Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 02/01/2005

2005; Gale Group;

Autores

Richard Clayton, John Dugdale, Hala Jaber, Ken Orton, Matthew Wall, Helena Frith Powell, Barbara Hall, David Mills, Jim Munro, Jon Swain, Helen Davies, Sally Brock, Pam Barrett, David Anderson, Amanda Ursell, William Lewis Business Editor, Lesley White, Christopher Wood, Susan d'Arcy, Dr Eiddon Davies, Peter Day, Gareth Walsh, Frank Whitford, Das Rheingold, Caroline Brannigan, David Gower, Gemma McCrory, D J Russ Kane, Brian Turner, Matt Wolf, James Makin, P D, Jonny Wilkinson, Professor Bill McGuire, David Smith, Jenny Grafton, David Cracknell Political Editor, Nick Pitt, Neil Wormald, Mary Poppins, E P, Clive Davis, Lynne Truss, Christina Cradick, Gideon Garter Professor, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Martin James, Robert Sandall, Norman Cook, Tom Walker, Jane Thynne, Anthony Sattin, Ben Ainslie, Irwin Stelzer, Peter Wilson, Richard Usmar, David Dougill, Michael Gordon, John Arlidge, Dan Caims, Jenni Muir, Caroline Murphy, Geraldine Hackett, Stephen Ritch, Dennis Hopper, Brian Park, Cally Law, Frank Dobson, Mark Edward, Paul Forsyth, Peter Tom, Hugh Canning, Andrew Stone, Jeremy Clarkson, Edward Porter, David Cairns, Stewart Lee, Victoria Segal, Michael Portillo, Patricia Nicol, Anthony Peregrine, Sarah Dempster, Dave Pollard, Christopher Price, David Groom, Alan Bracken, Richard Fletcher, Greg Struthers, Joan Smith, George Perry, Dan Drillsma-Milgrom, Thomas Graves, Christopher Silvester, Stuart Wavell, Paul Donovan, Roland Joffe, Jim Munro Football editor, Adam Nathan Defence Correspondent, Martin Kelly, Edward Gorman, Chris Woodhead, Rue Hughes, Emma Lee, Lisa Rogak, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, John Follain, Julie Earle-Levine, Shelley Von Strunckel, Stuart Andrews, Gilbert, Alex Clark, Bert Wright, Paul Durman, Kevin Brooks, Dominic Prince, Mark Edwards, Graham Bell, David Miller, Askold Krushelnycky, Anne Thomas, Blower, Tony Boddy, Michael York, Christina Lamb, Sean Newsom, Octavius Black, Raymond Keene, Rod Liddle, Michael Crichton, David Cracknell, Robbie Hudson, Zoe Brennan, Jayesh Ghaghda, Stanley Stewart, Cosmo Landesman, Lindsay Duguid, Benji Wilson, Alice Douglas, Emma Smith, Steven Osborne, James Swindon, Dominic O'Connell, Robbie Burns, Peter Koenig, Roland Hancock, Uzi Mahnaimi, Nick Cain, Michael Wright, Frankel, Adrienne Connors, Spindle, Caroline Donald, Nick Rennison, David Walsh, Vera Drake, Helen Brown, Colin McDowell, Bryan Appleyard, Stephen Armstrong, John Elliott, Mick Fitzgerald, Victoria O'brien, Richard Woods, Roland White, Shane Watson, Abul Taher, David Burnside, Maurice Chittenden, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, Richard Rae, Mark Franchetti, Ray Hutton, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Jonathan Leake, Michael Sheridan, Marian Salzman, Clare Francis, William Boyd, Tablib Choudhry, John Harlow, Dileep Premachandran, Brian Smyth, Marvin Pryce-Jones, Dipesh Gadher, Mark Kleinman, A A Gill, Matthew Campbell, Amp Fiddler, David Sanderson, Ariel Leave, Nick Fielding, Jools Holland, Philip Pangalos, Alexander Clarke, Will Iredale, Jessica Bown, Fiona McIntosh, Peter Grundy, Charlie Hodgson, George Russell, Stephen Pettitt, Justin Sparks, Sally Kinnes, Nigel Powell, Jim Cronin, Roger Dobson, Keith Townrow, Brian Doogan, Ben Dowell, Minette Marrin, Clifford Bishop, Mark Hodson, Thomas Lamb, Graham Norwood, Joe Lovejoy, Ian Ogden, Victor Bryant, David Budworth, William Lewis Business editor, Hugh Pearman, Andrew Davidson, Dan Cairns, Pete Oliver, Stewart Mitchell, Bjorn Lomborg, Matt Roberts, David Smith Economics Editor, Rachel De Thame, Peter Robinson, Sarah Baxter, Brian Schofield, Jenny Cole, Matthew Goodman, India Knight, Simon Wilde Cricket Correspondent, J Seillis, Dominic Rushe, Karen Robinson, Helen Stewart,

Resumo

Contents British death toll may run to hundreds UK police among worst in the world, says report Contents Mfi Price Cuarantee 'My town was just scoured from the map' The Sunday Times World on the move to avert an even bigger catastrophe The family saved by their towels Chanel Sale Alive: mother who ran towards death The Lucky Ones Blair stands by his uninterrupted holiday Prime Minister Tsunami Appeal Champion horse joins charity effort The Donors Air New Zealand British survivor works to rebuild the island she loves Aid Volunteer Geologist gave repeated alerts Expert Warning Focus Redgrave hit by Russian rent-a-mob Shoppers face torment of 'chip and pin' queues Times Online Flybe Harrods first to fall to data law Sony Y Care International How to Get Data Miliband in row over adoption of baby 'on the nod' Major goes in to bat with a cricket book Ministry labs paid £1 a cat for research Labour campaign to start without Brown Contents Agents hijack army website Air France Clever devils get the bird Blind pilot sets controls for a 12,000-mile flight Detained Briton 'had arms training' Nature's Timebomb It is the biggest natural disaster for decades. Yet scientists feared such a catastrophe was looming. So why were there no warnings? A special report into the Asian tsunami that claimed more than 120,000 lives Reporting Team The Burial Tanya Smart was in Sri Lanka The Sunday Times We know why and where they will strike us, but not when The Emergency Doctor Yael Mosezon, a diving in structor from London, was on Ko Phi Phi island The Honeymoon Couple Oliver Milburn, the actor, and his bride Katie Razzall, the television reporter, were in a cabana in Tangalle Halifax More Swedes may have died than in 9/11 attack The rescuers: tourists who turned into heroes The Helping Hands Shamed by individuals' generosity, governments are now mounting a huge aid effort. But political wrangles persist and supplies are struggling to get through. Sarah Baxter reports Action Hunger Remember, Asia's old stealthy killers claim more victims than any catastrophe Calls for costly tsunami warning systems are misguided when so many are dying of everyday diseases, says Bjorn Lomborg The Selfish Few Dominic Smethurst, from Derby, was in the Maldives Could an even bigger disaster strike in our lifetime? Professor Bill McGuire, catastrophe expert, says one is already in the making. Stuart Wavell reports Unicef Historic Killers PC World Musician for all seasons, mine host for all years Profile All right, you lot, here are the resolutions you need to keep Schroders Secrets from the vaults Tsunami Earthquake In disaster's shadow Who will form Labour's next opposition? Picture Gallery Nature in its infinite power asks an awkward question As the rest of the world digests the news with an Atticvs Boris stirs up something of an identity crisis for Howard Atticvs Lord, it's close as Auntie keeps the nobblers from Geldof and Singh Atticvs Chief Godwin stands guard over deputy chief Prescott Atticvs Peter Mandelson was spotted recently in central London Atticvs Good reasons and bad for our explosion of charity Were the kipper ties and stacked heels out in force … Atticvs Was there any hidden message in the fact that a picture Atticvs The US immigration service will no doubt be Atticvs Mortgages for Business Mitsubishi Motors Italian bars defy the anti-smoking mafia Janet Jackson out in front as focus of net excitement Russian double agent 'betrayed by journalist' Kiev old guard try a final coup Al-Qaeda seeks toxins for biowarfare attack Hamas in talks to end intifada Spectre of Greek terrorism returns Today's weather Wanadoo broadband Car thieves kill couple in crash News in Brief Victim on CCTV Wilson rejected identity card scheme Better school food Control to woman's brain device stolen Two tickets share £7.9m Lotto jackpot Tree crushes boy French EU vote Iraq pool tension rises as power-split falters The Times Mock case sets stage for the Saddam trial Outdated gongs add to tarnish of Labour's honours Bill Clinton's idea to twin impoverished and rich Ford Our hot pursuit of Paris Hilton It's greedy but I want the kids to inherit A week back we might have thought tsunami an Italian Contents Sony Chelsea snatch 1-0 win at Liverpool Cole's brace revives lowly Fulham Ljungberg fires Gunners Smith leads way to keep United in touch Yakubu profits as City pay the penalty Liverpool see red over ref Riley Diouf's late equaliser leaves Robson spitting mad Dynamic Dyer drives Newcastle to victory Silent rage of Benitez Barclays Premiership Coca-Cola Championship League One League Two Pools Nationwide Conference Scotland Other Football Fixtures Wright-Phillips gives Saints the runaround Five-star Spurs trounce Everton Last-gasp Solano puts Villa back on track The Sunday Times Safety First West Bromwich Albion Norwich City Nigel Worthington is convinced Premiership survival is possible, as he hopes Norwich City will demonstrate against Liverpool tomorrow. By Richard Rae Alfa GT Dreaming of Middle England Spurs' Michael Carrick is living up to his billing and will use Tuesday's game with Manchester United to stake an England claim The Sunday Times Scunthorpe strike for gold … about the romance the Cup—Scunthorpe be broke and it is all about money when they … Chelsea on Saturday Arrogant? Don't make me laugh, says Mourinho Chelsea's coach admits he is a confident character but believes he has been musunderstood because he wants to win and is not afraid to tell the world Chelsea v Scunthorpe: cash versus the cash-strapped Victor Chandler poker For some it's always a glory game Humble Exeter is far from his Sprs glory years but Steve Perryman wil be back on the big stage at Old Trafford on Saturday Boumsong could replace Shearer Football Shorts There's only two Vieiras Teacups safe at Barnet Bergkamp named in Word XI . . . by Bergkamp Chump of the week Football tales from … The Sunday Times Burley on trade mission As Derby prepare to face Reading, their manager is sekking young talent and free transfer signings to lift the club Leeds hit by wrecking Crewe County are stung by Thorne Wigan back to winning ways Coca-Cola League Ipswich pay for false start Bopp strikes right note Friio holds Wolves at bay Hull the main attraction as run continues Preston quick off the mark Mister Big What you see is what you get, he says, but there's more to Bolton's boss than meets the eye. By David Walsh Putting sport in its true context It seems incredible to believe that a football match should go ahead amid so much death and destruction, but perhaps it can help the healing process Sir Robin Knox-Johnston The top 10 British solo round-the-world sailors by Edward Gorman Sir Francis Chichester Sir Chay Blyth The Sunday Times Mike Golding Ellen MacArthur Sir Alec Rose Book of the week Ben Hogan, Authorised Biography By James Dodson, Aurum, £18.99 Richard Broadhead Pete Goss Josh Hall Samantha Brewster DVD of the week Jack Dempsey & George Foreman, Clear Vision, £14.99 60 seconds in sport With jump jockey and former Grand National winner Mick Fitzgerald Year to Remember Inspired by the emergence of Andrew Strauss and the brutal menace of Steve Harmison, England blossomed in 2004 Great escape crowns 2004 The recovery in Durban capped the year, but a non-stop schedule on tour will hamper this team's development Happy returns Duncan Fletcher's return to the scene of earlier triumphs may give South Africa cause to regret the one they let slip away The Sunday Times Coach Duncan Fletcher under the shadow of Table Mountain Pakistan left to pick over the pieces Having twice been brushed aside by Australia, Bob Woolmer's side can take nothing from a miserable tour England hold all the aces The weary South Africans will struggle to stop Michael … aughan's side from taking a 2-0 lead when the third est begins in Cape Town today, writes Simon Wilde De Villiers grabs chance behind the stumps The 20-year-old was playing club cricket in Northern Ireland last year. Now he is the answer to South Africa's wicketkeeping problem, writes Peter Robinson Nigel Botherway beams in from planet rugby Rugby Shorts Gilbert Diary date Border raiders Prawn damage Star-studded Staines Ospreys flying high Quote of the week Separated at birth The Sunday Times Saracens sweat it out Powell packs punch Blowers fires Saints Jonny's big test Balding plots double Gloucester success Leicester will be thirsting for revenge when they visit Kingsholm today, but their old boy has not read the script Stuart Barnes On Wilkinson. . . On today's battle. . . On selecting both men. . . The battle of the England No 10s Taylor moves up a gear to brush Painter aside Sports round-up Rugby Union Results Other Sport Today's racing Cheltenham Racecourse Fixtures Racing This Week The Times Fallen star lets in My Will Fundamentalist's huge reputation took another blow at Cheltenham as he proved a costly failure in the big novice chase The Sunday Times Caught in time Manchester United in international kit, October 1985 One for the … Sport Letters Questions answers Your sporting conundrums tackled Heroes' Ben Ainslie, Olympic gold medal-winning sailor, or … The Sunday Times Sport on TV Times Online Honours are less than even Multiple Display Advertising Items It's time to ditch captain Beckham Singh deserves credit Contents Revenue's Varney targets entrepreneurs' offshore accounts Next to unveil robust festive shopping sales Economy has 14th year of growth Cadbury Dairy Milk Contents Shire lines up new drug Contents Big profits but even bigger risks Special Report Life is getting tougher for the Masters of the Universe, writes Peter Koeing 20 pages of business & money The Sunday Times Astra moves to calm investors Borse and Euronext in auction for LSE Times Online The Sunday Times 'Hip' gym bought out by management Germany tops Europe's labour costs league E-mails expose broker defection Business Digest Split-cap court date set for October Citigroup was year's top M&A adviser Firms are urged to enjoy freedom of information Loss of Intel and Volkswagen advertising weakens Havas Residents put BAA in the dock over runway Courts chief's pension transfer to be probed My predictions for where the action will be Agenda Warning signs but no crash Economic Outlook America starts the new year in good shape American Account Counting the Cost The devastation around the indian Ocean is an unparalleled human tragedy. But What does it mean in economic terms? How British Business Joined the Public in Raising Millions The Sunday Times Expansion into New York takes a bite out of Pret a Manager profits Americans are causing problems for the fast-food chain at home and abroad, writes Matthew Goodman Unstoppable king of the quarries Peter Tom has led Aggregate Industries for 20 Years and the Leicester Tigers rugby club since 1993. Both are booming so, as he approaches 65, don't ask when will quit Peter Tom's Working Day Working Space The Times US airlines struggle to stay in the air America's oldest airlines are cutting jobs and costs to stay alive but it may be too late, says Dominic Rushe in New York The Week that was Indian Ocean nations devastated Business on the Box They'll Be Back . . . Judgment Day The Week Ahead Quote of the Week World share markets Databank Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates/Bonds Currencies Commodities The Sunday Times 2005 share portfolio Our staff and Judgment Day experts give their predictions for the stocks that will flourish in the coming year Last year we did three times better than the market The Sunday Times portfolio rose 22% against a 7.5% rise in the FTSE 100 index. Report by Paul Durman And the Judges Give their Predictions Garfunnel's Contents Shops count the cost of Christmas Were sales flat, or were they higher than last year? Even the retailers and experts are divided, reports Richard Fletcher How technology will change the way we do business Christopher Price looks at the gadgets, services and methods of working we will have to get to grips with this year Christmas Trading Updates Online retailers notch up record sales Firms face big rise in property rates Christopher Price assesses the changes in working practices and the business environment that will pose challenges to small companies in the year ahead Insolvency: the correct way to deal with failure How to Handle voluntary liquidation Todd Enterprises Where to Find More Advice Setting losses against tax on last year's profit The Business Doctor Projector will pep up your presentations Business Tools NEC LT 10 Portable Projector Price £1.695 Hairdresser offered a cut above the rest How I Made It Multiple Display Advertising Items Exercise plan that prevents art failure Idea of the Week Playing a global card game Soon we will all be using chip-and-Pin terminals such as those made by Dione, but the firm needs to secure long-term revenues to survive, By Andrew Stone What the Experts Say Dione's Challenges The Sunday Times Progress Report Firebox Shares set for healthy gains in 2005 Experts are …edicting another good … for the stock market. By David Budworth Capital One Experts look east for big profits Europe and Asia are tipped to race ahead of America and Britain this year, but pundits are divided on Japan. By David Budworth Contents . . . and the hottest stock tips Britain's top-performing share soared 400% last year. David Budworth finds out which firms the experts are backing for 2005 Top funds for this year's Isa . . . David Budworth asks some leading advisers where they would invest their own tax-free allowance in 2005 F&C Management Limited How to claim your split-cap compensation Victims of the splits crisis are being offered £194m, but it is unlikely to cover their losses. By Jessica Bown Abbey Labour strips child trust funds of tax breaks worth thousands Some families may miss out on up to £5,700 when the flagship scheme is launched in April. By Clare Francis 'i was Misled' House prices poised for first annual fall in a decade Property values could drop by up to 8% this year, raising fears that buy-to-let investors will quit the market, writes Clare Francis Winners and Losers for 2005 Cheaper mortgages ahead Lenders are gearing up to slash their rates, but should you opt for a cheap fix or a discount, asks Clare Francis Contents In a Fix London property is tipped to beat the rest of Britain Trader's fund soars twice as much as the Footsie My Diy Pension Savers have one month to claim pension perk You have until the end of January to boost your retirement fund. By David Budworth Paragon mortgages Nationwide hikes interest rates on its credit cards Best Savings Accounts Mortgage Deals Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares Factfile Multiple Display Advertising Items Too Rich for Twickenham Sunseeker Those City hare coursers are going to the dogs Prufrock Wine tycoon gets a taste for horses Buyer offers £18m for 'Pornbroker Palace' Booming China heads for collision with West Intransigence over fixed exchange rate will cause tension,'prophet of doom' Marc Faber tells Michael Sheridan Ocado still can't deliver profits Wake up, FSA Inside the City Market Mole Contents The Hungry Heart After Christmas and the New Year, thoughts turn to losing weight. Lisa Rogak, biographer of Robert Atkins, the diet king, reveals a cautionary tale that may make you think again Contents Dive into' 05 at Waterstone's Contents Bye bye, Tony? It's all in the numbers game The prime minister is counting on staying at No 10, but his fate after the election is far from clear, says David Smith The father I thought I'd never find When Philipp Molnar starting looking for his father a compelling story of cold war intrigue emerged, writes Justing Sparks Tod's Psycho-shoppers are go Kenya, 1950s: an uncanny foretaste of the Iraq war The savage course of the Mau Mau rising against British rule has many parallels with the terror war today, writes David Anderson Who's afraid of the nice wolf? Global warming? Now that really is fiction Facing a new year without my beloved Sally Losing his wife to cancer has made the DJ Russ Kane aware that he is now the centre of his twin boys's world Multiple Classified Advertising Items Little Albert and big God In Einstein's Year we should understand his religious quest—and that his final 'failed' theories may be true, says Bryan Appleyard Multiple Classified Advertising Items The IRA laughs all the way to and from the bank The £22m heist shows that terrorists should not be allowed a part in government, says David Burnside Out of the killing fields Bringing the Khmer Rouge to trial is the only way Cambodia can lay its bloody past to rest, writes Roland Joffe Married to a marked man Ukraine's new first lady talks to Askold Krushelnycky about poison, politics and a triumph over tyranny The Sunday Times crossword Prepare for the new battle of the sexes Men will be men again in 2005, and China will be on a roll, says trendspotter Marian Salzman Multiple Display Advertising Items March of the mutant blogger Primordial Swamp Old-School Linkblog Fingertip search for the right security Sounding off Single-Subject Blogs Personal Journal Personality plus Rise of the Predator Automated Newsfeeds The Sunday Times Correction In Online Beat Bobby (Doors, December 19 Don't panic Nigel Powell answers your home technology queries In fitness and health Sunday's online challenge: Jenni Muir goes in search of sites that clear your mind, cleanse your body and banish the festive hangover Film Buffs Clogging Internet Mixed Signals on Mobile Phones Girl Gamers Lead the Online Charge Gadget of the Month The Sunday Times Brilliant! Michael Wright relives our celluloid past at the brilliant Moving History archive Nappies and Prada can go together Leaving the glitzy world of magazines to be a stay-at-home mum was hard for Fiona McIntosh. Here she explains why she's gone back to work Multiple Display Advertising Items I want A-levels in fame, celebrity and being a star A whole generation is growing up wanting just one thing-to be famous. Should parents be worried, asks Jane Thynne Sing and you're winning The benefits for kids in learning to sing aren't trumpeted enough, says Karen Robinson, especially for those with low self-esteem The Sunday Times Gifted kids are paying a penalty Six chefs, four customers, two stars. . . no hats Winner's Dinners We're celebs, get us a Gurkha This Life Ann Summers? Well There's Posh. . . People of the Week David's Downfall … Reasonable … Honest Guv The Daily Telegraph: Susan Sontag Last word . . . The Daily Telegraph: Robert Hesketh Winner's Letters Talking Heads Nick Newman's Week Contents The Sunday Times Summer 100 One summer, one million holidays. So how do you choose? Simple: you let us be your guide. Mark Hodson cuts through the also-rans to find this year's top getaways. All you have to do now is narrow it down to one and pick up the phone Clubs Sunsail 15 Greek chic: Santorini for sweethearts Kuoni 23 Bloodthirsty Borneo: on holiday with head-hunters Fly Zoom Markwarner 58 Not so Placid: New England for adventurers Qantas 54 Horse around in South Africa Thomson The Sunday Times 79 Corking walk: the Alsace vineyards Rubbed up the right way Jenny Grafton's Tunisian massage was more hands-on than expected Confessions of a tourist Hidden turkey The Sunday Times 95 Hero's welcome: Nelson on Nevis Cyprus Cachet Travel Travel One Elixir We can't desert them now Indian Ocean Disaster — Special Report The tsunami's impact on tourism: the latest information Sea France Fortina What the travel industry is donating What to do if your holiday is imminent Anatolian Sky The Sunday Times The real star in California Stanley Stewart found sophistication, fine living and a new generation of wine-makers in the valleys of Santa Barbara Multiple Display Advertising Items Roma Travel brief Anyone else sick of spas? You can shove your mango wrap, says spa-hating Brian Schofield. Here are the sensible ways to treat your body Shift that cellulite Multiple Classified Advertising Items Touch your toes Lose a few pounds Gain inner peace Beautify your kids Detoxify Tone those legs Beat backache Get the skin glowing The greatest snow on earth? That's what they say about Utah's off-piste powder. Sean Newson has a blizzard of fun testing the claim Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief There'll always be an England . . . . . . in southwest France? Mais bien sûr. Anthony Peregrine takes afternoon tea in Pyrenean Pau Multiple Classified Advertising Items On the Cheap Where to sleep and eat Middle of the Road No Expense Spared Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items British Airways Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items My hols Michael York used to swashbuckle in Tuscany, now he unwinds in Cumbria Multiple Display Advertising Items Where was I? Win a luxury multi-centre week for two in Jordan, with Audley Travel The competition The Sunday Times Travel Quiz — our mistake Contents Inside this Week Jimmy Carr First drive Forget the coach Regulars Car Advertising Range Rover does a Disco dance Up to Speed Mercedes scores World Cup goal New Passat goes Golfing Cars on TV Easy riders prefer Jaguars Me and my Motors Dennis Hopper The good, the bad and the ugly of 2004 Stars to Come Porsche Health Spa in the Car Ingear The Stuff of Motoring Dreams Commemorate your Car in Cashmere The Knowledge Trackers All you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Virtual Driving Lessons Bentley Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The great breakdown day is nigh The RAC has Tuesday ringed on its calendar: the worst day of the year for call-outs, reports Emma Smith The Sunday Times The Strangest Distress Calls Jimmy Carr Call it a Ferrari for personal of taste Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Feel the width . . . Skiing: the perfect approach Getting to the slopes can be even better than going down them. Graham Bell, former Olympic skier, identifies the great Alpine winter drives Times Online Multiple Classified Advertising Items … Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Deal of the Week My First Crash Multiple Classified Advertising Items Regtransfers Ferrari Contents Contents Much? On Worth It? Barn Unit C, Wonson, Devon, £80,000 Poetic place in the sun Musician Tomas Graves, son of l, Claudius writer Robert Graves, grew up in Majorca surrounded by actresses and exotic pets Time and place Design Classics Slowdown in sales market boosts rents Most experts are predicting a year of falling property prices, but there is a silver lining for landlords, say Graham Norwood and Caroline Branningan Multiple Display Advertising Items The stars say it's a good time to sell up Cally Law finds out why astrologer Shelley von Strunckel, predicting 'glimmers of optimism' for the market in 2005, thinks it's time to move on from her £1.25m London flat Heritage site on the tourist trail. . . . . . £750,000 Houses of the week Commuter country . . . . . . . . . . £460,000 Share of historic manor . . . . . £525,000 South Bank show. . . . . £4.25m Highland retreat. . . . . £225,000 Michael Shanly Homes Discovery Dock Multiple Display Advertising Items It's all change at Paddington Sales for off-plan developments may be slowing, but Cally Law finds one project is transforming a lost 80-acre corner of London Multiple Display Advertising Items Running with the pack French Mistress The French are welcoming an influx of hunting enthusiasts from England with open arms Multiple Classified Advertising Items Dubai's desert dream The Gulf state's rulers are spending £2 billion on a lavish sports and residential complex, including 8,000 homes, in a bid to host the 2020 Olympics while attracting international homebuyers. John Arlidge investigates the plans for the sands Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Bentley At last, we're making progress Spiritual conversion The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items It's time to down tools and tidy up If your garden is looking rough round the edges and you can't find a thing in the shed, start 2005 with a therapeutic clear-up. Rachel De Thame is on hand with a practical check list Garden Cuttings What to Do this Week Clever kitchens off the shelf Still clearing up from New Year's Eve? The latest storage ideas mean your pots and pans can have a proper place of their own, says Victoria O'brien In Store Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Ask the experts Now detox your drawers Donate your suits to charity and recycle your wellies, suggests Cally Law Times Online The Market Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Westbury The Sunday Times Fresh! The Sunday Times Sport New Year Superstar Going up News Fresh! Changing Gear New Wave Scooby-Doo! in the Boston Pulse Snatcher Weather Picture Bike Hike The 2005 Funday Times Swapits Auction The Buzz Contents World Play The Giblet Boys Get down on It Pop! . . . Pop File Creating the Comedy Book Mark YU-GI-Oh! For You Win It! Squirt Creature feature Jarvis Dennis and Gnasher Quick Fire Emma Lee See Scooby Live Four by Four Puzzle Zone Work out the next letter in each of these three sequences? A bit of lateral thinking is required–but the hints should help! Pasta Master? Who Am I? Close up Word List Beryl the Peril F-Mail Puzzle Zone Answers King of Europe Jarvis The Simpsons Contents Comet Contents Film Theatre Pop Look ahead 2005 From Caravaggio to Coldplay and Jephtha to Johnny Vegas. we pick the year's don't-miss cultural highlights Classical Television Dance Look ahead 2005 Comedy Architecture Radio She won't take it lying down It's got Monet, it's got water, and it throws in Turner and Whistler-Tate Britain's new show is sure to make a splash, says Waldemar Januszczak Buddies, are you worth the time? Television Ludvig in the air Radio waves Eight years ago this March A league of his Owen He's stolen the screen from the Hollywood heavies in the film adaptation of Closer and is now tipped for an Oscar. Has Clive Owen finally hit the big time, asks Matt Wolf The Sunday Times Nashville The week's films 15.161 mins Dead of Night PG 104 mins Koktebel 12A, 107 mins 12A, 107 mins The Inheritance 15.115 mins Short Cuts Without a Paddle 12A, 99 mins Classical On record The week's essential new releases London Symphony Orchestra Thomas Quasthoff Classical CD of the week Brahms Richard Rodney Bennett Pop and Jazz Will Johnson The Durutti Column Ludacris New kids in town Various Artists John Butcher, Toshimaru Nakamura Claire Martin John Legend Pop CD of the week Various Artists You go your way and he'll go his Restless souls both, Ray LaMontagne and Conor Oberst are among the most talented singer-songwriters at work in America today, but can they both be the 'new Bob Dylan', asks Dan Cairns Savoy Theatre The Sunday Times The top arts events of the coming months Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Dance Concerts Pop Comedy Film House of Flying Daggers This week, don't miss Theatre Mary Poppins Art Faces in the Crowd Comedy James Campbell: Comedy for Kids Opera Das Rheingold Dance St Petersburg Ballet Theatre Concerts Pop Watching the detective Vincent D'Onofrio's steely cop makes Law & Order: Criminal intent compelling viewing, says Stephen Armstrong No domestic goddesses, please America's sharpest new comedy is about suburban housewives, and it's made by a conservative network, says Benji Wilson The return of the king Trigger Happy TV's Dom Joly is back doing what he does best, but this time he has taken his peculiar brand of anarchic British comedy around the world for BBC1, says Robert Sandall Royal Shakespeare Company Royal Shakespeare Company The show that came in from the cold Sadler's Wells as a skating rink? Yes — but the biggest surprise about Sleeping Beauty on Ice is that it's serious choreography. By Clifford Bishop English National Ballet Royal Opera House PC, £34.99, ages 12+ The Times Literary Supplement Sunday Times Reader Award The Almodovar Collection DVDs and videos Open Water Stage Beauty Hollywood agenda The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinema The Official Guide of the Society of London Theatre Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The lost boys The Living Unknown Soldier A True Story of Grief and the Great War by Jean-Yves Le Naour Heinemann £15.99 pp233 Read on . . . Rather slim pickings French Women Don't Get Fat: The Secret of Eating for Pleasure by Mireille Guiliano Chatto £12 pp280 Read on . . . New Year Quiz How Blunkett was betrayed by the politics of love Biography David Blunket by Stephen Pollard Hodder £20 pp359 Arts Guild What Sally Beauman has on her bedside table In the news Books behind the headlines: The Aviator The coldest place on earth Travel Through Siberia by Accident by Dervia Murphy J Murray £18.99 pp302 Read on. . . Comic turns Wrong about Japan a Father's Journey with His Son by Peter Carey Faber £12.99 pp158 Happy days Memoir The Memory of All that by Betsy Blair Elliott and Thompson £14.99 pp319 Outspoken words Never Apologise: The Collected Writings of Lindsay Anderson edited by Paul Ryan Plexus £19.99 pp612 Baffled by science State of Fear by Michael Crichton HarperCollins £17.99 pp603 Meet the family Feed my Dear Dogs by Emma Richler Fourth Estate £17.99 pp502 A man of mystery Turkish Gambit by Boris Akunin trans Andrew Bromfield Weidenfeld £12.99 pp230 Candy Children's book of the week WHSmith The Time Traveler's Wife Paperbacks Over the Edge of the World London Calling The Heat of the Kitchen Michael Palin's Travel Compendium John Fowles Hancock's Half Hour The Way to Paradise What's happening in the literary world Book events You really must read. . . The Sunday Times Pile 'em High The Sunday Times concise crossword No 877 Hardbacks Paperbacks Contents The best of British? Watch it: the best of the week ahead The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (Friday, FilmFour, 6pm) Potter goes pop Stepford it ain't Gear grinders One good shot . . . Do we really care? Pick of the week Picks of the day Radio Sunday2January Pick of the Day A taxing time Most comforting Who will do it? Compulsive viewing Ever fallen in love? Pick of the day All Greek to him Developing comedy The best of British? Potter goes pop Films Film Choice BBC1 Sunday 2 January ITV1 Anglia Sky One Sunday 2 January Variations Radio Monday 3 January Pick of the Day Pick of the week Here, kitty, kitty 1 Here, kitty, kitty 2 This turbulent priest Soap moment Pick of the day Funny peculiar The Unseen Eric Morecambe (C4,9pm) Missing link Without a Trace (C4,10.35pm) The spy at night Alias (Five, 12.20am) Stepford it ain't Sex And The Suburbs — The Desperate Housewives Phenomenon (E4,1. 35am) Films Film choice Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Bog-standard murder? Tales Of The Living Dead: Bog Mummy (National Geographic, 6.30pm) Signs of the times Divine Designs: Spitalfields (Five, 7.15pm) Doing the business Dragon's Den (BBC2, 8pm) Heavyweight names? Celebrity Fit Club (ITV1, 8pm) Pick of the day Shameless (C4,10pm) Teachers' pets Child Of Our Time: Identity Crisis (BBC1, 9pm) Got the munchies? Drugland: London (BBC2, 9pm) You are not alone Wacke About Jacko (C4,9pm) Films Film choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Hot property 20 Best Places To Buy in The Sun (C4,8pm) Natural charmer Snake Hunter — Search For The Giant Anaconda (Five, 8pm) Holiday horrors So You Think You're Safe (Sky One, 8pm) Old territory Distant Shores (ITV1, 9pm) Pick of the day Desperate Housewives (C4,10pm) Crackdown Drugland: Manchester (BBC2, 9pm) Love on the coal Wife Swap (C4,9pm) Gear grinders In Search Of Speed: The Battle For Bonneville (BBC4, 9pm) Read all about it Dead Man Weds (ITV1, 10pm) One good shot. . . Paparazzi (BBC1, 10.35pm) Films Film choice Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Meals on wheels The Hairy Bikers' Cookbook (BBC2, 8pm) Hit and miss Taggart (ITV1, 9pm) A taste of paradise? Drugland: lbiza (BBC2, 9pm) Do we really care? Celebrity Big Brother (C4,9pm) Bullseye Darts Players' Wives (Sky One, 9pm) Pick of the day ER (E4,9pm) Task force Who Rules The Roost? (BBC3, 9pm) Running on air Jump Britain (C4,10pm) X-rated? The Sex inspectors (C4,11.40pm) Films Film choice Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Ed Reardon's week (R4,11.30am) Snoop of the day The Curious House Guest (BBC2, 7.30pm) Atlantic crossing Holiday House Guest (Five, 8pm) The Goodie life Bill Oddie's How To Watch Wildlife (BBC2, 8.30pm) Homer and away The Simpsons (C4,9pm) Pick of the day According To Bex (BBC1, 9pm) Gift of the cab The Keith Barret Show (BBC2, 10pm) Best pranks World Shut Your Mouth (BBC1, 10.35pm) False prophet Derren Brown — Messiah (C4,10.35pm) Films Film choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Never had it so good? 30 Minutes: Are Muslims Hated? (C4,6pm) Best architecture Abroad Again In Britain (BBC2, 7.10pm) The clock is ticking The End Of The World As We Know It (C4,7.30pm) Most spooky Sea Of Souls (BBC1, 9pm) Pick of the day Jerry Springer—The Opera (BBC2, 10pm) No moving parts? Ultimate Force (ITV1, 9pm) BBC1 Films Film choice Critics choice BBC1 ITV1 Anglia Sky One Million Dollar Baby Contents BMW "Something you use this much deserves to be extraordina Contents Secret Britain: What you won't find in the guidebooks Murray's Cabaret Club, 16-18 Beak St. London: Soho's celebrity sex den Lost in Translation Stats Entertainment Immaculate conception That's Snow Biz Flashback Bystander On the edge of history Listomania Endpiece The Price of Everything Intel inside Magnet Gerald and Lisa Ratner China National Tourism Administration Amdega Sony Harry Gregg There was No Screaming, No Crying, Just Darkness, and It Felt like the Top of my Head Had Been Sliced off Dfs In the Name of Desire Water Features Conquest Smallbone Waitrose Avedon's Final Take Office Politics Neville Johnson Harrods Hammonds The Sunday Times Wharfside Bridge Chess Teaser Bookwise Mephisto Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items A Life in the Day Norman Cook Thomas Raymond Weil Geneve Contents Breil Liposuction The Intellectual's Guide to Fashion The Peter Pan PM Going up Going down Homespun Fashion Moment Clinique New Year New Year New Men 2005 Year of Inspiration Loreal Evian Affinitys What's next Burn the poncho, cancei Dubai—it's time to move on. Helen Brown and Talib choudhry spot the year's trends Stellar Exercise your mind The start of the new year is the perfect time to get to work not only on your physical state, buy your mental shape, too. Octavius Black tells you how to sharpen your wits Brain Games Champneys What's the Meaning of Beauty? Bethan Cole the Sybarite Beauty Still Home Body Hair Bitch! Do It now Paint Box Shine Bright Vanessa Wilde's Secret Diary In which Vanessa compiles a list of new-year resolutions and puts Rafi at the top Remingto Heard about the G Det Benefits of a Gi Diet Style The Ultimate Fat-Loss Plan Desperate to shed your Christman blubber? Style's fitness expert, Matt Roberts, has designed an intensive five-week fat-burning programme—start now and we guarantee your body back This Week, You Also Need to. . . Picture Gallery Win a day of sheer indulgence from Umberto Giannini Umberto giannini New Larder Essentials Foodstyle Going up Going down Ay Caramba Foodie Forecasts for 2005 3-day Detox Feeling broken and bloated by the holidays? Then Kick solids for three days and watch your body get its mojo back. By Amanda Ursell Potential Side Effects The Gallery at Sketch Joanna Simon Sauce Cellar Notes Wine Bluff Interiors Caroline Murphy meets a designer who's living the Boy's Own dream: building fires, catching fish and crafting a wooden shelter-all in deepest, darkest Surrey Remember when people used to hide their TV in a In the Stars Fal and Muffy-Moo-Saurus Small Talk Bring on the Marrieds Ball-breaking, professional wives are now top of the agenda, says Shane Watson Mrs Mills Solves All your Problems Style Seiko

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