Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 17/07/2005

2005; Gale Group;

Autores

Jonathan Northcroft, Laurence Leamer, Waldemar Januszczak, Neil Price, Hala Jaber, John Dugdale, William Kay, Barbara Hall, Margery Elliott, Sue Kenny, Hari Kunzru, N J, David Mills, Jim Munro, Jon Swain, Helen Davies, Peter Whittle, Mark Spitz, Sally Brock, Rob Hughes, John Peter, Cris Freddi, Professor Gideon Garter, Anthony Ricketts, Derek Hodgson, Anna Cullen, Jim Munro football editor, Les Worrall, Andrew Longmore, Adam Zamoyski, B S, Merryn, Gareth Walsh, Frank Whitford, Marcus Brigstocke, M Best, David Clegg, Sally Hughes Managing/Artistic Director, David Gower, William Lewis, Lucy Hughes-Hallett, David Smith, David Cracknell Political Editor, Nick Pitt, Xinran, Mark Gibbard, Neil Wormald, E P, Alison Kervin, Andrew Sullivan, Nicholas Alexander, Douglas, Karl Newick, Clive Davis, Margaret Jowers, Ph B, Lauren Thompson, Dominic Bradbury, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, D C, Robert Sandall, Martin James, Anthony Sattin, Phil Smith, Mike Russell, E S B, Irwin Stelzer, Robert Hewison, Peter Wilson, Rosie Millard, David Dougill, Sarah-Kate Templeton Medical Correspondent, Laura St Quinton, Mathew Court, Peter Jones, Rob Maul, David Hewson, Sian Griffiths reports, Jonathon Carr-Brown, Paul Forsyth, Hugh Mcllvanney, Hugh Canning, Louis de Bernières, Jeremy Clarkson, David Cairns, Edward Porter, Stewart Lee, Victoria Segal, Michael Portillo, Patricia Nicol, Lindsay Baker, Sarah Dempster, Dave Pollard, Bob Delamare, Cathy Struthers, Richard Fletcher, D Burles, Greg Struthers, Jeremy Duncan, Jada Pinkett Smith, George Perry, Tim Cumming, Lydia Slater, Karl Rove, Joanna BRISCOE's, Reda Hassaine, Brendan Bourne, David Walsh Chief Sports Writer, Christopher Silvester, Roger Eglin, Louise Arnold, Steve Waugh, Kay Mitchell, Paul Kimmage, Giles Hattersley, Hugh McIlvanney, Chris Woodhead, Vincent Crump, Steve Boyd, Simon Mills, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, M Y, Garth Pearce, Richard Brooks, Ian Hawkey, Laurie Graham, Shelley Von Strunckel, David Leppard, Paul Durman, Roger Fulton, Jonathon Carr-Brown Health Correspondent, Mark Edwards, Katrina Burroughs, Janet Daley, Rachel Bridge, Heston Blumenthal, Roger Brigham, Glenda Cooper, Martin Deeson, Susan Clark, Sheila Hayman's, Andrew Cowan, Christina Lamb, Paul Morgan, Judea Pearl, Tim Mickleburgh, Raymond Keene, J S, Kate Saunders, Rod Liddle, Douglas Alexander, Robbie Hudson, Irshad Manji, Zoe Brennan, Cosmo Landesman, Diana Wright, Nik Cohn, Alice Douglas, Emma Smith, Stephen Jones, Dominic O'Connell, Robert Douglas, Barry Flatman, Uzi Mahnaimi, Louise Armitstead, S G, Lydia Halls, Adrienne Connors, Natalie Graham, Nick Knowles, Lois Rogers Social Affairs Editor, Bevis Hillier, Caroline Donald, Jeremy Lewis, Dr Rosemary Alexander Paint planning engineer, Ian Critchley, Jessica Brinton, Caroline Gascoigne, David Lodge, Helen Brown, Emily Blunden, Trevor Lewis, Tiffanie Darke, Bryan Appleyard, Sarah Keenlyside, Stephen Armstrong, John Elliott, Terry Heathcote, Howard Jacobson, Bethan Cole, Victoria O'brien, Jonathan Leake Environment Editor, Roland White, Shane Watson, Maurice Chittenden, Ronald White, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, Richard Rae, Mark Franchetti, Claudia Croft, Anton Mosimann founder of Mosimann's, Jonathan Leake, Frank McLynn, Michael Sheridan, Dan Box, Amanda Craig, Clare Francis, Michael Smith, John Harlow, Lesley Thomas, Chris Haslam, Dipesh Gadher, Tom Baird, Mark Kleinman, Gareth Jenkins, Williams Lewis, Jeremy Hart, Alex Pell, Matthew Campbell, Brian Glanville, John Carey, Stephen Pettitt, David Bolchover, David Sanderson, Mary Braid, Nick Fielding, Simon Jenkins, Nico Ladenis, Jonathan Carr-Brown, Will Iredale, Jonathan Calvert, Deirdre Fernand, Karen MacGregor, Ann Garrod, Jennifer Rees, Jessica Bown, Justin Sparks, Sally Kinnes, John Baldwin, Daniel Emery, Nigel Powell, T L, Peter Almond, Brian Doogan, Jeremy Lazell, Clifford Bishop, Mark Hodson, Andrew Frankel, Graham Norwood, Michael Holroyd, Jonathan Futrell, Jane Orchiston, William Lewis Business editor, David Budworth, Andrew Davidson, Hugh Pearman, Dan Cairns, Ed Habershon, Clive Arrowsmith, Stewart Mitchell, David Smith Economics Editor, Rachel De Thame, Cary Cooper, Joseph Dodds, Janie Omorogbe, Brian Schofield, Hemscott, Chris Feetenby, Matthew Goodman, India Knight, Kingston Smith, Simon Howard, Jason Dawe, Dominic Rushe, Richard Lewis, Karen Robinson, Helen Stewart,

Resumo

Contents Mi5 judged bomber 'no threat' Nine bombs were found in car Blair damns 'evil ideology' Contents Official alert on deadly baby units The Sunday Times Contents Vodafone It's one small step for a bug, a giant red face for Nasa Turkey resort blast kills Briton No escape as terrorists strike London-based radical salutes bombs 'victory' Preaching Hate Campanile Police Snipers Track Al-Qaeda Suspects Iraq road blast kills three British soldiers Convoy Ambush Sunday Times Sale Increases 58 die in suicide attack No 10 to undergo security revamp Secret Plan Death and destruction on the bus to Ladies Beach Resort Blast Northern rock Kurds target Turkey's tourists New Campaign Brown seeks comic prop Watchdog to investigate surge in deaths caused by speeding police P&O Ferries It's the Way Gordon Tells Them Women's lib owes it all to the pill Legal rights fail the freedom test Councils must sell land for homes Flipping clever—divers to send photos underwater Tiscali Nurses fight weight test for children Picky stores force farmers to dump veg Skoda Talks start with US on Trident's £15bn successor Harry Potter and full-blooded mania First-day sales may net JK £25m Blue boar heralds Camilla's royal life After a Night of Frantic Reading the Muggles Give their Verdict Contents Alcohol fuels rise in violent crime Oh for a timely speel of reality Rowling's publicity machine needs to be brought back to earth, writes Roland White Fonteyn 'lost baby fathered by Nureyev' Volkswagen Doctors' surgeries to offer jobs help Virgin Safety fears over 'nano' anti-ageing cosmetics US fashion king pays £15m for Hesketh estate Science Museum's 'showy' chief quits Multiple Display Advertising Items Pandora's box of paternity for Melly The Web of Terror They struck out of the blue. But at least one of the London bombers was known to M15. David Leppard and Jonathan Calvert investigate Foiled UK Plots — from Sarin Gas to Hijackings Nationwide Double Jeopardy: The Woman who Beat the Tube Bomb Then Boarded the Doomed Bus and Survived Maurice Chittenden reports on an incredible escape and tributes to victims The Unidentified Victims PC Guide The Pakistan Connection Christina Lamb reports from a thriving training ground for British militants Middle-class bombers find DIY 'martyr belt' online They aren't poor and can learn their deadly trade on the web, says Hala Jaber From riots to model pupils: young British Muslims face an identity crisis More integration or less? Bryan Appleyard on the culture clash Rise in Anti-Muslim Attacks Nationwide No excuses for evil The work-life imbalance The Sunday Times Breaking the grip of death cults on our young Railtrack shares trial exposes ministers with a licence to steal Picture Gallery No 10 gags our former man in Baghdad over war policy Atticus Is it really the right time for a former Lords whip … Atticus Pity poor Denis—attacked for saying the right thing too soon Atticus Punters bet Blair is here to stay but Davis's hair isn't Atticus From the madcap funsters at the Adam Smith Institule Atticus Multiculturalism has failed but tolerance can save us You can remove the man from the Home Office, but you Atticus Let's have no more talk about MPs cowering in their Atticus Hurrah! At least one member of the Conservative party Atticus Barclays Article Withdrawn Ford Betting on Betjeman The power in the land Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street Bush's brain gives the White House a bad headache Let's have Marxist Love Island Wanadoo Mazda It's hard to swallow but vitamins can be dangerous Dietary supplements are seen by millions who take them as a sort of health insurance but as the EU cracks down on their use some experts are warning the curbs are not enough, writes Lesley Thomas What's Good and Bad for You Darling, you know nothing about me Multiple Display Advertising Items Abortion lobby in campaign to expose pro-life doctors India's yuppies flock to gurus for stress relief Saab 93 British boy, 12, may be named as UN envoy Sharon stands firm as Israel marches to fight Gaza pull-out Chirac aides turn on 'meddling' daughter Sex plays a mean hand as women invade poker Carey 'spurns' sister caught in police prostitution sting Monaco starts looking for more Albert children Today's weather Toyota Teenager charged with murder News in Brief Stabbing death 11 American soldiers accused in Iraq Nelson reminder Man shot dead in Epping forest One ticket wins £8.5m rollover Lotto jackpot Hurricane alert Lawyers strike Red avenger plots to sink Schröder The Times Zulu king leads revolt over plan to ban virginity tests for girls 'Bumbling Boris' defence no use to unlovable Byers A woman of 70 has just married a "toyboy" of 31 and … Vauxhall Rock on—with a nice cuppa 'British' seems an ugly word to the BBC Michael Bloomberg, mayor of New York Contents Wright-Phillips to go for £22m Contents Mitsudishi Motors Woods hangs on as classic finale looms The master of all trades Third-round scores at The Open Goosen puts game face on The South African thought he was too far back to challenge Tiger Woods. Now he has different ideas, writes Paul Forsyth Brave Monty still in touch Volkswagen Road to hell: the most fearsome hole in championship golf tames the world's best once again Rejuvenated Olly is back with a smile Norwich Union Luke and learn Keep your heads down No fiver favours The Open confidential Still waters run deep Fantastic fanatic Sheldon remembered Home hero keeps dream alive The magnificent eight: who has the form and temperament to keep his game together on the back nine today? Singh finds peace as the pressure mounts Multiple Display Advertising Items Old Lady is still full of surprises 'Everything look and fells the same, so why am I not leading? Faldo It's The Open and I am level with Greg Norman again. One problem, though: why have they got me teeing off at 11am? Fitleist Chrysler Ferguson raring to go Benitex shows ruthless side The Liverpool manager has displayed little sympathy for some of his European Cup winners as he continues the club's renaissance Contents Vieira pays his debt in full Flamini lacks weight to fill the void Window shopping: the transfer market's movers and rumours Cobra Spurs earn Peace draw Round-up The Sunday Times Strachan relishing task Celtic's manager was overwhelmed by the strength of support his team received in London for the scoreless draw against Fulham, reports Douglas Alexander Cisse strikes at the double Pardew Keeps on Spending United move tempts Ballack Bayern's midfielder may be ready to join the Old Trafford club, 5-1 winners at Clyde yesterday The Heat is on At Lord's on Thursday the phoney war ends and the Ashes begin. Do England have what it takes to beal the best asks Simon Wilde Analysing the Ashes: Four experts give their views on the summer's hottest battle Two-and-a-half years of drama: how England have closed on Australia since the last Ashes series Australia still hold a winning Ashes hand Jones keeps foot on pedal The Times Class gap closing but Aussies have edge Australia still hold a winning Ashes hand England have improved enormously and will at last give Australia a real contest, out the first battle they have to won is all in the mind Full of Fight The Big Interview: Justin Langer He was derided as the 'bus driver' in Australia's team of stars, but now he's punching his weight Opening shots: the life and times of Justin Langer The Top Team for the Ashes The Sunday Times Lords of our manor England could not have chosen a worse venue to begin their Ashes battle—they haven't beaten Australia at Lord's since 1934 Gatting's blast from the past The former England captain won the Shes and has a warning for his old foe Allan Border—Vaughan's men have the ammunition this time Numbers Game Steve Harmison, Andrew Strauss and Ashley Giles face key battles at Lord's that could decide the first Ashes Test Pietersen to find out fast if attack is best form of defence The Hampshire batsman makes an eagerly awaited Test debut this week against the world's best. Will his aggression prove his undoing? The Sunday Times IPA Langer gets off to flying start The opener led Australia's run charge at Grace Road yesterday as the tourists moved ominously into form ahead of this week's first Test, writes Simon Wilde Dawson inspires Yorkshire charge Great knocks from lan Harvey and Michael Lumb, and some inspirational captaincy, have sealed a semi-tinal place in the C&G Trophy, writes Derek Hodgson 'Pioneer' Gatlin and Powell head new breed of sprinters The Olympic 100m champion believes that he and his greatest rival have a responsibility to revive the tarnished image of athletics The Sunday Times Riding high They looked down and out in March, but Tony Rea's Broncos face Warrington today looking potential league title contenders Armstrong rides out storm The field tried to see off the six-time champion in the mountains but his spirit took him closer to a seventh Tour de France Multiple Display Advertising Items The week ahead Khan is two-minute wonder Curtis turns up the power Seat Football Results round-up Rugby Union Rugby League Other Sport Pools Today's racecards Glorious Goodwood Muralitharan steals the show with six-wicket haul Sports round-up Rugby league Tennis Motorsport Fixtures Superbikes Hockey Athletics Racing This Week Racing into history The run-up to Saturday's King George at Newbury evokes memories of the greatest race of them all, at Ascot 30 years ago The Sunday Times Lady Livius sprints to 100-1 upset Scot aims at big time British tennis hope Andy Murray can test himself against the best in the world, says Barry Flatman The Times Caught in time Sport Letters Questions & answers Your sporting conundrums tackled Heroes' Duncan Goodhew, Olympic breaststroke swimming charnpion, on Mark Spitz The Sunday Times Sport on TV Don't miss this Times Online Legends only need apply here Hugh McIlvanney The voice of sport The Sunday Times Reality calms the Old Firm frenzy Monty wins the hearts Contents Rose's right-hand man in secret move to bale out of M&s C&w and Energis begin merger talks Chelsea chief in Sibir court battle Investec Contents ITV audience 'is old and poor' Contents Hedge fund boss is UK's best paid businesswoman Tate has a sweet taste of Splenda Special Report The sugar maker's low-carb sweetener is the flavour of the moment. reports Dominic Rushe in New York Contents The Sunday Times IoD calls for retirement at 70 AMD case 'could cost Intel billions' Science Museum cashes in Times Online Gamesys aims for jackpot joy Spirit pub sale near to collapse Business Digest Online markets service launched Keep Rover Running P&o warms up Cold Logistics for auction US radio group tunes in to Heart FM's owner Sherwood embroiled in bitter legal row with GE Baugur in race to pot Whittard Multiple Display Advertising Items Slow growth raises hopes for a rate cut Contents M&S board must show Wilson the door Agenda Slowdown turning the screw Economic Outlook Right connection Capital cool A matter of trust Global ambition The proof's in the pudding—flexibility reigns American Account White noise Once upon a Train. . . Former shareholders have forced Stephen Byers to admit in court that he lied over the Railtrack affair. Win or lose, the thousands of peivate investors fighting for compensation have changed the relationship between government and business. Dominic O'Connell reports A Little Matter of Funding Multiple Display Advertising Items Orange Abramovich attacked by Russian rival on oil deal Legal action could bring the Chelsea owner's business secrets out into the open. Report by Louise Armitstead and Dan Box Ebbers sentence a warning for corporate crime The ex-WorldCom boss's 25 years is a strong message to white-colla crooks Multiple Classified Advertising Items Turn your team into champions In the final article in our series on lessons business can learn from sport, Sir Bobby Robson explains the techniques that have made him one of the most successful of English football managers. By David Bolchover Doing the Business Management masterclasses from the world of sport Robson's Secrets of Success Robson at a Glance The Sunday Times Nokia 6822 'Pimpernel' takes a £9m stake in Umbro Mike Ashely, the quiet man of retail, has finally stepped out of the shadows in a big sportswear deal Three groups in the running for rebirth of Rover China's SAIC is seen as being in pole position as the carmaker's future is decided, writes Dominic O'Connell Broughton faces a turbulent fide at BA The British Airways chairman says it should compete on service, not price. Will shareholders at his first annual meeting agree? American Airlines says it won't be beaten by low-cost rivals Gerard Arpey has steered AA from bankcruptcy and now reveals his plans for growth Martin Broughton's Working Day Vital Statistics The Sunday Times Working Space Television gives industries the opportunity to look sexy Reality shows are transforming the image of entrepreneurs on the box. Other sectors should take note, says Rachel Bridge Will my property sale incur CGT? Salford Wage deduction is tricky problem The Business Doctor Chef's lifelong passion to see happy eaters How I Made It Fighting to patch up software security holes Tec Spec Technology for Business Todd Enterprises Dog coat idea has a clear pedigree World share markets Databank Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates/Bonds Currencies Commodities Miller's tale of iconic British brand names Judgement Day: Should You Buy Shares in RHM? Ebbers is sent to jail for 25 years The Week that was Business on the Box The Week Ahead Quote of the Week Good vibrations at WH Smith Prufrock BT Mellon puts the boot into a rival Being slighdy too young to remember the antics of Lord A Week after serving as a comfort station following … So Amvescap, the embattled fund-management giant, has Get ready for a pub brawl over Urbium Floors 2 Go Inside the City Sunday Times Market Mole Citywire reveals secret City deals Contents Undercover Agent Contents BT The lipstick lesbian daring to confront radical imams Irshad Manji has already been dubbed 'Osama's worst nightmare' for her criticisms of lslam. Now she wants Britain's Muslims to stand more firmly on the side of freedom Islam is a Weapon that Can Be Turned against the Suicide Bombers Don't laugh, I'm taking the fight to Blair Political satire today is a vitally serious business, John Bird tells Jasper Gerard Absolutely fabulously cheap Forget Prada, fashionistas have discovered Primark, a cut-price chain leading a new consumer trend - the rise of cheapskate Britain, writes Deirdre Fernand Bmibaby Mind the gap-year waste Legalised brutality—the new face of America My burning hate for patio heaters Come on you lot, get up and walk tall Interview Starbucks Coffee King Paddy reigns supreme Paddy Ashdown has made enemies as the West's forceful 'ruler' of Bosnia but he tells Jon Swain he has gradually grown to love this turbulent land The Sunday Times crossword Sex 'n' swagger: the posh teenage kicks Giles Hattersley joins in as a gang of raunchy, ultra-confident rich kids descends on London Multiple Display Advertising Items Harry Potter and the art of lifting ideas JK Rowling has been accused of borrowing from literature—but so has Shakespeare. It is how she develops the magic for children that is so original, writes Amanda Craig Vauxhall Multiple Classified Advertising Items It's getting tough for the Terminator Arnold Schwarzenegger has been a daring reformer as governor of California but now the people are turning, writes his biographer Laurence Leamer Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Beware camping it up American-style summer camps for kids are taking off over here, but some parents are wary of non-stop activities, says Zoe Brennan Don't generate fear without the facts Answer the question The model of a city academy Ark, a charity headed by a supermodel's ex, is planning a new wave of city academies, reports Sian Griffiths If you want to talk slang, you'll need this phat guide Multiple Display Advertising Items Digitise the soundtrack of your life Doors campaign Get Digital A false dawn for television Don't panic Release the Sounds Stay Healthy in the Air High-Quality Performer Buyer's guide The plummeting prices of flat screens make it high time you reclaimed your desk it high time you reclaimed your desk with the latest generation of TFT computer monitor. We test four of the best Analogue Workhorse Sharp Ll-191a — typically £300, or £236 from www. savastore. com Gear up for summer hols Sunday's online challenge: Sally Kinnes tours the web for essential equipment to keep the family happy and healthy abroad Entertain the Children When You Get There Gamer's Delight ViewSonic Vp191s — £359 from www. pixmania. com Blazing-fast images for a 19in screen Staying Bug-Free One Foot in the Grave Lg L1730s — typically £190, or £156 from www. savastore. com Stylish and astonishingly cheap, but watch out for possibly limited shelf life Extreme Travel The Sunday Times That's amazing! In tune for a little more conversation You get a better class of guest at my events Winner's Dinners Admired organs of the press Shock exchange The tabloid week Fashion icons of the week This Life Angry bloke of the week Hero of the week Surprise of the week Oddball of the week The Guardian: Lord King Last word. . . Robin Hood-The Third Way The Daily Telegraph: Gretchen Franklin 1911-2005, EastEnders' Ethel Winner's Letters The AA to ZZ of Underwear Rod Finds God Talking Heads Nick Newman's Week Contents Ryanair - Fly Cheaper Nutty Suites You could choose a nice, sensible hotel — or, there's the giant dog, the vintage plane or the world's only undersea Suite. Jeremy Lazell offers you a trip on the strange side Multifunction Mobile Good Gear Guide Deck Shoes Multiple Display Advertising Items Breathable Jacket Mini Hairdryer Surf Safekeeping Life in the slow Spain Porcine playboys, killer oranges and gymnastic sheep — Brian Schofield finds there's life in Andalusia yet Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief Buyer's market Tourists 'will be hurt' in Turkey Multiple Display Advertising Items Elvis has entered Glamorgan The wild dogs of St Petersburg Following the launch of budget cruising in the Med Where was I? Disney ride reopens The Piccadilly line, which links central London and Eau my, it's getting dry Holiday money A plague of jellyfish has invaded the Balearics, on … Bargains Scarface, Tubby and the babeskis A heavyweight stripper, loaded Russians: a big night in Paris for Karl Newick Multiple Display Advertising Items Villa prices take a plunge Rental rates are plummeting — Mark Hodson knows why, and how to find a summer bargain That's the way to do it! Our Punch and Judy, buckets and spades, lobsters and caviar — the UK's best seaside towns mix tradition with invention, says Vincent Crump Swanage Multiple Display Advertising Items Tenby Whitby Padstow Multiple Display Advertising Items St Andrews Southwold Criccieth Children + Vienna = a piece of cake It's not all Freud, torte, Welles and wheels: the fetlocks and footie won over Sheila Hayman's kids Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items My hols Marcus Brigstocke has other identities abroad — Sport Billy and Slope Nazi Multiple Display Advertising Items Where was I? Win a twin-centre winter walking holiday for two in Tenerife, with Headwater The competition Contents Forget China and India — look at Korea Smaller emerging markets are tipped for rapid growth, but there are fears that shares may not keep pace. By David Budworth Hunt for dividends goes east Drive to cut costs News in Brief Cost of protection Footsie falls back from three-year high Fidelity International Taxman can raid Portuguese holiday home A Question of Money Multiple Display Advertising Items Body Shop duo make £2.3m each by shaving their stake Directors' Deals Contents Boiler rooms target Britain with new scam A US firm is offering to buy your shares at twice their market value — if you pay them £8,000 first by Jessica Bown How to beat the fraudsters Multiple Display Advertising Items Investors in £1bn companies don't need tax breaks Abbey A not so standard loan Making pensions smile Banks prey on fraud fears Financial firms are charging up to £84 a year for identity theft cover, when you'd be better off with a shredder. By Jessica Bown Moving on Get cover for your big day Many couples are taking out insurance policies in case disaster strikes when they get married, writes Clare Francis Multiple Display Advertising Items Something borrowed? Don't pay over the odds Graduates face a hard lesson in debt The average student leaves university £13,500 in the red. But there are ways to ease the burden, writes Clare Francis Multiple Display Advertising Items Older workers can still be forced out Still Nursing her Student Loan Best Savings Accounts Mortgage Deals Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Factfile Market defiance is a myth Multiple Display Advertising Items Soccer star now gets his kicks abroad Fame and Fortune Former England defender Dave Watson tackled his pension early, so he can afford lavish holidays, he tells Natalie Graham Multiple Display Advertising Items The value of being consistent A Merrill Lynch fund is the most dependable scheme over five years, but do the figures tell the whole story, asks David Budworth Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Online checks can beat career cheats An Israeli MBA student's fast system for verifying job applicants' details through the internet can save firms grief. Report by Roger Eglin Multiple Display Advertising Items No accounting for the UK's graduate tastes Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Taking a coach trip to life at the top Corporate coaches can improve staff performance — or encourage them to move on to better things By Mary Braid Multiple Display Advertising Items Managers need good talking-to Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents White Stripe Contents Fresh! Roman Invasion Goggle Eye Scooby-Doo! in Mystery Macabre! The story so far - Mystery Inc are visiting the set of top TV series Mystery Macabre … A Belgian beach has been transformed into a giant work Learning to dance may never be the same again - thanks to the world's first ballroom-dancing robot Tree Hotel Young Moguls The magic of Italy's kits-only … spreads to america, so that more you have their say about movies Most Requested Storm's Brewing Weather Challenge Towering Treat Mad Fact Welcome to the Jungle Hooray Henri Animal Magic Extreme Animation Plant Life Mane Attraction Hip Hippo Actress Jada Pinkett Smith tells us what it was like to voice no-messin' hippo, Gloria Book Mark The Return of Death Eric by Sam Llewellyn (Puffin, £4.99) Fantastic Four: The Ultimate Guide by Tom Defalco (Dk, £14.99) Princess Academy by Shannon Hale (Bloomsbury, £6.99) All the Fun of the Furbies Squirt Fans Utd Jarvis Robot Crusoe Quick Fire Enjoy the Show with Swapits Puzzle Zone The Powerpuff E…knit One Purl Doom! The story so far - The girls find Ms Keane's knitting class totally yawn-worthy after their usual crime-fighting capers … F-Mail Puzzle Zone Answers Freddie's Ready With the Ashes starting on Thursday at Lord's, in London, England's Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff finally faces Australia in a Test series Fact File Did you know. . . The Simpsons Contents Contents Cameras to police car-share lanes UP to Speed Top marques scrap speed limiters Rover bidder in jobs pledge Cars on TV Houston, we have a convertible Me and my Motors Buzz Aldrin Picking out a MAG 1C number Personalised plates were once an ego trip. Now they're a booming investment, write Roger Fulton and Emma Smith It's Scr 4P to You, but £54,000 to Him As sharp as a racing rat Vital Statistics The Opposition 600 miles a month — it's non-stop as a taxi mum Women are spending ever more time on the road — much of it ferrying children around. One mother reveals her hectic routine to Glenda Cooper Audi Boxing Clever Ingear The Stuff of Motoring Dreams Unbreakable Resolve The Knowledge Torque Steer All you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Using your Head Bentley Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Used Car: Renault Mégane Second Opinion Nationwide Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items A real corker for plonkers Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Getting Britain back on track Jonathan Palmer tells Emma Smith of his battle to revive four classic racetracks Subaru Garmin Where no girl has gone before The Sunday Times Letters Multiple Display Advertising Items Car Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Deal of the Week The Sunday Times Times Online My First Crash Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Regtransfers Porsche Contents Inside How Much? A flat in a castle in. . . Moving on Contents Time and place Dartmoor's wild bunch When novelist Joanna Briscoe's family fell in love with an ancient, crumbling Devon longhouse, a barefoot life of freedom and colourful chaos ensued Design Classics One year on, still stuck for a sale With buyers thin on the ground, many sellers find themselves unable to move — unless they can make drastic price cuts, reports Graham Norwood Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Better class of commute Houses of the week Handy for the beach Life in the round Driven made by the conservation corps Is buying a listed property becoming more hassle than it's worth? Katrina Burroughs investigates the relentless spread of planning red tape Listed Homes Rag trade to riches The vendor is a lord, the buyer a fashion mogul from California and the sale of Easton Neston is the year's biggest property deal, says Helen Davis Savills Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items I get lucky with guests — again Spiritual conversion Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Fine & Country Hampstead hits the big league Multi-million-pound 'country houses' are attracting the super-rich to Nw3, says Dominic Bradbury Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Foxtons Foxtons Foxtons Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Natural Spain Catalan country life is at its most traditional in the Ebro Valley — and property prices haven't caught up either, finds Karen Robinson On the Market Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Knight Frank When Satan lives next door Robert Douglas found his new neighbour was a man who blared music, screamed, and threatened violence. Evicting him took 18 months, and left Douglas feeling the system had let everybody down Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Make an impact with classy glass Contemporary conservatories aren't just for modern buildings: the right design can add space and light to period properties, says Victoria O'brien For Sale Ask the experts E-mail your questions to propertyexperts@sunday-times. co. uk The exterminator Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items A very private affair Carole Boyd — The Archers' Lynda Snell — has a garden out of keeping with her busybody alter ego, says Rachel De Thame The Sunday Times Garden Cuttings What to Do this Week Multiple Display Advertising Items Westbury Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Racing round his property empire Stirling Moss is not just a sporting icon — he is also a buy-to-let landlord with 22 London properties which he insists on servicing himself, says Mathew Court Multiple Display Advertising Items Who's the Womble in this tale? Did a Wimbledon couple over-react when their landlord failed to pay his mortgage, asks Rosie Millard Savills The Market How Much? Multiple Display Advertising Items Royal Arsenal Contents Mercedes-Benz Contents 'What we want is cult status' Extras won't top the success of The Office — so say its creators Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant. But Samuel L Jackson, Ben Stiller and Kate Winslet might have other ideas Fac news Coming to a cinema near you this autumn, the actresses who are set to become household names Rachel Blanchard Evan Rachel Wood Bryce Dallas Howard Pell James Maria Bello Leanne Rowe Jena Malone Southern Comfort, with a mixer Take one British hip-hop duo, add to the New Orleans rap scene and stir. By Nik Cohn Gone to the Dogs Their fast-growing pack of fans can't be wrong. Dan Cairns meets Britain's most exhilarating new band On the rocks Diamonds are the most dazzling of gems, so why put them in a show that dims their natural brilliance, asks Waldemar Januszczak Rock Star Inxs Biteback Maybe it's because he's a Londoner Madagascar Rest of the week's films U, 86 mins Duchess Theatre Festival 3 Iron Tiresia 18,115 mins Process 18,93 mins The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things Los Debutantes 18,114 mins What a crashing bore It tries to tread a line between romcom and teen gross-out, but Wedding Crashers soon outstays its welcome, says Cosmo Landesman Short Cuts Bent to his will He is Mr anti-ballet; they are the most classic of ballet companies. What happened when Forsythe met the Kirov? Renault Two of a kind Pairing up two very different types of performers produced visual delight, says David Dougill Barbican Megane Classical On record The week's essential new releases Monteverdi Il Sesto Libro dei Madrigali La Venexiana, cond Claudio Cavina Glossa Gcd920926 Beethoven Septet in E Flat, Op 20; Sextet in E Flat, Op 81b The Gaudier Ensemble Helios CDH 55189 Shostakovich Classical CD of the week Francis Pott Christus Jeremy Filsell (organ) Signum Sigcd062 (2 CDs) Ades/schubert Piano Quintets Arditti and Belcea Quartets, Thomas Adès (piano) EMI 7243 5 57664 2 7 Pop and Jazz Over the Rhine Drunkard's Prayer EMI/Liberty 3118672 Madness The Dangermen Sessions, Vol I V2 Vvr1033232 Frank Black Honeycomb Cooking Vinyl Cookcd341 My Computer Pop CD of the week No Cv Gut Mccd01 Rachel Fuller Cigarettes & Housework Universal 9882626 Various Artists Cheatin's Soul and the Southern Dream of Freedom Triknot US-0337 Oren Marshall Introduction to the Story of Spedy Sponda Part One: in a Silent Room Slowfoot Cd003 John Scofield That's What I Say Verve 9880534 Original Broadway Cast Recording The Light in the Piazza Nonesuch 7559798292 School of Iggy Get on down New kids in town The Grates Six Pictures of Lee Miller Rest of the week's theatre Based on an original idea by the Wright brothers Carver Shoreditch Madonna Nowhere left to run Aristocrats is haunted by the ghosts of a family on the verge of extinction, says Victoria Segal SAAB Summer Sundae Weekender The top arts events of the coming months Waiting for Godot Macbeth Pride and Prejudice Edward Scissorhands Degas, Sickert and Toulouse-Lautrec: London and Paris … Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Concerts Dance Les Liaisons Dangereuses The Australian Ballet: Swan Lake Opera Opera Holland Park Buxton Festival Pop Comedy Film War of the Worlds This week, don't miss Theatre Private Lives ART Gauguin's Vision Comedy Gala Night Opera Giulio Cesare Dance Kirov Ballet Concerts Peter Katin Pop Joseph Arthur Zenith The song of Rolando The 'new Domingo'— and the original — light up a vocal fiesta at the Royal Opera House, says Hugh Canning HMV The Sunday Times Who Killed Mr Drum? Games The Times Codename Panzers: Phase Ii PC, £34.99; ages 12+ The Rank Collection Racing Stripes Pickpocket Artifical Eye, Pg, 73 mins; £22.99 (2 discs) The Trial of Joan of Arc Artificial Eye, Pg, 61 mins; £19.99 L'Argent Artificial Eye, Pg, 82 mins; £19.99 You're Beautiful James Blunt Constantine Warner, 15,116 mins; £22.99 Don Giovanni Arthaus, 168 mins; £18.95 The Sunday Times Clear and present danger The king of complexity suffered from too simple a staging, says Paul Driver Royal Shakespeare Company 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 A look back in anger Party in the Blitz: The English Years by Elias Canetti translated by Michael Hofmann Harvill £17.99 pp266 Read on. . . The Genius Factory Unravelling the Mysteries of the Nobel Prize Sperm Bank by David Plotz Simon & Schuster £12.99 pp262 Read on. . . Diary Rosie Thomas When disco was queen Turn the Beat around The Secret History of Disco by Peter Shapiro Faber £12.99 pp350 Aid memoirs Where Soldiers Fear to Tread At Work in the Fields of Anarchy by John Burnett Heinemann £17.99 pp351 Moving Mountains by Claire Bertschinger Doubleday £14.99 pp320 The horror, the horror Crossing the Buffalo The Zulu War of 1879 by Adrian Greaves Weidenfeld £25 pp383 Book events What's happening in the literary world In the news Books behind the headlines: the Ashes The dark side of a magnetic man Marlon Brando: The Naked Actor by George England Gibson Square £15.99 271pp Read on. . . Websites Rebels with a cause Progressive Hollywood by Ed Rampeil Disinformation Company £8.99 pp351 Trafalgar Hungry for love and affection Fat Girl: A True Story by Judith Moore Profile £12.99 pp196 Waterstone's With great pleasure The Wonder Spot by Melissa Bank Viking £12.99 pp324 It's in the male Martin Lukes: Who Moved My BlackBerry? with Lucy Kellaway Viking £12.99 pp376 Making a difference A Changed Man by Francine Prose Allison & Busby £10.99 pp421 Pelican Blood HarperCollins £10.99 pp266 What I Know Sceptre £14.99 pp278 Read in More Comfort Children's book of the week The Invisible Friend by Louise Arnold Age 7-11 WHSmith Paperbacks Author, Author by David Lodge 1759: The Year Britain Became Master of the World by Frank McLynn MR Starlight Sky Burial Transmission The Sunday Times concise crossword No 905 Mosaic The Making of Henry John Peel by Mick Wall Birds without Wings by Louis de Bernières The 8.55 to Baghdad by Andrew Eames You really must read. . . The Sunday Times Inside story What's making news in the Sunday Times bestsellers list Pile 'em High Hardbacks Paperbacks General Contents Watch it: the best of the week ahead Read all about it Harry Potter At The Castle — The J K Rowling Interview (Today, ITV1, 5.30pm) Klute Today, BBC2, 11.30pm No longer No 1 Top Of The Pops (Today, BBC2, 7pm) Low Heat The Truth About Richard And Judy (Tuesday, Five, 8pm) Same old thong What Not To Wear (Tuesday, BBC1, 9pm) Remember 1981? Cricket: England v Australia (Thursday, C4,10am) Helsinki, here we go Athletics (Friday, BBC2, 6pm) Pick of the week Summer comedies BBC2 and FX Why don't you? Coast (Friday, BBC2, 9pm) Picks of the day Radio Sunday17 July Pick of the Day New for old Dealing With Dickinson (BBC1, 8pm) Soap moment Where The Heart is (ITV1, 8pm) True Brits The British Middle Class (C4,8pm) Rock till you drop Rock Star: INXS (VH1,8pm) Pick of the day The Secrets Of The Sexes: Brainsex (BBC1, 9pm) It's not cricket Trevor's World Of Sport (BBC2, 10pm) Unlucky in love? How To Get Lucky (BBC3, 10pm) The sitcom trials The Story Of ITV (ITV1, 10.40pm) Klute (BBC2, 11.30pm) Films BBC1 Sunday 17 July ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Monday18july Pick of the Day Dead again The Dead Zone (Sci-Fi, 6pm) My ship is coming in A Picture Of Hull (BBC3, 7.30pm) Ring back BBC Proms (BBC4, 7.30pm) The grim reaper Dispatches: On Pain Of Death (C4,8pm) Pick of the day Murder Investigation Team (ITV1, 9pm) Just desert Escape To The Legion (C4,9pm) Monday18July Simon says Britain's Finest Actresses (Five, 9pm) The miracle of birth Desperate Midwives (BBC3, 9pm) The Professionals (C4,12.50pm) Films BBC1 Monday18July ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Afternoon Play: Silt (R4,2.15pm) Great white hope? Investigating History: Lincoln — Man Or Myth (History, 7pm) On the road For The Love Of Eleanor (Five, 7.15pm) Family conflicts Holby City (BBC1, 8pm) Time-warp TV Ann Widdecombe To The Rescue (BBC2, 8.30pm) Pick of the day This world: Properties To die For (BBC2, 9pm) Hell is other people The Nightmares Next Door (C4,9pm) Moving tales My Life As a Child (BBC2, 9.50pm) Teen drama Sugar Rush (C4,10.50pm) The Asphalt Jungle (TCM, 9pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day The Moon Trees (R4,9pm) Nasty, brutish, short Penguin Death Zone (National Geographic, 7pm) The face The World's Most Photographed (BBC2, 7.30pm) Mousse loose Full On Food (BBC2, 8pm) Rubbish How Clean Is Your House? (C4,8pm) Pick of the day Stepkids in Love (C4,9pm) Grizzly documentary Man Eaters: Fangs And Claws (Five, 8pm) National Horror Show Panorama: Undercover Nurse (BBC1, 9pm) Double feature Nip/Tuck (C4,10.50pm) White Feather (C4,1.05pm) Films BBC1 Wednesday20July ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Devout Sceptics (R4,9.30pm) Meet the neighbours Mobster Next Door (Biography, 8pm) Best documentary Dispatches: Beslan (C4,9pm) Returning drama One Tree Hill (E4,9pm) Tate's Britain The Catherine Tate Show (BBC2, 9.30pm) Pick of the day Extras (BBC2, 9pm) Spin city Absolute Power (BBC2, 10pm) Bad behaviour Showbiz Hissy Fits With Julian Clary (C4,10.50pm) Medical matters Extraordinary People: A Hundred Orgasms a Day (Five, 11pm) Barefoot in The Park (BBC2, 1pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Off The Page (R4,11pm) His generation Roger Daltrey: For The Record (Performance, 10am) Filth columnist House Doctor — The A-Z Of Design (Five, 7.30pm) Lead by the nose Will And Grace (C4.8. 30pm) Pick of the day Coast (BBC2, 9pm) Hail, King Richard The Rebel Billionaire (ITV2, 8.30pm) Ageing disgracefully Still Game (BBC2, 10pm) A distant shore The Wrecking Season (BBC4, 10pm) Mind blowing Jazz Britannia (BBC2, 11.35pm) Titanic (BBC1, 8.30pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Radio Pick of the Day Archive Hour: To Win The Peace (R4,8pm) Poor little rich girls Millionheirs (Biography, 8pm) Best science Journeys From The Centre Of The Earth (BBC2, 8.10pm) Soapy situation Casualty (BBC1, 8.20pm) Shameless celebs Celebrity Stars in Their Eye (ITV1, 9.20pm) Pick of the day Hitler's Children (C4,8.10pm) Returning cop show The Shield (Five, 11.05pm) Millions viewing week ending Jun 26 To Have And Have Not (BBC2, 1.30pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Dispatches: Beslan Contents You never actually own a Patek Phillipe Patek Philippe Geneve Malaysia Contents Hp invent Secret Britain: What you won't find in the guidebooks What you won't find in the guidebooks Rainbow Corner: the American forces club in Piccadilly, London From the Boffins Possible pain caused by different executions Born on the Same Day The high-flying Tory and the famous twitcher Dfs Enter Stage Write Flashback Blunders of the World Don't make me laugh Rootfinder That "old chestnut" The Unlikely Event Big Spender What it cost then. . . and what it's worth now Life's Good Jungle Formula Bill Bruford and his Son Alex Sharps Everest Ltd Boots Avid Warner La Belle Rafaela (1927) Tamara De Lempicka The Paint Strippers A remarkable project to reinterpret classic paintings has become the talk of northern Italy. And nobody's raising money for charity. Patrick Nicholas took the Photographs, and Nicholas Farrell explains how the ladies were persuaded to disrebe for art's sake LA Grande Odalisque (1814) Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres Venere Dormiente (c1505-10) Giorgione (Completed, Probably, by Titian) Pornokrates, Ou La Dame Au Cochon (1878) Felicien Rops The Birth of Venus (c1483) Sandro Botticelli Venus at her Mirror (1644-8) Diego Velazquez La Maja Desnuda (1800) Francisco Goya Ariel Into the Underworld Bose North east england More than 20 years ago, Godfrey Smith predicted in … Espace Renault Createur D'automobiles Pompeii of the Caribbean The Sunday Times Aspinal The Travel Collection Conquest Noble Caledonia Limited Do you want younger looking skin in 30 days? David Goode The Knightsbridge Bridge Chess Teaser 2235 Bookwise Mephisto 2343 Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items …iana Lopatkina The Spiritual Condition of a Ballerina is as Important as her Physique. Never Dance Just with my Body The Sunday Times P&O Cruises The Colourful Gin Contents Giorgio Armani Contents Sony The Intellectual's Guide to Fashion Electric Cars Prince's Trust Going UP Going down Fashion Moment Introducing Eau de partu… L'oreal Paris Am Life Fame and beauty did her no favours. It's only now, away from the lens, that Christy Turlington has discovered who she really is, she tells Jessica Brinton "i Always Felt Clumsy on the Catwalk. I Went to Parties … Crimson Tide Watch out: the Novi Ruskis are invading Europe's upscale holiday resorts, and they're not going just to flash their flesh. Flashing their cash is even more important, says Simon Mills How to Spot a Novi Ruski It's so every season Peugeot Rich Hippies Tech Tenters Single'n' Hopeful Family Nest Norman No Tent Nectar Skinted Faking It Claudia Croft Wardrobe Mistress Fashion Style Minted The Wonder It's the frock for every occasion, the answer to all your dreams. Slip on an Issa design and you can enter any social event with confidence. says Tiffanie Darke Gotta Have It It's been a long time since a bag has inspired such envy. Claudia Croft reveals what women will do for a Mulberry Watch your Backs, Chaps Don't look now, but there could be a single thirtysomething woman behind you, desperate to hang up her dancing shoes and reproduce, says Martin Deeson Nescafe Kiss'n'tell Festival Frippery Beauty Hair Bitch! Fresh Hair Get Fruity No Knife …ouired Cosmetic Surgery Guide Part 2 Junkies Get your kicks from physical exercise? Then get the ultimate head rush with the latest high-octane sports, says Cathy Struthers Red Sea relaxation The Berkeley What's the Alternative? New Quaker Seasons Slice of the Action Take 3 Ingredients Tip from the Top Sweetness and Light Spotted Line Management Getting your puds just right can sometimes prove tricky. Heston Blumenthal has the perfect techniques to give you layer cakes that could never be called mere trifles Tiramisu Heston's Trifle Strawberry Sundae Chair Joanna Simon Sauce 2004 Côtes du Rhône Rosé, Domaine de la Mordorée, £6.35-£7.95 "Rosé sales are growing by more than 30% a year" After a Fashion Persil Seats of Power Curl up or lie back. We pick the sofas that you will want to be seen on. Shopping by Emily Blunden In the St …rs by Shelley Von Strunckel Oliver and Moe Ladies' Man Mrs Mills Solves All your Problems The Facts of Life Just when you think you know what's what, it turns out to be wrong, says Shane Watson Toyota Jeep

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