News from 02/03/2005
2005; Gale Group;
Autores
Andrew Robson, David MoVay, Susan Foster, Peter Kllnger, Robert Cole, Andrew Pierce, Tom Rowland, Alexandra Frean, Grace Bradberry, Kirsty McLeod, Alexandra Blair, Magnus Linklater, Peter Lansley, Ydia Hislop, Mark Souster, Anne Rowe, Ivo Tennant, Philip Howard, Hannah Betts, Ben Hoyle and Adam Sherwin, Christine Seib, Philip Walker, David Chater, Flemming Sorensen, Penny Wark, John O'Byrne, Bronwen Maddox Foreign Editor, Nikolai Tolstoy, Elizabeth Judge, Richard Irving, Rosalind Renshaw, Sam Marlowe, Kevin Eason, David Sharrock, Jonathan Dawid, Donald Hutera, Hugh Livesey, Bernard Parke, Dominic Walsh, Ruth Gledhill, Graham Moss, N. M. Sutherland, Jill Dupleix, Tim Reid, David Day, Daniel Finkelstein, Toby Moore, Christopher Meyer, Dan Sabbagh, Richard Ford Home Correspondent, Anthony Browne Brussels Correspondent, John D. Emanuel (Chairman), Scott Murdoch, Rick Broadbent and Gary Jacob, R. J. Neale (Lecturer), Roland Watson, Richard Lloyd Parry, David Hands, Jenni Murray, Charles Bremner, Michael Glover, Matt Dickinson Chief Football Correspondent, Charles Bremner and Catherine Philp, James Jackson/Gabrielle Starkey, Caroline Merrell Banking Correspondent, Angela Jameson, Barbara McLaren, Richard Cork, Brian Holden, Oliver Kay, Lisa Armstrong, Bob Cammiade, Sam Coates, Ann Treneman, Simon de Bruxelles, Celia Brayfield, Sue Moller, Gabriel Rozenberg, Neil Harman Tennis Correspondent, David Powell Athletics Correspondent, Tim Goldingham, Martin Samuel, V. Saunders, James Polke, Adam Sage, Christine Buckley, Lewis Smith, David Griffiths, Steve Boggan, Richard Ford and Stewart Tendler, Peter Toogood, Philip Webster and David Charter, Rosemary Bennett Deputy Political Editor, Xan Rice, Nigel Hawkes, Jeremy Page, Clifford Coonan, Chris Campling, Cathy Harris, Patrick Hosking, Helen Nugent, Richard Hovil, Roger Boyes, Emily Davies, Peter Dixon, Gabriel Rozenberg Economics Reporter, Nick Hasell, Nick Kelly, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Tony Cascarino, Paul Simons, John Allison, Alan Lee Racing Journalist of the Year, Dominic Kennedy, James Doran, John Foster, Kitty Dimbleby, Jane Shilling, Ian Johns, Craig Lord, Hilary Spurling, Russell Jenkins, Neil Fisher, Peter Riddell, Bel Mooney and Kitty Dimble, Richard Beeston Diplomatic Editor, David Charter Chief Political Correspondent, Philip Webster, Martin Hasseck, Simon Jenkins, Martin Waller, Chris Ayres, Christopher Irvine, Alan Coren, Sarah Butler, Benedict Nightingale, Stephen Dalton, Nicola Woolcock, Tim Luckhurst, Bill Edgar, Alice Miles, Abigail Rayner, Randy Cohen, Rosemary Bennett and Gary Duncan, Jenny Davey, Peter Klinger, Patience Wheatcroft, Joe Bolger, Philip Pank, Elizabeth Judge Telecoms Correspondent,
ResumoThe Times Hong Kong chief to step down Muslims 'targets' Bashir jail threat UN men tortured Su Doku Boots on slide Arsenal through Rise in cost of home loans is no poll threat, says Labour Hard line on Syria by tough-talking Rice In the Times Today Business Sport T2 The Register Crossword Miscellany Today's Weather Hong Kong chief 'to step down for personal reasons' Home loan rise 'no poll threat' Changing Rule Terror suspect set for release Delia boils over Rafting death JP's hunting act Clarification Business Toucan Bashir's silence a threat to trial British journalist could face charges of contempt and his Jackson documentary may be ruled out as evidence over his refusal to answer questions, writes Chris Ayres £200m vaccine will be just a stopgap against flu outbreak More than 53,000 people could die but antiviral jab will not prevent all the deaths, reports Nigel Hawkes New research needed to fight pandemic Mafia linked to Wembley threat Gervais gold trial Drink-drive anger Council tax rise Watershed ban Obituary The abuse of power Only a vote can lift this deadly curse An ancient evil has awakened plague and football disaster. A council must fight it—democratically. Ruth Gledhill reports Why do English parents love their own kids but hate everyone else's? The child champion who was vetted by panels of teenagers for the job is watching TV for tots, writes Alexandra Frean And what do you do, Mr Clapton? Gay MP harassed by Labour supporter Minister tells Muslims: expect police to target you Judge who finished white supremacist finds her family murdered at home Police investigate whether a double shooting in Chicago was a case of vengeance or a bungled robbery, reports Tim Reid If you don't listen, you will lose, MPs tell Blair Philip Webster explains how the Prime Minister's failure to need the Commons is leaving him increasingly vulnerable Direct Line Electoral politics likely to trump Civil liberties Ryanair Fly Cheaper Tories let terror Bill go through Conservatives agree that proposals can become law for trial period of 8 months, write Philip Webster and David Charter Comment M&G Investments Automobile Association Insurance Services Ltd Specsavers Opticians Soldier said he would kill dying son, wife tells court We may not be seeing double with Camilla Book raises question eurostar Sir lan tied up with goodies Picture Gallery Ps Basf The Chemical Company Citroën premier travel inn Britain hit by surge in Afghan heroin Dell Roy Keane cleared of assaulting teenager Zurich Beach Hotels Arsenal's one-time teenage star jailed for drink-driving Ramifications of EU constitution Train travel by magnetic levitation Rejection of the congestion charge Food dye alarm Garden of Eden Goodwill for the Windsor wedding Royal succession Dowsing skills Hiding place Headless skeletons Picture Gallery Injecting Urgency Greater capacity to respond to bird flu is needed Recipe for Disaster Delia Smith is a forlorn substitute for proper cheerleaders That'll be a large payment for my exclusive Hitler memoirs, please Notebook Winds of Change The demand for democracy is swelling in the Middle East Thunderer: Enough to drive you bananas Maybe baby's best with dad Men don't want it, women shouldn't do it for long but a debate on parental leave is overdue Rwanda: a story too terrible to believe The silence of those who knew about the massacres speaks eloquently of the world's indifference The genocide scarcely figures in any of the memoirs of ministers in the Major Government Mr Clarke bumbles his way to a grotesque travesty of justice Britain can defend itself against al-Qaede, whatever that name means these days One. Tel Saab 95 Wife admits earl was beaten to death Men who pay for sex with trafficked girls to face rape charge Halifax Crash fear over air-traffic fines Wogan blasts BBC No to badger cull Prudence The Sharpest Critics Death highlights plight of the living Firstnight Theatre Breathing Corpses Royal Court Theatre Upstairs, SW1 So far, so good, but without Israel more talk will be futile abbey Homechoice Syria steals Blair's thunder at summit Two-Way Street Fiat Fraudsters target charities through web bank details ThyssenKrupp Accessbility Donate Your Brain Prudential Hundreds flee as jet catches fire on runway 'We did not plan to damage the IRA—the killers did that' Six 'sisters' are leading a drive for justice that is loosening the republican hold on Catholic Belfast, writes David Sharrock churchill Volkswagen Financial Services (UK) Limited Trial judge threatens poll ban on 55 Labour supporters Sainsbury's Tory plan for foreign teachers 'too costly' Papers clear me over prison chief row, says Howard Bespoke Suits Lloyds TSB Loathing, but no fear in the corridors of that Other Place Parliamentary Sketch Online Exit, stage left, the smoke and mirrors From Dior to Westwood, designers are adapting to the fact that wearable fashion is in and spectacle is out, reports Emily Davies from Paris. Photographs by Jack Hill Heathrow express Direct Line Post Office Nature Vicar wins royal wedding inquiry Ideal Home Show AA ciné lumière Fishing for New Ideas? Schools need… a dose of cod-liver oil Scientists want Government to give supplements that will help the brain, reports Alexandra Blair Victorian census discloses authors' secret lives Flying Flowers (Jersey) Limited PRU Health Times World News UN troops tortured and mutilated Reinforcements came too late for the peacekeepers massacred in the Congo, Xan Rice reports from Kafe On a Mission High-tech weapons help Europe to close military gap with US Anti-Jewish lie which simply refuses to die Independent Age Rac always there (AP): Trial for Hitler fan (Reuters): Anti-smoking push (AFP): Pet fur protest Poles reject Dr Death's display over Nazi links Trial starts for 66 accused of child rape and sex abuse onspeed (Reuters): EU acts over child abduction Flawed polls spread fever for further revolutions Haliborange Ukrainian security men held over killing Cheshire Building Society Direct Line Raja Fashions Building shows Sri Lanka has begun to bury its pain Survivors move into the first new homes, Philip Pank reports France dismayed as hostage seeks help from disgraced MP Egg Banking plc US says human rights suffered under Iraqi interim authority (AFP): Job for warlord (AFP): Prosecutor quits Debate The Times Seoul seeks war apology to test the year of love with Japan (AP): Police drugs ring smashed Brutal Rule Steve Fossett's record bid nearly loses its way St Anthony's Hospital first direct Aquability (UK) Ltd The Times End of the Row By Our Foreign Staff: Changed Prince returns to Perth for hugs, kisses and live lobster US Supreme Court bans death penalty for juvenile killers Times Business Wednesday March 2 2005 SABMiller talks Whitbread rises Serco confident Stock Markets Currencies Commodities FTSE 100 Dow Jones New profit warning puts Boots under fire Hilton in talks to sell 11 UK hotels to Starwood Ca… Time not ripe for rate rise Going Dutch Mortgages for Business Back to basics may just save Boots Business Editor's Commentary Need to Know Results in Brief Need to Know FTSE 100 Eurofirst 80 Need to Know Nikkei Need to Know Data Day Look Ahead Defence truce Stop Press Sodexho re-jig Bet of the Day Rumour of the Day Exchange Rates Data Smaller Stock to Watch Director's Dealings Quote of the Day The Times Business Big Shot BT's rivals claim review will not level playing field Timesonline Walkman hopes to make fresh strides Virgin uses net to get off the hook Reed turns to Philips to fill position of chairman UK ethnic minorities targeted by new WPP unit Oracle Ebbers 'was made to borrow $400m' HSE Better health & safety benefits everyone LSE throws open books to bidders Inroads into a Massive Market Doubt over Elan's long-term future BAT writes off £50m China outlay Top tobacco firms chase new market British Airways Taylor Woodrow buoyed by pick-up in housing demand CRH faces costs of £5m to meet US governance rules Whitbread cautious despite robust trade Auction for LA Fitness looks in poor shape Use labour better, Europe told The Times Hays rewarded by rise in staff churn UK 'Needs to Reform' JP Morgan to spin off private equity Citigroup poised to cut 1,400 jobs Pro Ven 3 VCT plc Scandal knocks Marsh to first loss since 1997 Fund managers take blame as unit trust sales slump Save for that rainy day and be one of the Yads The Times Britannic hunting for closed life fund Investor fined over bulletin board post St James's Place lifted by surge in profits Holding Firm Barclays severs its exclusive sales deal with L&G Goodbye Dubai City Diary Howard's say City Diary Jpmorgan Fleming Worldwide Income Investment Trust … Schroder family to reap £20m as profits triple Farmed out City Diary Martin Waller The Times Unit Trust Information Service This is a paid-for information service. For further details on a particular fund, readers should contact their fund manager The Times British Funds Driving Force Holcim extends bid period Wimpole Carmakers steer new investment to the East GM in executive revamp to boost sales FTSE gains held back by doubts over mining shares Stock Market Larger Capitalisation Shares Wall Street Major Indices Commodities London Financial Futures Money Rates % European Money Deposits % Gold/precious Metals Baird & Co Sterling Spot and Forward Rates Dollar Rates Other Sterling Recent Issues FTSE Volumes (000s) Eurotop 100 Serco has stumbled but is a good bet for the long run Tempus The Day's Biggest Movers British American Tobacco Gilts Upgrade forecast hopes lift Interserve Smaller Capitalisation Shares Schroders 66 Business Equity Prices Cityindex Electronic tags make barcodes so yesterday Tom Rowland introduces a two-page report on how smaller companies can exploit the new world of e-business Oracle Mystic Meg spots wet white goods going wrong Kylie's spinning around with all the work Let the technology ease your customer management woes Many people find out the hard way that there is more to building a business than just selling your products The bank takes the strain out of doing invoices The cost of producing a conventional invoice for a small firms is about €40 Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Claimants departed from commercial agreement Court of Appeal Statutory payments not administration costs Chancery Division In Parliament Session 2004-05 Legal Notices Crossrail Bill Legal Notices Single employer is not single employment Court of Appeal Audit Commission must not apply automatic rule Queen's Bench Division Times Register Jef Raskin Computer scientist who strove to make the Apple Mac more user friendly—and designed aircraft wings Jef Raskin, computer scientist, was born on March 9, 1943. He died on February 26, 2005, aged 61 Brian Townend Cryptanalyst who learnt Japanese from a destroyer's logbook and broke the enemy's naval codes Brian Townend, wartime codebreaker and schoolmaster, was born on May 2, 1917. He died on February 3, 2005, aged 87 Lives Remembered Hans-Jurgen Wischnewski Politician whose effective and pragmatic solutions quashed a terrorist group's 1977 aircraft hijacking in Mogadishu Hans-Jürgen Wischnewski, politician, was born on July 24, 1922. He died on February 24, 2005, aged 82 Sylvia Rafael Mossad agent jailed in Norway for the botched attempt to assassinate a Palestinian terrorist leader Sylvia Rafael, Israeli secret agent, was born on April 1, 1937. She died of Leukaemia on February 9, 2005, aged 67 Pandora's Box debate@thetimes.co.uk Debate the issues of the day as they happen Is television a helpful invention or a health hazard? TV and fast food Plato's vision Don't blame the medium What's your view? No respite Passive generation Thief of time Vote 'no' Lives in Brief Chris Curtis, pop singer, was born on August 26,1941. He was found dead on February 28,2005, aged 63 Tyrone Davis, soul singer, was born on May 4, 1938. He died on February 9, 2005, aged 66 Merle Kilgore, songwriter, was born on August 9, 1934. He died on February 6, 2005, aged 70 Soloman King, singer, was born on August 13, 1930. He died on January 20, 2005, aged 74 Court Circular Forthcoming Marriages Marriages Memorial Service Service of Thanksgiving Dinner University News Birthdays Anniversaries Births, Marriages and Deaths Births Deaths Premium Bonds Chess Winning Move Questions Answered Multiple Classified Advertising Items Bridge Fossett's flight rides on the jet stream Weather Eye Nature Notes On this Day A few months after his separation from Diana, Princess of Wales, and the publication of a transcript of the "Camillagate" tape, the Prince of Wales was redefining his priorities Five-Day Forecast Around Britain High Tides Abroad Weathercall Reader Offers Times Sport Taaffe rules Kicking King out of Festival Racing Catterick Results from Yesterday's Three Meetings Leicester Lingfield Park Times Test Gold Cup Betting Wetherby The Wright Track Pipe challenges club in penalty area Stoute must dial M for Murtagh and Moore Sad Lyle banished to fringe as third man of Ryder Cup Golf Folkestone Racing Southwell Cambridge indebted to captain's performance by Fulford Hockey A Billion-Euro Drug Industry The Medals Factory The Victims Drug claim could be a bitter pill Craig Lord on the demand by former East German athletes for compensation from the firm that made their steroids Minardi ready to strike blow for poor relations Motor Racing The Results Service Football Pools Forecast Basketball Bowls Cricket Today's Fixtures Football Snooker Squash Tennis McLean rolls over rivals Homeward bound Perez banned Amazing Mirza Gooch's new role Woods pledge Parmar injury reduces options Tennis Luckhurst succumbs to cancer Cricket Britain's fresh faces bid to make mark Athletics The Race against Time Comings and Goings on the Big Stage Kaplan stands by his decisions Rugby Union The Sunday Times Students bid to crack the code and make name for themselves Rugby League Racing Average Starts this Season First figure is starts this season in all competitions, second figure in brackets is appearances as a replacement Henson rejects foreign attractions to commit his future to Ospreys England treading softly towards central contracts Delia: passion cake or fruit fool? Bellamy's riches cannot buy respect Tony Cascarino on why the Celtic striker should beware of alienating fellow pros Kings of the Wind-Up The Times Birmingham vow to stand by Pennant on release from jail Carroll on his way out as Ferguson sets sights on Niemi There will never be another Clough, but surely English football has room for one maverick? Tottenham need Jol to keep mind on job Last Night's Results The Premiership Today Baros snub Likely to end with Liverpool departure By Our Sports Staff: Aragonés is punished with 'pitiful' fine for making racist slur Advanced Hair Studio Redknapp's little and large show saves day Martin Samuel The Times Crossword 22,913 Pedersen provides Blackburn relief Best for Sport Solution to Crossword 22,912 Times Sport Almunia basks in spotlight Other Results The Times What's the recipe today? What Do Women Really Want? A new magazine thinks it has the answer First Person Verbatim It never rains but it pours scorn on forecasters Colonel Stingo was a journalist and a conman (these are separate professions) Hunter home truth Shuffle off Russian to buy it Picture Gallery The Ethicist The discerning woman is not easy to please Magazine owners spend fortunes each year to find out what the lucrative market of women aged 30-59 want. Their latest effort, Easy Living, is out tomorrow. Celia Brayfield reports We're a Difficult Age to Satisfy Why the Weeklies are Winning It's Not for Me A Real Letdown A Patronising Mix The anti-Jewish The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a forgery about a world plot by Jews, have sustained anti-Semitism for 100 years. Steve Boggan meets the woman still battling against them "Jewish World Plot" An Exposure The Source of the Protocols Truth at Last The Times People ask:'But is it art?' Yes, actually, it is Richard Cork springs to the defence of modern works The Times There's no manual for being a mother The mother-daughter relationship is explored in the film Spanglish-and here by Bel Mooney and her daughter Kitty Dimble Mutual Protection A quick, perfect fry-up, old bean Dish Su Doku for Beginners White Bean and Salami Fritters For years I was caged in chaos Emotional Intelligence Vicky Biggs is 17. She has an IQ of 155 but she can't pour a drink without spilling it. When dyspraxia was diagnosed it 'set her free' to write a book, she tells Penny Wark Wearing black is fatally attractive Jenni Murray, 54, presents Woman's Hour on Radio 4. She and her second husband, David Forgham-Balley, have two sons, Edward, 21, and Charlle, 17 Show 'em a mean pair Leg it towards spring in colourful strappy sandals, peep-toes and court shoes teamed with funky tights, says Fashion Editor Lisa Armstrong Knead your own tension-buster Beauty Expert Arts Colourful rags to artistic riches While writing her biography of Henri Matisse, Hilary Spurling learnt how much textiles inspired him. Now we can all see it He used abstract principles to break every known rule of picture making Royal Opera House The artist's move to Nice produced his most luxuriant paintings, but his lonely winters there were marked by hardship In his rabbit-skin nightcap, even his goldfish didn't recognise him The tail wags the gods Two shows about Bacon and Picasso have opened simultaneously in different parts of the same Paris museum. Michael Glover asks a simple question: Why? In Screen tomorro Woody Allen; sex education with Kinsey; women in film Donmar Victorian mariner's globe Object Lesson Dazzling in the dark Theatre Antony and Cleopatra Theatre The Dresser Duke of York's, WC2 First Choice Pop Doves Olympia Theatre, Dublin LSO shows its true colours to mark Tippett centenary Concert LSO/Davis Barbican Entertainments Dance Sinner Touring Heart of the network Working relationship: Sir Christopher Bland, head of BT, and PA, Rosemary Paur Working with someone who is extremely bright is very demanding Make e-mails work for you Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items PA pay rates are on the way up Pay Temps should benefit first, says Rosalind Renshaw Conference Call Are you our PA of the Year? FYI Multiple Display Advertising Items Tv & Radio Radio Choice The Times Choice Answers from Back Page Main Channels Entertainment Factual Sport Television Kids BBC One Variations Film Choice A lesson in the banality of evil Last Night's TV Viewing Guide Pigeons, seek and despoil! True Fiction T2 Quiz T2 Crossword Polygon Win Puzzle Book and Champagne Word Watching Su Doku Picture Dryden Financial Media Planet Nordea Forsyth finds the best funds Fifty years ago, and organisation like Forsyth Partners, a fund research house, probably would not have existed. But it has flourished as more private banks and wealth managers have outsourced their fund management operations and need to know who to trust with their clients' money Keep the family fortune Keeping the family fortune in tact over more than a single generation is almost as challenging as making the money in the first place, new research reveals Cardif Pinnacle Nationwide A life in the day James Bull, aged 40, runs the UK private clients group at Credit Suisse 2005 will be an unpredictable year Rarely is there consensus in the investment world. But there is one issue on which fund managers, analysts and private bankers all agree this year: 2005 will be an unpredictable year when they will really have to earn their money M&G Investments Wealth experts put on the sport "Private Investment" special report poses a set of probing questions to experts in the field on their approach to managing private wealth Strange client questions Crippis Portfolio Guaranteed bonds are gaining in popularity With many ivestors still nursing their investment hangovers from the 2001/2002 stockmarket crash, there is a greater need than ever before for financial certainty. Instruments such as guaranteed bonds are therefore gaining in popularity, particularly with the 40-plus age-group Structured products at KBPB In recent years, the use of structured products within client portfolios at Kleinwort Benson Private Bank (KBPB) has grown dramatically. Our philosophy is to use structured products as key solution tools to meet the investment needs of private investors Best of British What do the finest, most lavish opera productions and, Islington's edgily modern Almeida theatre have in common? Or the Queen and David Beckham for that matter? Britain's richest Essential guide to the latest jargon The world of private investment has its own, sometimes baffling, language. Here we give you some invaluable translations and survival tips Credit Suisse "The Nordic touch" AT Nordea's private bank, part of the Nordic region's leading financial services group, they specialise in servicing affluent and wealthy clients but also young clients who are on the fast-track to the top. "We think that High Net Worth individuals start at a lower financial level than many of … Private banking: ask Jeeves! One of the satisfactions of wealth is watching the private banks and wealth managers fall over themselves to win your business Dryden Financial Baring Asset Management Let your fingers do the banking In these time-poor, cash rich days we are forever searching for what are now known as "time-freers. " Netjets Online trading takes off Share trading on the internet is booming. Last year about half of all direct broker trades were done online, rather than by phone or in person Coutts
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