boss Business Digest Chase De Vere Investments PLC BA's Go auction fails to gain height Jupiter Pentagon blocks European invasion Follow the leader Economic Outlook David Smith Investors curb Asia's errant tycoons Victory in a three-year battle to seize control of a company that owes £2.6bm heralds the start of reform. Michael Sheridan reports from Bangkok Pain for firms may mean gain for the workers Will this Be Europe's Year? European growth is speeding up as the United States slows down but American problems could still have an impact here. By Kirstie Hamilton and John O'Donnell The Sunday Times Drug pioneer earns world recognition Cambridge Antibody Technology has had a heady year. Its value has soared to £1.3 billion and it is ready to list on Nasdaq. By Paul Durman Singapore oil firm sets its sights on Premier Sharewatch Railtrack Savills Silicon Valley Rolls-Royce Aggreko A Share in the Boardroom Vodafone IMI Databank Top 200 companies Arms merchant marshals his European force Thomas Enders believes EADS is overcoming the problems of its merger and can beat the Americans in the battle for the skies Ship launched sponsorship empire Ex-racing driver Guy Edwards discovered he had a talent for dealmaking when he badly needed a cabin on a Swedish ferry, writes Mark Stretton Thomas Enders Working Day Vital Statistics Firms insure against red tape law threat Fear of employment legislation and the Inland Revenue is forcing more small companies to buy cover for legal bills. By John O'Donnell Bulletin Fun organisers must decide whether to get more serious Bosses at a party-planning firm are split over whether to focus on higher-margin work under a new name, writes Sarah Gracie The Sunday Times The Experts Jim Cotton-Betteridge Royal Mail Mike Langston BT Mark Hunt KPMG Michael Riding Lloyds TSB Commercial Simon Culmer Cisco Systems Where in the world to invest next year Stock-market investors have had a bad year, but what will 2001 bring? Robert Winnett asks the experts Property prices will climb steadily in coming months Recommended Investments for 2001 Next Year's Predicted Hotspots Gartmore Day trader pins hopes on a prosperous new year Wealthcheck Legal & General Brothers divided by bank share giveaway Money Matters Every week Diana Wright answers your questions on personal finance Best Savings Accounts Mortgage Deals Low-Cost Loans Top ISA Funds Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares Factfile Safety giant's shares are primed to explode Motorbike insurer moves online Foster & Cranfield Foreign Colonial Best invest Crane The Post Office Westell Odgers Ray & Berndtson Collinson Grant Interexec Connaught The Times Smartpeopletime Regional Director Sales Director The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Micro muse Kestrel Caledonian MacBrayne Morrison The Sunday Times Antal International DeLtic Resourcing Barnes Kavelle Limited "Only the strong and wise know when to make way… Grave errors in mag's list Multiple Display Advertising Items Henry Butcher US gamblers say no dice to Vegas Prufrock Turner & co. Anti-gravity invention idea fails to get off the ground Year's heroes and villains take a bow The Sunday Times The Bawdy Women of Oz The 200 convicts who boarded a ship in 1789 to be transported to New South Wales were no ordinary cargo: they were all women, intended as 'breeding stock' for Australia's lusty young colonists. But, recounts Sian Rees, on the long voyage out the ship itself was to turn into a floating brothel Contents Radisson Edwardian Next week A bit of who's your father My new year's resolution is to start more feuds The Sunday Times Enemy of the People New era? It's just like the old days It was a year that was supposed to herald a new dawn. Instead we got a return to the past: protest marches, job losses, and a railway that didn't work, writes Stuart Wavell Maturity rules in the middle-ageing society Courage of the woman in the mask Settle those debts, or the the debts will settle you The Sunday Times A hot date for the wild women of Borneo Gwenda Hames tells Margarette Driscoll about the adventures of 12 Herefordshire housewives in the jungle The Times Why prevention is the new name of the crime game Liza and me, back together round the tree Lorna Luft and her sister Liza Minnelli fell out years ago. Now she tells how illness has reunited them Russia rekindles that old imperial love affair Britain is returning to its adoration of all things Russian, and it's mutual, writes Simon Sebag Montefiore Multiple Display Advertising Items Prowting Homes Weston Homes Plc Retirement Villages He saw the light on the road to Land's End The retiring US ambassador walked Britain from end to end, and took to his heart the people he met en route, finds Stuart Wavell Hello, my healthy new world Sickness took Inga Clendinnen close to death, but she has found a new life there Decline and fall of man's kingdom Talking heads Global village This Life People of the Week Hold front page, star buys bunch of bananas Pop makes you old, Henry VIII the darts champ, and turtle smugglers Shock Exchange The tabloid week Eureka! The Times: Allan Smethurst The millennium list Jason Robards Last word . . . The house of the year show Sunday Times writers nominate the most memorable houses they have seen this year—but did they sell? Buyers reluctant to take the plunge on a Madeiran hillside David Wilson Homes Glass palace for the 21st century A home being built on the shores of a Bedfordshire lake will be one of Britain's most unusual country houses, writes Mary Wilson Market forces: in 2001 prices for top-end houses… A happy new year for country house market The rail crisis and a looming election won't stop a boom in 2001, says Graham Norwood Ministers take on noisy neighbours New regulations would help flat buyers, says Stella Bingham What to Do about Noisy Neighbours Berkeley Homes Beazer Contents The mystery traveller Week 2: On his Last Legs Concluding his round-the-world voyage, crime writer Michael Dibdin flees the heat of Bangkok for some Kiwi calm. Overleaf—a chance to win your own global adventure Sandals Contents Good Gear Guide Travelling in style, edited by Angie Buttrose Markwarner beach clubs Suitcase Win two round-the-world tickets with Bridge the World Holiday Clinic Helen and Paul Cini have infant twins and two young boys—and no idea where to holiday. David Wickers dishes up some summer fun for £2,000 Red spy at night, writer's delight Is she Raymond PALMER's dream girl? Or something more sinister? Clubs The Holidaymakers' Profile British Airways Holidays Directions Readers' Rants Holiday Money Crystal US is the place to go for snow Directions If this week's snowfalls have reminded you just how… Deals of the Week A&K TV Travel Ooks of the week Ireland Paris tackles train crime Question & Answer Multiple Display Advertising Items On the Cheap Tobago The Caribbean doesn't have to blow the budget. Sue Clayton reveals laid-back, low-cost Tobago International Chapters Cntraveller. Com Wake up to India Qantas The Sunday Times High life: the best bars in the Alps After a hard day's skiing, what could beat a warm, cosy bar? Fifteen of them, says Alistair Scott P&O Stena Flying? No fear Stephen Bleach finds 20% of us are terrified of flying. Can a course cure this altitude sickness? South Africa Does it work? An aviophobe tames her terror Plane facts Trail Finders British Airways Travelbag Bridge the World Austravel Unijet Flights Usit To advertise please call Travel Select KLM British Airways Quest Travel Travel Insurance Multiple Display Advertising Items Sunday Times Travel Insurance Against the odds Stanley Stewart finds the old ways of the wild Hunza are thriving—thanks to tourism Ryanair. Com Multiple Display Advertising Items Flight Bookers Travel Insurance Keycamp Holidays Monarch Crown Service Netflights Multiple Display Advertising Items Club Med Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items British Airways Multiple Display Advertising Items My Hols Internet guru Angus Kennedy likes to travel hard and dangerous Multiple Classified Advertising Items Competition Details Where was I? Win a one-week, twin-centre break for two in Morocco with Panorama Holidays Contents Pow! Try this Trick Amaze your family and friends this new year by learning a fun trick from Sav the magician Nuts about cars Tiny titan Passport for Pippin Giggles galore Snap happy Too much? The Adventures of Tintin Explorers on the Moon The story so far- The rocket is approaching the Moon, but will everything do to plan? Jarvis Dagsy Dog Bag It up! Clock Works Beryl the Peril Fresh! WW Buzz! Squirt F-mail Next Week Fun Competitions! Funtimes The Funday Times sport Heroes of 2000 Golden days Fans utd French lesson Contents Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon Contents From disaster at the dome to a fabulous year for film, our critics recall the highs and lows of 2000 Architecture The ups and downs of 2000 Using one die, throw to proceed. If you land on a dated square, just follow the instructions below Space oddities Jean-Michel Jarre and Arthur C Clarke have joined forces to create a new show for 2001 that should be out of this world, says Michael Wright Meet Wok Bottom Greg Dyke was the big news at the BBC this past year Not getting into the Kids are all right Season of invention Paul Driver enjoys a week of inspired music-making—and on the way rediscovers Tippett Paris Ceramics A Paris mismatch John Adams's latest opera should have been the toast of the French capital. But a strike-ravaged Magic Flute hit the right notes for Hugh Canning The Sunday Times From Handel to hip-hop The Grove answers all your music questions, and it just got bigger, better and faster, says Michael Wright … copy of The New Grove Dictionary Record of the week Beethoven The Symphonies Soloists, choirs, Berlin Philharmonic, cond Claudio Abbado DG 469 000-2 (5 CDs). £55.99 The Sunday Times Pop Califone Sometimes Good Weather Follows Bad People Glitterhouse GRCD 510, £10.99 Classical Haydn Armida Bartoli, Prégardien, Weir, Concentus Musicus Wien, cond Nikolaus Harnoncourt Teldec 8573-81108-2 (2 CDs), £22.99 Crucial cuts Suede Suede Nude 1CD, £13.99 Jazz Frank Sinatra/various Artists Reprise Musical Repertory Theatre Reprise 2-47775 (4 CDs), £49.99 Not just a pretty voice Emma Fielding's mellifluous tones make Cosmo Landesman go weak at the knees. But is the acclaimed actress as disarming in the flesh as she sounds on Radio 4? The week's films Fantasy farming Paul Donovan celebrates The Archers' golden jubilee with 50 little-known facts about Ambridge and its folk Hitting the jackpot One-time Corrie writer Sally Wainwright is on a winning streak with the Braithwaites, says Simon Fanshawe Look ahead Long players Pick of the week The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinemas The Official Guide of the Society of London Theatre Rapping yarns They've turned a hopeless French hip-hop duo into one of the year's most hilarious acts. But can Ben and Arn break into the big time? Oui, says Stephen Armstrong Wigmore Hall Royal Festival Hall Barbican Centre St. John's, Smith Square Royal Albert Hall The Mikado Royal Festival Hall Multiple Display Advertising Items Royal Albert Hall Kurt Masur Event-travel Raymond Gubbay Capital Breaks Culture Theatre Royal Drury Lane The Best Disco in tohn - Live Quidam Entertainment Video 1 The Beatles 1 the Voice Russell Watson Agenda A tale of two authors The Dent Uniform Edition of Dickens's Journalism: Volume 4 The Uncommercial Traveller and Other Papers, 1859-1870 edited by Michael Slater and John Drew Dent £30 pp514 Horses for courses Dick Hern: The Authorised Biography by Peter Willett Hodder £18.99 pp303 Handy All the Way a Trainer's Life by Peter Walwyn Metro £17.99 pp285 Yankee Doodle Dandy The Life and Times of Tod Sloan by John Dizikes Yale £16.95 pp238 Racing is a sport on the edge of rapid expansion Diary Better safe than sorry Immaculate Contraception by Emma Dickens Robson £16.95 pp222 Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood by Gary Taylor Routledge £15.99 pp307 The Constant Gardener Abebooks. com Trusted confessor through the ages The Assassin's Cloak An Anthology of the World's Greatest Diarists edited by Irene and Alan Taylor Canongate Books £25 pp684 These are my resolutions What Wendy Holden has on her bedside table In the news The books behind the news: the third millennium Gainsborough and Reynolds: a portrait of two 18th-century artists in their own words The Letters of Thomas Gainsborough edited by John Hayes Yale UP (with the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art) £30 pp208 The Letters of Joshua Reynolds edited by John Ingametis and John Edgcumbe Yale UP (with the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art) £30 pp208 Gainsborough, left, to the actor John Henderson, July 19,1773 Gallery of delights The Ephemeral Museum: Old Master Paintings and the Rise of the Art Exhibition by Francis Haskell Yale £16.95 pp201 In search of a lost world The Wandering Jews by Joseph Roth Granta £12.99 p146 Sabra: The Creation of the New Jew by Oz Almog University of California Press £22 pp313 Women on the edge The Avengers: A Jewish War Story by Rich Cohen Cape £17.99 272pp The past in Hiding by Mark Roseman Penguin Press £18.99 592pp Turlough by Brian Keenan Turlough by Brian Keenan Cape £16.99 pp348 Splenetic genetics The Peppered Moth by Margaret Drabble Viking £16.99 pp392 Baby love Motherkind by Jayne Anne Phillips Cape £15.99 pp292 Children's book of the week Waterstone's Paperbacks Pick of the week Speaking with the Angel edited by Nick Hornby Book events What's happening in the literary world You really must read . . . The Sunday Times Pile'em High The Sunday Times concise crossword No 668 Hardbacks Paperbacks Websites of the year Simon Crerar, Webwatch editor, chooses 10 of the best newcomers to have advanced the cause of the net in 2000 Doors annual awards: stars of There was no shortage of winners this year, despite the doom merchants' forecasts. For discriminating consumers, the digital juggernaut is leading a technological and social revolution Picture Gallery Webdirectory Webdirectory Quotes 2000 Ten of the year's best books for inquisitive minds Take a break from your screen and curl up with some food for thought Ten of the year's best books for inquisitive… Television and Radio The one to watch The week ahead Gentlemen's Relish, New Year's Day, BBC1, 9.20pm Best film The Wizard Of Oz Today, BBC1, 3.30pm Seeing is Believing BBC1 Goodbye 2000 New Year's Eve Paul Zenon's Trick Or Treat (C4,10pm) Film choice BBC1 Anglia Variations Radio Sky One Gentlemen's Relish (BBC1, 9.20pm) Critics' choice New Year's Day Film choice BBC1 Anglia Variations Radio Sky One Sword Of Honour Fred Dibnah's Victorian Haroes (BBC2, 9.05pm) Film choice BBC1 Anglia Variations Radio Sky One Stella Street Special Critics' choice School Uniforms(C5,10.50pm) Film choice BBC1 Anglia Variations Radio Sky One The Braithwaites The Victorian Way Of Death(BBC2, 9pm) Film choice BBC1 Anglia Variations Radio Sky One Some Liked It Hot Streetmate (C4,8.30pm) Film choice BBC1 Anglia Variations Radio Sky One The Greeks Beast(BBC1, 9.50pm) Film choice BBC1 Anglia Variations Radio Sky One Sunday Times Starlight Express Contents Harrods Contents It's nearly the New Year, so Victoria Hervey has made some resolutions Almost Famous From revealing her fridge contents in magazines to appearing on Through the Keyhole, the novelist Wendy Holden has joined the ranks of sort-of celebrities Are you on the Z list too? Style Quiz So, how cool are you? Dance à la mode Is disco king Bob Sinclar the coolest Frenchman ever, asks Claudia Croft Spin doctor: clubbers on both sides of the Channel… Bryant Homes Picture Gallery A soft touch Go on, indulge yourself with the luxury of cashmere Picture Gallery Picture Gallery Farewell to arms Bell sleeves are the season's hottest silhouette V-neck (front and back) batwing blouse, about £468,… Get over Yourself Perfect Couple Knife & packer Take the High Road Parka Ticket It's a grinch Click on What's hot on the net Simple pleasures There is nothing like hot chocolate and chips to make you feel warm inside, says Alastair Henry Where to Get It Fitex (UK) Limited Letters Auld acquaintances Winner's Dinners Last-Minute Wonders Don't panic: if you've forgotten to get some wine for you New Year's celebration, it's not too late to buy something delicious Wine Joanna Simon Something to drink Matt Whiskles Table Talk Baby, it's Keep out the chill with toasty textures and delicious warm colour, says Hilary Lowe Above: charcoal blanket with lilac blanket stitch,… The best for less Why go outside at this time of year? Neil Wormald picks exotic indoor plants for the sedentary gardener Picture Gallery Best laid plants Have something eye-catching in the garden every month, says Dan Pearson Cresta Odeon Furniture Company New heights Anna Morris Wood Floors F&S Vin-Garde Ltd. Lipman & Sons Birthday Newspapers Leukaemia Research Fund Genealogy Multiple Display Advertising Items Oakridge Direct Sofa Workshop Direct Multiple Display Advertising Items Dolphin Bathrooms Kirkdale Mail Order Ltd. The Handcrafted Bed Company Divani Multiple Display Advertising Items Leather Workshop Reproduction Furniture Gym World Musical Instruments Stonebow Leisure Computer Furniture The Original Stone Company Multiple Display Advertising Items Thomas Lloyd Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Sunday Times Lifestyle Carol Vorderman is now more famous for her diet than her maths, and she is ready to share her secret with the rest of us, says Mandy Francis Counting down How to Lose Weight the Vorderman Way 2 Minute Clinic Short of breath Pollution levels in the atmosphere are now so high that you might be safer staying indoors, says Peta Bee Health Medical Notes Sleepyheads, brittle bones, sex in space and why men need a good cry What's the alternative? A good exercise programme during and after pregnancy Consumer File Star Buy Picture Gallery Did You Know . . . Home Comfort Don't skimp on protein, says Philip Kingsley Lock the doors, light the candles and relax in your own luxury spa, says Emma Moore 6 of the Best Home spa essentials Stars 2001 The age of Aquarius may sound like it should be all peace and love, but for now it's going to be a chaotic roller-coaster ride. So, who is going to flourish and who is on their way down and out? To Place your Own Advertisement Multiple Classified Advertising Items Sirius Sara Eden Drawing down the moon Berkeley Sweetingham ABIA Elite Nexus Style The Sunday Times Mobile Matches Perfect Partners The Executive Club The switch Perfect Harmony Scope Help! Mrs Mills answers all your problems The Sunday Times Crossword The Sunday Times OleMed Contents Multiyork Rover Rover D. F. S 2000 Allders Magnet Harrods Möben Stagecoach Theatre Arts Schools Sharps Bedrooms Discover the Art of Delcoration 2000 the Year in Pictures Collision Courses Not a Prayer Picture Gallery Question Masters Picture Gallery Flying Colours Tragedy in the Making Children in Need News of the World Bedazzled The Year of Living Famously Maserati Labouring the Point Dolphin BAC Danish Furniture Strachan Mephisto Brain Power Use It or Lose It! Teaser 1998 Bookwise Chess Bridge A Life in the Day of Pierre-Yves Gerbeau Pierre-Yves 'PY' Gerbeau, 35, is the chief executive of the Millenium Dome, which closes at 6pm today. He is a former Disneyland Paris vice-president and professional ice-hockey player. Divorced, with a young daughter, he lives in Greenwich Portland Honda

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