Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 05/09/2004

2004; Gale Group;

Autores

Christopher Whyatt, Dave Smith, Johnny Davis, Christine McGourty, David Mills, Sally Brock, Michael Burleigh, Walter F Stowy, Amanda Ursell, Waj Charlesworth, Jonathan Miller, Matthew Davis, Stephen Farrow, Ferdinand Mount, Neil Wormald, Rosie Millard, David Hewson, Linda Wonnacott, Mario Testino, Hugh Canning, Lucy Rouse, Sarah Dempster, Kevin Jackson, Peter Andre, John Guest, Fred Ashmore, Antonio Carluccio, Derek Emery, L Jones-Parry, Giles Hattersley, Caroline Scott, Danny Scott, Shelley Von Strunckel, Christopher Morgan, Brian Jackman, Linda Barker, Julien MacDonald, Lawrence Booth, Robbie Hudson, Dr Richard Lowe, Simon Hart, Emma Smith, S G, Imogen Edwards-Jones, Nick Rennison, Gareth Southgate, C P H, John Elliott, Laurence Phillips, Maurice Chittenden, Emma Wesley, Sarah Demspter, Sophie Kirkham, Thomas Hauser, Stephen Hoare, Matthew Campbell, Dmitry Beliakov, John Carey, T Perlman, Timothy Pallett, Kevin Wilson, James Knight, Kenny Dalglish, David Budworth, William Lewis Business editor, Stewart Mitchell, Dorothy Wade, Mike Hammond, Kevin McCloud, Neil Hanson, Giorgio Locatelli, Janathan Futrell, Sarah Baxter, Jason Dawe, Barry Newcombe, Sian Griffiths, Jonathan Northcroft, Hala Jaber, Matthew Wall, Joan Bakewell, Lucas Hollweg, N J, Sarah_Kate Templeton, Jim Munro, Peter Whittle, William Lewis Business Editor, Andrew Longmore, R Thwaites, Caroline Brannigan, Dr Nick Palmer Mp, Steven Poole, Andrew Sullivan, Clive Davis, Kevin Hughes, Zoe Brenna, McFly, Asics Rucksack, Tom Otley, Robin Pagnamenta, Mark Ottaway, Geraldine Hackett, Cally Law, Victoria Segal, Edward Porter, Anthony Peregrine, Adrian Turpin, Dave Pollard, Adam Nathan, Doug Sager, Andrew Porter Deputy Political Editor, Mrs Baldwin, Richard Lyddon, Stuart Wavell, Paul Donovan, Pat Cash, David Miliband, Hugh McIlvanney, Garth Pearce, Charlie Nicholas, David Leppard, Peter Milstead, James Rushton, Christopher Silverster, John Oliver, Gareth Huw Davies, David Cracknell, Diana Wright, Barry Flatman, Natalie Graham, Christopher Simon Sykes, John Bell, Jessica Brinton, Sarah Keenlyside, Stephen Armstrong, Paul McGee, Bethan Cole, Andrew Sinclair, Ray Hutton, Mel Webb, Joel Reindorp, Pat Lee, Dileep Premachandran, Raymund Carroll, David Elleray, A A Gill, Brian Glanville, C V, Freddie Witney, Antonia Fraser, Minty Clinch, T L, Jeremy Langmead, R H, Colin McDOWELL'S, Daniel Emery, Nigel Powell, Ben Dowell, John Aizlewood, Clifford Bishop, Jonathan Futrell, Rachel De Thame, Carolina Herrera, Richard Lewis, Helen Stewart, John Dugdale, Barbara Hall, Jeff Dawson, Rob Hughes, John Peter, Simon Hacker, Boris Johnson, Adam Hathaway, Jane Mulkerrins, Susan d'Arcy, Jenny Dalton, Ivo Tennant, Sara MacEfield, David Smith, Tim Richards, Jacke Ballard, David Cracknell Political Editor, John O'Brien, Adrian Furnham, Henry Kondracki, Lawrence Dallaglio, Emma John, Stewart Lee, Nick Mason, Nicola Smith, Barbara Gamer, Michael Portillo, Robert Maguire, Christopher Elworthy, H Moncrieff, Jeremy Guscott, Vincent Crump, Paul Kimmage, Chris Woodhead, Sir Clive Woodward, Colin McDowel, Alex Clark, Ann McCann, Mark Edwards, Rachel Bridge, Susan Clark, Raymond Keene, Stephen Jones, Louise Armitstead, Nick Cain, Liz Loxton's, Yasmin Kurelshi, Rob Ryan, Trevor Lewis, Andrew Sanger, Victoria O'brien, R W Johnson, Roland White, Andy Zaltzman, Mark Franchetti, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Paul Newman, Dipesh Gadher, Stephen Pettitt, Jean Thompson, Justin Sparks, Brian McFadden, Andrew Frankel, Joe Lovejoy, Thom Osborne, Dan Cairns, J Hughes, O P, Chris Feetenby, Simon Howard, Anthony Roberts, Dominic Rushe, Karen Robinson, P B, Helen Davies, Gideon Garter, Frank Whitford, Kathryn Cooper, P D, Sir David Tweedie, Alison Kervin, Jack Goodman, Sue Gedge, Andrew Porter, Catherine Moye, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Dargon Rider, Robert Winnett, Duncan Farmer, Irwin Stelzer, Robert Hewison, Peter Wilson, David Dougill, Peter Wyman, C S, Ann Hagger, Simon Ostrovsky, Sadler's Wells, One Aldwych, Jonathon Carr-Brown, Geraldine Hackett Education Correspondent, Jeremy Clarkson, David Cairns, Philip Smith, Nigel Summers, Sally Kinness, Lydia Slater, Roger Eglin, Sheila Clayton, Lucinda Kemeny, Jeremy O'Brien, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, Paul Durman, Harriet Perry, Christina Lamb, Dick Blaid, C L, Cosmo Landesman, Damian Wild, Caroline Donald, Miranda Seymour, Liat Joshi, Carlo Mollino, Dr Ian Natoff, Shane Watson, Philip Galvin, Clare Francis, John Harlow, Melanie McDonagh, David Williams, David Sanderson, Jessica Bown, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, Sally Kinnes, Naomi Caine, Judy Craymer, Kimberly Fortier, Pete Oliver, Matt Roberts, Damlan Wild, Carey Scott, Walter Ellis, Matthew Goodman, India Knight, Michelle Cox, Jon Bennett, Adrian Somerfield,

Resumo

Contents Killers hid bombs weeks ago Death toll could exceed 400 at Russian school HSBC The world's local bank Contents Horror as this little girl climbs back into an inferno Milburn set for election comeback The Sunday Times 'We've run everywhere, out of our minds, looking for When Russian troops stormed the school, a crack Alfa force team were deployed to take out the hostage takers. Dmitry Beliakov was with them as disaster unfolded Contents Howls of pain amid the bodybags as full tragedy becomes known PC World Boy who begged for water was bayoneted Northern rock Brave children save their friends Inland Revenue Follow my leader. . . why Blair apes Bush Tories want only immigrants with £25,000 salaries Health food that is saltier than sea British european Radcliffe loses out in ad deal BMW Vengeful ode of Lib Dem after Mandy's seat Revenge Mandelson eyes £ 580,000 bachelor pad in Brussels Tax fear drives rich home owners abroad Jasper Conran gives £2m to fashion a school Styling a Designer Education Naipaul lashes out at 'multi-culti' Britain Halifax Clarke aims for 10-hour opening of schools Weight Watchers slim for free on the NHS Nissan Article Withdrawn Nelson's last hurrah: 200 ships for a new funeral Pupils expelled to lift pass rate Multiple Display Advertising Items Runaway girls in suicide pact Multiple Display Advertising Items Briton supplies arms to Sudan Labour ads go for the Fcuk factor Come in November 10, your time's up Women priests take ordination lead over men VW Franz play into a prize position Citroen The lost post: 1.5m items just left on doorsteps The Contenders Death of Mercy Chechen rebels slaughtered hundreds of men, women and children as they gathered last week to celebrate the first day of the new school year. Sunday Times reporters describe 52 hours of blood and terror in Beslan Children Executed Fleeing GYM Terror Subaru A Decade of Slaughter The guerrilla who drove Chechnya into barbarity Victims turn on defiant Putin BT From revolt to mass murder Gadzooks, you can't bank on the Barclays Profile I have now discovered the highest form of life: wasps Saga Russia must rethink Prudential Welcome to Asboland, a punishing place It's charisma, stupid: Bush has it and the Tories don't Oliver Letwin has called on us all to take more risks Atticvs Wary Brown declines to stick his neck out for art Atticvs Clarke takes the biscuit with healthy eating drive in schools Atticvs Dubya in quiet word with Edward the Confessor Atticvs In a Ted Heath-style grump, John Birt has bitterly Atticvs How close to home these terrified children seemed Television producer Michael Hurll was once responsible Atticvs Student journalist Julia Buckley Atticvs Who'd be a politician? Atticvs Denimstrate Class woes in our own hands Lexus Hunt ban bogged down Subs' Bench Defending A-levels Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street She died diving deeper than any woman had gone before Office World How Low Can You Go? A Guide to Freediving British Airways Booker backstabbing begins at long range Youth mayors get vote to curb teenage apathy MP in travel tours row Lemmings Middle-class teens shun university Surging Bush stays one jump ahead of an economic ambush Kerry left relying on TV head-to-heads Currys Jeb shut out as dynasty goes into denial Contents Bmi Clinton 'a little scared' by heart op Iraqi prime minister slams delusions of 'pacifist' French Money puts brake on hostage deal Manners maketh a US brat bearable Schoolboy, 13, trains his sights on Everest record US troops told to stop the rot in Babylon Alien epic launches Cruise into £200m stellar league Mgcars Karajan 'secret family' play theme on a love triangle Today's weather Fiat Hurricane kills two in Bahamas News in Brief Cellmates hanged Exploding torch closes LA airport Machete charge Jackson admits paying off children Two tickets share £4.7m Lotto jackpot Rider dies in fall Activist's speech Flowers, oysters, time to go: the calm suicide of Jospin's mother The Times EU sights new asylum class, the eco-refugee De Klerk's gentle lesson for the world's hardmen Today I shall be at Goodwood Boro to perform Priceless joke of Heidi's legs Conrad and Babs aren't so black after all Contents Mitsubishi Motors Contents Bring on Sir Clive England lose two-goal lead in Austria England let win slip through their hands I back James says Eriksson Player ratings England Lampard shows Beckham how it's done It was clear from the start that the England captain felt he had wrongs to right, but he was outshone by a less celebrated teammate. By John Aizlewood Wales come up short despite Speed strike Three minutes of madness and it all falls apart Sky Sports Blunder signals time for change It was a familiar story for David James and now surely it is time to give youth a chance. By Brian Glanville World Cup Qualifying Pools Barclays Premiership Coca-Cola Championship League One League Two League One League Two Nationwide Conference Scotland Other Football Fixtures Poland warning for England Resilient Dudek rises to challenge England will face a goalkeeper determined to prove his detractors wrong in Wednesday's World Cup qualifier against Poland. By Jonathan Northcroft Sky Ireland inspired by Reid Vauxhall Vectra Ronaldo fires up Portugal World Cup qualifying round-up Gazza turns back clock to inspire Boston Paul Gascolgne's best days may be behind him, but Boston's player-coach showed glimpses of the past in his side's 2-1 win over Cambridge. By Pete Oliver Marsden stifles Luton N'Toya foiled by Dons League One round-up Rush job lifts Chester League Two round-up Football Shorts Mourinho backs Woodward in whole new ball game United fans put their shirt on Rooney Fair play to Arsenal Numbers game in Nyon Not managing so nicely in Brazil Sure-fire Bet in Italy Football tales from the tabs. . Growing Pains in World of Wayne Rooney must learn quickly At 16 he rode his bike round a council estate; at 18 he has a £27m price tage and all the pressure that goes with it DVLA Now Alex Ferguson has Wayne Rooney, can he really challenge the Premiership's big two? Ferguson will mould future The United manager will harness his new signing's raw talent and ensure he flourishes at Old Trafford Tears and souvenirs Andrew Longmore and Richard Lewis reflect on the best and worst of Athens and predict what we can expect in Beijing Funny you should say that. . . SkY Sports Star rider killed by fall The equestrian world is stunned as Caroline Pratt dies after a crashing fall while competing at the Burghley Horse Trials Palmer hits 75 Arnold Palmer changed the game of golf for ever and put The Open back on the map as the major everybody wants to win The Sunday Times Stealthy Jimenez sneaks into lead The Spaniard's brilliance gives him the lead and puts his two Ryder Cup teammates in the shade in the Swiss Alps, writes Mel Webb The Palmer legend Fancy pants strides ahead Ian Poulter needed a blistering final eight holes to grab a Ryder Cup place, but never doubted he would make it Multiple Display Advertising Items Sporting egas out of control The top 10 Michael Jordan Julian Dicks Davina Galica Book of the week Garrincha, Brazil's Forgotten Hero by Ruy Castro, £17 Daley Thompson Roy Wegerle Jan Zelezny Mike Tyson Ivan Lendl Ian Botham . . and three who did rather well DVD of the week Thrilla in Manila ESPN, £14.99 60 seconds in sport With controversial former Premiership referee David Elleray Clubs angry over Woodward Some senior figures are questioning whether the former England coach is the right man for leading the Lions Last-gasp Little points Saracens to victory South African savvy sparks Saints' success Exiles edge dour contest Gullivers sports Travel Stormy knight The Big Interview: Sir Clive Woodward Players' strike episode brought out the worst in me The threatened players' strike of 2000 was a low point of my reign as England coach. I was angry and lost my temper with the players. It was awful Contents False start on the long road to glory In an extract from his new book, Sir Clive Woodward reveals that he realised within minutes of walking into Twickenham as the new England coach just how difficult it would be to change the amateur ethic ingrained in the RFU and conquer the rugby world The Sunday Times Contents Marines gave us discipline England's time spent training with the Royal Marines showed the players how an elite group performed and inspired a new strength and trust within the squad Here's to you Mr Robinson Stephen Jones says England's caretaker coach — who has three games to prove himself — will face the same frustrations that drove Sir Clive Woodward to resign Air-Berlin Acting coach can inspire England revival Woodward's successor (for now) has a tough job, but autumn success could cement his appointment 'England have been worked out. They need to raise the bar again' New faces and a fresh approach are essential if there is to be any chance of a repeat of that glorious evening in Sydney Is Jonny Boy the man to succeed He already directs the team's play and he can lift spirits with one brilliant kick or one shuddering tackle, while off the field he is clever and clued-up Jonney's inspiration is just what England need Dallaglio as captain? The captaincy could prove the straw to break the camel's back—it is for England's greater good to allow Jonny to rediscover himself in relative peace Batman forever The days when the swaggering great dominated cricket are gone, but Sir Viv Richards can't resist the game Tom Hartley Symonds stars as Aussioes hold their nerve The world champions showed they still have what it takes by keeping calm to clinch a 10-run win over Pakistan at Lord's yesterday, writes Simon Wilde Freddie Star England plot one-day bonus Increased TV revenue could see England playing more one-dayers in the future—but it is too late to help them in the Champions Trophy. By Simon Wilde ICC Champions Trophy dates Reebok Flintoff's year Sloppy Sussex run out of ideas Cricket scoreboards Kent bully feeble Northants Hampshire's party back on Leicestershire (282 and 282) Doshi delivers Round-up It's sweet 16 for Henman It was a hard night's work, but the British No 1 is in the fourth round after a 4-6 6-3 5-7 6-4 6-3 victory Sharapova falls victim to Pierce power Wimbledon's teenage champion slumped to a shock defeat in the US Open last night as the French star made her experience count. By Barry Flatman Laying down law adds insult to injuries The heavy balls and slow courts of Flushing Meadows can only add to tennis's worryingly long list of casualties The Sunday Times Results round-up Today's racing Fixtures Ardila on target for Tour title after second win Sports round-up Rugby league Rugby Union Rugby League Rallying Motorcycling Fixtures Golf Squash Bowls Racing Touring cars This Week Racing takes another fall Racing is in turmoil over the arrest of Kieren Fallon, but the smart money is now on the matter being quietly dropped Tante Rose tastes victory Trainer Roger Charlton watches his filly's nose hit the front on the line in the Stanleybet Sprint Cup for a triumph over last year's winner. By Tim Richards Fallon lawyer on the attack The Times How exchange betting works The Times Caught in time India win the cricket World Cup, Lord's, 1983 Sport Letters Questions answers Your sporting conundrums tackled Heroes' Heroes Former Celtic and Scotland international Charlie Nicholas on Multiple Display Advertising Items Sport on TV Don't miss this Ford The Sunday Times Shepherd leads his flock astray Khan can, but not too soon Greg's weary ways Contents HBOS's Crosby has to steady nerves over Abbey bid 'Armageddon August' spooks the high street Black faces 'back-door' prosecution Virgin Contents Gangmaster jobs scandal Special Report Migrants often work 80 hours a week for half the minimum wage. By Robin Pagnamenta and Jon Ungoed-Thomas Regan makes stock market comeback Contents Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Intercontinental investors in line for £500m Golf gets swinging in Soho Labs business up for sale with £220m price tag Regulator will lay into E&Y over Equitable Pension property firm float Business Digest Legal eagles lose out overseas Kirkham DFS bid gets shot in arm BAA radar detects a windfarm solution Cazenove boss tries to sell JP Morgan link-up Turner showdown at BAE Silchester chief's £9m pay packet BT Five-Year View Will they, won't they join the dance for Abbey? Agenda Economy gets bogged down in a soft patch Economic Outlook Going global Cherry pickers United forward Bush and Kerry are poles apart on way forward A Black Future Swindlers and Sex Maniacs: Black's Views on Media Barons British Airways Cairn boss joins the oil giants Bill Gammell has transformed Cairn Energy with an Oil find in Rajasthan In less than a year it has gone from a minnow to the brink of the FTSE 100 Vital Statistics Bill Gammell's Working Day Working Space Scandal of Wembley 'slave workers' Dell Hands finally lands cinema blockbuster The double swoop for Odeon and UCI ended a long pursuit by the man behind Terra Firma. By Matthew Goodman National Grid Transco The gas and electricity distributor has sold £5.8bn of assets. Will it make good use of the money? By Lucinda Kemeny Billionaire: I'm no friend of Saddam In his first ever interview, Iraqi-born Nadhmi Auchi tries to set the record straight about his controversial business activities. Report by Robert Winnett Focuses on America LE Cercle of the Elite Canadians Plug into Britain O2 Multiple Classified Advertising Items Apple banks on iPod's street cred Apple is leaning on the iPod to give its stagnant computer business a kick-start. Report by Paul Durman Toshiba cracks the marriage of computer and television With a DVD recorder and CD player as well, the Qosmio breaks new ground, says Paul Durman Multiple Display Advertising Items Emap charts course for media success Judgment Day: Should You Buy Shares in Emap? Black accused of $400m theft Business on the Box The Week Ahead Quote of the Week World share markets Databank Major share movements Risers UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates/Bonds Currencies Commodities Picking the recruits that are up to the job Growing your Business When taking on a new employee, find someone adaptable, be sure that all the bosses agree on the appointment and insist on a probationary period, writes Rachel Bridge in part four of our series Todd Enterprises My exciting life: read all about it Idea of the Week Multiple Display Advertising Items Next Week An evening class may be the way to start Business Tools Mamma Mia, Abba makes me £4m a year How I Made It Judy Craymer creator of Mamma Mia Multiple Display Advertising Items Stop staff surfing the net during work hours Business Doctor Charity Link Can Be Taxing Kingston Smith Zoo enters financial lion's den Bristol zoo is seeking corporate sponsors to raise funds to improve its facilities and finance plans for expansion with a wildlife park. Report by Philip Smith The Sunday Times What the Experts Say Bristol Zoo's Challenges The Sunday Times Progress Report ABS Generals unite for a spot of counter-terror Prufrock Dirt flies on the bush Telegraph Becoming Britain's multiplex king is not enough to … Mazda Mirror man eyes pay-off The sell-off is back in fashion Wh Smith's tough chief executive, Kate Swann, has Builders set for concrete gains Superscape Market Mole Citywire reveals secret City deals Contents Best of British This Thursday, The Good Hotel Guide reveals its Cesar awards—but does its top 10 live up to the star billing? Supercritic Walter F Stowy Checks in to deliver The Sunday Times's verdict Srilankan Airlines Luxury London Hotel of the Year Compass Good Gear Guide Hiking Boots Best of British Newcomer of the Year Hope Street Hotel, Liverpool Multiple Display Advertising Items Guesthouse of the Year Shallowdale House, Ampleforth, North Yorkshire Country Hotel of the Year Crose Lawn House, Gloucestershire For Utterly Enjoyable Mild Eccentricity The Old Railway Station, Petworth, West Sussex English Inn of the Year The Museum Inn, Farnham, Dorset Snowboarding Jacket Welsh Hotel of the Year Harbourmaster Hotel, Aberaeron, Ceredigion Video Player Scottish Inn of the Year Tigh an Eilean, Shieldaig, Wester Ross Luggage Irish Guesthouse of the Year Flemingstown House, Kilmallock, Co Limerick A bumpy ride from top to bottom The Ghan train may not be the height of luxury, but it goes to parts of Oz others can't reach. By Mark Ottaway Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief Rip-off clinics harass ill Brits Directions No-frills protection Holiday money Multiple Display Advertising Items Warning signs have been posted at one of Cornwall's Tour operators are running out of undiscovered corners … Questions & Answers Stick your nose in next weekend It's open house at some of our most riveting buildings. By Vincent Crump London Southeast Southwest Where was I? Midlands East Airlines declare price war Bargains The North Readers' rants Wales Scotland Barcelona The City Page Top tapas, mad lampposts, wild art: avoid the hen parties and this is still Europe's hottest weekend. By Harriet Perry On the Cheap Where to stay, where to eat, what to do: Barcelona for every budget The Great Sex-scape Dave Smith wanted a ride in the fields. The farmer's daughter had a better idea Middle of the Road No Expense Spared Out now! You've gone and cut their heads off! Just got your snaps back? Are they awful? Fear not, help is at hand, as camera-shy Simon Hacker finds out Multiple Display Advertising Items Doug McKinlay's top 10 photo tips Lunchtime in lion country At the largest game reserve in Africa, there's nothing between Brian Jackman and the big cats Multiple Display Advertising Items Beat those September blues with a final shot of sunshin Summer isn't over yeat—the Med is just reaching its warm and wonderful best. Rob Ryan has 15 weekend treats to help you savour the season The Algarve Multiple Display Advertising Items Andalucia Valencia Mallorca Minorca Provence Nice The Italian Lakes Chianti Multiple Display Advertising Items Gozo Dubrovnik The hamlet of Estol feels a million miles from the … Northern Greece Crete Cyprus Beirut Painting the town Burgundy Each year, the fruity little town of Beaune hosts its fine-wine auction. Anthony Peregrine joins the party The Sunday Times Feeling sporty? It's a winner Active types will have a ball at the southwest's newest retreat, Says Rob Ryan Travel brief Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items My hols It's vodka, yachts and fat-bottomed lemurs for Imogen Edwards-Jones Multiple Display Advertising Items Where was I? Win a long weekend for two in Rome, courtesy of the Aleph and Exclusive Italy The competition Contents Dad's Game Rugby supremo Sir Clive Woodward, now turning to football, recalls his father's early crusade to crush his first sporting love Radisson Edwardian Hotels Contents Airports without security: Britain fails to learn from 9/11 Working at Manchester airport showed Michelle Cox what a joke our 'tight security' really is Contents All's fair in love, war and Africa, says the runaway wife Bestselling author Alexandra Fuller explains to Christina Lamb why she abandoned her family to exorcise the demons of her Rhodesian childhood No sex please, we're twenty A new report on twentysomethings reveals a generation shunning what you might expect, says Giles Hattersley Marriage is fine for starters Bush plays a blinding game of deception Beware of the big balloons Maybe I should have run for president. . . Forgive us for the sordid sins of the 21st century Joan Bakewell set out to find the sins of the modern age and explains why apathy is the vice of the moment New Sins for Old Shock tactics: let's give the poor their own place … In the second extract from his analysis of the new class divide, Ferdinand Mount proposes a rural revolution: abandon the 'blinkered' preservation of the countryside and let the Downers back into the hills Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times crossword Renault Multiple Classified Advertising Items The lover who blew Bacon's millions Francis Bacon left his barman boyfriend £11m: last week there was almost nothing left. Andrew Sinclair, who knew them both, on a spectacular spending spree Multiple Classified Advertising Items Brother, leave our sweet dad alone Yasmin Kurelshi, sister of Hanif, is furious about his new book portraying their father as bitter and pathetic Confessions of a catalogue junkie Useful accessories for modern Supermums, or the gateway to a dangerously addictive habit? Rosie Millard examines the perils of catalogue shopping Multiple Display Advertising Items Styling a designer education Fashion maestro Jasper Conran tells Sian Griffiths how miserable memories of school motivated him to help draw up plans for a new city academy Multiple Display Advertising Items Selective schools keep on selecting Answer the question On message for an instant party Your computer desktop is now a vital social hub James Knight discovers the appeal of instant messaging Not so mobile video Sounding off Three Modern Modes of Staying in touch Don't panic Games Exploration Site test Rating space exploration Christine McGourty marks the British Association's Festival of Science with a tour of sites covering man's greatest area of discovery Stargazing Deep Space Mobile Newsflash Mixed Signals for Digital TV Stealth Wallpaper Conspiracy Theories Leisure Laptop No 1 for Downloads Cosmic Weather Mission to Mars Space Race Intel inside My best Buy Nic Fildes, 26, an Australian working in London, tells James Knight how he plucked a banjo from the net Winner's Dinners A trip to the meat market leaves me hungry for more That must have hurt. . . Bargain of the week This Life Dimwits of the week Job satisfaction of the week Oddballs of the week Send in the Clowns? … Just Kick out the … People of the Week Sorry, Earth in a Meeting Arrested, but Not Furlong Driver of the week Sports clash of the week The Daily Telegraph: Arthur Barraclough Last word. . . The Daily Telegraph: Sir Alastair Morton Winner's Letters Talking Heads Nick Newman's Week Contents Experts warn of house price plunge How to prepare for a crash A&L rapped over fee News in Brief Contents Pensions hope Footsie climbs to just below 12-month high Fidelity Investments Landlords may do well out of property slump Multiple Display Advertising Items Fixed up Off a precipice Fraudster lands me in debt trouble with bank A Question of Money HSBC boss banks £4.4m on options Directors' Deals Contents Beware tricks of the car hire trade If you are renting a car on holiday, it might cost you a lot more than you expect. By Kathryn Cooper Extra Insurance Multiple Display Advertising Items Damage disputes Breaking Cover Refuelling fees Early return The wrong car Heavy Loss Scandal of the rogue advisers A firm has been struck off for mis-selling precipice bonds, but others have so far ducked responsibility. By Kathryn Cooper Multiple Display Advertising Items Risky schemes still being sold You can fix your savings at rates of more than 6% Investors can get high interest if they are happy to leave their money for a few years. By Jessica Bown Pick of the Fixed Deals Find the funds to beat the markets The FTSE 100 is up only 1.65% since the start of this year, but some managers can outstrip the index. By Clare Francis Internet services take the hassle out of monitoring your portfolio Online fund supermarkets let investors see the value of their total holdings at a glance. Report by Clare Francis Multiple Display Advertising Items Salesmen earn high fees for pushing insurance bonds Advisers are accused of selling schemes that are unsuitable for most investors. By David Budworth Multiple Display Advertising Items Insurers fail patients with terminal cancer Charity says companies are misleading clients over the extent of their private medical cover. Report by David Budworth Warning on limits of health cash plans Best Savings Accounts Mortgage Deals Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares Factfile Woolwich under fire for costly scheme Multiple Display Advertising Items It doesn't matter who wins the US election Broadcaster doesn't live like a royal Fame and Fortune Jennie Bond made her name as a royal reporter, but she is frugal with money, she tells Natalie Graham Legal & General Credit card companies bump up interest rates Some of the big firms are raising the APR by as much as 1%, blaming the higher base rate. By Clare Francis Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Call centres need not be such a nightmare Companies that treat staff like battery hens and keep customers on the line for ages do themselves no favours, writes Roger Eglin Multiple Display Advertising Items Searching for a job is nobody's work but yours Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Flexi-working helps customers It's not only employees juggling job and parenthod who benefit from a better career-life balance. By Stephen Hoare Multiple Display Advertising Items Ideas to stir the creative juices Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Scooby-Doo! in the Mine is Mine . . . Everyone Wolld Leave this Molintain in Peace!" New on Nick Run Scoob and Shaggy! The Funday Times Beak Feat Sweet Talking Retro Wheels Blowing Bubbles Sky Walker Pickle Sickles The story so far—There are no ice pops in Townsville—and it's an absolute scorcher! But the Powerpuffs are on band F-mail Got a good joke? Write to f-mail and tell us! Wordwise Quick Draw! Dear f-mail Show us your drawings Snap Happy Book Fresh! This Week Single Fashion Win a Bratz Day out Win It! Book Single Audiobook Back to School The Odd Couple On Aussle soap Home and AWay, Max and Colleen are the mismatched friends who always look out for each other. Funday catches up with actors who play the unlikely pair, Sebastian Elmalogion and Lyn Collingwood Mission to London Squirt Jarvis Fans utd Jarvis is back at school, too! Quick Fire Greek Feats Disney Channel Contents Contents Peugeot builds a dream machine Up to Speed All hail the old masters of speed Lamborghini off-roader? Cars on TV Return of the real Mini. . . Was supposed to have died four years ago, but a company has found a ready market for its 'new old' on of British engineering, writes Jane Mulkerrins Shake. . . this is the most incredibly expensive way … How you pay for your car can be as important as what you buy. Matthew Wall identifies the bargains and the pitfalls A Better Offer from the Bank Times Online Let the Mortgage Take the Strain Me and my Motors Now this is what I call music Multiple Display Advertising Items Full of empty promise Drives the Mitsubishi Grandis Multiple Display Advertising Items Keeping Rover from the Helm Ingear the Stuff of Motoring Dreams The Ferrari that Takes Photos Give your Car a French Polish The Knowledge Continuously Variable Transmission Everything you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Bentley Multiple Classified Advertising Items Used Car: Lamborghini Diablo Second Opinion Ford Values Lamborghini Diablo VT coupe 6.0 litre Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items This British bulldog bites Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Letters Multiple Classified Advertising Items Have your Say Multiple Display Advertising Items RoadPilot Steam's up: now for a 200mph run A British team is about to take on a 100-year-old record to prove that steam is the fuel of the future, says Emma Smith The Fast Set: Current Speed Records Multiple Display Advertising Items Car Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Deal of the Week The Sunday Times My First Crash The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Inside How North Lodge, Blenheim Park, Oxfordshire, £0 per month Moving on Cook, nanny and me Christopher Simon Sykes rarely saw his parents, but was never short of company in the house where he spent his childhood Design Classics Finders keepers Where are the best houses? The tricks of the professional property hunters could win you the home you're looking for, advises Liat Joshi Octagon Name of the rose Our new gardening columnist Rachel De Thame guides you through the jungle of 5,000 plants launched this year, and picks some of her favourites Designs on your time The right wall clock can finish off a room perfectly—and looks so much prettier than digital displays, says Victoria O'brien Homes Make your own wine £4m Houses of the week Play lord of the manor £875,000 Welsh bolt hole £115,000 Cute—but a doll's house £320,000 Needs a makeover £1m Life Lab A new innings back on home ground Cricketer Adam Hollioake tells Helen Davies why he's heading for a new property career in Australia British Gas Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Rear window on the world The accidental landlord Multiple Classified Advertising Items Cheaper than a starter home The young and cash-strapped sometimes need ingenious tactics to get a home of their own. Self-building, outwitting the planners and even converting shipping containers are among the more radical solutions, says Sian Griffiths Open up a Window on Poole Harbour Economy class A warehouse conversion for under £60,000? Caroline Brannigan finds one in Darlington The Sunday Times St George Illusions on a grand scale The owner of a bog-standard two-bedroom flat in north London has created a haven of extravagant Puginesque splendour, discovers Caroline Donald Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Foxtons Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Looking for a former rectory Old rectories are popular with buuyers seeking a family home in the country, often attracted by spacious ground. Just make sure you've got time to tend them Oxfordshire £2m Multiple Classified Advertising Items Somerset £975,000 Multiple Display Advertising Items Minding her manor The £1.4m asking price was just the start of the spending when Linda Agran, one of the most successful women in British television, decided she wanted the perfect Costwold country house, says Cally Law Buildit Modern in Malaga Kevin McCloud visits a sleek hilltop home built for a Spanish retirement in our second extract from Grand Designs Abroad On the Market Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Chesterton International Multiple Display Advertising Items Style right out of Africa A South African reckoned he could do a better job than London developers. Catherine Moye reports Multiple Display Advertising Items The Crescent Nursery lessons A wildlife garden in south London is nurturing the trainee horticulturalists as much as the plants, says Caroline Donald Multiple Display Advertising Items Not just a load of old rubbish Don't throw out your empty jars and unwanted CDs, says Neil Wormald. There are jobs these and other household cast-offs can do in the garden Garden Cuttings The Sunday Times What to Do this Week Kingsoak The project Snagging is a hassle but it is the key to good building results The home Why do the French have cleaner houses than ours? A recent holiday house swap revealed some home truths Multiple Display Advertising Items Vizion7 Ask the experts Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Redrow Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Homes Discovery Dock Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Get straight to the point A bold approach to auction buying could pay off, says Rosie Millard Times Online The Market Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Crest Nicholson Contents Plan the perfect autumn getaway France in the off-season promises sheer indulgence, whether your vice is shopping, eating or haute couture. Laurence Phillips reports Paris Ile-de-France Web Guides Tee time Brittany offers golfers unhurried fairways, fast greens and some truly inspiring vistas, writes Minty Clinch TGV Golf Breaks Spoilt for choice in the north Forget hypermarkets. Pas de Calais is a gem well worth exploring, says Duncan Farmer Five Sights You Shouldn't Miss TGV Electric, exciting, oh-so-arty Lille As Europe's current Capital of Culture, Lille offers a surprise on every corner, Laurence Phillips reports Norman inspiration Pilgrims and invaders, artists and writers have found inspiration on Normandy's coast, writes Tom Otley TGV The fat of the land Cheese, butter and cream: Tom Otley on France's richest food What's new in the city of chic Paris is always in season—and autumn brings the best deals, writes Andrew Sanger Follow the court circular road for a taste of French history Beyond the suburbs you can live like a king—or an artist—for a few days, advises Laurence Phillips The Ile De France Route of Royal Chateaux Paris Ile-de-France Brittany Best Breaks France's wild west Very French and not French at all: Walter Ellis gets to grips with the enigma that is Brittany Brittany Deals Dance to the music of time The cities of the Rhone-Alpes are at their most enjoyable in autumn, writes Doug Sager TGV Luxuries of a lakeside city Rhone-Alpes Autumn Escapes to the Rhone-Alpes Region It's quicker and cheaper than ever before. . . Cut-throat competition between cheap airlines, new ferries and high-speed trains means the cross-Channel hopper has never had it so good, says Gareth Huw Davies Brittany Ferries Holidays Sea France Normandy Tourist Board Contents Standards set to raise the global stakes Lucinda Kemeny calculates the effect of new accounting rules that will govern financial reporting from 2005 Scottish Power Seven steps to IFRS heaven Markets will gain by way of consistency High-quality international regulations will aid world growth, says Sir David Tweedie Communicate with your investors Fear over what might happen to share prices is making companies reluctant to publicise IFRS changes, says Lucinda Kemeny RTL Price Waterhouse Coopers What your company needs to do… Apathy and ignorance could cost companies making slow progress on IFRS, reports Louise Armitstead What IFRS means Clear thinking and planning will help companies to negotiate the hurdies presented by the revolution in accounting practice. Follow Liz Loxton's guide Customers and suppliers Investors Analysts Pension funds Internal structure Treasury Internal audit Human resources Investor relations The board/au to your company What IFRS means Business units Finance IT/systems M&A support Regulators Banks and lenders Business/joint venture partners Competitors The new transparency Greater accountability means hard work in the boardroom, says Peter Wyman Price Waterhouse Coopers International benefits Moving towards a global accounting standard should cut costs and boost economic activity, reports Damian Wild Glaxosmithkline Numerica Price Waterhouse Coopers Keeping track of the money Converging European and US accounting standards will free the world's flow of capital, reports Damian Wild China Price Waterhouse Coopers Contents Double Contents Just don't call me Interview First Prize: £15,000 Each year, Singer & Friedlander prizewinnes tease more out of the watercolour medium, says Frank Whitford Where to catch them Coats of many colours Young Artist Award: £5,000 Runner-Up: £1,000 The chips are down Morgan Spurlock tells Jeff Dawson why he put his body on the line to make Super Size Me—and why McDonald's should be thanking him Don't miss the trailer for Super Size Me on the latest The kid will stay in the picture JoJo was singing Aretha Franklin songs on television at six. At the ripe old age of 13, she wants it all, says Dan Cairns Sadler's Wells Donmar Biteback Doctor, doctor, we are losing this one For all seasons Festival Express 15,89 mins Rest of the week's films In Casablanca Angels Don't Fly Short Cuts Hellboy 12A, 122 mins The Alamo 12A, 137 mins Facing Window 15,107 mins Free Radicals Stage Beauty You're My Hero 15,102 mins The Perfect Husband PG, 110 mins The Month Terminal limbo Despite its black-comic potential, Spielberg's latest never quite takes off, says Cosmo Landesman London Palladium Read the review of The Terminal Man in Books, page … Don't miss the trailer for The Terminal on the latest Oasis Special The Month Put the disc in your Competition Oasis offer Kids Films Ace attractions What's on? Computer and bring culture to life You won't believe what's on it. . . 25 new albums 9 film trailers 6 DVDs 5 new games Games Virtual worlds Music Arts Experience it here What to Do TV&DVD I am your father Two Step Almeida Rost of the wook's Royal Shakespeare Company Royal box Italian-American Reconcillation Finborough The Composer, the Singer, the Cook and the Sinner Edinburgh International Festival, King's Theatre William goes to Bollywood Goodness graciousme: this Asian Twelfth Night almost works. By Victoria Segal Liverpool biennial Classical On record The week's essential new releases Tchaikovsky Symphonies 4,5 & 6 Boston Symphony, cond Sergey Koussevitzky Music & Arts CD 1138 (2 CDs) Joan Rodgers Classical CD of the week Liszt Piano Sonata in B minor and other works Paul Lewis Harmonia Mundi HMC 901845 Robert Saxton Music to Celebrate the Resurrection English Chamber Orchestra, cond Steuart Bedford NMC D102 Pop and Jazz Jill Scott Beautifully Human Sony/Hidden Beach 5176522 Natasha Bedingfield Unwritten Arista 82876637022 Dizzee Rascal Showtime XL Xlcd181 The Black Keys Rubber Factory Fat Possum/Epitaph 0379-2 New kids in town Jawbone Dang Blues Loose Vjcd153 Noel Akchote Aduit Guitar Blue Chopsticks Bc13 Asere Destinos Astar Astarcd01 Giant Sand Pop CD of the week Is All Over the Map Thrill Jockey Thrill142 Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong Ella and Louis Together. . . UCJ 9867768 The Month Tudor courted One great Brit artist's work is alive and well in Edinburgh, says David Dougill Garrick Theatre The Force is with them China's Shaolin monks share one or two of their kung-fu secrets with Clifford Bishop Lyceum Theatre The top arts events of the coming months Merce Cunningham Dance Company Buried Child Haitink at 75: Berliner Philharmoniker Raphael: From Urbino to Rome Collateral Film The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Opera Dance Concerts Pop Comedy Film The Motorcycle Diaries This week don't miss Theatre Sweeney Todd Art Christopher Dresser Comedy Flight of the Conchords—Lonely Knights Opera La Gioconda Dance Wolf Concerts Piano 40 Pop PJ Harvey Take a bow Hugh Canning applauds a great Beethoven, but Previn's violin concerto is a dreary offering Royal Opera House Berlioz Revolution, anyone? Paul DRIVER's ears take a battering at the hands of the avant-garde The Sunday Times Ps2, Xbox, £39.99, ages 12+ Conflict: Vietnam PC, £29.99, Ps2, XBox, £39.99, ages 16+ The Month Jean Renoir Triple Box Set Warner, PG, 290 mins; £29.99 (DVD) Jean-Luc Godard Triple Box Set Warner, PG, 262 mins; £29.99 (DVD) Robot Luis Bunuel Triple Box Set Warner, 15,288 mins; £29.99 (DVD) The Village Hollywood agenda Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Hammersmith Apollo Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinema The Official Guide of the Society of London Theatre The power and the glory Heroes: Savious, Traitors and Supermen by Lucy Hughes-Hallett Read on. . . Winning over apple The Right Nation: Why America is Different by John Mickletwait and Adrian Wooldridge Penguin £14.99 pp450 What's the Matter with America: The Resistible Rise of the American Right by Thomas Frank Secker £12 pp306 What We've Lost by Graydon Carter Little, Brown £12.99 pp338 Read on. . . Diary The Sunday Times A walk on the wild side Scribbling the Cat Travels with an African Soldier by Alexandra Fuller Picador £16.99 pp256 A Tale of Love and Darkness by Amos Oz Chatto £17.99 pp18 This I Believe: An A-Z of a Writer's Life by Carlos Fuentes Bloomsbury £20 pp342 Books for Children What Alice Thomas Ellis has on her bedside table In the news Books behind the headlines: Mark Thatcher How paranoia and autocracy led Europe into slaughter Europe's Last Summer: Why the World Went to War in 1914 by David Fromkin Heinemann £20 pp349 1914-1918: The History of the First World War by David Stevenson Allen Lane £25 pp784 Read on. . . Under the king's thumb Princesses: The Six Daughters of George III by Flora Fraser J Murray £25 pp476 Waterstone's Comedy for egg-heads Planet Simpson by Chris Turner Ebury £12.99 pp352 Canongate What about the workers? The Hive: The Story of the Honeybee and Us by Bee Wilson J Murray £14.99 pp320 Sweetness and Light: The Mysterious History of the Honey Bee by Hattie Ellis Scepte £16.99 pp290 The Folio Society Orion Books Too long a wait to board a plane The Terminal Man by Sir Alfred Mehran Corgi £6.99 pp309 Edge of darkness Case Histories: A Novel by Kate Atkinson Doubleday £16.99 pp304 Ottakar's Children's book of the week Jonathan Swift's Gulliver retold by Martin Jenkins illus Chris Riddell Age 7-12 The Times Paperbacks Our Final Century: Will Civilisation Survive the Twenty-first Century? by Martin Rees The Gangster we are All Looking for by Le Thi Diem Thuy The Confident Hope of a Miracle: The True Story of the Spanish Armada by Neil Hanson A Special Relationship by Douglas Kennedy The Dante Club by Matthew Pearl read by Adam Sims Bravemouth by Pamela Stephenson China by Alan Wall Snowleg by Nicholas Shakespeare read by William Gregory The Kaiser's Last Kiss by Alan Judd Book events What's happening in the … world You really must read The Sunday Times Pile 'em High The Sunday Times concise crossword No 860 Hardbacks Paperbacks Contents Poignant doc Who Framed Roger Rabbit Today, Five, 6.05pm Pretentious drama Carnivale, Today, FX, 9pm Dull drama East Enders Monday, BBC1, 8pm Domestic drama Little Angels: The Husseyins Monday, BBC3, 8.30pm Freedom fighters The Fight For Ground Zero Monday, C4,8pm Best festive repeat The Office, Monday, BBC2, 9pm A public service? Cosmetic Surgery Live: My Breasts Are Too Small Monday, Five, 11pm Word on the Streets Mercury Prize Tuesday, BBC4, 9pm The one to watch Blue Murder, Monday, ITV1, 8pm The big matches International Football Wednesday, Sky Sports 1-3 Best culture Liverpool—City Of Poets Thursday, Five, 7.30pm Radio Pick of the Day Classic Serial: The Diary Of a Nobody (R4 FM, 3pm) Step to it Faking It (C4,12.55pm) Up, up and away 1 Smallville (C4,3.35pm) Traditional values Antiques Roadshow (BBC1, 6.40pm) Antlers locked Silent Witness (BBC1, 9pm) Oops, sorry Crisis Command: Could You Run The Country? (BBC2, 9pm; BBC4, 10pm) Pick of the day Quite Ugly One Morning (ITV1, 9pm) Up, up and away 2 Mile High (Sky One, 10pm) Papa was a. . . The South Bank Show: Ronnle Wood (ITV1, 11.05pm) Films The Hours (Sky Movies, 1,8pm) BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Sunday 5 September Radio Pick of the Day Flit for life Moving Day (ITV1, 2pm) Oddest reality The Hairdresser (Living TV, 7pm) Oddest challenge Guerrilla Homes (BBC3, 7.30pm) Best history Hittites—The Lost Civilisation (Five, 8pm) Pick of the day Britain AD (C4,9pm) Best comedy Jack Dee Live At The Apollo (BBC1, 10.35pm) Best drama The Sopranos (C4,11pm) Time for bed Public Opinion (BBC1, 11.20pm) Films Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Horse sense The Stables (BBC1, 4.05pm) A right royal mess The West Wing (E4,9pm) Surprise, surprise NY-Lon (C4,10pm) Best investigation Blueprint For Disaster: King's Cross (Discovery, 10pm) Dos and don'ts Good Girls Don't (BBC3, 10.30pm) Pick of the day The Grid (BBC2, 9pm) Comedy follows five friends desperately trying to playing … Ab flab Cosmetic Surgery Live: I'm Too Fat (Five, 10.50pm) Homecoming queen? The Graham Norton Effect (BBC3, 10.55pm) Films Gunga Din (BBC2, 1pm) BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day All talk, little action Greatest SAS Missions: Desert Storm Scudbusters (Five, 7.30pm) Contentious history The True Story: Search For The Holy Grail (Five, 8pm) Scrubs up badly Beauty School (Sky One, 8pm) Decent drama Steel River Blues (ITV1, 9.30pm) Pick of the day Grand Designs Abroad (C4,9pm) Best drama Nip/Tuck (C4,10pm) But why would you? Can You Pull. . . Tara? (E4,10pm) Oddest comedy Don't Worry (C4,12.15am) Films Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Thursday September Pick of the Day Pound stretchers Fat Nation—The Big Challenge I will survive Ray Mears' Bushcraft (BBC2, 8pm) Buyer beware Housetrapped In The Sun (C4,8pm) Body of evidence Manhunt: The Body In The Boot (BBC1, 9pm) Pick of the day Victim 0001 (ITV1, 11pm) A country practice Doc Martin (ITV1, 9pm) The plots thicken The 9/11 Conspiracies (C4,9pm) Best comedy Curb Your Enthusiasm (E4,11.10pm) Films Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day East meets west My Life As a Popat (ITV1, 4.30pm) Blooming lovely A Year At Kew (BBC2, 8pm) Well I never Spy Secrets: Playing Dirty (Five, 8pm) Lads barmy Carrie And Barry (BBC1, 9pm) Pick of the day All About me (BBC1, 8.30pm) Do I have to, dad? Battlefield Britain: The Battle Of The Boyne Strange medicine Green Wing (C4,9.30pm) Island records Last Voices From Heaven (National Geographic, 10pm) Blood On The Sun (BBC2, 1.30pm) Films Keane BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day The Archive Hour: Where Thye Go. We Go (R4,8pm) Long live the king Guinness World Records—50 Years, 50 Records (ITV1, 5.55pm) Much maligned The Art Show: I Love Carbuncles (C4,6.10pm) No riff raff allowed Last Night Of The Proms (BBC2, 7.30pm; BBC1, 9.10pm) Back already? Casualty (BBC1 8.10pm) Pick of the day Beauty (ITV1 9.10pm) Look into my eyes The Dark Side Of Stage Hypnotism (Discovery, 9pm) BBC1 Films Two Weeks Notice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Variations Sky One Carnivale Contents Tiffany & Co. Contents Opener Can't Live without Pants on Fire: The World's Biggest Lies Brand Royalty Best of British BASF Mitsubishi Motors Stage Door People Used to Say to Me: Isn't She Frightening and Id Say: Who' Sonia? You Can't Possibly Mean my Sister? Coop Triton Kurumba P-Y Gerbeau, 38, recalls the horrific sporting acciden 3 in Front The Teen Commandments They're a law unto themselves. But are adolescents actually genetically programmed to rebel? By Dorothy Wade Drinking Girls Just Want to Have Fun Drugs E. Garlick & Son Sex You've Got Male Sharps Upwardly Mobile All her boyfriends asked her out by text Smoking Eating Passion for wine Waitrose Rising from the Ruins The Power Players God's Gift Charles Church Birds Eye Lands' End Laughedout of Court Amdega Conquest Water Features Hammonds' Tuscany Bridge Chess Teaser A load of marbles Bookwise Mephisto 2298 Noble Caledonia Limited Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Theday The Sunday Times Mazda Vauxhall Contents House of Fraser Inside Clinique Harrods Going Commando Lovingit The Intellectual's Guide to Fashion Posh and Dregs Going up Going down Moment Clarks Qbooty Records, films, clothes, accesories—Beyonce is one of a new breed of do-it-on divas who nurture their caree's like global bounds. Shane Watson catches up with the mega-bucks icon and discovers you can now smell like her too. Photographs by Mario Testino Scent of a Red-Blooded Woman Sony Ericsson It's 10pm at The Maritime Kate Moss did. Jessica Brinton says Har Mar Superstar signals the down of the age of the ugly sexy man Mister Potato Head M&S M&S On top of your Game? Yes, girls, it's time to make men feel good about themselves. Shane Watson introduces the Campers: Calculating Alpha Male Pleasers Beyond the Rules: How to Be Skinted Faking It Claudia Croft Wardrobe Mistress Fashion Style Brintons Meet the Whistle-Blower Sick of Savile Row rates and high-street horrors? Lucas Hollweg and David Mills discover the man who can craft you a bespoke suit for next to nothing Tkmaxx T-K-maxx Rubecksen Yamanaka Style gives you Scented Letters Hot Hair Bitch! Do It now Face to Blush Glam Rocks Diane von Furstenberg revolutonsied women's wardrobes with her wrap dress. Now she's going back to her disco roots with a mak-up line. She talks exclusively to Bethan Cole Vanessa Wilde's Secret Diary In which Vanessa sympathises with Kimberly Fortier—and wonders if she'll give her a job John Lewis One, Two, Three Between Friends Want the body of a triathlete but don't think you're fit enough? Triathlon's tough, but with the right triaining, even beginners can succeed, says Matt Roberts Alpro soya What's the Alternative? The Sunday Times Taste Sensations Food Style Truly Scrumptious Take 3 Ingredients Foodie Blue is the Colour Food Fact Eating for Life Continuing our series on how to eat your way to better health, Amanda Ursell recommends the super combo of tomato and broccoli Good Fat, Bad Fat Selenium Facts The Farm Joanna Simon Sauce Cellar Notes Wine Bluff The rules of the house? When everybody's home looks the same, how do you make yours stand out? Johnny Davis reports on the new eclecticism Habitat Together An airy London apartment doubles as a showroom for the founder of a British-based design collective and interiors company In the Stars Holly and Funky Small Talk Mrs Mills Solves All your Problems If you have ever smoked Surely bingers are found in Faliraki, not cocktail bars, says Shane Watson Style gives you Lacost The Sunday Times The new BMW 1 Series

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