Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 18/07/2004

2004; Gale Group;

Autores

Maria Joseph, Waldemar Januszczak, John Dugdale, Steve Pittard, Collin McDOWELL'S, Barbara Hall, Harry Tidsley, Frank Parker, David Mills, Peter Whittle, Helen Davies, Sean O'Brien, Sally Brock, Mike Pffanz, Rob Hughes, Amanda Ursell, Jim Brotton, Jonathan Miller, S Waddington, Andrew Longmore, Lesley White, Nick Rufford, Gareth Walsh, Frank Whitford, Ivo Tennant, Caroline Brannigan, Ferdinand Mount, Kathryn Cooper, William Lewis, P D, David Smith, Darren Campbell, Tim Richards, P P, David Cracknell Political Editor, Nick Pitt, Dr Conor Carr, Neil Wormald, E P, David James Smith, Andrew Sullivan, Clive Davis, Kate Reardon, K R, Ateh Damachi, Sally Brown, Jeremy Smith, A C, Gideon Garter Professor, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Martin James, Jonathan Ungoed-Thomas, Tristram Hunt, Anthony Sattin, Robert Winnett, Peter Koeing, Dipesh Gadher Transport Correspondent, Irwin Stelzer, Jeremy Seal, Adrian Furnham, Duncan Farmer, Peter Wilson, Rosie Millard, Joey Dunlop, Robert Hewison, David Dougill, Christopher Hart, Jim Piatt-Higgins, Frank Graham, John Waples Deputy Business Editor, Stewart Lee, H C, Saky Kinnes, David Hewson, Cally Law, Jim Dougal, Hugh Canning, Burlington Bertle, Hugh Mcllvanney, Geraldine Hackett Education Correspondent, Peter Bulloch, Jeremy Clarkson, Andrew Stone, Margarette Driscoll, Peter Conradi, Edward Porter, Ryan Gilbey, Peter Upton, David Connett, Michael Portillo, Eileen Wheelans, David Cairns, Anthony Peregrine, Alan Brownjohn, Sarah Dempster, Helen Kenny, Dave Pollard, Kevin Jackson, Shirley Rose, Paul Metcalfe, Richard Fletcher, Ranulph Fiennes, Greg Struthers, James Delingpole, Adam Nathan, Jeremy Guscott, Charlie Higson, Paul Durman City Editor, Jason Dave, Tom Provan, Robin Scott-Elliot, Stuart Wavell, Roger Eglin, Maggie Gee, Paul Donovan, Norman Miller, Smily Lloyd, Adam Nathan Defence Correspondent, Vincent Crump, Michael Howard, Giles Hattersley, Chris Woodhead, Monsieur Mangetout, Lucinda Kemeny, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, Imogen Brewer, Nicholas Hellen, Richard Brooks, Shelley Von Strunckel, Stuart Andrews, Alex Clark, David Leppard, Oleg Gordievsky, Paul Durman, Peter Clarke Founder, Alicia Wyllie, Dave Hannigan, Richard Girling, Mark Edwards, Buffy Reid, Trevor Hamley, Susan Clark, Milly Chen, Charlotte Burgess, Nigel Jay, Nicholas Alexander Faldo, Blower, Robert Lacey, T Ellison, Partricia Nicol, Lois Rogers, Richard Young, Raymond Keene, Douglas Alexander, David Cracknell, Cosmo Landesman, Zoe Brennan, Peter Hall, Robbie Hudson, Diana Wright, Dominic O'Connell, Andrew Holgate, Barry Flatman, Uzi Mahnaimi, Nick Cain, Louise Armitstead, Councillor James Scott, Adrienne Connors, Michael Wright, Natalie Graham, I C, Keith Cameron, Tim Moorey, Caroline Donald, Dominic Rushe, Hugh McManners, Jemma Harvey, Fiona Terry, David Walsh, John Bowis MEP, Scott Johnstone, Mark Taha, Colin McDowell, Bryan Appleyard, Stephen Armstrong, Lennox Lewis, John Elliott, Nick MacKinnon, Emily Pritchard, Christopher Goodwin, M L, Bethan Cole, Victoria O'brien, R W Johnson, Roland White, Tony Allen-Milles, Shane Watson, Amrit Dhillon, Maurice Chittenden, Mark Haddon, David George, Judi Rouse Edwards, Jason Lloyd-Evans, Victoria Segal, Judith O'Reilly, David Rees, Mark Franchetti, Mel Webb, Martin Ivens, Richard Rae, Ray Hutton, Donald Sadler, Jason Gardener, Lizzie Pountney, Clive Lloyd, Michael Sheridan, Dan Box, Clare Francis, Colin Yates, John Crossland, John Harlow, Brian Smyth, Bethan Ryder, Barry Collins, Michael Collins, Huw Benyon, John Waples, Bill Clinton, Jeremy Hart, Suzi Perry, Geoff Tibballs, Nick Haysom, Matthew Campbell, Trevor Broadley, Marc Zakian, A A Gill, John Carey, Tom Robbins, Mary Braid, Stephen Pettitt, Claudia Croft, Jonathan Carr-Brown, Will Iredale, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, Rob Clark, Kate Bleasdale, Maria McErlane, R H, Shirely Mazzard, Hugh Barnard, Naomi Caine, Nigel Powell, David Wickers, Daniel Emery, Brian Doogan, Michael Clower, Ben Dowell, Minette Marrin, Neil White, Mark Hodson, Andrew Frankel, Graham Norwood, Ken Lunn, David Milis, David Budworth, Ed Owen Madrid, William Lewis Business editor, Andrew Davidson, Hugh Pearman, Maurice O'Blen, Steve West, Tony Perrottet, Dan Cairns, Sebastian Smith, M Mistry, David Smith Economics Editor, Tom Deveson, Sarah Baxter, Joanna Simon, David Robertson, Matthew Goodman, India Knight, Anthony Millar, Simon Howard, Tom Norrington-Davies, Natasha Shishmanian, Richard Lewis, Sian Griffiths, Karen Robinson, Helen Stewart,

Resumo

Contents Arsenal stars dodge milions in taxes Inside Contents BT Three slices of bread have more fat than Mars bar I would not have voted for Iraq war, says Howard Contents The Sunday Times Contents Euro Tunnel Ministers plan to scrap BSE controls Police to be cut in council squeeze Labour fails to halt grammar pupil boom MPs attack Coastguard over rise in sea deaths Laws to check sexism in the City Fat Boy Dim in dust-up with Philip Green Cotton Wool Binge drinking increases crime Falklands hero says Blair used army out of vanity National saving & investments Brown cuts 'will raise number of bureaucrats' Lottery's £20m for a gothic 'black hole' No to Radical V&A Extension New withnesses to be called at Jenkins retrial Flybe. com Contents Rattle and soprano stir opera gossip Mercedes-Benz Soccer fans say no to Gadaffi Beckett cashes in on housing allowance loophole How the king tried to prevent the war George V's diary reveals late intervention Olympic feud triggers panic call to No 10 Finding Victoria's Voice Broccoli plus tomato staves off cancer Ford Prince of Darkness set for power comeback Hannah murder suspect 'destroys' life of second wife Ego-text is answer to all your problems EasyJet. com Caged patients to be freed after Rowling protest Distinct whiff of life on Mars WHSmith John Leslie rakes over 'year of hell' in book of the sex scandal A-level boxer takes swing at exam board Prescott's traffic cuts hit reverse Blunderball A Split Verdict Alliance Leicester Jessops The Vanishing Weapons How Whispers The question remains: can Blair be trusted in a crisis? Chrysler Public Trust Wanes It still isn't going Howard's was The Tory leader is struggling to go on the attack. Martin Ivens and David Cracknell talk to Michael Howard Skoda Fabia The New Spymaster The curious incident of the author in the Limelight Profile Stars staying alive is really killing rock'n'roll BT Blair's big mistake The fat of the land External Relations The Sunday Times Now for Labour's great leap backwards Picture Gallery The PM has beatern off Butler, he should biff Brown The House of Lords was once the country's most Thunderbirds are go with PM disguised as Lady Penelpe Atticvs It's Carry On up the Corridor as Mandy flashes his double entendre Atticvs Spin doctor has measure of Conservative inefficiency Atticvs One rogue leaf was blamed on Wednesday for putting When we're afraid to trash a religion or three we're lost Who says modern Labour is too middle-class? It's Hell hath no fury like a crony scorned. As the governme News that David Blunkett has been a guest of the Endowmentuk Butler bares Blair's flaws Clas of its Own Impartial views, better services Caring, not caging Go north for quality Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street Nationwide A day's diet: how home-made food compares with supemarket meals You can't see it and you may not taste it. But the use of fat in processed food is sperading like a plague. Lois Rogers and Jonathan Ungoed-Thomas report on the hidden harrors on supermarket shelves Howdy, you swinging people Election 2004 Orange Never Say Gay: Bush's Subtle Vote Card Contents Shot editor's wife fights for vanishing city Elderly Cubans left to starve as drought brings cut in rations Celebrity villa set face massed charge of the Coasta bulldozer Langham Hotel African bid to stop the lion hunters France's spacewoman sets controls for Europe sans frontiéres Multiple Display Advertising Items Our mudslinger in Kenya wins friends Divorce? Japan thinks the unthinkable EADS Paralysed boy on a crusade frightens the gun lobby Israel targets Iran nuclear plant Iraqi prime minister denies executing six blindfolded rebels BT Palestinian premier offers to resign Checkmate for Fischer, chess renegade When in Rome, beware of a tiger bite at your table Multiple Display Advertising Items Today's weather The new MG ZS 180 Better access for fathers News in Brief Arms swoop Vanunu excluded from his own hearing Pat Roach dies Two die in Kent car crash Two tickets share £4.8m Lotto jackpot Festival shooting Bishop says sorry Kennedy 'the clown' looks a serious bet now Having run out of things to ban, the home secretary … The Times The sound of protest silence Blair's love of animals hides a cruel joke I have been surveyed by the Home Office to see if my Toyota Contents Alfa 147 Unknown American leads stars at Open Inspired Hamilton in with a shot at glory World's best set to pounce Tiger Woods had a start but to battle hard to sustain his challenge over the closing holes My Open Third-round leaderboard at The Open Who will win the Claret Jug today? All hail man from Illinois The unfancied American Todd Hamilton may relish the pressure of being Troon's overnight leader Fans urge local hero Monty to roll back the years The Open that couldn't have come at a better time or abetter place for Collin Montgomerie is still within his grasp Vauxhall Contents Titleist Levet plans to put French Claret on menu The Frenchman wants to build on his Scottish Open success and believes he can go one better than his playoff defeat at Muirfield in 2002, writes Neil White A trip down memory Lane Having recently ended a losing streak of 251 tournaments, Barry Lane will fancy his chances today, writes Neil White My Open Order of play The Master of all he surveys Phil Mickelson has maintained his level of performance and goes into the final day in the hund for a second major Open Diary The Sunday Times My Open The Royal Bank of Scotland Driven off straight and narrow Stand on the 11th tee at Troon and then ask yourself if you would still swap places with the world's greatest golfers Mind games test the best Putting practice pays off for one senior pro, but for many it's the short game that lets them down first as the brain topples technique. Mel Webb reports My Open 'Maybe I have to accept that I'm just one of the numbers Hunting in Pairs England take on West Indies at Lord's this week with two genuine quicks. Steve Harmison and the explosive Simon Jones Milled Titamium Selectors open the door for Solanki Duncan Fletcher is prepared to offer a second chance to a number of players who may have believed that their England days were over, writes Simon Wilde England's best pace partnerships Pace duo take aim at England Tino Best and Fidel Edwards have opposite natures—one is all posture, the other shuns the limelight—but in harness they are a real menace. By Simon Wilde Lara's inspiration can roll back the years Caribbean cricket is on the road to recovery, and a united West Indies team presents a formidable test Air-Berlin West Indies short of time Yorkshire foiled by Spearman The Sunday Times Worcestershire earn final chance Twenty 20 vision will take world by storm Having grabbed the imagination of English cricket followers, the future of the 20-over game is certain to feature international matches, writes Ivo Tennant How Twenty20 has taken off Armstrong makes the vital break The American has only one main rival blocking his march to Paris and a historic sixth successive Tour victory Eight days on the Tour de France Fluent in Finance Chelsea suffer Oxford blues Jose Mourinho faced more opposition than expected as he began his Chelsea career with a 1-1 draw against Oxford High-profile loan may come back to haunt Mourinho Chelsea's new manager says his predecessor was to blame for some of Stamford Bridge's big-money misfits. The truth is closer to home. By Rob Hughes I'm a celebrity, get me a manager's job The clearout of managerial failures at Euro 2004 highlights the growing popularity of 'personality' coaches The Sunday Times The long Goodbye He's rejected a move to Real Madrid before, but this time Patrick Vieira may find the lure of the Bernabeu irresistible Real chase Wenger pleads with Vieira to stay Arsenal's manager makes an impassioned appeal to his captain to reject Spain and remain at Highbury, writes Barry Flatman Man in a hurry The Big Interview: Darren Campbell Britain's fastest man in chasing a sprint double in Athens. By Andrew Longmore Torn in the USA Troubles Marion Jones pulled out of the 200m Olympic trial, saying that it had been a struggle to cope physically The Sunday Times Jones 'too tired' to run 200m The controversial star of US athletics admitted late last night that she was feeling 'like an old lady' as the pressure took its toll. Dave Hannigan reports How the Balco six have performed Foster fuels fears of lottery money rethink The Olympic bronze medallist has a clear message for Britain's track stars in Athens—perform or put your funding in jeopardy. Richard Lewis reports Macey lifted by Athens target The Essex decathlete may not have competed for almost three years, but he is closing in on an Olympic place American Davis set for Olympics Despite failing to impress since arriving on these shores, it looks increasingly likely that Malachi Davis will be chosen to run the 400m for Britain at the Olympics in Athens. Richard Lewis reports The Sunday Times When size matters Diego Maradona Wayne Rooney Anna Kournikova David Beckham Book of the week The Olympics' Strangest Moments Mike Tyson Seve Ballesteros Lome Fa'atau Carol Ashby Vinnie Jones Dennis Rodman DVD of the week Soccer Superskills with Jay-Jay Okocha, Tri-Star, £15.99 60 seconds in sport With Britain's 100m Olympic medal contender Jason Gardener Kiwis too tough for Wallabies Lions robbed of support To the dismay of former Lions stars, the Welsh Rugby Union has decided its national coaches won't be going on next year's New Zealand tour. By Nick Cain The Sunday Times All Blacks must add pragmatism to power New Zealand should have thrashed the Wallabies yesterday, but they were too busy entertaining to finish the game off Tours back on agenda McLaren's road to recovery It's been a grim season for Ron Dennis and his team, but a second place at Silverstone could be the start of something big Bmibaby. com Mosley's resignation U-turn After appearing determined to resign a fortnight ago, the FIA president's sudden change of heart could lead to be a Formula One revolution, writes Richard Rae Miles ahead Miles Kasiri is the latest teenage idol to be hailed as Britain's tennis saviour and he believes he will be, reports Barry Flatman Rusedski runs out of steam Fluent in Finance Clinical Hull to hot for Saints The Times Rhinos dare to dream Marcus Bai won a Grand Final in Australia—now the Papua New Guinean says Leeds can achieve similar success after decades of failure. By Richard Rae Back in the Swing Catrin Nilsmark aims to put injuries behind her as she returns to a scene of past glory at this week's Evian Masters Fluent in Finance Football Results round-up Rugby Union Rugby League Other Sport Pools Today's racecards Mew finds Olympic form to leave rivals in his wake Sports round-up Motorcycling Fixtures Rugby union Golf Rallying Athletics Tennis Bowls Racing This Week Buck Stops Here It's rare for an American trainer to race in Europe, but Kenny McPeek fancies his chances in the King George VI Stakes at Ascot Relieved Dunlop aims to ride all with Ouija Board It's been a long road, but victory in today's Irish Oaks would see the Newmarket trainer step further out of the shadows of an illustrious father. By Michael Clower Multiple Display Advertising Items Siena Gold blasts rivals After an anxious wait in the stalls, Frankie McDonald's charge glittered at Newbury. By Tim Richards Sport Letters The Sunday Times Caught in time Fulham celebrate life in the Frist Division, 1960-61 One for the future Charlotte Burgess, 17-year-old archery prospect Sport on TV Don't miss this Friday First Test, England v West Indies, Lord's, C4,10am Questions answers Your sporting conundrums tackled Heroes' Former world superbikes champion Carl Fogarty on Ioey Dunlop Any Answers? Show me the money Inside the world of sports betting Times Online Write off Woods at your peril The voice of sport Times Newspaper Limited Scotland 'saviour' gets icy welcome Under-valued Faldo Contents Virgin and Premier floats in doubt Man from Pru sets two-week deadline for £1.4bn Egg sale Is Morrison running down Safeway stores it must sell? Special Report The group is close to breaching undertakings it gave to the competition authorities. Report by Richard Fletcher and Dan Box Computer Associates Contents House prices slowing fast as rate rise bites, says expert M&S asks Myners to stay on Contents Contents Thales Shabby Abbey plans a refit Splashing out. . . 3i, the venture-capital group, has … Brittanic opens Cornhill talks Business Digest Vodafone has 'failed the City', admits chairman Rail chiefs on track for bonds WPP faces rival in fight for Grey GWR and Capital held talks to create £800m radio giant Fitness groups get cash boosts Kuwait to hang up Q8 petrol pumps Airbus boss lashes out over government export agency Whitbread edges ahead in race for hotel chain Multiple Display Advertising Items Four more City banks face sexism charges Shareholders warn Putin over handling of Yukos Contents To the victor the spoils—Myners must stay on Agenda Making sure the poor aren't always with us Nokia knocked Greenspan was right not to panic on interest rates American Account What a catch! The One that Got Away Philip Green's attempt to net Marks & Spencer has finally failed. But while Green can lick his wounds on a holiday beach, Stuart Rose must now work to deliver what he promised. Richard Fletcher and Peter Koening report Rose Rings the Changes The Sunday Times BA's veteran pilot flies into sunset Lord Marshall dragged the newly privatised company into the modern age and made it the world's favourite airline. Now he is stepping down after 21 years Reformed railway steams in to a mixed reception With Network Rail in day-to-day control, Dominic O'Connell assesses the new structure's chances of success The Open University Vital Statistics Lord Marshall's Working Day Jailed Martha Stewart vows: I'll be back. . . The Manhattan court's verdict on America's home queen in the first of several high-profile cases, reports Dominic Rushe in New York Facing the Law EasyJet. com Morrison diverts shoppers from stores it must sell Vodafone Floating firms are in for some choppy waters Virgin Mobile and Premier Foods' owners may have to settle for less. By Paul Durman Prada marches on with epicenters A big new shop in Beverly Hills marks another step towards floatation for the company. By Dominic Rushe in Los Angeles British Airways Smart phones may spell end of Blackberry Paul Durman on the Sony phone that is threatening the iconic City gadget Is float value Virgin on the ridiculous? Judgment Day: Should You Buy Shares in Virgin Mobile? Rose pledges bright M&S future 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 The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Lifestyle draws small firms to France Bureaucracy and a system weighted in favour of your staff is balanced by a high standard of living, writes Andrew Stone Draw Capital without Tax Todd Enterprises To recruit, rely on references The Business Doctor Kingston Smith Sexism carries a rising price How to Avoid sex discrimination Further Information Contents Beginner's guide in how not to run a diner Business Tools Maximum Diner, by Christopher Nye. Published by Sort of Books, £6.99 Times Online Multiple Display Advertising Items If you can dream, you can be a king of nightclubs, my son How I Made It Peter Clarke Founder of Entrepreneurial Leisure Home in on lifestyle to attract the top tenants Idea of the Week Building on magnetic therapy Enterprise Ecoflow relies on word-of-mouth to sell its products but needs to find a better way of projecting the company's image to boost sales. Fiona Terry reports What the Experts Say If You Would like to Join the Enterprise Network Ecoflow's Challenges The Sunday Times Progress Report The going gets Taff for Rose Picture Gallery BT Nice to see that our biggest companies are one top … Paragon joins Drive for modernisation Prufrock Putting a foot in it: the new sandal won't be taking … Brian's a breath of fresh air Lacey shoe is a flop HAS political correctness in the City gone totall Cash is king for big fund groups Intercontinental Inside the City Market Mole Citywire reveals secret City deals Contents Welcome to Sin on Sea Newquay, once a genteel resort, is now the playground of wild child Britain. As police announce a crackdown, Giles Hattersley witnesses a teenage rampage Bmi Contents Click, click, you're making history Love letters and diaries, the raw materials of research, are being killed by e-mail. But it's not all bad news, says historian Tristram Hunt Noel . . . from naff to nob Once Noel Edmonds was the tackiest man on telly. Now he has replaced Princess Anne as head of the horsey set. The tweed brigade is changing, he tells Jasper Gerard Why I ran away from the rulemasters of Brussels Renault Scenic Dirt is a class issue Never say gay: Bush plays a subtle vote card Naked stable girls . . . lovely Mean Fields Lonely, bored and looking for action Interview White trash, the only people left to insult The middle class's delicate racial sensibilities mysteriously disappear when it comes to poor white folk, writes Michael Collins Multiple Classified Advertising Items A model of bravery in the face of torture Waris Dirie, the catwalk queen from the Somali desert, filed her British home to escape a frenzied stalker. In her first interview since, she tells Stuart Wavell of her ordeal and her quest for justice for African women Multiple Classified Advertising Items Sexism and the City: you don't know the half of it Kate Bleasdale, who was awarded £2m, says court cases such as last week's scar women even if they win A mistress is for life When she fell in love with a married man Jemma Harvey realised affairs can be nothing to do with sex My life as an innocent Bin Laden The Swiss socialite who married the brother of the Al-Qaeda leader tells Margarette Driscoll of her years of fear The Sunday Times crossword Multiple Display Advertising Items Hack through the rich-media jungle Doors Do you speak the lingo of the here and now? Part two of the Doors Get Digital campaign offers a crib sheet with attitude to the buzz words of the digital revolution—the convergance of computers, telephones and television that is changing our lives by the day How WiFi trips the unwary Sounding off Two Days Left to Win £50 An eye for baby bargains Web shopper Sunday's online challenge: father-to-be Barry Collins seeks time-savers for busy parents of new arrivals Clothing Toys Nappies Muted Muscle Buyer's guide Feeding Stealth and Storage Understated Elegance Nursery Equipment Bedding Tiny. com Don't panic Multiple Display Advertising Items Marty Poppins is taking charge in the nursery Peter Cummins, the first man to graduate from Norland College, the august school for nannies, tells Roland White that childcare is easy work Never too young to learn? Ryde college isn't pushy, its head tells Sian Griffiths, it just helps six-year-olds through their GCSEs The Sunday Times Dealing with an overcrowded class Answer the question A desperate escape in search of a decent dessert Winner's Dinners Rotten tricks of the hawker Shock exchange The tabloid week Saucepot of the week This Life Crimebusters of the week Romantic of the week Oglers of the week Useful research of the week The Daily Telegraph: Brian McConnell Last word. . . Can One Fix It? The Independent: Barry Walls Winner's Letters Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star People of the Week May the Morse Be with You Talking Heads Nick Newman's Week Contents Keep 'em Busy Ghouls, goals, gibbons and JCBs: the kids will love our pick of Britain's coolest attractions—and (whisper it) they're great fun for grown-ups too. By Vincent Crump and Mark Hodson Kids at the Dig York Time machines SriLankan Airlines Warwick Castle Bunratty Folk Park Bunratty, Co Clare National Showcave Centre for Wales Real Mary King's Close Edinburgh Fun Camera Markwarner Ear Protectors Buoyancy Jacket Junior Shades Children's Luggage Blazing a new trail in Yellowstone It's a park visited by millions, but they all stick to the same bit. Tony Perrottet cuts loose Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief Bargains galore as tour ops panic Thomsonly. com (0870 190 0737, www. thomsonfly. com) Airline grounded in drugs row Holiday money Multiple Display Advertising Items Questions and Answers British Airways and the Transport and General Workers' The World Health Organisation has warned that his Off the Beaten Track EU plan flies off course TV Travel Readers' ranks Where was I? This week, win a trip to Corfu (see back page) EasyJet (0871 750 0100, www. easyjet. com) expands … What's New in. . . Cruising Thrils ahoy! From motor yachts to mega-ships, cruisers now go further and play harder, says David Wickers Multiple Display Advertising Items Your chateau needn't cost a mint Can some of the Languedoc's best hotels cost under £100 a night? You bet, says Anthony Peregrine Multiple Display Advertising Items He shoots! He scores! Bored with her footie-mad man, Maria Joseph was tempted by a forward Italian Confessions of a tourist Travel brief Hangin' 10 with the Sydney surfies Down under's the place for waves, dude—but will novice Nick Rufford jump up or wipe out? Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief Tented camps Seafrance Dover-Calais Ferries Stay on top of the game Tents? Lodges? If you're planning a safari, the choice is endless. David Wickers has the right one for you Safari suited? Make sure your lodge is up to scratch Take a new road to ancient Turkey It's an authentic taste of the old Med: now the Datca peninsula is easy to reach, says Jeremy Seal Multiple Classified Advertising Items Travel brief The best of the rest 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 Greek love and Welsh sands are the stuff of holiday memories for Charlie Higson Multiple Display Advertising Items Where was I? Win a week's villa holiday for two on Corfu, courtesy of Meon Villas The competition Contents Investors urged to hang on the M&S Experts fear for other retailers News in Brief Contents Fidelity Contents Why I disagree with analysts on M&S shares Multiple Display Advertising Items A Question of Money Memo to Barclays: pick up the phone Cleaning firm bosses sell more shares Directors' Deals Multiple Display Advertising Items Shares are still the best bet Ten reasons why long-term investors would do better to stick with the stock market. By Kathryn Cooper Long-Term View Top tips to help parents save and Experts recommend equity funds to parents as the ideal investment for children. Report by Alicia Wyllie Multiple Display Advertising Items Putting Child Benefit aside Will and up to a Nest Egg for Couple's Sons Young savers are paid good rates Make the most of tax allowances Multiple Display Advertising Items It's never too early to start a pension Chancellor's trust fund scheme is a small step for babykind How to beat the taxman on buy-to-let Follow your advice and cut your tax bill when you sell an investment property, writes Kathryn Cooper Multiple Display Advertising Items Customers urged to quit as Scottish Widows axes payouts Experts say it's more time for tens of thousands of policyholders to invest their money elsewhere. Report by David Budworth Best Savings Accounts Mortgage Deals Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares Factfile Going for growth helps me to stay in the black My Diy Pension Multiple Display Advertising Items Rockers still earnin' all over the world Fame and Fortune Status Quo's Francis Rossi pulls in more than £1m a year, but no longer wastes £1,400 a week on cocaine. By Natalie Graham MBNA A&L guarantees to pay 5.5% on its new current account Premier Plus has a high rate of credit interest, but there are conditions attached, writes Clare Francis Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items It pays to let high-flyers spread their wings Vodafone is benefitting from sending young executives on overseas assignments to broaden their outlook, writes Roger Eglin Graduates Say University provided Them with the Right Skills for Work Multiple Display Advertising Items Sexism industry keeps living in a time warp Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Outrage over Whitehall's jobs cut plan Civil servants are worried about the chancellor's latest drive to shed 100,000 staff, writes Mary Braid Multiple Display Advertising Items Where the Axe Will Fall Severance need not be so severe Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Scooby-Doo! in the Ghostly Guest Hello Everyone! The Funday Times Today Bigs Bunny News Dream Machine World View Game Boy Beryl the Peril F-mail Wordwise Ghost Writer How Far Will You Go to Protect your Funday Times? Tiger Tiger Cub class Single Fresh! This Week Go Ape Win It! Television Book Movie Musical Saturday Night Fever Single DVD Single Movie Book Thunder Teen Tuned in Squirt Newton's law Jarvis Dennis Fans utd Quick Fire Mattgoss Speed Demon! Colombian Formula One driver Juan Pablo Montoya talks to Funday as he promotes Hot Wheels at Hamleys Toon Disney Contents Contents Mitsubishi reaches for its Colt Up to Speed Scoot . . . you're in the army now A Noble idea from Korea Cars on TV Some cars you can Bond with Me and my Motors Rosamund Pike Distinguished Service Record 55 Years of the Army Land Rover Last post for an army hero The British Army is thinking the unthinkable: ditching its venerable Land Rover for a better equipped Mercedes model, reports Tom Robbins Yes, the old Aston can still hack it Drives the Aston Martin Vanquish Old Rollers never die, they just turn into PR For the price of a family hatch you can have a luxury car of a certain age that is every bit as practical, finds Andrew Frankel Multiple Display Advertising Items Bargain Luxury Porsche Seat of the pants safety A new Citroën will give drivers who stray from the straight and narrow a rude awakening, finds Ray Hutton Nationwide Multiple Display Advertising Items Pocket Tools with Style In Gear the Stuff of Motoring Dreams Just in case. . . The Knowledge Hybrids Everything you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Kite Kart Kicks Bentley Multiple Display Advertising Items Used Car: Renault Laguna Second Opinion Ford Values Renault Laguna 1.9dCi 120 Expression Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items At last, a car that can eat off-roaders Vital Statistics Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Letters Multiple Display Advertising Items Have your Sky Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Call me Rocket woman The Triumph Rocket 3 is the biggest production bike ever, and taking America by storm. But can a lady handle it, asks Suzi Perry Vital Statistics The Sunday Times Taking the Fight to the Harley Heartlands Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Car Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Deal of the Week My First Crash Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Regtransfers Ferrari Contents Inside How Much? A country pad with offices in. . . Moving on Faw Head, Wensleydale, North Yorkshire, £20,000 Dropping anchor in Africa Halfway through a Mediterranean sailing trip, the novelist Sebastian Smith sought respite in Tunisia from the winter gales Time and place Design Classics Heritage worth fighting for Griff Rhys Jones tells Jasper Gerard why he's on another Restoration crusade to save one of Britain's best buildings Octagon Charm of chintz If you haven't got granny's old tea set here's where to find pretty china, says Victoria O'brien A Taste of Summer The new in-betweeners In a gloomy market, the ideal of selling, renting, then buying cheap later sounds appealing, says Graham Norwood British Gas Jacobean gem £3.25m House of the week Woodland retreat £230,000 Capital pad £3m Family favourite £750,000 Hexagonal haven £495,000 Six goes into one £395,000 Manhattan Loft Corporation Raise the roof for high returns Turning unusable space into a room is sure to add value: Start in the loft, says Cally Law Top Tips What Goes in the Garden? Modern City Where the action is in Lake and Always a haven from urban stress, Kendal has been energised by the arrival of young entrepreneurs, says Caroline Brannigan What's on the Market Crest Space at a premium Duncan Farmer sizes up the tiny bolt hole that, foot for foot, could be London's most expensive flat Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times It's time to end my pain in Spain Constant building work and rowdy British holidaymakers are just two of the reasons why life on the Costa del Sol has lost its sparkle for Tom Provan Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Foxtons Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Multiple Classified Advertising Items The other side of Liguria There's more to this part of Italy than glitzy Portofino. For medieval charm and peace, go wets, says Marc Zakian Riviera Retreats 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 Kingsoak Ask the experts Across the finish line Trust your instinct when choosing a builder, buy good paint and make sure you have a big fat contingency fund, says Kate Reardon. Then you might enjoy renovating as much as she has The Sunday Times FPDsavills Tibetan treasures The thriving gardens of a Buddhist monastery in the Scottish Borders belie the chilly climate, says Caroline Donald Garden Cuttings What to Do this Week Stop bugging me Neil Wormald explains how to stop uninvited pests making flying visits Multiple Display Advertising Items The project manager Cheap, versatile decking brings tidiness to scruffy gardens On Call The home If you want the secret to that old white magic, choose your washing powder carefully, and keep your cool Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Who's got the right formula? Serious buy-to-let players need a strategy for success. Rosie Millard looks at some of the options Times Online The Market "how Much? Multiple Display Advertising Items Ballymore Contents Nastro Azzurro Contents Truly madly Delpy The star of the cult hit Before Sunrise is back with a sequel, but can the quirky French actress and director Julie Delpy make it work once more? By Christopher Goodwin The Bennets from Amritsar Wickham is the backpacker. Darcy owns a Hollywood hotel. And Lizzie? She's as feisty as ever. Bollywood takes on Jane Austen in Bride and Prejudice—and the result's a triumph, says Stephen Armstrong Why we'll always rage against the machines The cold war is over, but the invisible invaders are returning to our cinemas. Bryan Appleyard has a theory about why we are terrified by technology The Gabriel Orozco who has arrived at the Serpentine Edward Fox Peter Bowles Biteback Islands struggle to keep us occupied Royal flush Radio waves The pluck of the Irish Damien Dempsey has a voice and vision all his own, says Mark Edwards If pop has traditionally been music's least valued … It's her disco and she'll cry if she wants to: Annie has made a truly affecting pop album, says Dan Cairns Rest of the week's films The Month Short Cuts French dressing A stylish Gallic tale of adultery, Nathalie falls short on drama, says Edward Porter Hp invent Next Week in the Sunday Times The Sunday Times What do young artists do if Saatchi doesn't call? They In a garden like Eden A decaying comprehensive has had a radical renovation—with impressive results, saya Hugh Pearman Bartok Violin Sonatas Christian Tetzlaff (violin), Leif Ove Andsnes (piano) Virgin Classics 5 45668 2 On record Classical Piotr Anderszewski Piano works by Bach, Beethoven, Webern Virgin Classics 7243 5 45632 2 5 Shostakovich Symphonles Nos 5 and 9 Kirov Orchestra, cond Valery Gergiev Philips 470 651-2 Classical Cd of the week Symphonies Nos 5 and 9 Kirov Orchestra, cond Valery Gergiev Philips 470 651-2 Bach Fantasia and Fugue in a Minor, Aria Variata, etc Angela Hewitt (piano) Hyperion Cda67499 Fantasia and Fugue in a Minor, Aria Variata, etc Angela Hewitt (piano) Hyperion CDA67499 Jack Liebeck Prokoflev's Sonata No 2 and other works Katya Apekisheva (piano) Quartz QTZ 2002 Grand Drive The Lights in This Town Are Too Many To Count Gravity 82876625662 Modest Mouse Good News for People Who Love Bad News Epic 51627 2 2 The Loose Cannons Make the Face Islands MCD60095 The Polyphonic Spree Together We're Heavy Good Polycd1 News kids in town New Rhodes Jay Farrar Stone, Steel & Bright Lights Transmit Sound Tspr-0002 Various Artists King Tubby's—In Fine Style Trojan Tjdd063 Louis Eliot The Long Way Round Independent Records Irl019 Karrin Allyson Wild for You Concord Ccd-2220-2 Hp May the force be with you, LA-style Cop shows will never be the same again, now Michael Chiklis is playing so deeply dirty in east LA's The Shield, says John Harlow Life is Just Rest of the week's theatre The Goat Titter ye lots A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum will warm your heart like an old Roman's loins, Ooh er, missus, says Victoria Segal Life is Just a Slow Train Royal Opera House Hot on his heels With the return of Carlos Acosta's Tocororo, David Dougill finds Jose Oduardo Perez ready to fill his Cuban mentor's shoes Crawling up a Hill The top arts events of the coming months Look ahead Cross Central Festival Ancient Art to Post-Impressionism The Trojans Cloaca Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Edward Hopper Tamara de Lempicka GF Watts The Pier Arts Centre Collection Lasting Impressions Paolozzi at 80 Opera Dance Concerts Pop Comedy This week, don't miss Cheltenham is far from ladylike Poetry, passion and intensity are the hallmarks of an extraordinary festival. By Paul Driver Politics Buxton springs surprises Now in its 25th year, Derbyshire's leading festival is reaching new peaks, says Hugh Canning The Sunday Times Games WarBirds 2004 PC, about £10 a month, ages 7+ The Times Literary Supplement Asterix & Obelix: Xxl The Month Blazing Saddles Warner, 15,93 mins; £15.99 (DVD) The Barbarian Invasions Paperbacks The Singing Detective (2003) Starsky & Hutch Agenda The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinema The Official Guide of the Society of London Theatre Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Pile 'em High The Sunday Times concise crossword No 853 Hardbacks Paperbacks Life begins at 60 Voltaire in Exile by Ian Davidson Atlantic Books £19.99 pp368 Read on. . . Waking up British film Edge of Midnight: The Life of John Schlesinger by William J Mann Hutchinson £25 pp628 Read on. . . Diary Rules of engagement The Interrogator's War Inside the Secret War against Al-Qaeda by Chris Mackey with Greg Miller J Murray £14.99 pp512 David Nicholls Soldier, soldier Memoirs My Father was a Hero by Cole Moreton Viking £16.99 pp240 Hotel Tiberias: A Tale of Two Grandfathers by Sebastian Hope HarperCollins £18.99 pp352 A little nugget Digger by Max Anderson Picador £10.99 pp368 A little night reading In the news Books behind the headlines: Michael Moore How the South African revolution destroyed its children A Burning Hunger: One Family's Struggle against Apartheld by Lynda Schuster Cape £18.99 pp451 Read on. . . He stood up to Stalin Zhukov: The Conqueror of Berlin by John Colvin Weidenfeld £14.99 pp207 Keep taking the pills As Pirin: The Remarkable Story of a Wonder Drug by Dlarmuid Jeffreys Bloomsbury £16.99 pp335 An injection of truth? MMR and Autism: What Parents Need to Know by Michael Fitzpatrick Routledge £14.99 pp218 Crime Wave Riotous assembly The London MOB Violence and Disorder in 18th-century England by Robert Shoemaker Hambledon & London £19.95 pp409 Mark Billingham In a state of grace Memoir Accidents of Fortune by Andrew Devonshire Michael Russell £13.95 pp127 Half Price A toast to the darker side of life I'll Go to Bed at Noon by Gerard Woodward Chatto £12.99 pp437 Ottakar's Love late in the afternoon Becoming Strangers by Louise Dean Scribner £12.99 pp291 Mind games Light by Timothy O'Grady Secker £14.99 pp266 the Memory Man by Lisa Appignanesi Arcadia £11.99 pp259 Because you read Children's book of the week WHSmith Paperbacks National Service: Diary of a Decade at the National Theatre by Richard Eyre The Full Cupboard of Life Captain Scott Giving up the Ghost: A Memoir by Hilary Mantel The Great Fire Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar Empire Made Me Glimmer of Twilight The Churchills and their Palace The Cryptographer Book events What's happening in the literary world You really must read The Sunday Times Rescue remedy Poetry New Collected Poems by Stephen Spender edited by Michael Brett Faber £30 pp393 Finding their form Sean O'brien examines how three poets achieve their contrasting effects Contents Best advice Tape it: the best (and worst) of the week A Canterbury Tale Tuesday, BBC2, 1pm Best current affairs Panorama: Fighting For Care Today, BBC1, 10.15pm Best profile Marton Brando Monday, Biography, 11am Pop idles Rock Profile Monday, VH-1,11pm Terror tales Seconds From Disaster: The Bomb in Oklahoma City Tuesday, National Geographic, 9pm Living doll Barbie's Mid-Life Crisis Wednesday, BBC2, 7.30pm The big match Cricket—First Test Thursday, C4,10am The day today 24, Thursday, Sky One, 9pm The one to watch The First Olympians, Friday, BBC2, 9pm Best bad guy Targeted: Noriega—Pineapple Face Friday, History, 9pm Reich ramblings Hitler's Secret Diaries Friday, History, 11pm Radio Pick of the Day The way we were Hopeless endeavour? The Wreck Detectives: The Hope (C4,5.25pm) Best natural history Time Machine: Life—The Race Against Time (BBC1, 8pm) No presuming here Livingstone's Last Journey (History, 8pm) Pick of the day Read Life: Children Of The Miners' Strike (ITV1, 10.48pm) Best police drama Waking The Dead (BBC1, 9pm) Best SOS show Restoration (BBC2, 9pm) Resistance is futile? Island At War (ITV1, 9pm) Films Critics choice Sunday 18 July ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Cosmo comedy Coupling (BBC2, 9pm) Oh la la Rose And Maloney (ITV1, 9pm) Dirty dancing Ruby Does The Business (BBC3, 9pm) One small step Race To The Moon: Failure is Not An Option (History, 9pm) Pick of the day Too much pressure? Young Doctors (ITV1, 10pm) Best comedy Comedy Connections (BBC1, 10.35pm) Too much info 101 Things To Do With a Dead Body (C4,10.50pm) Film choice Films Monday 19 July ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Tyne waits for no man 55 Degrees North (BBC1, 9pm) Welsh re-assembly Restoration (BBC2, 9pm) You're not my mum Wife Swap (C4,9pm) Pick of the day You're not my dad From Here To Paternity (BBC1, 10.35pm) Flirty dozen Average Joe (C4,10.50pm) Copping an eyeful The Shield (Five, 10.50pm) Film choice Films BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day The square peg Norman Wisdom (Biography, 7.30pm) Money talks Superhomes (BBC2, 8pm) Best drama The Long Firm (BBC2, 9pm) The joys of parenting Supernanny (C4,9pm) Pick of the day Medical Mysteries (BBC1, 10.35pm) Justify my love Madonna's Men (Five, 9pm) The vital ingredients Who you gonna call? Critics choice Films BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day I can't answer that When will Be Famous?(BBC1, 7pm) Making a switch 1 Get a New Life (BBC2, 8pm) Making a switch 2 A New Life Down Under-One year On (C4,8pm) Just say no This World: The Real Bangkok Hllton (BBC2, 9pm) Devil makes work Bad Lads'Army (ITV1, 9pm) Pick of the day Picking Up The Pieces: Robert (C4,9pm) Best cops Law & Order (Sky One, 10pm) True love ways Mlsaing You Already (C4,10.50pm) Films Critics' choice Thursday July ITV1 Anglia Variations Thursday July Radio Pick of the Day A new man? Queer Eye For The Stralght Guy (C4,7.30pm) Best music Proms (BBC4, 7.30pm) By royal command Gardeners'World (BBC2, 8pm) Bloodiest nostalgia Pick of the day The First Otympians (BBC2, 9pm) Unseasonal comedy More gore Power, Privilege Arid Justice (Biography, 10pm) Folk routes Originels: Martin Carthy-English Roots (BBC2, 11.35pm) Films Film choice BBC1 Sky One ITV1 Anglia Variations Radio Pick of the Day Busting out Mlinistry Of Mayhem (ITV1, 9.25am) Bringing it to the boil Weapons That Made Britain: Lance (C4,7.10pm) Most shocking Clearing The Killing Fields (National Geographic, 8pm) Ambulance chasers Casualty (BBC1, 8.20pm) Pick of the day X-Rated: The pop Vidoos They Tried ?To Ban (C4,10pm) Land of the free? Law & Order-Special Victims Victims Unit (Five, 10.05pm) Millions viewing week ending Jun 20 Film choice Films Saturday 24 July ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Decay Contents The only one in its class with a Valvetronic engine Bermuda Contents Eve opener Next Big Thing Handycam Ychaikovsky? Can't Live without Atomic Kittens Triumph Best of British Samsung Relative values Emily Lloyd, actress, and her mother, Shella Hughes, interview by Caroline Scott Lexus Hilton Subaru Bestollmesworstftimes The Bones of Contention He discovered the New World, but moved heaven and earth to ensure nobody discovered his true identity, Now, 500 years after his death, his tomb has been opened — and bizarre and macabre facts are emerging. Are we finally going to learn the truth about Christopher Columbus? Dfs Sealy Chemicals The Sunday Times Wine Club Shifting Sands For these intimate pictures, the photographer Reza had unprecedented access to key members of the house of Saud — a dynasty that is trying desperetely to hold onto its traditions in the face of cataclysmic change The Desert Way of Life is Still Central to how the Saudis See Themselves Spider Catcher As the arch-baddie in Spider-Man 2, Alfred Molina has woven his way into his biggest role yet. So why does he want creep back into the shadows? The Many Faces of Molina From comedy capers to gut-wrenching drama — Alfred Molina on the big screen Free next Week: The Month Renault Mecane When this 22-year-old man was mowed down by a car in … Tour normal prices will apply Siemens Portland Stagecoach Voucher First Alternative Bridge Chess Teaser Bookwise Mephisto Brain power Viking River Cruises at Noble Caledonia Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items I compose at night, and when I'm writing music it's still in my head when I wake up Don't Struggle to make Things Simple There's a place where dreamers go Contents Giorgio Armani A Good Look Lounge Fredperry Contents Be Happy Naked Chiffon Loving It Smoothies Celebrity Sex Clinic Going up Going down Fashion Moment Yohji Yamamoto 40? Lucky You Can You Work the Cap? You're thinking country gent chic or working class cool. Everyone else thinks prat. If you ain't got attitude, the hat will fall flat, says James Delingpole When Frodo Met Sam It's the ultimate fantasy: your fictional heroes getting down and dirty in a steamy gay clinch Sinsahons Claudia Croft Wardrobe Mistress New Designers Deth Killer of Bushwick Deb El-Yu Derek Lam Sensations Frock Follies They are the world's most expensive dresses. But when they're good, says Colin McDowell, they're worht it Figleaves. com All aboard Hip shape and Bristol fashion—make waves in nautical chic, says Helen Kenny I'm a Celebrity, Get Me into Rehab! The Chicest Places to Go Cold Turkey Cirque Lodge Clouds Crossroads The Sanctuary Thamkrabok Chrysler Toni & Guy The Smell of a Man The Sybarite Goodie Bag Hair Bitch! Coco Nuts Look at Me Passion Slah Mini Get a little Great Gatsby chic from fashion and beauty's obsession with the 1920s, says Ateh Damachi Vanessa Wilde's Secret Diary In which Vanessa goes native in the Highlands and forgets her vanity case Macleans What's the Alternative? Live for Sugar You might think rapid weight loss is a cause for rejoicing — but it's just one of the signs that you, along with 1m others, could have undiagnosed diabetes, says Sally Brown Preventing Diabetes The Times Green Giants George Bush might hate them, but cruciferous veggies are a superfood and you should be eating them, says Amanda Ursell Young at Heart Health and Deficiency Wedded Fizz Apple Blossom Drink Style Summer Drinking French Bliss Fair Port Super Bowls Light White Sainsbury's Cooking Green Bean, Lemon and Mustard Salad Short Cuts to Finery Out to Grass Pack up your hamper and head for the hills — but don't go via the supermarket, says Tom Norrington-Davies. Instead, poach some meat, pot some fish and make some proper lemonade Radish, Onion and Parsley Salad Potted Salmon Real Lemonade Poached Chicken White Chocolate Rice Pudding with Summer Berries Cooking Bistrotheque A a Gill Table Talk Where to Eat French Honey, I Revamped the House The Georgian house of Tv design queen Naomi Cleaver is bold, beautiful and certainly no DIY disaster, Bethan Ryder gets a private viewing Get the Look In the Stars Sue and Chouchou We're so in Love Small Talk Mrs Mills Solves All your Problems The Gaucho Club Could ponchos finally spell the end of the pashmina? Let's hope so, says Shane Watson Style gives you TAG Heuer

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