Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 12/10/2004

2004; Gale Group;

Autores

Andrew Robson, Peter Penfold, Albert O. Faluyi, Leo Lewis and Tim Teeman, Nigel MacNicol, Jon Rouse, Chief executive, Hilary Bradt, Andrew Pierce, DJM, Alfred Lord Tennyson, J. E. Maurice, Sarah Butler and Richard Irving, Adam Sherwin Media Reporter, Jonathan Miller, Malcolm Cohen, Chairman, Robert Thicknesse, M. Boag, Elizabeth Cruikshank, Linda Tsang, Nick Freeman, Philip Howard, Christine Seib, David Chater, George McNally, John O'Byrne, Penny Wark, Alison Kervin, Elizabeth Judge, Bob Stanley, Greg Monks, Sam Marlowe, Roger Maynard, D. S. A. Murray, Kevin Eason, Howard Dean, Joe Joseph, David Sharrock, Glenn Haldane, Antony Chant, Ben Webster Transport Correspondent, Valerie Elliott Countryside Editor, David McVay, Bill Coles, Anthony Browne, Steve Bird, James Doran Wall Street Correspondent, Jill Dupleix, Tim Reid, Dan Sabbagh, Dalya Alberge Arts Correspondent, Libby Purves, Richard Ford Home Correspondent, Richard Need, Alan Hamilton, Alex Glassbrook, Anthony Browne Brussels Correspondent, James Delingpole, Anatole Kaletsky, Phil Gordon, Charles Bremner, Barbara Stocking, Director, Matt Dickinson Chief Football Correspondent, Peter Klinger and Gary Duncan, Richard Susskind, Kenneth Warren, Caroline Merrell Banking Correspondent, Hugo Rifkind, Roy Bond, Charles Priestley, Russell Kempson, Ken Herman, Geoffrey Bindman and Joel Bennathan, Dan Silver, Edward Fennell, Gary Duncan Economics Editor, Oliver Kay, John Woodcock, David Lister, David Foskett and Andrew Kennedy, Rick Broadbent, James Briggs, Jeremy Page and David Lister, Terry Sanderson, Vice-President, Eve Thomas, Gary Slapper, Ann Treneman, John Hopkins Golf Correspondent, Rob Wright, Mark Henderson and Tim Reid, Mary Andrews, Geoffrey Dean, John Mairs, Gabriel Rozenberg, Francis Bennion, Martin Samuel, Raymond Keene, Lewis Smith, David Wheatcroft, Laura McMurtie, chief executive, Sean O'Neill, Jeremy Page, Morris Clegg, Chris Campling, Bronwen Maddox, Lord Phillips, Helen Rumbelow Political Correspondent, David Malaperiman, Patrick Hosking, Helen Nugent, Michael Cook, Christopher Martin-Jenkins Chief Cricket Correspondent, Damian Whitworth, Roger Boyes, Nicola Laver, Oliver August, Peter Dixon, Nick Hasell, Grania Langdon-Down, Tom Baldwin and Philip Webster, Carolyn Asome, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Tom Dart, Julian Muscat, R. D. M. Grant, Adam Fresco, John Allison, Nick Szczepanik, John Goodbody, Joanna Pitman, Craig Lord, Dominic Maxwell, Andrew Hough, Anjana Ahuja, Fred Bridgland, George Caulkin, Neil Fisher, Peter Riddell, Michael Gove, Danny Kushlick, Allen Robertson, Russell Jenkins and Ashling O'Connor, Helena Renberg-Fawcett, David Charter Chief Political Correspondent, Jack Malvern Arts Reporter, Richard Miles, Martin Waller, Chris Ayres, Peter Ingham, James Jackson, Nigel Hawkes Health Editor, Ashling O'Connor, Stephen Cragg, Keith Young, Stephen Dalton, Nicola Woolcock, Fiona Bawdon, Frances Gibb, Richard Lloyd Parry and Ali Hussain Khudair, Debbie J. Ancell, Randy Cohen, Edward Bellord, Alexandra Blair Education Correspondent, Anthony Howard, Jenny Davey, Richard Ford, David McIntosh, Sam Lister Health Correspondent, Patience Wheatcroft, Derrick Anderson, Tony Baldry, Christopher Irvine, Joan Smith, Patrick Martin,

Resumo

A Day in my Life Forces rebel against MoD for wasting public money Services demoralised by poor equipment and biased selection Inside The Times Poll Findings Audience sees red over blue Ladykillers Index Picture Gallery Workers may get right to stay after 65 Discovery at Marigot Bay What's Important The Times 'Terrifying' NHS computer bill will rise from £6bn to £30bn Home Office sets new race target Defence staff survey Lowest paid health staff get £35 rise Debut leads straight up the garden path Parliamentary Sketch MacMillan cancer relief Hoax photos soldier before court martial Alzheimer's drug Survivors speak MRSA challenge Currie and eggs I can't control myself, says GP who admitted string of affairs with patients MP's daughter was electrocuted after bad building work The final gift of America's real Superman The all-American hero's battle with disability and his campaign for more research gave hope to millions, report Mark Henderson and Tim Reid Prada Stem-cell trials give hope of success How to Solve Pension Crisis Sky Blair's 7 steps in his 2nd attempt in 12 days to detail a 3rd-term plan The Prime Minister has listed the challenges for his next Government. Tom Baldwin and Philip Webster report What we could expect from four more years Political Briefing Tories promise £350 a year for pension savers Teacher calls for peace after killing Green Flag motoring assistance Hawkish vicar opens war on squirrels Teenager made £45,000 in eBay auction fraud Financial Services Authority Horne wins Kissinger seal of approval to write biography MPs foxed by hunt scene Book reviews with bite Marr's less than glorious start People PS … Top football agent is caught 'lying' over Rooney contract Picture Gallery Middlemen A1 Fayed accuses manager in trial Honey, Nec Has Shrunk the World Dell Schools in England, 2004 High-speed trains to squeeze delays for passengers on the London Tube Torture-trial judge asks to see scars Teaching unions reject fast-track transfer plans Ambassador loses security clearance Drink problem Man denies rape Last laugh Birds attacked Lexus Pheasant and Mushroom Pie The Rules of the Game Venison and partridge all year round in game plan for a healtheir nation Welcome to the £14m free hotel for sick children lastminute Action Medical Research acts Director decries 'ludicrous restrictions' on film-making Will Tate Modern's noisy art fall on deaf ears? Digital TV refuseniks offered helping hand Prince Harry cited in Eton teacher's sex bias hearing One-liners and a lean, mean wit that needs some weight Firstnight Comedy Jimmy Carr Brighton Dome Just AAsk The Sharpest Critics Multiple Display Advertising Items Deadly Bazaar Arms amnesty opens in Sadr City (AFP): EU lifts arms embargo against Libya (AP): $10bn tax bill (Reuters): EU security chief (Reuters): Soldiers go Awol Less Cholesterol Chinese seized by former inmate of Guantanamo Afghan count delayed for fraud inquiry Kerry has easy targets that could damage his rival in debate on economy Foreign Editor's Briefing Air France Army of lawyers on standby for election fiasco Woman wrestled with crocodile to save man dragged from tent It's over and out for the voice of gay Japan after thirty years in the pink Multiple Display Advertising Items Arms payoff claims rock ANC leadership The Nature of the Beast Berlin gets a new Wall, lest the city's young forget Shelter Whistle is blown on manager's TV lover Great Divide (AP): Girl trapped alive in car for eight days (AP): Somali president (Reuters): Suspect freed EU moves to lift China arms ban lastminute.com Fascist disturbs Spanish parade The Times The Noble 600 Veterans' fury at pillage of Crimean battlefields Relics are being dug up and sold 150 years after the Charge of the Light Brigade, report Jeremy Page and David Lister. Pictures by Michael Crabtree The Charge of the Light Brigade Royal Mail honours heroes Who gets your vote? Monkey or monkey? 'Passive apartheid' is just rural curiosity Countryside communities are naturally inquisitive about outsiders-whatever their colour We should fear it when man becomes superman La Notebook Picture Gallery China's Hostages Al-Qaeda's challenge should stiffen resolve in Beijing No Cuts Action without incident: HSE sorts out the cinema Opinions past Leading Article, the Simpson Aftermath, October 12,1995 Of Mice and Supermen Christopher Reeve's legacy must be fearless research Egypt travel advice Great expectations Thunderer: How to break the link between drugs and guns Intelligence on Iraq and the PM Addressing the needs of Africans Future of Bow Street Court building Legacies to charities Folly of London Olympic bid Regional pride? A little brief authority Mobile dangers The Weather The Times Crossword 22,793 Plasma Your Questions Answered The Times On the Agenda . . . Microsoft media drive Briefing John Lewis appointment Encore for Fiddler man Telekom stake sale VW law faces challenge Stock Markets Currencies Charts of the Day Charcol Commodities Alarm as Brent crude hits record Credit rating of Sainsbury near to junk Equitable puts old guard under the hammer Index Sweet & Sour Retail giants pile on the agony O'Reilly offers a minority stake in paper FTSE 100 Hang Seng Eurofirst 80 Nikkei The Times Business Big Shots Need to Know Global Business Briefing Results in Brief US Bill to end sanctions Stop Press Yukos loses tax case GM prepares Europe move Smaller Stock to Watch Talking Points Directors' Dealings Quote of the Day Bet of the Day Rumour of the Day Data Day Data Look Ahead Exchange Rates Figures show rats may have to rise Cazenove close to Morgan deal Vi@tel Time to pause on rate rises Blair oblivious to pensions crisis Business Editor's Commentary Sainsbury's shelves look bare of hope BT stumbles as broker voices its concerns Stock Markets Larger Capitalisation Shares Wolfson warning sends rival CSR down Smaller Capitalisation Shares Eurotop 100 Major Indices Commodities Moneybox London Financial Futures Money Rates % European Money Deposits % Gold/precious Metals Baird & Co Sterling Spot and Forward Rates F&C's debut sparks few squawks on the floor of the jungle Tempus Wolfson Micro The Day's Biggest Movers Bonds lower on strong data Bonds Dollar Rates Other Sterling Recent Issues FTSE Volumes Wall Street Curtain falls on £21m Tyco flat sale Telegraph post taken by Orange chief executive Australian-led consortium plans Chelsfield break-up R&SA ships 1,200 jobs to India The end is not nigh; it really is just a 'soft patch' Economic View Three Reasons Not to Worry about a Global Slowdown Apax recruits Dyke for drive into media sector The real McCoys City Diary Mirror image City Diary Banks go begging City Diary Multiple Classified Advertising Items Lions International The Times Unit Trust Information Service Stephens Brothers Business Equity Prices Debate Anniversaries Births Deaths Birthdays Who Wrote this? Christopher Reeve American actor who came to fame in the role of Superman and campaigned for disabled rights after being paralysed in a riding accident Dame Rosemary Murray Capable and public-spirited teacher who became the first women Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge Births, Marriages & Deaths Deaths Lord Clark of Kempston Straight-dealing Conservative MP and party finance committee chairman widely respected for his expertise in taxation policy Keith Miller Australian cricketer and peerless all-rounder who was equally entertaining as batsman and bowler To place death notices, acknowledgements or notices … Lives Remembered Peter Garrard, artist, was born on January 4,1929. He died on August 2,2004, aged 75 In Memoriam - Private Just believe in people Creator creates Himself Daily Life A fairy tale Liberal silliness Bridge Nature Notes Playing it down A word to the wise Faith in Nothing Debate the issues of the day as they happen, and join in the discussion with other Times readers Jonathan Miller believes absolutely in the absence of any deity. Do we really need God any more? Chess Atrocities prove nothing Practise without preaching Speaking from experience CAH: Quick Word Losing faith Only the master knows Faith wins either way What's your view? Questions Answered On this Day The Air Miles Travel Company Service of Thanksgiving Appointments Army Retirement Army Appointments Retirement Latest Mills ROL holidays Hockney Paris sketches for sale in London Luncheon Court Circular Launch Presentation Forthcoming Marriages Election Miller mourned Pandering to fashion fancies is needless exercise In Sport Today Fresh representation can be allowed Queen's Bench Division Costs risk for missing new deadlines in appeals Court of Appeal Chataway's finest hour hailed on 50th anniversary Athletics John Goodbody recalls the 5,000 metres success that captured the hearts of a nation Yesterday's Results Leicester Treble puts Dettori in command of title chase The Times Sports Book Fontwell Park AYR Much to savour as top horses remain in training On the Level Bon viveur whose approach was shaped by War John Woodcock pays tribute to one of the most popular of all sportsmen Dolphins hit new depths in season of trauma American Sport The Times Top Quality Latest Results and Tables Miller, the charismatic champion Cricket Caminiti pays ultimate price Tendulkar's continuing absence is sore spot for India Timesonline Pietersen seeks new club Henin's time-out Forryan to fore Rusedski wins Britain on target Play-Offs Dawson on casualty list BAR's hopes high in Button row Motor Racing Hanson returns home queen of the pool Swimming Timesonline Heath excels in Faldo's search for star Peter Dixon reports on the 2004 final of a series set up to find young talent McGeechan wary of congestion in players' schedule Rugby Union hp Invent World's best tipped for tantalising contest at Wentworth First round Ireland make waves with draw in Paris Group Four Modest Cole reaching dizzy heights Today's Finest Hargreaves ready to be Beckham's stand-in World Cup Qualifiers Group Six Scottish FA seeks to ease the pressure on troubled Vogts with vote of confidence Group Five England's Best Wales camp wary of possible Toshack return Sanchez aims to lay home jinx to rest Timesonline By Our Sports Staff: Woodgate escapes surgery but faces ten weeks on sidelines The Results Service Times Test The Premiership Today Clubs told to eliminate white domination Today's Fixtures Adams calls time on his fraught Leicester experience Football Johnson set for Grand Final berth Rugby League The Times Offers Direct Damiano seeks sweet smell of success at St Mary's Who's the Greatest? Glazer's United bid draws political protest Footballinside Experience puts Collier in pole position for ECB role Beckham 'meant to get booked' Christopher Martin-Jenkins and John Woodcock Mourn … dial a phone Billen in America My Daily Battle Quotes of the Day The Church's ideas about women are from Noddy land Decision time for Derry Cash for conferences Delivery failure Image of the Day Crimes Involving imitation flreams have almost doubled, Home Office figures show The Ethicist Christopher Reeve: a super man to know For Christopher Reeve, as the book extract opposite reveals, life was a struggle. Penny Wark says that he was the most remarkable man she ever interviewed A Man of Steely Will and Intent Being cared for like a baby is such an indignity 'Bush v Kerry: it's a question of credibility' In the first of four American interviews, Howard Dean, whose forthright anti-war campaign excited the Democratic race last summer, says his party has failed to connect with the electorate Next week Henry Kissinger: "Why the neocons are as … The Sunday Times Not Dead yet It's the ladylike look So-called "granny chic" fashion works if you ration yourself, says Joan Smith Say farewell to stone fruits Food Moroccan Stone Fruit Soup Magimix UK Ltd. Six of the Best Jackets Choose this season's tweed with trims or add colour with fuchsia cord or floral brocade, says Carolyn Asome home.forum@thetimes.co.uk He's the spitting image of . . . you know who Nappy Valley Wild West wear Style for Men Indulge your cowboy fetish with some mean, battered and desperately manly kit, says James Delingpole You can bet your blouse it'll look good Dress for your Shape Whether you take the plunge with a V-neck or opt for an Empire line, there is something to suit every body shape, says Eve Thomas A world of wonder in the wardrobes Fighting Forty Arts Red card for a kickabout in the park Architecture Liverpool FC were allowed to grab a piece of public land. Bob Stanley is appalled Britain's love affair with parklands Royal Opera House Seeing the light Photography Outdoor sculpture images impress Joanna Pitman Graham Murrell Roche Court, Salisbury Tomorrow: Bruce Nauman at Tate Modern; the best of … Davies saves the dog's dinner Radio First Choice ENO Concert LSO/Boulez Barbican A marriage made in Hell Opera Bluebeard/Erwartung Theatre Royal, Glasgow Pop Slipknot/Slayer Hammersmith Apollo, W6 Theatre The Weather/Bear Hug Royal Court, Upstairs, SW1 Entertainments Dance Birmingham Royal Ballet Birmingham Hippodrome TV & Radio Radio Choice Bordeaux David Chater's Choice Choice Multichannel Answers from Back Page Sport Choice Main Channels Entertainment Factual Sport Prime Time Film Guide Kids BBC One Terrestrial Who Do You Think You are? Viewing Guide Geldof on Fathers Channel 4,9pm One Life BBC One, 10.35pm Ban this Filth Channel 4,11.05pm Little Man Tate (1991) Five, 3.40pm Film Choice Show Me Love (1998) BBC Four, 11pm Mad Dog and Glory (1993) ITV1, 11.05pm Geldof tells us why he likes marriages Last Night's TV Variations Live and let cry True Fiction A new report reveals that Britons have lost their stiff upper lips and fallen in love with the analyst's couch. T2 investigates Don't miss T2 Crossword No 3407 Polygon T2 Quiz Word Watching Picture It Public Agenda Public Sector Gulp Headline of the Week Your Weekly Briefing Inside Contact US The Top Stories Doctoring of the Week Other Views Police carpeted over treatment of Muslims Issue of the Week Muslims Include your vacancies in our jobs listings Executive Pay The Week in Numbers Fear of Crime No Entry Public Opinion New Medical Research More choice, more bureaucrats Health 100s of Top Jobs The Issue Explained The Bellwin Scheme NHS death figures 'wrong' Production line nurses? Coursewatch Careers Jargonde Coder Learning to Learn Diversity has a new champion Interview Derrick Anderson has the task of revitalising the Home Office stance on race, gender, disability, faith and sexual orientation. Richard Ford asked him how he plans to do it Mediamonitor Visit the Public Agenda Website and Search our Jobs … In the Professional Press Foreign Ways PhDs turn backs on academia Education Other Stories we Liked Doubts over NHS university A break from the norm Corporate Directors Northampton Borough Council Builders outraged at leaked draft Local Matters Pilot plans give areas more control Kent leader lauds police wardens Consultancies cash in on aid International Aid How to ride the slowdown Charities Hero. . . IT disasters 'the only option' Information Technology How They See us Legislation Update Jobs Agenda Northampton Borough Council Classified advertising Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Times Educational Supplement Multiple Classified Advertising Items Use contracts to control cleaners Over to you . . . What Worked for Me agenda@thetimes.co.uk Diary Dates The First Stop for Public Policy Debate Law The New Marketplace for Lawyers Multiple Display Advertising Items Yeah—right on, Minister . . . The Lord Chancellor's new 'Sir Humphrey' is a Sixties child who never lost touch with his rock'n'roll roots. Frances Gibb reports In the Times next Week bar conference 2004 The Times Detention without charge has no place in our justice system Geoffrey Bindman and Joel Bennathan argue that terrorist suspects should be brought before the courts Multiple Display Advertising Items Times Online News Lawyers should be occupying the moral high ground The law lords are hearing a challenge to a ruling that evidence obtained by torture can be used in court. Can barristers ethically present such cases, asks Alex Glassbrook Joanne Manson Solicitors fight for supremacy in the 21st-century market place Clementi: the forthcoming legal services review and its promise of a new-look profession will exercise the minds of solicitors at their annual conference this week. Frances Gibb reports. Interviews by Grania Langdon-Down Law Society Solicitors 2004 'The quality of work solicitors want to give and clients deserve is under threat' 'We are opening up a two-tier system that is punishing people for being poor' 'I would like to see the regulation of unregulated legal service providers' 'My first interest was crime but as I went on to do business law I found it fascinating' 'The Law Society cannot be good cop and bad cop at the same time' What does every City solicitor want? David McIntosh explains the views of the 17,000 solicitors who bring in £2 billion in foreign currency every year Conference Highlights Multiple Display Advertising Items The legal aid revolution - frying pan to fire? Fiona Bawdon explains why publicly funded lawyers are disenchanted by the Legal Service Commission's cost-cutting reforms, and Tilly Reubens hears a personal view from three experienced practitioners Law Society Solicitors 2004 The Family Lawyer The Criminal Lawyer The Housing Lawyer The beauty of this beast is that it can be tamed Online Is the rush to mediation a case of poor judgment? Civil Litigation: Michael Cook questions the wisdom of promoting alternative dispute resolution at the expense of the High Court Law Society Solicitors 2004 We must strike a balance between ADR and the courts Aleka Sheppard on what the profession can learn from the shipping industry's move towards cost-effective and speedy dispute solutions Where have all the women gone? Part-Time Judicial Working: Elizabeth Cruikshank examines a possible solution to the problem of combining a legal career with family responsibilities How the Numbers Add up Times Online Get a life-lawyers can go freelance Joke of the Week Lives that shaped the law . . . Gary Slapper finds an abundance of legal characters in a new dictionary of national biography Rules not made to be broken How do firms deal with conflicts of interest and will new 'principles' clarify things, asks Edward Fennell What the legal journals are reporting this week law week Haven for a distressed Tiger In the City Eye-watering challenge Diversity the American way It's all right for some . . . What price a life, and who decides whether to pay it? David Foskett and Andrew Kennedy on the hard choices raised by experimental medicine lawyer of the week lawboard@thetimes.co.uk Multiple Classified Advertising Items Supreme court? It's just the ticket law diary tradingplaces@thetimes.co.uk Picture Gallery Multiple Display Advertising Items

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