Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 27/07/2003

2003; Gale Group;

Autores

Steven Shukor, Jonathan Northcroft, Waldemar Januszczak, John Dugdale, Hala Jaber, Dr Gill Morgan Chief Executive, Matthew Wall, Helena Frith Powell, Barbara Hall, Louie, Jeff Dawson, Lt Col (retired) B Clayton, Marianne Philips, Mark Ellingham founder of Rough Guides, N J, Fred Redwood, Jim Munro, Peter Whittle, Michael Burleigh, Helen Davies, Sally Brock, Nicholas Rufford, Rob Hughes, John Peter, V S, Pam Barrett, Limousine liberal, Mark Hodgkinson, William Lewis Business Editor, Jim Brotton, Jonathan Miller, Anne Everett, Professor Gideon Garter, Elisabeth Hoodless Executive Director, Barry Mitchell, Susan d'Arcy, J D, Hugh Morgan, Sally Emerson, Tim Nagle, David Mayers, Gareth Walsh, Peter Wade, Frank Whitford, Ivo Tennant, Alphonoso Toweh, David Gower, Kathryn Cooper, John Kerr, Peter Salter, Susan Bell, Heather Wadcock, Mia Ogden, David Smith, P D, Tim Richards, Paul Broks, David Cracknell Political Editor, Neil Wormald, Catalina Guirado, Andrew Sullivan, Clive Davis, Benedict Allen, Patricid Nicol, Richard Hamblyn, Andrew Porter, Graeme Wick, Chris Palmer, Joseph Dunn, Martin James, Simon Wilde, Grainne Murphy, Kevin Mitchell, Tristram Hunt, John Madejski, Robert Winnett, Irwin Stelzer, Matt Rudd, Robert Hewison, Robin Pagnamenta, Peter Wilson, John Crompton, Rosie Millard, David Dougill, Rachel Dobson, Nicholas Hellen Social Affairs Editor, Steve Haynes, Steve Kirby, Frank Graham, Frodsham, Geraldine Hackett, Jerry Daly, Rob Maul, Cally Law, David Bond, Hugh Canning, Alasdair Reid, Mike Pattenden, Jeremy Clarkson, Victoria Segal, kingston Smith, Peter Conradi, David Cairns, Stewart Lee, Nick Middleton, Patricia Nicol, Hilary Clarke, Sarah Dempster, Broughton Astley, Eben Black, Dave Pollard, John O'Donnell, Hugh Cunning, Greg Struthers, Bury St Edmunds, Walter Houser, David Eimer, Lydia Slater, Robert Helms, Avon Bulbs, Shelley von Strunckel, Giles Milton, Paula Robinson, Diana Fullbrook, Colin Thubron, Joan Armatrading, Paul Ham, Robin Scott-Elliot, Stuart Wavell, Andrew Butler, Roger Eglin, E M Middlemist, Paul Donovan, Christopher Silvester, Dawe, Vincent Crump, Martin Flett, Simon Fuller, Hugh McIlvanney, Chris Woodhead, Elspeth Callender, Paul Wray, Lucinda Kemeny, D Burgess, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, Martin Penner, Simon Fanshawe, John Humphrys, Michael Boyd-Carpenter, Nicholas Hellen, Richard Brooks, Sally Jones, Ian Hawkey, Dori Schmetterling, Alex Clark, Rupert, Ray Rodgers, Mark Ludlow, John Marx, Jonathon Carr-Brown Health Correspondent, Alicia Wyllie, Robert Pfeiffer, Mark Edwards, Susan Clark, Cheryl Swinton, Hugh McLlvanney, Eben Black Chief Political Correspondent, Harriet Perry, Martin Jacques, Anna Lawlor, Phil Baker, Hugo Barnacle, Christina Lamb, Victoria O'Brien, Clive Richardson, Raymond Keene, Berni Cozzi, Gareth Huw Davies, David Cracknell, Cosmo Landesman, Zoe Brennan, Lynn de Rothschild, Katrina Manson, Robbie Hudson, Diana Wright, Anthony Gould, Helen Hawkins, Dominic O'Connell, Robbie Burns, Barry Flatman, Nick Cain, Louise Armitstead, Brian Stothard, Tim Moorey, M J, Caroline Donald, Nick Rennison, S D, Kate Rew, Rob Ryan, James Mottram, Jessica Brinton, David Walsh, Leslie Appleyard, Trevor Lewis, Rainer Becker, Colin McDowell, Stephen Armstrong, John Elliott, Anabel Cutler, Bethan Cole, R W Johnson, Jonathan Leake Environment Editor, Richard Woods, Roland White, Shane Watson, Howard Wyman, William Rees-Mogg, Maurice Chittenden, Monsieur Mangetout, Peter Fisk chief executive of the Chartered Institute of Marketing, Tom Cox, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, Richard Rae, Mark Franchetti, Craig Lord, Mel Webb, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, George Harvey, Ray Hutton, Lauren Quaintance, Claude Aitken, Alec James Stewart, John Crossland, Michael Sheridan, Marian Salzman, Clare Francis, John Harlow, Dipesh Gadher, Hunter Davies, A A Gill, Robert Mayes, Melanie McDonagh, James Miller, Denis Walsh, Matthew Campbell, Martin Wroe, Tom Hennigan, Alan Frommer, Maria Chooza, Nick Fielding, Mary Braid, Lauren St John, Stephen Pettitt, Claudia Croft, Jonathan Calvert, Maurfce Chittenden, John Spurling, T L, Jane Cattani, Maria McErlane, Emma Richards, Sally Kinnes, Shelly Stares, Naomi Caine, David Wickers, Nigel Powell, Karen Jennings Unison Head of Health, Roger Dobson, John Reeves, Andreas Brosjo, Emily Jewsbury, Jeremy Lazell, Leo Lewis, Andrew Frankel, Howard Cohen, Graham Norwood, Jonathan Futrell, James Knight, Rupert Steiner, David Budworth, William Lewis Business editor, Hugh Pearman, Andrew Davidson, Paul Stephen Lubicz, Dan Cairns, Pearly Queen, Mike Flannery, David Smith Economics Editor, Ben Rooney, Tanya Streeter, Sarah Baxter, Helen Vandevelde, Benjamin Wootliff, J Griffiths, Matthew Goodman, India Knight, Ed Hughes, Adrian Somerfield, Dominic Rushe, Richard Lewis, Karen Robinson, Mary S Lovell,

Resumo

Contents Saddam's son fed his love rivals to the lions Minister's denial puts aides in firing line Search for truth: Hutton visits Dr Kelly's widow as Hoon lets pressure show The Sunday Times Dairy Milk Contents Motorists face new stealth tax Blair guru sends son to private German school Reader Offers Contents The Sunday Times Are Any Sections Missing? The Sunday Times Nationwide Pensioners living abroad set to lose free NHS care Envoy denies uranium link Iraqi orphan to get new limbs Kelly affair fallout set to hit MI6 Multiple Display Advertising Items Blunkett plan Railways face long closures for repairs Newspapers Support Recycling Pretty boys get Greer excited Redwood's Vulcan romance with a heart-throb from planet Tory Debenhams Palace bid to rebuild a trusting nation Student cheats fuel online essay boom Peugeot Rothschild goes to Labour's aid Piano Auctions Limited Contents Heiress brings fantasy to glens BA plan to beat 'catastrophic' second strike Mosatrajectum NHS Contents New skydive death clues Life Too Short Not to London high life hit as rich Arabs decamp Contents Officer to be cleared of assaults on Iraqis Dentists skim millions from NHS with fake gold fillings Blair 'will go for third full term' Abbey National Just a glossy day in Cherie's big makeover High anxiety screws up our hi-tech heaven Barclays The meaning of life is . . . enjoy it while you can Beckham effect brings world's students to Manchester Chrysler BBC plans £2.8bn building spree Contents Stores pump up profits in watered meat Veronica Cherin Safe as Houses Anit-Diet Summit Kinnock tipped for National Theatre job Norfolkline Minnelli's marriage made in Ok! is on the rocks Orange Former Labour chief slips into F1 fast lane Probe as burglar is freed before Martin Toyota Holiday Inn Spinning to his Grave For nine years he has been Tony Blair's alter ego. Now Alastair Campbell is ready to quit. Richard Woods and David Cracknell report on the causes and the implications Who Might Replace Campbell? Money Every Parent's Nightmare Three generations of a family died in a holiday crash last week. Sarah Baxter reports on a tragedy that left five children orphaned Alliance Leicester Family Tragedy Ringmaster of pop with a brand new idea Profile I wish I'd chosen marijuana and biscuits over real life Dell Lonely at the top Milking the motorist B&B Italia Only electoral defeat can revive Blair's dream The Sunday Times Look after the millions and the billions won't wander No 10 huffs and puffs as Straw cosies up to the 'enemy within' "Stephen Twigg sees talented youth". Relax, not a tablo Union godfather fashions concrete overcoat for Tony and new Labour Atticvs A late - night rumble with Gilligan the Goon Atticvs Blunkett tinkers while our immigration problems grow Who says Little Ben Bradshaw is devoid of admirers, … Being attacked by Geoffrey Howe was famously likened … A crane has draped a tarpaulin over a giant statue … Concorde Power in the sun and sea Post Office NHS bureaucrats who keep hospitals working Kelly's conscience Points Birthdays Protests about a British invasion of the Dordogne Doubling police numbers and trebling prison places The Sunday Times Satanic at Sixty 20 Things You Didn't Know about Mick Jagger by Maurice Chittenden What does a national treasure do when he turns 60? Get a bus pass? Take a holiday? Mick Jagger is working. But, Roland White reveals, there is side to his a side to his birthday that he is keeping from us Nationwide Le thriller king puts knife in expat Brits Nissan Survivor draws face of Moscow serial killer Manila army rebels seize envoy Families fight to see censored 9/11 documents American Express Women trade sex for food in hungry Korea Flybritish european The Campaign to Stop Communism Russia's killing machine to offer 1,800mph bus rides into space British veterans revisit foxholes of a forgotten war Suicide of a hero taints mine rescue Argentina's 'angel of death' faces trial Mosatrajectum Times Online NatWest Liberia's child fighters await endgame Mitsubishi Motors Multiple Classified Advertising Items Schoolgirl's sex diary fires up Italian passions Costner prepares to clean up with oil-clearing invention The Times Governator Arnie calls a home summit Litter wardens to lead drive for clean streets Weather and Travel Outlook Ferrysavers Twelve held after racial clash News in Brief Arson kills boys Closure threat to casualty wards Betting firm sale Drug-driving claims 200 lives a year Corrections Three share £5.9m Lotto jackpot European Commission Tour firm sued 400 hurt in quake Pink and blue: Brian Paddick, a commander in the Metropolitan police and Britain's highest-ranking … Contents Golden Girl World-beater Katy makes history Five in a row for Tour legend Smith's mighty 277 has England reeling South Africa run riot The South African captain bludgeoned England—and ensured Nasser Hussain would regret his pre-match forecast England v South Africa South Africa First Innings (o/nt 398-1) England First Innings South Africa in England Remaining Test Matches The Sunday Times Graveney to shake up selection system As part of a wide-ranging review, England's chairman of selectors is set to recommend altering the way the side is chosen while on tour, writes Simon Wilde Record knock one to savour South Africa's heroic captain comes out on top in the psychological battle with an innings that defied his tender yender years Keeping up appearances Stewart pulling power will be sorely missed England's evergreen wicketkeeper has impressed with both his attitude and his ability throughout his Test career Where Smith scored his runs Strokes of Genius Craig Lord reports on a glorious night in the pool for Britain in the world championships, which is capped by Katy Sexton's gold medal in the 200m backstroke The Sunday Times Phelps favourite for magnificent seven Despite the claims of Australia's lan Thorpe, the American teenager looks best placed to challenge Mark Spitz's golden Olympic tally, says Craig Lord British trio in fast lane for more medals With seven medals already tucked away, three more of our swimmers believe they can add to the tally at the world championships today, writes Craig Lord Medals table Armstrong's five-star finish The American's procession into Paris today will cap an outstanding victory for a cyclist who overcame the odds Riding high: ranking the greatest Tour de France champions Tour de France—today's stage 20 BT Beckham in Chinese puzzle Real Madrid's new superstar is leading a lucrative, but occasionally troubled, sales campaign in a stormy Far East Air-Berlin We fly Europe Midfield riddle a test for wily Queiroz Where will David Beckham figure in Madrid's line-up? The club's new coach has offered no clues so far, writes Ian Hawkey Bruised Rooney taken off on a stretcher England's wunderkind could have sustained ligament damage during Everton's 3-2 win over Rangers and may miss the start of the season. By Jim Munro Roman army seeks spearhead Now we know where the heart and the wallet of Chelsea's new owner lie: he wants a striker, and he wants the best Week links: seven days of transfer deals and speculation Keane: I'll Quit if the Fire Goes out Skipper ready for final fling Manchester United's talismanic captain prepares for his last hurrah with his sights set on Champions League glory Veron to stay at Old Trafford as Dyer mystery deepens Sir Alex Ferguson insists his £28m misfit has a future with the champions. But the rumours over Kieron Dyer won't go away, writes Jonathan Northcroft Reds on the march: Manchester United's tour diary Fergie starts feeder frenzy Manchester United are set to announce partnerships with clubs throughout Britain as they seek to shore up their youth system, writes Jonathan Northcroft Feeder clubs The Sunday Times Land Rover Chambers steals show A tremendous display in the 100m compensated for the absence of a host of big names at the AAA trials. By Richard Lewis The top 10 Overnight sensations by Mark Hodgkinson Today Sport on TV Monday Tuesday Thursday Friday Saturday The King Wallabies crash to record defeat Woodward warned: Be on guard over 'spying' threat The use of subterfuge to elicit vital information from opposition camps could be rife in the World Cup, reports Nick Cain Cracking the code: the vital information that international rugby sides desperately seek 1 Lineout codes This Week's Model The big interview: James Anderson Our latest sporting icon is fast and cool, with trendy hair, but tells Rob Hughes we should not expect him to be another Beckham Makeover men. . . England cricketers get a new image Pride laid the trap for Bjorn Trying to atone for a mistake on the 15th led The Open leader to a moment's loss of patience and his disastrous encounter with a bunker Weather wrecks Surrey's chances Frizzell County Championships Scoreboards Frizzell County Championship First Division Essex v Leicestershire Dogged Wagh denies Lancashire Fixtures Today Second Division Gloucestershire v Worcestershire Yorkshire v Hampshire Tour Match Glamorgan v India a National League Second Test Australia v Bangladesh Battling Hants hold on for draw Cricket round-up Averages Batting Bowling Sussex thinking positive Written off as no-hopers at the start of the year, Peter Moores' revitalised team go into this week's crunch meeting with Surrey in good heart. By Simon Wilde Wary Leicestershire shun victory chance Fiery paceman quick to make his mark Name to remember The Sunday Times Cool Goodwin breaks his duck Watson's class speaks for itself The American lies joint third going into today's final round. Victory would put the seal on a memorable year British Seniors Open Final round, today Sky Sports 2,1pm Record-breaking Inkster reaches dizzy heights in Alps Juli Inkster became the first American to win France's Evian Masters as she carded a final-round 65 to finish the tournament on 21 under par, writes Mel Webb Times Online Rejuvenated Bjorn equal to Irish task Thomas Bjorn put his Open Championship heartache behind him to share the Irish Open lead after a superb third round at Portmarnock. By Denis Walsh The Sunday Times Superman set for coronation Neil Hodgson could clinch the world superbike title before his home fans today after a season of domination Wild card Byrne hunts glory British GP is one to relish Silverstone delivered again and that should be the key when its future is decided, writes Richard Rae Ainslie aims to turn the tide Ben Ainslie puts his America's Cup nightmare behind him as he gets ready to launch his challenge at Cowes Week The Sunday Times All plain sailing as Cowes becomes home Moving into my newly purchased house in the spiritual heart of British yachting is a lifetime dream fulfilled Alamshar's Diamond polish The John Oxx-trained three-year-old pulverised top-class opposition to add to his triumph in the Irish Derby Murtagh's crowning glory Johnny Murtagh guided the Aga Khan's horse to a stunning victory in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes, reports Tim Richards The Sunday Times Clijsters calls shots to roll over Swiss teenager Sports round-up Results round-up Pools Today's racing New market Going: Good to Firm (Watered) Racing Newton Abbot Going: Good to Firm-Good in places Sheridan sparks Vikings' victory The Times League table Letters of the week The Sunday Times Caught in time Hampshire cricket team, 1973 60 seconds in sport With teenage featherweight boxing hope Kevin Mitchell Questions & answers Knee-jerk reaction Paul Stephen Lubicz, The Sunday Times fitness expert, describes some of the most effective ways of treating cruciate ligament injuries It's time to wake up to the thrill of water-skiing Making waves 180-Page Travel Magazine Working the core In training with Robyn Davies Robyn Davies is the UK's top professional female surfer and current English champion Chelsea bridge the odds gap The voice of sport Daewoo Audley overfed on diet of dead meat Dangers of discipline Contents British Airways bosses launch attack on 'time theft' strikers Shock exit for Horlick from SocGen Brown's borrowing to hit £50bn BT Embattled MyTravel in US sell-off Cordiant battle was 'a mistake'- Myerson Contents V Contents The Times Rolls demands staff help plug pension deficit Debenhams will foot £5m bid bill Times Online Blair adviser ready to quit No 10 for the City Abbey National set for more big losses Russian oil giant forced to delay its $1bn bond Business Digest Porsche Cantor sued by billionaire Swiss family Centrica to boost dividend by one third Centrica Facts The Business in Express talks The gadget set to ruin your summer holiday Group gambles on change to laws Chinese eye UK water company How CFDs Work Price war bites into United Biscuits It's time for private equity to come out in public Agenda Brown curbs the splurge Business Letters Tesco Law: the legal profession's big bang Short term gain is storing up long term pain The Roddy Horror Show British Airways has been torn apart by a battle with its own staff. It will take all of Rod Eddington's skills to heal the rift. Report by Dominic O'Connell What is the Dispute About—and what Happens next? Interview Sam Jonah, the world's only black goldmining boss, plans to merge his Ashanti with Anglo Gold to become the world's No 1. So why the delay? Rover Africa's Old King Gold glitters Sam Jonah's Working Day Vital Statistics IBM Multiple Display Advertising Items Leisurewear helps Boss to fight back The fashion house is pushing into new markets after a fall in profits, writes John O'Donnell from Metzingen Kingfisher attracts American interest Home Depot is a natural suitor for the owner of Britain's B&Q, write Matthew Goodman and Lucinda Kemeny Where Boss Does Business US Set for European Buying Spree Higgs reforms turn heat on fund managers Now investors are being forced to mend their ways. Louise Armitstead reports The Sunday Times The Key Points FSA's Chelsea probe catches Bates offside David Bond and Matthew Goodman report on the inquiry into share trading that took place before the club was sold The Sunday Times Chelsea Holdings Sold to Abramovich Pearson caught in high-living scandal The British firm is embroiled in a row over the costs of a US government hiring drive. Dominic Rushe reports from New York How the Company Operates Lifting the Lid World share markets Databank Top 200 companies Fund shuns blame for Cordiant loss Active Value lays the blame for WPP's victory on the board and other shareholders. By Andrew Porter A&L's figures far from boring Sharewatch Shell Smith & Nephew Monsoon A Share in the Boardroom Share of the Week Major share movements UK economy at a glance Commodities Currencies Interest rates / Bonds Indicator of the week Linen firm is a bed of thorns Carolyn Dunn set out to make high quality linen but finds herself embroiled in red tape, sourcing problems and litigation over the theft of her designs. Zoe Brennan reports The Sunday Times Damask's Challenges Small consultants thrive as firms tire of big agencies Clients are looking for advisers that can move quickly and keep costs down, reports Lucinda Kemeny What the Experts Say about Damask Craig Rowland Managing director of business at BT Sunny days ahead if you read up on those grants Small firms can cut their costs with government aid. Rupert Steiner looks at how to get hold of the money Convincing the taxman of expenses without receipts Questions of Buiness Clean up your Transport The Times Backpacker stumbled on publishing fortune How I Made IT Expect more crank callers Bmibaby What Cats boss creams off Slipping back into Nun habit When the law feels your white collar BP's Browne is top non-US exec Prufrock Sunday-times Contents Evil in the Blood With Saddam's sons dead, their henchmen reveal the depths of their depravity. Hala Jaber and Matthew Campbell in Iraq and Christina Lamb tell a chilling story Mitsubishi Motors My wife didn't die in vain Five years ago Martin Jacques and his family moved to Hong Kong to start a new life which all too soon ended in tragedy. Finally, an anti-racist law that might have saved his wife's life is to be introduced Fast, fluffy and clever with it They think Bush is worse than the Baghdad bullies What the artist saw in my butler Queen of the limousine liberals Interview I'm the hitman who made New York choke Aa Gill went to a US restaurant and stirred up a conspiracy theory Multiple Classified Advertising Items The rainbow nation paints out the whites Helen Suzman, who fought apartheid, tells Rw Johnson how the ANC has turned on its old liberal friends Multiple Classified Advertising Items Bye bye new towns, hello garden city In the 1950s, new towns like Bracknell were the way forward. They were a disaster but there is a better way, says Tristram Hunt The Kelly inquiry: get ready for a long slog and sniper fire all the way Lord Scott, who led the 'arms to Iraq' inquiry, tells Stuart Wavell what Lord Hutton can expect Another chance to kick the Catholics The Ku Klux Klan was against Koons, Kikes and Katholics. Prejudice against the first two is now beyond the pale so why is anti-Catholicism still acceptable, asks Michael Burleigh The Sunday Times crossword An unlikely fame for the vicar turned sorcerer A self-published parish priest has hit the jackpot with vic-lit, writes Martin Wroe Multiple Display Advertising Items Invitation to join the elite A series of summer schools to attract students from poorer backgrounds to Oxford is proving a success, writes Sally Jones Multiple Display Advertising Items How examiners ensure they get your marks right The Edexcel exam board marked 5m papers this year. Its chief executive John Kerr explains the system of checks designed to weed out errors Saying thanks to sir with a designer gift End-of-term presents for teachers are becoming ever more exotic as parents seek to score points over each other, writes Ben Rooney The Sunday Times Test system ignores work of the brightest pupils Spicing up my meeting with Tony and Cherie Etiquette bottoms out at palace Shock exchange This Life Winner's Dinners People of the Week John Schlesinger Last word . . . The Independent: Jack Davis Winner's Letters Talking Heads From The Daily Telegraph, From The Guardian, From The Times, From The Daily Telegraph, From the Daily Mail: P. S. Contents Going glam Enough no-frills—it's time to holiday like a movie star Ireland Monte Carlo Portofino Best Western Capri St Tropez Costa Smeralda Toothbrush Good Gear Guide Postcard Printer Touring Bike Video Camera Coffee Sling My kind of town Does Chicago live up to its sassy stage image? Sally Emerson visits the Windy City and has a blast Clubs Peregor Zones Travel brief Chaos as car hire firm folds Directions Reader's rants Multiple Display Advertising Items Monte Carlo a to B: after helicoptering in, the only way to get about is by classic motor launch. Before … Ryanair loses again Bargain map of the world Ct2-safrica Where was I? BA strike fiasco: what now? Questions and answers Holiday money Just what Dubai needs—another five-star hotel Norman Lewis, one of the world's best-loved travel The former homes of Sir Walter Raleigh (in Dorest) … Struck by the magic Dart Blue Flags, boat rides and bags of eccentricity—David Wickers is bowled over by the Dartmouth coast The rules of engagement Elspeth Callender was smitten by a mine-clearing soldier, but had to tread carefully Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief The land of champagne socialism Moldovan wine is headed west, but it still has a Soviet sparkle. Nick Middleton gets a taste of the Wild East Markwarner holidays Joanna Simon, Sunday Times wine writer, on the battle to drink Moldovan Picture windows Creaking glaciers, squeaking sands, two cities and a place to swing: Jeremy Lazell takes five different views Who's the stupidest tourist of them all? Ever left your brain behind when you've gone travelling? Matt Rudd has—and he's not the only one Multiple Display Advertising Items Everyone's a winner on the Where would Jimmy Connors go for a tennis holiday? Or Curtis Strange for golf? Lauren St John gets the star tips for the best breaks for you (and your non-sporty partner) The Sunday Times Golf Come to the butterfly ball August is a lepidopterist's delight. Vincent Crump suggests six reserves that are good for a flutter Fly-fishing Horse-riding World's best sporting breaks Sailing Multiple Classified Advertising Items Climbing Tennis Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items My hols Last week, Tanya Streeter dived to 400ft in a breath, and broke a world record Multiple Display Advertising Items Where was I? Win a luxury spa break for two at the Elysium Beach Resort in Paphos, Cyprus, with BA The competition Contents Time for investors to take a risk How savers can use tax breaks Rate cut at Abbey News in Brief Contents Aggressive funds House prices up 2% Smaller companies Emerging markets ISIS High-yield bonds Taxing times for Brown over Revenue chaos Get fixing Hanging on Insurer takes two years to pay policy proceeds A Question of Money Getting cover for garden valuables Between a rock and a hard place Brewery bosses cash in on results cheer Directors' Deals Cache of old shares is now worthless Multiple Display Advertising Items Is it time to get back into the US market? Shares around the world have staged a recovery since the lows in March. In the first article of a three-page special Alicia Wyllie finds that experts remain cautious about prospects for America Advisers lose faith in Fidelity American fund Guru who explained why we are forever blowing bubbles The late Charles P Kindleberger's economic theories about the recurring patterns of boom to bust are just as relevant today Have Markets Passed the Fifth Stage? Halifax Invest your cash around the world Kathryn Cooper discovers investors can boost returns and reduce risks by looking for opportunities beyond the UK and Europe Adventurous Investor Alliance Leicester The cautious Balanced Investor A healthy portfolio is all question of balance The balanced The adventurous Cautious Investor How to cut the price of share dealing As investors return to the stock market, Clare Francis shows the best ways to keep down costs Don't get your fingers burnt by China's economic dragon Western investors are eyeing up the biggest country in the Far East, but it is a risky strategy, warns David Budworth Nationwide Growing Confidence How to Deal for Less The Sunday Times Pros and cons of a managed service Confident trader takes chance on three outsiders My Diy Pension Multiple Display Advertising Items Card tricks can be costly Unwary customers can end up paying hidden penalties on their plastic. Clare Francis offers advice 0% interest Switching cards Credit score Minimum payments Credit limits Credit-card cheques Late-payment charges Low usage Crackdown on loan repayment penalties Best Savings Accounts Mortgage Deals LOW-COST LOANS Top Annuity Rates Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares News Factfile In Control Why you should clear your mortgage early Flexible home loans allow you to overpay each month, saving thousands of pounds in interest. Report by David Budworth Multiple Display Advertising Items Best Deals if You Want to Overpay The Sunday Times Actor has cold feet about the future Fame and Fortune Family man James Nesbitt wants to make sure that his wife and children never have to worry about money. By John Marx Cheltenham & Gloucester Thank you Mr Hill. You're the winner in my tax race When the Inland Revenue wanted £10,000 from Hunter Davies, he didn't have it. Then a bookmaker came to the rescue . . . Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Fat-cat pay? It's danger money Chief executives are often made scapegoats for factors that are beyond their control. They usually deserve their payoffs, writes Roger Eglin Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Inquisitors hold councils to account A new breed of managers can earn £60,000 a year scrutinising the work of local authorities, writes Gareth Huw Davies Multiple Display Advertising Items Press delete on e-mail abuse Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Scooby-Doo! in the Creepy Cruise The story so far - The gang's environmental study trip is all at sea after a spooky ghoul scuppers the ship's launch More from Maria The Funday Times Ready, steady, mow! Funday News Ocean pearl Green giant Dream location London Imax Movies to go Simpsons Where Will You Go? If you enjoy a good book, don't miss out on the summer reading challenge at your local library Cool it dudes! Brick by Brick Building bricks Design mind Your turn Mini world Beryl the Peril Webby World Holiday Inn at Disneyland Paris Resort Fresh! Microbabies Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas Jon Moves on Funday Stars Living IT up! Walking Tall Single File Syuirt Jarvis Robot Crusoe Take Note F-mail Next Week Have a Pop Funday Prize Haul Beastie Alert Dear f-amil Toon Party Contents Inside this Week Golf stretches to the next generation Up to Speed Freelander smartens up Billy to set a blinding pace Cars on TV Car Advertising Which supercar will it be today? Me and my Motors The making of its marque Vital Statistics Peak performer Annie Seel is attempting to go higher than any biker has gone before with a daring assault on Mount Everest, reports Andreas Brosjo Your life in their hands - the truth about road safety How safe is your car, and are the crash safety tests all they would have us believe? Andrew Frankel investigates Lowest Euro Ncap Scores Highest Euro Ncap Scores Rusty the Human Crash Test Dummy Porsche Tanks for the memory Civilian enthusiasts are deciding soldiers should not have all the fun, writes Joseph Dunn How to Get on Track for Military Hardware Multiple Display Advertising Items Rust Relief In Gear the Stuff of Motoring Dreams Power Injection The Knowledge Digital Radio Eveything you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Terminator Tool Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Used Car: Audi A8 Values Audi A8 4.2 quattro Sport Second Opinion The Sunday Times This is for - but real drivers not for me Vital Statistics Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Letters Multiple Display Advertising Items Have your Say Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Car Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Design Disasters Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Find Perfection Contents Inside Is it worth it? Sales talk. . . Mature purchaser Home essentials Internet fridge First steps that led to the jungle Time and place Catalina Guirado, pouting star of I'm a Celebrity. . ., found her feet in a cosy London flat How much? A windmill in . . . Moving on Chelsea in Oxford Landlady Heather Wadcock ended up with a terrorist-proof home when a former occupant of the White House moved in Octagon The cad in the pad opens up James Hewitt is trying to sell his South Kensington bachelor flat. He gives Jasper Gerard a guided tour Nurseries grow healthy profits Adapt your home into a nursery and childcare could pay for itself, says Mary Braid Times Online How to make a Million Canny buying and selling has taken Dave Chipping from a council estate to a £1.5m home. Cally Law meets people who made all the right moves Houses of the week Hidden magic Michael Ani had the imagination to turn a wedge-shaped plot with two garages and a one-bedroom flat into a family home with a touch of the Guggenheim and a valuation to match, says Victoria O'Brien Harrods Estates How clean do you need? Health-conscious homeowners are buying air-purification systems and pulling up carpets, says Graham Norwood. But is it just hype or does it really help? What's bugging you? Doctor peps up the chapel Alternative health expert Sarah Brewer has made some eye-catching changes to help sell her East Anglia home, reports Cally Law Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items The drive-in super home With the squeeze on parking, wealthy Londoners are installing car lifts to keep motors safe and add value to their homes, says Victoria O'Brien Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Foxtons Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Bedding down To maximise wardrobe space in a tiny bedroom Paula Robinson builds extra storage in neglected areas under and behind the bed Nuts & bolts Tool kit Keeping your cool A pool abroad looks enticing. but make sure the maintenance doesn't land you in deep water. warns Helena Frith Powell Before you take the plunge In the pool Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Semi-detached suits me fine On the Market A unique composition David Hellewell's garden is as unusual as his music, says Caroline Donald The Sunday Times Garden cuttings What to do this week Copthorn Homes Racy reds fire up Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Ask the experts Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Tide turns at last resorts DTZ Residential Seeking fringe benefits Is Edinburgh's rental market as lucrative as it seems, wonders Rosie Millard The market Multiple Display Advertising Items Sales & marketing suite Contents Rolling Stones Contents Weisz versa The Mummy's girl and West End star has seen her career turned upside down more than once and she does it that ways, say Jeff Dawson When will be famous? Well, fame costs, and right here's where Dan Cairns started paying, in sweat. So after 24 hours in the fabled Fame Academy, was it all worthwhile? Rest of the week's films The Sunday Times Short Cuts Standing in the Shadows of Motown Sex is Comedy Agent Cody Banks Historias Minimas Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas Public Enemy Right on the Marx A German comedy? Yes, and Good Bye Lenin! beats most British films hands down, says Cosmo Landesman Why does Shakespeare in Art lack drama? That is the question, says Waldemar Januszczak Theatre Royal Bath Atkearney Their life really is a cabaret Television Iam glad that the Heritage Lottery Fund has coughed up £11.5m for Raphael's All above board Radio waves The West Wing Gods and monsters The Greek myths are the inspiration for this year's Proms programme, and the early performances have ranged from the divine to the diabolical, says Hugh Canning After Mrs Rochester Rest of the week's theatre Royal Shakespeare Company The Water Babies Suger Daddies No more Mr Nice Guy: Kenneth Branagh's debut at the … Comedy So much to see, so little time. Make the most of the festival with our guide to the best events in town Theatre Playing it safe at the Fringe: how not to do it Classical music Edinburgh 2003 Music—Fringe Art Film Dance Not just for laughs Stand-up stars are trying their hand at straight acting this year—and we should take them seriously, says Stephen Armstrong Comfort of strangers The challenge here inspires Aussie comics, says Simon Fanshawe In with the nu Pop Tom Cox, 27, thought he was a proper pop fan, but then he met a 14-year-old and realised he knew nothing The Pleasure is all ours Bedroom boffin Fred Ball has roped in Britpop's coolest crew to make the best debut yet of 2003. By Dan Cairns Mahler Classical CD of the week Classical On record The week's essential new releases Tchaikovsky/mendelssohn First Piano Concertos Lang Lang (Piano), Chicago so, cond Barenboim Dg 474 291-2 Berlioz L'Enfance du Christ Soloists, SWR Vokalensemble, Stuttgart Radio so, cond Sir Roger Norrington Hanssler CD 93.091 (2 CDs) Carl Nielsen Symphonies Nos 2 and 5 BBC Scottish so, cond Osmo Vanska BIS BIS-CD-1289 Morton Feldman Late Works with Clarinet Carol Robinson (clarinet), Quatuor Diotima Mode 119 Pop and Jazz Chris Rea Blue Street (Five Guitars) Jazzee Blue Jbluecd 03 Psychid Psychid DB Records DB 005 CDLP I Monster Neveroddoreven Showbiz/Dharma Dharmacd 2 The Coral Magic & Medicine Deltasonic DLTCD 014 New kids in town The Stands Jackie-O Motherf***er In Europe Cast Exotic X002 Kim Fowley Impossible But True: The Kim Fowley Story Ace CDCHD 888 Radio Tarifa Fiebre World Circuit WCD 066 Various Artists Pop CD of the week Philly Soul Unisex USEXCD 003 Jacqui Dankworth As the Sun Shines Down on Me Candid CCD 79788 Jumped up Tongue-in-cheek fun makes up for a lack of conviction in the Kirov's Le Corsaire, says David Dougill The Times Literary Supplement With friends like these. . . The man below is your new best mate—but can you bear to admit it? This is the kick behind a new gameshow, and the odd thing is, it really works, says Victoria Segal Look ahead Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Pick of the Proms Opera Dance Concerts Pop Comedy Film Buffalo Soldiers This week don't miss Art Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Theatre Vincent in Brixton Comedy Osama Likes it Hot Opera Die Fledermaus Dance Kirov Ballet Concerts Academy of St Martin's Pop Cambridge Folk Festival Agenda Punch-Drunk Love DVDs and videos Gangs of New York X-Men Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Pile 'Em High The Sunday Times concise crossword No 802 Hardbacks Paperbacks Katharine the great a special relationship Read on . . . The royal command performer Inigo: The Troubled Life of Inigo Jones, Architect of the English Renaissance by Michael Leapman Review £20 pp362 Read on . . . Diary Portrait of a people under siege Wild West China The Taming of Xinjiang by Christian Tyler J Murray £20 pp314 Solving the riddle of the sands Empires of the Plain Henry Rawlinson and the Lost Languages of Babylon by Lesley Adkins HarperCollins £20 pp424 What Esther Freud has on her bedside table In the news Books behind the headlines: GM food Magnificent man in his flying machine Wings of Madness Alberto Santos-Dumont and the Invention of Flight by Paul Hoffman Fourth Estate £18.99 pp369 Read on . . . First lady of the skies Amy Johnson: Queen of the Air by Midge Gillies Weidenfeld £20 pp384 Why mental illness is not all in the mind Madness Explained Psychosis and Human Nature by Richard P Bentall Allen Lane £25 pp640 Read on . . . Fighting back Mud, Blood and Poppycock: Britain and the First World War by Gordon Corrigan Cassell £18.99 pp431 Read on . . . Pick up your Parrots and Monkeys History By William Pennington Cassell £16.99 pp352 Comrades By Robert Harvey J Murray £25 pp448 Brothers in Arms By Peter Duffy Century £16.99 pp302 Pandora The price of privilege The Hamilton Case by Michelle de Kretser Chatto £10.99 pp297 Perfectly formed Desperate Characters by Paula Fox Flamingo £6.99 pp156 the Widow's Children by Paula Fox Flamingo £6.99 pp224 Under Western eyes Mortals by Norman Rush Cape £18.99 pp715 The Book of Dead Days by Marcus Sedgwick Age 10+ Children's book of the week WHSuspicious minds Paperbacks Pushkin: A Biography by T J Binyon The Angry Young Men By Humphrey Carpenter The Seven Sisters By Margaret Drabble Book events What's happening in the literary world You really must read . . . The Sunday Times The Man who Lost his Language Horrible Histories Lola Rose by Jacqueline Wilson read by Helen Leader Einstein in Love Il Gigante Behindlings Dirt Music Murder in the museum John Dugdale unearths scholarly intrigue at the Louvre and a killing game on the web The Sunday Times Silver surfers catch the wave Many oldies neither have nor want internet access, but Martin Wroe discovers that those who take the plunge find it widens their horizons Gear up for your first foray online The Right Computer Connecting Safely Internet Alternatives Now Click Here Atticvus Special Equipment Recommended Reading Screens of all sizes Don't panic State of Play Brilliant! Prepared for the cowboys Site test From personal loans to house repairs, consumers beware—there's a scam out there. Sally Kinnes investigates the sites that lay out your rights The annual celebration of hilarity and culture that is the 57th Edinburgh Festival Fringe begins next Sunday Slide and ride Multiple Display Advertising Items Buyer's guide King of All Trades HP Officejet 6110 This virtual life Slides over substance Super-Sized Photos Canon i9100 Family Bargain HP Deskjet 5150 All prices include Vat No cheap imitations On test: four printers ready to make their mark in the home or office Home-Office Powerhouse Kyocera Mita FS-1010 The Sunday Times Contents The one to watch Steve Leonard's Search For The Loch Ness Monster Today, BBC1, 8pm Best film Lord Preserve US BBC1 America—Beyond The Colour Line He's Back . . . The Terminator Story (Five, 8pm) Film choice There's Only One Robbie William (BBC1,10.15pm) A French Affair: All's Well That Ends Well (C4,8pm) The South Bank Show: George Orwell (ITV1, 10.45pm) BBC1 Radio Pick of the Day Critics' choice Films Kids' TV Nobody Likes a Smartass Human Senses: Hearing (BBC1, 7pm) Film choice Ruby Wax With . . . Jim Carrey (BBC1, 10.35pm) Machines Timo Forgot: Fireship (C4,9pm) Platinum (BBC3,9pm) Spooks (BBC1,9pm) BBC1 Radio Pick of the Day Critics' choice The Kennedys: The Curse Of Power (History, 9pm) Films Sky Movies Premier Kids' TV The Search For King Midas Holby City (BBC1, 8pm) Panic In The Streets Welcome To Britain: The Applicants (BBC1, 10.35pm) Rebels And Redcoats: The World Turned Upside Down (BBC2, 9pm) Cutting Edge: Behind Closed Doors (C4,9pm) Your Money Or Your Life (BBC2, 7.30pm) BBC1 Radio Pick of the Day The Real 80s (R2,8. 30pm) Critics' choice When Celebrities Attract (Sky One, 8pm) Films Kids' TV My Family And Autism Critics' choice Outside (C4, from 11.10pm) Film choice ER (C4,9pm) The Man Who Made Accidents Happen (BBC1, 9pm) Battlefield Detectives: Agincourt's Dark Secrets (Five, 10pm) Imagine: Sir John Mortimer—Owning Up At 80 (BBC1, 10.35pm) BBC1 Radio Pick of the Day Critics' choice Cheating Death: Storm Shooter (National Geographic, 8pm) Films Kids' TV Malcolm In The Middle Critics' choice No 57: The History Of a House (C4,8pm) Film choice The Real Richard Desmond (C4,10.40pm) Football Stories: George Best's Body (C4,9pm) The Highest Bidder (BBC2, 9.50pm) The Way We Travelled (BBC2, 8pm) BBC1 Radio Pick of the Day With Great Pleasure (R4 Fm, 11.30am) Critics' choice The Most Evil Men in History: Pol Pot (Discovery, 6pm) Kids' TV Films A Country Estate Critics Choice Film choice Sex And The City (C4,10pm) Will And Grace (C4,9pm) The Flying Gardener (BBC2, 8pm) Scrubs (C4,9.30pm) Proms On Four (BBC4, 7.30pm) BBC1 Radio Pick of the Day Ken Clarke's Jazz Greats (R4 Fm, 11am) Critics' choice Robo Sapians (Discovery, 8pm) Films Kids' TV Gauguin: The Full Story Critics Choice Film choice Robbie Williams: Live At Knebworth (C4,9pm) 4Danca (C4,7.30pm) The Story Of The Novel (C4,8pm) Killer Queens (History, 10.30pm) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (Five, 10.30pm) BBC1 Radio Pick of the Day Critics' choice Beckham Live: Real Madrid V China Dragons (ITV2. from 12.30pm) Kids' TV Films The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinemas The Official Guide of the Society of London Theatre Books for Children Contents Alfa Romio Cru Contents Eye Opener … At an Indian club, women indugle in laughter yoga—a new therapy that proves giggling is good for your health D·f·s Relative Values Zeev and Ruth Aram Multiyork Freixenel Toyota Best of Times Worst of Times Nissan Whatever Happened to … The Facts of Life Magnet a pleasure for life Alison Balsom Volvo The Eden Project The land of the Marsh Arabs, thought to be the original Garden of Eden, was drained by Saddam Hussein. Can paradise now be restored Report by Christina Lamb. Photographs by Bruno Stevens Vauxhall Vauxhall The Sunday Times Truly Madly Depp Johnny's Reel World He's the rock'n'roll movie star who has veered between sanity and self-destruction, trashed his hotel room and attacked the paparazzi. So why is Johnny Depp giving up his hard-man image? Interview: Chrissy lley. Main portraits: Nigel Parry Bedrooms Furniture Design Studio Roman Russia's Living Nightmare Squalid communal houses should have gone out with the fall of communism. But in St Petersburg, 300,000 families are still forced to live like this. By Joseph Dunn. Photographs: Francoise Huguier 'Psychologists are Interested in Life Here as It Encourages a Form of Paranoia' Field & trek Dream Chariots of Satire The Wharfside Sale Thesmart Gardening Direct Tempur The Savile Row Company Mephisto Teaser Bookwise Chess Bridge Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items A Life in the Day Abbot Ale Lexus Contents Chrysler Voyager Raymond Weil Geneve Beach Babe Siemens Inside Olympus Lovingit The Intellectual's Guide Fashion Sombereros The Kiss-And-Tell Rule Going up Going down Fashion Moment City Shorts Fabulousness When Missy Met Madonna Hip-hop's first lady and the queen of pop are mixing it up in a new ad campaign. Just don't ask them who's more bling, says Jessica Brinton America or Bust They love Nigella but couldn't care less about Robbie Williams. So what is the secret of success for Brits who want to make it in the States? American cool-hunter Marian Salzman reports Fruits De Mer Come out of your shell on the beach this summer Photographs by Thomas Cardy Styling by Jones Cattani Fashion Hats off Brow Beaters Claudia Croft Wardrobe Mistress Hair Apparent Claudia Croft welcomes the return of the rug-and-ready brigade Do You Think I'm Sexy? After 10 years of follicly challenged pecs coming down the catwalk, Tom Ford of v YSL has decreed that hairy chests are back in fashion. But are they really what women want? Smooth Operators Shane Watson on why she's sticking with the hair-bare bunch Ford Ages of Men Are mature blokes more fun? Maria McErlane (fortyish doted ber way through seven decades of men—form freewheeling teen to seventysomething stckler Vanessa Wilde's Secret Diary In which Vanessa realises her limits after receiving some porno junk e-mails One for the Road Roll with It The Sybarite Feel the Burn Do It now Star Line-Up Beauty and the Beach Think Ursula Andress or Brigitte Bardot—it's make-up to the max this summer, says Bethan Cole. So pack your bag along with your beach towel Tried and Tested Hair Shine Boosters What Really Part 2 In the final extract from her book, Susan Clark offers natural solutions to some of the more common health problems, from panic attacks and migraines to low libido and jet lag Log on, Chill out Health and Deficiency Visors Galaxy A Light Drizzle Foodstyle Feel the Heat Spice of Life A New Leaf Dressing up Truly Scrumptious Orient Joanna Simon Where to Eat Good Snacks Little ltaly, 205 Byers Road, Glasgow: 01413 396287 Island Interiors It's the place in the sun … everyone dreams of. Anabel Cutler on a remote lbiza retreat that's a chillout zone for all seasons Power Flowers Interiors Forget chintz. This season's big bold florals have serious attitude. Styling by Emily Jewsbury In the Stars Chill Shake Enjoy Two-for-one luxury health resirt breaks We're so in Love Small Talk The Holiday Test Shane Watson on summer breaks and relationship havoc Mrs Mills Solves All your Problem Amoré Pvlgari

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