Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 02/05/2004

2004; Gale Group;

Autores

Jonathan Northcroft, Kevin Dunn, David Wood, John Dugdale, Hala Jaber, Edward Maydon, Barbara Hall, Barry McGuigan, Alasdair Riley, Ben Whishaw, Basil Steven-Fountain, David Mills, Peter Whittle, Helen Davies, Sally Brock, Katie Bowman, Nicholas Rufford, Rob Hughes, John Peter, Saulius Jarmalis, John Mudd, Jonathan Miller, Donna Leon, Alvin Rakoff, Paul McGinley, Andrew Longmore, Jane Mulkerrins, Lesley White, Susan d'Arcy, Wayne McCullough, Martin Riley, Frank Whitford, Ivo Tennant, Caroline Brannigan, Ferdinand Mount, David Gower, Kathryn Cooper, Samantha Bond, William Lewis, P D, David Smith, Nick Pitt, Party trick, Neil Wormald, Sir Nigel Crisp Chief Executive, E P, Andrew Sullivan, Clive Davis, Andrew Porter, Mohammed Shehzad, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Martin James, Paul Jeeves, Tom Walker, Anthony Sattin, Hugh Brogan, Robert Winnett, Dipesh Gadher Transport Correspondent, Irwin Stelzer, Chris Sullivan, Matt Rudd, Robert Hewison, Peter Wilson, Rosie Millard, Mary Anne Hobbs, Lawrence Dallaglio, Marion Hill, David Dougill, Emma John, Ian Mortimer, Geraldine Hackett, Damon Hill, Steve Boyd, Nick Speed, David Hewson, Ken Ruddiman, Kamil Tchorek, Sue Doughty, Toby Porter Emergencies Director, David Bond, Eniola Aluko, Jonathon Carr-Brown, Margarette Driscoll, Hugh Canning, Marika Stone, Jeremy Clarkson, Victoria Segal, Edward Porter, Andrew Oswald, Phil Spencer, David Cairns, Stewart Lee, Michael Portillo, Ryan Gilbey, Peter Kemp, Jeanette Winterson, Sarah Dempster, Dave Pollard, Peter Andre, Peter Millar, Bennie Penzik, Greg Struthers, David Eimer, Phil Craigie, Simon Brett, Adam Nathan, John Timpson chairman, Shelley von Strunckel, Andrew Porter Deputy Political Editor, Christine Toomey, Stuart Wavell, Charles Chesshire, Paul Donovan, Stan Greenberg, Peter Hounam, Bob Woodward, John Woods, Chris Woodhead, Julian Rendell, Clive Bone, Simon Mills, Lucinda Kemeny, Lisa Jardine, Jasper Gerard, Gordon Boocock, Paul Driver, Stephan Grey, Michael Barrows, Nicholas Hellen, Samantha Patrickson, John Follain, Richard Brooks, Ian Hawkey, Alex Clark, David Leppard, Paul Durman, Alicia Wyllie, Kippe Williams, Mark Edwards, Howard, Martyn Palmer, John Pooler, Susan Clark, Hugh McLlvanney, Joan Collins, Askold Krushelnycky, Blower, Alistair Baker managing director, Phil Baker, Roger Camrass, Diana Coad, Christina Lamb, Victoria O'Brien, Alan Combes, Raymond Keene, Gareth Huw Davies, Rod Liddle, Lindsay Duguid, Robbie Hudson, Zoe Brennan, Cosmo Landesman, Diana Wright, Roger Harrison, Los Angeles, Stephen Jones, Dominic O'Connell, S G, Barry Flatman, Uzi Mahnaimi, Nick Cain, Louise Armitstead, Tom Hanks, James Q Wilson, Frankel, David Gardner, Natalie Graham, Barry Mason, David Walsh, Mark Stuart, Liat Joshi, Sophie Tweedale, Trevor Lewis, Enver Solomon, Helen Stewart, Sarah Keenlyside, Stephen Armstrong, Burlington Bertie, Ron Clarke, John Elliott, Beri Goldenberg, Lionel Richie, N R, Richard Woods, Roland White, Ade Daramy, Rachel Cooke, Sarah Kate Templeton, Shane Watson, Amrit Dhillon, Ian Joseph, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, Richard Spink, Czech Republic, Richard Rae, Mark Franchetti, Ray Hutton, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Jonathan Leake, Michael Sheridan, Ian Edwards, Ian Thomson, John Harlow, Robert Winnett Consumer Affairs Correspondent, Tim Evans marketing director, John Dugale, Dipesh Gadher, John Waples, Paul Rowan, A A Gill, Matthew Campbell, Brian Glanville, John Carey, David Sumner Smith, Simon Jenkins, Stephen Pettitt, Jason Mellor, Maria McErlane, Will Iredale, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, John Spurling, David Radcliffe chief executive, Justin Sparks, Gary Howard, Sally Kinnes, Naomi Caine, Gavin Pike, Ben Dowell, Minette Marrin, John Aizlewood, Peter Schmeichel, James Robbins, Mark Hodson, James Knight, Andrew Frankel, Lois Rogers Medical Editor, Joe Lovejoy, James Radford vice-president, Jonathan Futrell, David Budworth, Hugh Pearman, Graham Norwood, Dan Cairns, Andrew Male, Pete Oliver, Colin Kennedy, Stewart Mitchell, Judith Flanders, Henry Armstrong, s John Aizlewood, David Smith Economics Editor, Susannah Price, Sarah Baxter, Douglas Kennedy, Chris Feetenby, David Robertson, Matthew Goodman, Bill Drummond, Sandy Gall, Nina Goswami, Dominic Rushe, Richard Lewis, Sian Griffiths, Karen Robinson, Trevor Phillips,

Resumo

Contents Murder of British soldier may have sparked torture Girls of 14 'sterilised' by doctors Two Jags goes electric Contents BT Our extended family comes knocking The United Colours of Europe: It's Open Border Day The Sunday Times Sunday Times wins first Weekend Newspaper of the Year award Top writing in Business Explore France for £70 Talking Newspapers Your Sunday Times Classified Multiple Display Advertising Items Air Canada Europe Cheers a Brave New Dawn Britons killed in Saudi strike Evicted migrants may stay in tents Sting: the sex wasn't tantric, it was frantic 'Vile' US adoption reality show reaches tearful finale Chopard Geldof goes home Water bills to jump by 30% Flybe Writer tempts fury with 'lazy black men' film Millions of letters wrongly delivered Article Withdrawn Labour wants the professionals to save councils Good Yearg Blair faithful beg him to get a grip on Party South African Airways What Will the PM Do when He Resigns? Soldiers' grief that fuelled brutality Iraqi prisoner 'died under interrogation by CIA' Red Cross anger at army actions City of Death Road noise rebels win EU hearing Legoland Madonna puts her lawn on the line to stop ramblers Article Withdrawn Today's children are tubbier than yesterday's adults Multiple Display Advertising Items Charities may be asked to run 'Cinderella' public services Robot hunts for pride of ancient Greek fleet Multiple Display Advertising Items Failed Beagle 2 space probe damned by official report Passports to be free for D-Day veterans Daughter to unzip Ab Fab life with Jong New evidence in cleft lip abortion Multiple Display Advertising Items Europe Cheers a Brave New Dawn The leaders of 'old' and 'new' Europe embraced in Dublin yesterday to celebrate the formal unification of a long-divided continent. Richard Wood considers the impact the 10 latest members considers the impact the 10 latest members will have on Britain's influence in the EU Subaru Suffering nations of the east know Soviet winter is … The new members see the EU as their guarantee of freedom, says Peter Millar Matalan Soon we will be gone for good. Will you. . . CitroËn The racial weather vane changes direction Profile You're all on probation, this is the British nation Miele Shame on them WHSmith A cure for Eurosclerosis? Blair zigzags towards the land of the lost Picture Gallery It took a Labour leader to win Thatcher's last battle Is the ordinary Iraqi in the street quite as hostile … Atticvs Call for plain English gets double-digit response in Whitehall Atticvs They keep falling his way: plum-job Patten backed to be EU president Atticvs Will Marr dance out of the limelight before Blair? Atticvs Congratulations to Labour MP Stephen Pound Atticvs Britain's new apartheid makes strangers of us all Is the BBC veteran Michael Buerk having a late Atticvs One group of Europeans will have celebrated particularl Atticvs There is fresh evidence that the gender revolution … Atticvs Empire direct Protect Palestine for a victory over terror Lufthansa Statistics will lie unless reformed Smith's Place It's simply bad taste Dangerous Confusion Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street, … City of Death For nearly a month US forces laid siege to the Iraqi city of Falluja. Last week Hala Jaber got behind the blood-soaked rebel lines Lloyds TSB Business It could take 10 years to deport Hamaza Rover Boy, 10, gets transsexual counselling Titchmarsh to present Proms Words of Hate Top school ditches 'weakened' A-level for baccalaureate English Patient's real lover was a gay Nazi Kenyans invite Scotland Yard back to reopen Julie Ward case Boots Cyclist's racy love life shocks France Mitsubishi Motors Taliban use the devil's weapons Terror strike raises new Saudi alarm Indian fashion takes on the world Expedia Toyota King Arthur rides in from Russia with love Cosmonaut claims Soviet cover-up on Gagarin's death Thai 'martyrs' raise tourist terror threat Freedom is a multimedia experience for Vanunu Doubting Democrats lose faith in gloomy Kerry Clintons Accused of Not Wanting a Democrat Victory Sharon warns waverers on Gaza pullout ballot The week's weather Newspapers Support Recycling Nissan Airline failure strands travellers News in Brief Fatal 150ft crash Teachers 'live in fear' of punishment More D'oh! Survivors of poison-gas tests may sue Two tickets share £4.7m Lotto jackpot Detainee dies Correction Party leader flies flag for Oz republic The Times Tennis ace helps rescue guests as hotel blazes Self-inflicted wounds don't win wars, soldier The new MG ZT260 We're to blame if an artist gets Beckham in bed Like a flasher in a raincoat who can't resist outraging Sickness of 'win a baby' reality TV Weather Contents Swaggering Chelsea romp to 4-0 win Beckham's Real Love: Is It over? Keegan edges towards survival The Sunday Times Arsenal fail to crack dogged Birmingham Fortune conspires against brave Leicester Harry happy defies odds Stead sinks lacklustre United Zidane off as Madrid flop Euro 2004 Camara ensures Wolves go down fighting Real Love But is it over already? Real Madrid once basked in the publicity David Beckham brought them. Now they are finding the spotlight far too bright The Sunday Times Beckham turns to old allies With the England captain having ditched his agents, any deal to bring him to Chelsea is likely to be done by David Gardner, an old friend. David Bond reports Will he stay or go? You buy your paper and take your choice Real lose title grip Lampard quick on the rebound Will Owen try luck in Spain? With no sign of Liverpool developing championship credentials, the England striker is looking abroad for a real challenge. Jonathan Northcroft reports Sky Sports Draining the Pool Liverpool take on Middlesbrough today desperate to clinch the remaining place in the Champions League Smart Leeds on verge of takeover On the field, Leeds United must beat Bolton today, while off it, the club's board is ready to accept a £20m offer to secure the future, writes David Bond David's dream Villa Forty-six today, much has changed for David O'Leary in a year. Against all odds his team could yet make the Champions League Shooting from the lip: the various thoughts of David O'Leary Cisse takes a shot at glory The Monaco and former West Ham midfielder returns to London this week eager to end Chelsea's European run Claws are out as Porto and Deportivo continue catfight London Pride Hungry for success Scott Parker has grown up since his days as the McDonald's Kid. Now he has an appetite for glory with Chelsea and England Air-Berlin Barclaycard Premiership Nationwide First Division Second Division Third Division Pools Nationwide Conference Scotland Other Football Fixtures Milan back in fashion Victory over Roma today will seal Serie a for Milan, while even defeat to their only challengers should merely delay the triumph Chasing silverware across Europe Renault Johnson strikes late to lift Palace The Sunday Times Exit Carlisle as luck runs out after 76 years Nearly 10,000 supporters turned up at Brunton Park hoping to witness another miraculous escape, but this time their team could not do it. By Ron Clarke Bolder keeps Derby up Nationwide League Norwich close in on title Ashton keeps Crewe safe Sidwell crashes West Brom party York City 1 Hammers on the charge Moore joy as Rotherham avoid the drop The Sunday Times Johnson knocks Wigan hopes Heart and SOL Joe Lovejoy talks to the England defender who has triumphed over despair to have his finest season Woodgate out of Euro 2004 Chatty officials can go whistle Who needs television pundits to explain what is happening in the big matches, now the man in the middle has enough chat to leave players speechless? The Sunday Times Sacrificial Lamb? The ECB has been widely criticised for its fumbling over this autumn's tour to Zimbabwe, and there may be changes at the top Politicians pass the buck Caught between a rock and a hard place by the ICC, England have little choice but to go ahead with the Zimbabwe tour England's dilemma England hit for six Marcus Trescothick's 130 is in vain as West Indies level the series with a thrilling victory in St Lucia after a blistering late onslaught, reports Simon Wilde Cricket scoreboards and tables Warne's men turn on style Essex collapse Adshead keeps up Round-up 1 Black Power Olympics, 1968 The top 10 Political controversies in sport 2 Basil D'Oliveira, 1968 3 Jesse Owens 1936 Book of the week Red Mist by Conor O'Callaghan Bloomsbury Publishing, hb, £12.99 4 Moscow Olympics, 1980 5 Jackie Robinson 6 Zola Budd 7 Uday Hussein 8 Zimbabwe, 2004 9 Chile v Soviet Union, 1973 10 Springboks' tour of New Zealand, 1981 DVD of the week The History of England ILC Sport Ltd, £15.99 60 seconds in sport With Paul McGinley, who helped Europe win the 2002 Ryder Cup The Times Funnell's broken dream Britain's eventing queen crashed out of the Badminton horse trials after two falls on a day she would rather forget Rugby Shorts Nigel Botherway beams in from planet rugby SAAB Gloucester turn tables Rampant Tigers keep wildcard hopes alive Today's Zurich Premiership matches Club Class The European Heineken Cup has been lifted to new heights and is giving the Six Nations a good run for its money Cash-strapped Wakefield ready to sell out to consortium Directors open the door to a southern hemisphere takeover as London Tribe seeks a deal with the RFU in a bid to set up home in the capital. Nick Cain reports The Sunday Times Cynical play not our style Wasps proved they are a side for the big occasion in Dublin, but swingeing criticism of our defence is off the mark The Sunday Times Rocket races to final Ronnie O'Sullivan finishes a 17-4 demolition job over the seven-time champion with a session to spare The Sunday Times F1 rebellion breaks down The face of motorsport could change earlier than expected, now that a rival to Formula One is no longer on the cards, reports Richard Rae Ruthless Warriors continue Tigers' tale of woe Sports round-up Results round-up Today's racecards Fixtures Golf Rugby Union Athletics Basketball Rugby Union Rugby League Fixtures Motorcycling Tennis Racing Picture Gallery Cycling Haafhd pockets Guineas Richard Hills's mount lives up to the hype, recording a memorable father-son double in the first Classic of the season Classic chance for McEvoy The Aussie kid who came out of the bush to win the Melbourne Cup is being backed by Godolphin to beat the best in British racing. By Andrew Longmore The Times McCoy makes smart move The champion jockey is not the first man to leave Martin Pipe, and Richard Dunwoody says he has done the right thing. By Andrew Longmore Sport Letters Sky Sports Caught in time Burnley return to the First Division, 1973-74 One for the future Sport on TV Don't miss this Questions & answers Your sporting conundrums tackled Heroes' Heroes Former world bantamweight champion Wayne McCullough on Henry Armstrong and Barry McGuigan Show me the money Inside the world of sports betting Times Online Time that Owen said goodbye Jaguar Haafhd's Guineas is solid currency Sven's double-Dutch Contents Abbey board to reconsider 'serious' offer by Spanish bank BAE row over Eurofighter's rising costs Cox joins the 'top table' as BP prepares for life after Browne Computer Associates Agenda Floating on big air . . . Projects Distribution Group, … Regus under fire over £59m exec share plan Where have all the plcs gone? Special Report The number of fully listed firms fell from 1,600 in 1997 to 910 in 2003, writes Paul Durman 16 pages of business Multiple Display Advertising Items 'Non' to new Eurotunnel loan Raging violence hits Iraqi crude Fed to signal the start of American rate rises 'Foreigners should create jobs—not clean our loos' Pizza men serve up new venture Business Digest Former QMH boss joins race for Premier Protection money. . . Guardit, a security firm, is … Chelsea boss risks own goal over joint venture in Russia Dixons tunes up for Napster deal Global optimism to spur ad boom Xerox US group wins army truck fight for Wales Now Black faces claims over sale of local papers Some searching questions to ask about this float Agenda Will new blood revive Europe? Economic Outlook Mail order A wee whoop Into the fire Return of the Magnificent G7 raises only dust American Account Are They Having a Giggle? The much-hyped Google float could raise billions from investors while leaving the founders in control. Are they really trying to break new ground or just having a laugh all the way to bank? By Dominic Rushe in New York The Founding Pair who Have so Much in Common The Sunday Times Vodafone BAE loses its battle with government The group has failed to convince Whitehall that it deserves special treatment. Report by Dominic O'Connell and Andrew Porter Now you see them, now you don't: Britain's vanishing … From rag trade to rich peer of the realm He came here as a penniless teenager and rose to become a textiles giant. Now David Alliance is to enter the Lords. By John Waples British Airways Steps to the Top Big Four battle liability laws Accountants threaten to stop auditing unless they are allowed to limit their liability. Report by Lucinda Kemeny The shoe fits shy princess of British retailing Linda Bennett, founder of the fashion chain LK Bennett, was last week named Veuve Clicquot Business Woman of the Year British Airways Vital Statistics Linda Bennett's Working Day Working Space Multiple Classified Advertising Items Camelot stops lottery rot with sales rise For the first time since 1998, sales have gone up. But can the recovery be sustained? Louise Armitstead reports Multiple Display Advertising Items Old wires hold key to telecoms revolution The regulator is grappling with widespread technological change as it seeks to shape the industry's future. Paul Durman reports Bus and train group will be going places Judgment Day: Should You Buy Shares in National Express? Google float will raise $2.7bn The Week that was Business on the Box The Week Ahead Quote of the Week World share markets Databank Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates / Bonds Currencies Commodities Old age is the youngest market to exploit Pensioners are refusing to grow old gracefully, and that is creating opportunities for entrepreneurs, write Howard and Marika Stone Take a bet on gambling Idea of the Week Putting the fraudsters out of business How to Prevent fraud in your company Todd Enterprises Tips to Keep the Problem at Bay Next Week: What's in it for you? The Business Doctor: Should I sell my family's shareholding? Extra Hours for Staff Kingston Smith Crisp salesman went solo to make a packet How I Made It John Mudd founder of The Real Crisps Company Multiple Display Advertising Items Voice recorder will boost your memory Business Tools Diasonic DDR-3000 Voice Bank Sterling drive for expansion The currency trader 4Less Group has just floated on the stock market. But could the company be diversifying too fast? Report by David Sumner Smith The Sunday Times Do research on target customers What the Experts Say Buy a firm to break into new markets 4Less Group's Challenges Improve customer service Motivate employees with sabbaticals Stick with the long-term plan Reward staff for working flexibly The Sunday Times Progress Report Newton Abbot Racecourse Nokia Connecting People Price is right says Fred for RBS's new HQ Prufrock Wanted: Brit to trump the Donald Heavy hitter lets rip £10m in child benefit The dangers of playing roulette with Russians Inside the City Market Mole Contents Butt out! As the USA puts the squeeze on tourists, we find classic America elsewhere Long queues, short tempers and an outside chance of incarceration: travelling to the USA, is already no picnic and, as Matt Rudd reports, it could get worse. But don't panic: you can have the American dream without even going there British Airways CD Player Good Gear Guide Markwarner Car Fan Laptop Case Little Black Dress Pedometer I still want to go the USA Beauty and treachery on Devil Island Wild and unpredictable, the Tasmanian bush could swallow you whole, says Douglas Kennedy Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief Thailand unrest sparks FO alert Holiday money Multiple Display Advertising Items All good things must come to an end. in the case of … The cheetah is Africa's most endangered cat Where was I? Bargains around the world Calls for reform of DVT law The Dance at Mociu by Peter Riley (Shearsman Books £8.95) Readers' rants Kyrenia Happiness is a time-share scam The sexiest girl on Tenerife only had eyes for luckless James Robbins. Why? A new place in the sun Make a dash for Northern Cyprus before everyone else does The Karpas Peninsula Famagusta The Sunday Times Travel brief Hot shots: if you want style in your city break, go … On the weekend the Baltic states join the EU, Mark Hodson presents Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius, the new trendy threesome in the east Tallinn Multiple Display Advertising Items Riga Vilnius The Sunday Times Which is for you? How to organise your Baltic break Explorer Multiple Display Advertising Items Something Different Take cruise control No forced friendships, no queues at the buffet bar and no straitjacket schedules: on a small-ship cruise, you're the boss, says Katie Bowman Sanjeeda The islands of Zanzibar The Beagle Galapagos Islands The grizzly bears' picnic Sandy Gall packs his sandwiches and sets off to seek the man-eaters of the Great Bear Rainforest Multiple Classified Advertising Items Travel Brief Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items My hols Novelist Donna Leon went from New Jersey to Naples—and lost the plot Multiple Classified Advertising Items Where was I? Win a three-night break for two in Vilnius, Lithuania, with Baltic Holidays The competition Multiple Classified Advertising Items Contents Lost in Space Tom Hanks presents the story of two top guns who were opponents on the front line of the cold war and in the race to the moon. Both nearly died, but became friends — and they have now written a book together Bmi Dramatic Contrasts in the Lives of Two Spacemen with a Single Dream Contents They're trying to kill my England Joan Collins has never voted, but she will be first in line at the ballot box to throw out an 'insidious' EU constitution When you're £30,000 down, ID cards look good Sara Smith was swindled by a fraudster claiming to be from Harrods. Would identity cards have saved her, asks Rachel Cooke Shopping does ruin a romance Hidden from view, the noble face of war A king's ransom for a horse… A crazy prince for our times Interview Why freedom can be a lot more important than democracy The attempt to impose the western political ideal on Iraq is misguided. What the country needs first is stability, says James Q Wilson Multiple Classified Advertising Items You want a date? Fill out this form Successful thirtysomething women are refusing to leave love to chance. Now they are using checklists and cool-headed business techniques to get their man, writes Margarette Driscoll Multiple Classified Advertising Items Saddam's great escape On the eve of the Iraq war, American agents believed they had located Saddam and his sons. Could one missile strike win the campaign? Bob Woodward reveals the inside story of President Bush's agonising, and early inklings that CIA intelligence might not be all it appeared The girls ganging up on the old boy network Frozen out of the golf circuit, women are forming rival groups to help them up the career ladder, writes Margarette Driscoll The Sunday Times crossword Liar, liar, you should be fired Doctors write 22m sick notes a year, it was revealed last week. GPs tell Stuart Wavell why they often collude with malingerers Multiple Display Advertising Items Be nice to your nanny — or pay the price Well-paid professionals can be the meanest employers, discovers Rosie Millard. But they can be caught out Multiple Display Advertising Items Will she be the heroine of Hackney? The head of a top private school has been drafted in to boost results in a poor London borough, reports Sian Griffiths Any old excuse for a drunken get-together Unfair freebie privilege or a harmless bit of fun? Jane Mulkerrins weighs up the Oxbridge MA The Sunday Times Boards must study their times tables Saviours of the lost archives To preserve Leonardo's notebook of 1508, it has been put online. Robbie Hudson discovers the headaches involved, and how we're saving digital records such as eyewitness accounts of 9/11 Real menace on the net Sounding off Now click here Games: the latest games for computer, console and mobil Don't panic Nigel Powell answers your home technology queries First steps on the web Site test Today's technotots are born clicking. Sally Kinnes enlists some young helpers to review a world of wonder for the under-8s Education Comic Book Spies to Despise What's new Multi-Talented Conversation Piece Games Notable Value Own Goal for Bookies Passwords Passed on Toddlers Characters Microsoft Movies That's amazing! Ex-Smith's lyrics ease exam stress It's all too noisy apart from the odd welcome Bang Winner's Dinners In a lather over steam Shock exchange The tabloid week This Life The Daily Telegraph: Alex Madonna Last word … Britney and the Meaning of Life People of the Week The Guardian: Estée Lauder Winner's Letters Forget the Chef's Special, I'll Take the Waitress Have I Got Nose for You! Talking Heads Nick Newman's Week Contents Insurers trap savers in ailing funds What you should do next Equitable hope News in Brief Contents Wasted Isa fees Rate rise fears lead to Footsie jitters HSBC It's time to teach the big four a lesson Hard Labour Multiple Display Advertising Items A Question of money Each week Diana Wright sorts out readers' financial problems Don't Pin your hopes on getting money back Incisive bosses cut their holdings Directors' Deals Contents How bad are Britain's big banks? The biggest four banks made £20bn last year, but they routinely offer poor deals and service Current accounts Savings Accounts Switch now to get a better deal No bank has the top rates on all products, so you should shop around for the best offers Credit cards 'i'm Leaving Lloyds after More than 20 Years' Investments Mortgages Customer service Shelter £600,000 from the taxman National Savings has raised the amount you can save tax-free — and there are other ways to beat the Revenue National Savings Watchdog raises stakes in bid for split-cap compensation Multiple Display Advertising Items Premium bonds Isas Tessa-only Isas Gifts VCTs Dentists Extract All They Can from their Tax-Free Allowances Crunch time for investors in buy-to-let Landlords are being tempted back into the rental market, but many will struggle to break even, writes Kathryn Cooper Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Profit from the rising price of oil With the price of crude near a 13-year high, Alicia Wyllie asks the experts for tips on the best way to take advantage Multiple Display Advertising Items Make the most of low commodity prices Use the net to view all your accounts at once Web Wise How the Sites Compare Cheap Credit Cards Best Savings Accounts Mortgage Deals Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Windfall Shares Factfile I'll be home and dry in France A real winner — naturally Fundwatch Multiple Display Advertising Items Jazz cat author always gets the cream Fame and Fortune Musician and writer Humphrey Carpenter splashes out on large bottles of Baileys, which he drinks in bed. By Natalie Graham Legal & General Experts raise the alarm about pension unlocking If you get at your retirement funds early you could end up worse off — or even on the wrong side of the law 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 Cities shell out on makeovers by style gurus Birmingham and Glasgow are leading the charge to attract investors and excite overseas interest Happiness is . . . a lot of good friends Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Scooby-Doo! in Icy Reception Scooby-Doo! in Icy Reception Campioni The Funday Times 7 Days What's Happening in the World this Week Tuesday Wednesday Monday Thursday Friday Saturday On the Run News Junior James Blown Away GR8 Lite Chain of Fools Novel Ideas F-mail Star Wordwise Places Mind Games Funday meets Robin Burgener - the inventor of a new mini mind-reader The Sunday Times Top Headlines Answers Sounds Good Be a Sport At the Flicks Mixed up Single Fresh! This Week Book A Hat Full of Sky Fun in the Sun Win It! Fashion Website Single Television Single Toy Phlat Ball Single Last Thing on my Mind Wanted The next Tim Henman! could you be Britain's first Ariel Tennis Ace? Pan-Tastic! Squirt Quick Fire Keep It Real Jenny Eden visits the set of Trouble's My Wife and Kids The Simpsons Contents Contents The fastest load-lugger in town Up to Speed Vauxhall starts a youth club New life for old Rovers Cars on TV You can keep your cars Me and my Motors Mary Anne Hobbs On her CD Changer A triumph against the odds Vital Statistics The Opposition Model Mercedes E500 £43,750 Total recall from Room 101 The car makers' nightmare is becoming more frequent, reports Julian Rendell AA Whoops! We've Got a Problem Porsche Drive yourself silly at the motor show The Sunday Times Motor Show Live will get visitors on the move. Andrew Frankel had a rousing preview How to Book We have designs on your next car The young car designers at the Royal College of Art will soon be making their international mark, writes Jane Mulkerrins So You Want to Be a Car Designer Maestro with the mostest Ian Callum, an early graduate of the RCA course, has created some of the world's sexiest cars over the past 25 years Multiple Classified Advertising Items Window Pocket for Little People Ingear the Stuff of Motoring Dreams The Knowledge Mileometers Everything you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Used Car: Ferrari 360 Second Opinion Jason Dawe TheAA Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Go on, look a twerp and win the kids' hearts Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Letters Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Dadmobile of your dreams People carriers have had the most unlikely image change, argues Simon Mills, social editor of GQ The Sunday Times Saab The Sunday Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items Car Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Design Disasters My First Crash Lionel Richie Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Contents How Much? A seaside flat in. . . Is It worth It? Moving on Stars in the making Time and place Design Classics How to sniff out a good deal Always open all the windows, turn on the taps and check out the neighbourhood when you're viewing a potential purchase. Don't worry if it smells of dogs though, says Phil Spencer What to Look for 18 Lansdowne Crescent Great things in small packages So much children's furniture is unbelievably naff, but if you hunt around the are stylish solutions out there in miniature sizes, advises Victoria O'brien Barclays Fluent in Finance Little Gems The project… A patio adds an extra room to your home — at least while the sun shines — and there's one to suit every style and budget Good Woodcare product makers may polish up their act with natural ingredients, but there's no substitute for elbow grease Stock up for the Summer London £8m Houses of the week St. George Dumfriesshire £450,000 Cheshire £3.75m Suffolk £850,000 Devon £220,000 Somerset £685,000 Cornwall £750,000 The dynasty departs The owner of this estate wouldn't single out one child in his will, so it has to be sold, says Caroline Brannigan Linden Charles Church Does your house have a secret history? Curiosity about their home's previous occupants is leading owners to unearth fascinating stories. John Elliott and Helen Davies explain how to be your own house detective Digging up the past Vizion7 Landlord Mortgages If you're in when a burglar calls… Break-ins carried out while the owner is at home are on the increase, so upgrade security to protect yourself and your property, advises Liat Joshi Preventive Measures There's a buzz about this place On the Market Smallbone of Devizes Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Arsenal kick-start the new N7 The Gunners' move to a state-of-the-art stadium has triggered a building project that will bring 2,000 new homes to north London, reports Hugh Pearman Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Foxtons Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward The Sunday Times A long love affair in the South of France Actress and author Carol Drinkwater played a Yorkshire vet's sensible wife on television, but her purchase of a ruined Côte d'Azur villa was pure romantic impulse, says Alasdair Riley French Fancies Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Gravelling in style A practical alternative to soil can give your plants a canvas on which to shine, says Charles Chesshire Husqvarna Multiple Display Advertising Items A feast of beans Green is not the only colour. Opt instead to grow a deliciously different variety in an exotic shade of pink, purple or yellow, recommends Neil Wormald Multiple Display Advertising Items Ask the experts Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Picture-perfect Tuscany Recognise this? It's one of Italy's most photographed houses and it could be yours, says John Follain Multiple Display Advertising Items Flowers: the decorator's secret weapon Cheaper than art and easier than paint effects, why are flowers still the Cinderella of interiors, asks Karen Robinson Lycett's Top Tips Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Antler Homes Sofa power—the proof Are furnished or unfurnished properties more likely to appeal to potential tenants? Rosie Millard investigates Timesonline The Market Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Crest Nicholson Contents Queen's Theatre Contents Complicated? Definitely, But what the anti-Britney … That's why the lady is a vamp The Dracula story is back, this time with a classic action hero, state-of-the-art special effects and parts for Frankenstein's monster and the Wolf Man, says David Eimer Watch the Van Helsing trailer and hear Hugh Jackman … Swan finds his voice The dancer Will Kemp leaps onto the big screen Swapping stage for set: Will Kemp as Prince Velkan … What's black, grey and read all over? It's the British UGC Take the magical misery tour Acerbic wit Dylan Moran is on the road, but, he tells Stephen Armstrong, writing is what keeps his motor running Play. Com Biteback If you can't stand the heat… Hit or myth? Bus 174 15,120 mins Pas sur la bouche Our House 12A, 89 mins The Honeymooners 15,89 mins Main Hoon Na (I Am There for You) 12A, 179 mins Imagining Argentina 15,107 mins I'll Sleep When I'm Dead 15,103 mins The Route V50 The Calcium Kid 15,89 mins Secret Window 12A, 96 mins Just out of time A romcom with not quite enough heart or laughs, says Cosmo Landesman, just misses the beat Multiple Display Advertising Items Age before beauty Francesca Annis is relishing the feeling that she's no longer an object of desire, she tells Lesley White Play. Com New music The Month World Classical Jazz Timesonline Young guns go for it Bright ideas and youthful vigour fire Trevor Nunn's new Hamlet, says Victoria Segal Saab SAAB The Sunday Times The Dog in the Manger Swan, Stratford-upon-Avon Rest of the Week's theatre Multiple Display Advertising Items Mad Bush Yellowman Everyman, Liverpool A Very Naughty Boy Soho Insignificance Theatre Royal, Northamton Classical On record The week's essential new releases Chopin Classical CD of the week Magdalena Kozena Songs by Ravel, Shostakovich et al Malcolm Martineau (piano), Henschel Quartett DG 471 581-2 Haydn Schnittke Symphony No 6, Concerto Grosso No 2 Russian State Symphony Orchestra, cond Valeri Polyansky Chandos CHAN10180 Pop and Jazz Gabrielle Play to Win Island 9866530 Ryan Adams Love Is Hell Lost Highway/Mercury 9862325 Iain Archer Flood the Tanks Bright Star St Thomas Let's Grow Together: The Comeback of St Thomas New kids in town Mission of Burma OnOffOn Matador OLE-613 Gail Brand & Morgan Guberman Ballgames & Crazy Emanem 4103 Rob Koral Sleeping with Angels 33 Records 097 Pop CD of the week Picastro Red Your Blues Monotreme MOMO03 Omara Portuondo Flor de Amor World Circuit WCD068 The Month The Company We have liftoff What does theatre mean to you? That is the question asked by an adventurous London festival over 50 days, says Robert Hewison Vauxhall Tamara de Lempicka The top arts events of the coming months The Day After Tomorrow A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum Bolshoi Ballet Brian Wilson Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Opera Dance Concerts Pop Comedy Theatre Oleanna Art Barbican Art Gallery Reopening Comedy Mark Thomas Opera Francesca da Riminl/I pagliacci Dance Royal Ballet: Diaghilev Concerts Takacs Quartet Pop Supergrass An all-new baton charge Welsh National Opera's young maestro is more than commanding. Hugh Canning reports Vauxhall Best left to the imagination An unstaged work proved the high point of the Polish National Opera's visit, says Stephen Pettitt Virgin megastores Most passion spent Once more, with feeling, for New Zealand's Romeo and Juliet, while Anastasia had it, but failed to make it work, says David Dougill Multiple Display Advertising Items Ran & AK Special Edition Warner, 15,155 mins; £12.99 The Last Samurai Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed The Mother Momentum, 15,107 mins; £17.99 (DVD) …office Mar 26 Apr 25 Peter Pan Universall Hollywood agenda Project Zero II: Crimson Butterfly PS2, £39.99, ages 16+ Multiple Display Advertising Items Uefa Euro 2004 PC, PS2, Xbox, £34.99-£39.99, all ages Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinema The Official Guide of the Society of London Theatre Pile 'em High The Sunday Times concise crossword No 842 Hardbacks Paperbacks Friend of the more famous… The roots of our growing passion A Little History of British Gardening by Jenny Uglow Chatto £15.99 pp342 Diary Hitler's Mata Hari The Mystery of Olga Chekhova by Antony Beever Viking £16.99 pp300 Abacus The reign in Spain Politics Juan Carlos: A People's King by Paul Preston HarperCollins £25 pp614 Divided they fell United we Stand a History of Britain's Trade Unions by Alastair J Reid Allen Lane £25 pp496 A little night reading What Michael Schmidt has on his bedside table In the news Books behind the headlines: Troy How did America get here? Plan of Attack by Bob Woodward Simon & Schuster £18.99 pp468 Divide and rule Read on… Why George was right I'm Not the only One by George Galloway Allen Lane £10 pp185 The Colour Rose Tremain The schooling of a genius The World of Christopher Marlowe by David Riggs Faber £25 pp425 Making it up is hard to do Social history Home: The Story of Everyone Who Ever Lived in Our House by Julie Myerson Flamingo £20 pp452 Waterstones Waterstone's A towering figure Biography Franklin Delano Roosevelt by Roy Jenkins MacMillan £15.99 pp186 Gulag Timewarner Staring at the sun Travel Falling for Icarus a Journey among the Cretans by Rory MacLean Viking £15.99 pp334 A master of despair A Bit on the Side by William Trevor Viking £16.99 pp244 Waterstone's Children's book of the week WHSmith Pick of the week Paperbacks Vernon God Little by D B C Pierre Paradise & Power The Courtesan's Revenge Crabwalk by Gunter Grass The Greatest Traitor Status Anxiety The Clerkenwell Tales In the Museum Cutting a Dash written and presented by Lynne Truss Fortress Malta What's happening in the Literary world Book events You really must read… The Sunday Times Telling tales Fiction Lighthousekeeping by Jeanette Winterson Fourth Estate £15 pp232 The Times Literary Supplement From hero to zero A Hero's Daughter by Andrei Makine translated by Geoffrey Strachan Sceptre £16.99 pp163 Contents Worth setting the viedo for: the best of the week ahead Other side of the coin A Musilm in The Family Today, BBC1, 11.30pm Barry Lyndon Today, Sky Cinema 1,3.30pm The sweetest FA Match Of The Day: Women's FA Cup Final—Arsenal v Chartton Monday, BBC1, 12.45pm Never had it so good? Rise And Fall Of Margaret Thatcher Monday, UKTV History, 10pm Back to the future Car Crash: The De Lorean Story Tuesday, BBC4, 9pm Kids today, eh? "Whatever"—A Teenage Musical Tuesday, C4,11.05pm Slough of despond In Search Of Genius Wednesday, BBC2, 9pm It's only money Royal Millions Wednesday, BBC1, 10.35pm Not in my back yard Dispatches: Keep Them Out Thursday, C4,9pm The one to watch Peter Ackroyd's London, Friday, BBC2, 9pm Pretty in pink? Queer Eye UK Thursday, Living TV, 9pm What's in a name? Ghosts Of The Cannibal Islands Saturday, National Geographic, 9pm Radio Pick of the Day 90210, too The OC (C4,6.35pm) Worst documentary The Two Loves Of Anthony Trollope (BBC1, 7pm) Best documentary Children Of Abraham (C4,8pm) More Trollope He Knew He Was Right (BBC1, 9pm) All too brief The Brief (ITV1, 9pm) Pick of the day The South Bank Show: Jeanette Winterson (ITV1, 10.45pm) Cult viewing? Kingdom Hospital (BBC3, 10pm) Current affairs Zimbabwe Countdown (History, 10pm) Films Swept Away (Sky Movies 1,8pm) BBC1 ITV@#1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day A right old knees-up London: The Greatest City (C4,4.05pm) A holiday banker Station Jim (BBC1, 6.30pm) Soap moment EastEnders (BBC1, 8pm) Best lateral thinking D-Day—The Ultimate Conflict (Five, 9pm) A little light relief The Darkness (Biography, 9pm) Pick of the day Mountains Of The Mind (BBC4, 9.15pm)/The Big Read: Battle Of The Books (BBC4, 10.45pm) Back in the headlines Without a Trace (C4,10pm) Best cell mate Life Beyond The Box: Norman Stanley Fletcher (BBC2, 10.30pm) Pearl Harbor (BBC1, 8.30pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Those we love to hate Brassed Off Britain: Estate Agents (BBC1, 7pm) Dr Dolittle lives Go Wild! (National Geographic, 7pm) The big match Champions League Live: Deportivo La Coruna v FC Porto (ITV1, 7.30pm) Life sentence needed How To Get a New Life (BBC2, 8pm) Pick of the day Cover your ears Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares (C4,9pm) More nightmares CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (Five, 9pm) By any other name Painting Flowers: Tulip (BBC4, 10pm) The Lavender Hill Mob (C4,1.20pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Goodbye, Tinkerman? Champions League Football: Chelsea v Monaco (Sky Sports 1,7pm) Toy soldiers Destination D-Day: The Raw Recruits (BBC1, 8pm) His master's voice New Servants (BBC2, 8pm) Grime and punishment How Clean Is Your House? (C4,8pm) Stop the clocks 10 Years Younger (C4,8.30pm) Pick of the day Revenge—Getting Even With Your Ex (Five, 10pm) The enemy within The Protectors (BBC1, 9pm) Best history Britain's Best Buildings (BBC4, 10pm) Films Heat (Sky Movies 2,9.30pm) Critic's Choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Thursday May Pick of the Day New men's mag Fairy Godfathers (C4,8pm) Best acting New Tricks (BBC1, 9pm) Make me switch off Make Me Honest (BBC2,9pm) Spanish practises Trouble in Paradise (ITV1,9pm) Pick of the day I Like To Watch (C4,11.05pm) Out of time? REM (Biography, 9pm) Best history lesson Conflicts (BBC3, 9.30pm) Dull history lesson The Blues (BBC4,9pm) So-so sketches The All Star Comedy Show (ITV1, 10pm) Films Written On The Wind Critic's Choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Thursday May' Radio Pick of the Day Square deals EastEnders (BBC, 8pm) Empty nesters My Family (BBC1,8. 30pm) Blame it on the French Friends (C4,9pm) Defence of the realm Spy Secrets (History, 9pm) Pick of the day Peter Ackroyd's London (BBC1,9pm) Parent power Will And Grace (C4,9.30pm) Browned off Derren Brown—Trick Of The Mind (C4,10pm) Music to the ears Later. . . With Jools Holland (BBC2, 11.35pm) Young Frankenstein (Sky Cinema 1,4pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Still all to play for Football Special (Sky Sports 2,12 noon) It's the dog's Test Your Pet (BBC1, 6pm) For the boffins Carthage—The Roman Holocaust (C4,7pm) Shark jumped? Casualty (BBC1, 8.35pm) Pick of the day Restoration—The Story Continues (BBC2, 9.30pm) Wait for me, Parky? Boxing (BBC2, 10.30pm) BBC1 The Sea Wolves (C4,3.45pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Bose Contents Harrods Contents Mercedes-Benz Possible Words There'll Always Be an England Warring Matilda: How Henry I's daughter was outwitted by her cousin and battled to retrieve her throne Next Big Thing Ireland … Lord Elgin Can't Live without Pants on Fire: The World's Biggest … Brand Royalty Best of British Mazda Dad Would Throw out Books with his Drawings in Them. … Sealy Air Canada Nestle Double Cream Bestoftimes worstoftimes Everything about it says Nikon Nikon Dfs Bob the Builder 'the Morning Mum Died, I Had to Get out. I Sat at the Miele Discover Kumala Suzuki Phoebe Jeebies Clarks Sharp The only Way is up Reach for the Sky Siemens Amdega Stagecoach Portraits of a Short Life Abbot Ale Charles Church South West AGA Stirs the Passion Furniture Village Nivilli Johnson Greece ThomasSanderson Hammonds Clipper-ventures Zeitner Stressless Bridge Chess Teaser 2172 Bookwise Mephisto Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items …in the day Lurpak Jacobs Contents Chanel A Good Look Marc Jacobs Perfume Contents Motoliberty Face-Lifts Celebrity Sex Clinic Going up Going down Moment Dior Loreal Anita The highs, the lows, the Stones, being stoned—Anita Pallenberg can even remember bits of it. Chris Sullivan meets the ultimate rock chick Clarks Part-Time Lover Having a Regular Boyfriend" In the Cut Lavish embroidery, ruffes and capes—it's high drama in this season's couture pieces Fashion style Knitpicking Hello Girls Sounding off Start a revolution Are You Euro Man Enough? Toni&guy Latin Lessons Beauty Style Hair Bitch! The Perfect Pout Do It now Making Scents To Be a Bikini Babe this Summer, You're Going to Need … Müller love Why do 1-drum machines take so long? Dyson Vanessa Wilde's Secret Diary In which Vanessa recovers from eye surgery and finds salace is only a phone call away Love What's the Alternative? Marks & Spencer Real Good Oliver Peyton's restaurants are always fashion-forward Remy Martin Still Freezing Aagll Table Talk Joanna Simon Sauce Kadette Industrial Revolution Warehouse conversions can seem so 1990s, but not when the minimalism is given a his ethnic … in says Daishy Clark Style gives you In the Stars Marc Jacobs Perfume Charles and Baxter Small Talk Fashion: No Pain, No Gain What's a bit of agony when you're looking hot, says Shane Watson Mrs Mills Solves All your Problems The Sunday Times Giorgio Armani

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