News from 31/07/2005
2005; Gale Group;
Autores
Jonathan Northcroft, Waldemar Januszczak, Richard Clayton, Hala Jaber, Red Liddle, John Dugdale, William Kay, Francis Beckett, Terry Pratchett, Matthew Wall, John Finnett, Joan Bakewell, Aminatta Forna, Barbara Hall, Joanathan Leake, David Mills, Jim Munro, Peter Whittle, Helen Davies, Sally Brock, Rob Hughes, V S, Jan Masrers, Professor Gideon Garter, Amanda Ursell, Robin Eggar, Adam Zamoyski, Ken Booth, Frank Whitford, Ivo Tennant, Nicola Venning, Kathryn Cooper, Dom Joly, Andrew Taylor, Peter Salter, P D, Tim Richards, David Cracknell Political Editor, Edward Brovarski, John Parcy, Neil Wormald, Darrell Greco Singel, E P, Alison Kervin, Martin Brundle, Clive Davis, Hove Albion, Crewe Alexandra, K R, C D, Joseph Dunn, Dominic Bradbury, John Dugdate, Simon Wilde, D C, Martin James, Tom Walker, Robert Winnett, Mike Russell, Irwin Stelzer, Adrian Furnham, Matt Rudd, Robert Hewison, Peter Wilson, Frank Halliwell, Kathy Reichs, Rosie Millard, David Dougill, Charles Nicholl, Warren Shore, John Clarke, Walter Allwright, Christopher Hart, Robert Winnett Whitehall Correspondent, Frank Graham, David Hewson, Dafydd Goff, Cally Law, Craig McLean, Jonathon Carr-Brown, Hugh Mcllvanney, Hugh Canning, Hugh MaManners, Jeremy Clarkson, Joanna Briscoe, Edward Porter, Victoria Segal, Giles Chapman, Michael Portillo, S L, Alexander Jenkins, Wendy Sloane, Sarah Dempster, Brighton, Dave Pollard, Kevin Jackson, Richard Fletcher, Greg Struthers, Olga Korbut, Max Clifford, Simon Rogerson, Brian Wildey, Justin Lanager, Andrew Porter Deputy Political Editor, Dan Drillsma-Milgrom, Holly Watt, Paul Donovan, Steve Waugh, Geoff Fairhurst, Edward Gorman, Giles Hattersley, Michael Cole, Chris Woodhead, Simon Mills, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, John Follain, Richard Brooks, Dan Austin, Stuart Andrews, Shelley Von Strunckel, Carol Loeb Shioss, David Leppard, Paul Durman, David Meredith, Lisa Grainger, Mark Edwards, Rachel Bridge, Heston Blumenthal, Susan Clark, Sarah Kate Templeton Medical Correspondent, Phil Baker, Charles R Cross, Joseph Dun, Hugo Barnacle, Jason McAteer, Lois Rogers, Helen Willer, Alan Combes, Peter Mate, Dieter Arnold, Tim Mickleburgh, C L, P W, K H, Raymond Keene, Rod Liddle, David Enders, John Rummel, David Cracknell, Cosmo Landesman, Jan Batties, Marie Colvin, Richard Jolly, Kate Morris, Christopher Smallwood, Sally Gardner, Alice Douglas, Emma Smith, G McLean, Stephen Jones, Hanley Swan, Dominic O'Connell, Louise Armitstead, Blower Spindle, Stephen Bleach, John Carlin, Barry Denton-MacLennan, Domonic O'Connell, Adrienne Connors, Chris Hitchings, Lucy Atkins, Peter Boyle, Amanda Blinkhorn, Tim Moorey, Galina Breckhovnova, Caroline Donald, Rob Ryan, Jessica Brinton, David Walsh, Caroline Gascoigne, Talib Choudhry, Bryan Appleyard, Sarah Keenlyside, Stephen Armstrong, John Elliott, Colin McDowell's, M L, Leonie Parches, Bethan Cole, Jonathan Leake Environment Editor, Andrew Burnet, Richard Woods, Lynne Kelleher, Roland White, Paul Chesters, Michael Sheriden, N R, Sarah Kate Templeton, Johnny Depp, Abul Taher, Rose Shephered, Shane Watson, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, Rosemary Irving, Yuba Bessaoud, Jeff Green, Mark Franchetti, Richard Rae, Ray Hutton, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Shelley Spendfield, Matthew Adams, Jonathan Leake, Monica Grenfell, M E, Katharine Hibbert, Michael Sheridan, Clare Francis, Michael Smith, John Harlow, Simon Brooke, Chris Haslam, Dipesh Gadher, Mark Kleinman, Dave Parr, John Waples, Hunter Davies, Dave Mackay, A A Gill, Matthew Campbell, James Curry, Brian Glanville, Simon Jenkins, Chris Alcock, Deirdre Fernand, Jonathan Carr-Brown, Jessica Bown, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, Stephen Pettitt, T L, Claudia Croft, Ipswich Town, R H, Tom Pattinson, Douglas Rogers, Liam Clarke, Nigel Powell, Andrew Wilson, Roger Dobson, Aatish Taseer, Hazel Courteney, D MacGregor, Ben Dowell, Minette Marrin, Simon Buckland, John Aizlewood, Bramall Lane, Michael Clower, Mark Hodson, Ian Hollingshead, Joe Lovejoy, Jonathan Futrell, Andrew Frankel, Dave McDonald, David Budworth, Hugh Pearman, Graham Norwood, David Calrns, Robert Service, Stewart Mitchell, Stephanie Clark, Robert Randell, Sarah Baxter, Brian Schofield, Alice Jones, Joanna Simon, Matthew Goodman, India Knight, Ed Hughes, Richard Lewis, Helen Stewart,
ResumoContents Third terror cell on loose Intelligence warns of new wave against soft targets NHS failed to stop doctors raping scores of women Contents Lloyds TSB Business Contents No checks as fugitive fled UK The Sunday Times Black teenager killed with axe in race attack Intelligent Finance Desert deaths in aftermath of Britain's bombs Basra blast claims two British victims Iraq Victims Extremists had easy access, says Pakistan Safe Haven Claim Clarification: Tony Baldry MP Multiyork Bombing suspect tried to have moderate imam sacked History of Hate Blunkett covers for absent Clarke Line of Command I'm lovin' it Drink the real culprit in date-rape drug claims TV cameras to be allowed into criminal trials Hyundai Revealed: the freak waves that eat ships Nissan Hendrix posed as a gay to get out of military Key No 10 aides were split over war Flybe Leaked Data Reveal Reasons for Increased Bombing Raids were a Sham Charles farms by moon science Hormones in water blamed as more men seek breast reduction Boarding Pass Botton falls out of thong market Multiple Display Advertising Items £80m jackpot woman richer than Beckhams 'Good samaritan' donor offers to give one of her kidneys to a stranger Nationwide TV's master of bawd draws line at gay sex Aus Liebe zum Automobil New planet is found on edge of solar system Conspiracy of silence allowed NHS rape spree SAAB Cornered In the wake of Britain's biggest police operation, four bombers are dead, and four suspects in custody. Now we must brace ourselves for a possible third wave Tiscali Now They Search for a Mastermind Nationwide Tangled web that still leaves worrying loose ends The arrest of Haroon Rashid Aswat sets numerous questions, say Richard Woods, David Leppard and Michael Smith Trail leads to Horn of Anarchy Muslim extremism has built a power base in a highly volable area of Africa, write Tom Waker and Dipesh Gadher British Gas Shoot-To-Kill without Warning The truth is emerging about the shooting of an innocent man. Jon Ungoed-Thomas and David Leppard report Dell Biggest suicide wave in a bloody 2,000-year history The deadly tactic has been used for a long time but has never been more effective than today, writes Yuba Bessaoud Taser Dangers How Can we Stop this Happening Again? David Cracknell consults politicians academics, lawyers and security experts on the options New Terrorist Offences Telephone Intercepts Identity Cards Finger Points to British Intelligence as Al-Qaeda Websites are Wiped out Opt-Out of Geneva Convention on Refugees Warped Minds on Worldwide Web Repeal Human Rights Act Detention without Charge Investigative Magistrates Border Police Close Muslim Schools Promote British Values over Multiculturalism Trapped in Space? With more cladding falling off duirng Discovery's launch, fears of whether it can safely come down to Earth—without Russian assistance—have soured the jubilant atmosphere at Nasa. So is it time to consign the lumbering spaceship to the scrapheap, asks Joanathan Leake HSBC The hard nutty one at the bottom of the chocolate box Comment Profile Truth is, we're all liars now Wanadoo The source of terror Prince of organic profits WRVS The Sunday Times Confronted with our own decadence Panic in the face of fanatics is making Britain dangerous Computer hijackers leave Austin Mitchell lost for words Atticus What is Peter "Two Jobs" Hain playing at? The Northern Atticus Palace puts boot in as William line up to succeed Andrew at FA Atticus Toupee or not toupee? That's the bigwig question Atticus If chancellor Gordon Brown is seriously looking for … Atticus The lesson of grammars is elitism benefits us all In this age of insant news, and instant politics, the Atticus How should we celebrate the prospect of lasting peace Atticus The company that ran election advertising for the Atticus Barclays The freedom to live and let live KIA Fantasy's darkest arts make for a bestseller A Bug's Life: Your article It's one small step for … Filling in the gaps Generous Support: We are writing to express our regret Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street Milosevic may be jailed in Russia Multiple Display Advertising Items Arrest of son brings wife's plea to Karadzic Bush to defy Senate and send his man to the UN Multiple Display Advertising Items 'Commando Girls' fight Gaza pull-out Brides refuse to vow to the inevitable Land-Rover Soft porn life of a Russian tycoon's wife Nurse to revea 'plot behind banker's death Multiple Display Advertising Items Italy puts brakes on scooter rebels Wanted: first face transplant volunteer Multiple Display Advertising Items Today's weather Today Tomorrow Toyota Church gay clergy row deepens News in Brief Victims' memorial Helicopter rescues family from storm Protesters beaten Paedophile given court summons £5.1m Lotto jackpot to roll over 15 hurt at Disney Cheese hits bottom Black musuem of Japan's war crimes The Times Famine appeal launched for Niger Cherie and the do-gooders give terror a chance Little is more embarrassing than a sedate and rather Vauxhall Hollywood's beastly to beauty The perfect chastity belt for gay vicars Like the first cuckoo of spring, we have already seen Contents Real:'We will let Owen leave' Rooney Scores Wonder Goal. . . And Says England Can Win World Cup The Renault Safety Zone Contents Wayne's World Cup dream comes alive We can do it, says Rooney Jonathan Northcroft hears the boldest youngster in the game declare he will be better than ever in a pivotal season he expects to end with World Cup glory England better win next year. . . the future's turning blue The manner in which England were outclassed in the European Under-19 final does not bode well for the future Rodeo Ferguson leads praise for young maestro The Manchester United boss has seen most things in his career, but even he cannot quite believe the ability of Wayne Rooney Robinho ushers Owen to exit Michael Owen does not lack admirers in Madrid, but the arrival of another dazzling Brazilian has sealed his fate Real's Robinho Norwich Union Mourinho keeps plenty in reserve Chelsea could field a reserve team fit to challenge for the Premiership, but man for man they would fall just short of the champions' rivals, says Brian Glanville Chelsea's French farce Real in for Rio Figo dropped, Stelios in Baros Bundesliga bound Big Butt for Everton Campbell exit expected Wigan swoop for Francis Fergie back for Baliack Davids delay Best of the rest Close shave for Strachan The Sunday Times Contents Manager fails to heed signs Gordon Strachan was given a clear message yesterday that he must be ruthless if he is to turn Celtic around Burley off to a flyer with Hearts Scottish round-up The top 10 Managerial debut disasters Alf Ramsey, February 1963 BMW Bill Lambton, April 1959 David Platt, December 1998 Brian Clough, August 1974 Alex Ferguson, November 1986 Book of the week Bertie Mee—Arsenal's Officer and Gentleman, by David Tossell, Mainstream Publishing £16.99 Bill Shankly, December 1959 Graeme Souness, August 1986 Berti Vogts, March 2002 Malcolm Allison, August 1973 DVD of the week Back Where We Belong—West Ham, 2004-05 review ILC Sport, £15.99 60 seconds in sport With Kelly Sotherton, Olympic heptathion bronze medallist Ready for Action The Championship kicks off on Saturday with a place in the world's richest league the prize for Steve Coppell and Co. writes Joe Lovejoy Championship preview: from Brighton to Hull City Crewe Alexandra Last season's position: 21st Crystal Palace Burnley Last season's position: 13th Derby County Last season's position: 4th Cardiff City Last seasons' position: 16th Coventry City Last season's position: 19th Hull City Last season's position: promoted High hopes for Town planner Manager Mike Newell's old-fashioned principles are the cornerstones of his battle to take Luton Town even higher Championship preview: from Ipswich to Preston Millwall Last season's position: 10th Norwich City Last seasons's position: relegated Leeds United Last season's position: 14th Plymouth Argyle Last season's position: 17th Leicester City Last season's position: 15th Luton Town Last season's position: promoted Preston North End Last season's position: 5th Home fires burn for Jason Koumas surprised many by opting for Cardiff but he has a number of reasons for wanting to make this a seasons to remember in his homeland. By Richard Rae Championship preview: from QPR to Wolves Queens Park Rangers Last season's position: 11th Southampton Last season's position: relegated Stoke City Last season's position: 12th Reading Last season's position: 7th Watford Last season's position: 18th Sheffield United Last season's position: 8th Sheffield Wednesday Last season's position: promoted Wolves Last season's position: 9th Educating the Dons Mk Dons were unwanted and on the road to oblivion, but under chairman Pete Winkelman they are putting down roots in their adopted home, writes John Aizlewood The Sunday Times Title favourites. . . League One: promotion relegation and player to watch Battling the drop. . . Remember me Five to follow Lee keeps the fire burning The former Newcastle midfielder will turn 40 in February, but he is till unable to kick the habit of a lifetime Title favourites. . . League Two: promotion, relegation and players to watch Battling the drop. . . Remember me Five to follow Bmibaby The Sunday Times Veteran Teddy inspires West Ham Football Round-up Tottenham stroll to victory Lewis fires Leeds McCarthy must rush O'Leary faces tough season ahead Heroic Hull power into Challenge Cup final Boks draw first blood RFU policy to hurt England The preparation and performance of the national team will be adversely affected by the way the game's rulers have chosen to pick coaches, says Stephen Jones Australian Test star Andrew Johns will join up with Smith powers Somerset home The South African captan led from the front as his side claimed the Twenty 20 Cup with a crushing win over Lancashire Flintoff's brutal show A majestic performance from the England allrounder took the Red Rose county to victory Early exit for holders The competition's dark horses held their nerve over the closing stages to upset the odds Ready to declare Whether it's on or off the pitch, he's never shied from speaking his mind 'i was shocked by the lack of game plan from Trescothick … Michael Vaughan and his bruised side must put the negatives of Lord's behind them if they are to compete at Edgbaston The Sunday Times England facing Tests of character Michael Vaughan's men have shown they can bounce back from defeat but they face a massive task in back-to-back Tests after losing at Lord's Waiting game paying off for Cool Katich The Australian is reaping the reward for his patience on and off the field as he establishes his place in the Test side Understanding a cricketing enigma Shane Warne has not changed in the 15 years I've known him. He's still part genius, part lovable rogue Contents MacGill gets the Test bug One man is keen to prove Shane Warne isn't the only leg-spinner in this Ashes series, writes Ivo Tennant Sure Men Improving Sayers throws up hope for future The expectations for British athletes at the world championships are low, but there are some grounds for optimism The Coming Man Talented 400m runner Tim Benjamin has burst into the big time after years of injury, accidents and sheer bad luck Legend's son running in a different lane Rhys Williams is following in his father's footsteps—not on the rugby field but on the athletics track—as he flies the British flag in Helsinki The old man and the X Factor Stuart Jardine, at 71, has enjoyed almost half a century of success at Cowes Week, but his hunger to succeed is still strong in what many believe is the regatta's toughest class. By Edward Gorman Loftus keen on long stay in Hotel California The Cowes veteran is delighted with his eyecatching new yacht and expects it to act as a prototype for the future of British sailing, writes Edward Gorman Aus Liebe zum Automobil Conneely's double delight After success on the track at Galway, the Irishman made his Cowes debut —and won yesterday's prize trophy Contents Restored Gipsy Moth returning to Sydney Cowes Week has seen the return to the water of Sir Francis Chichester's famous ketch, which will retrace part of his epic voyage, writes Edward Gorman Sailing's stars on show: a guide to Britain's finest at Cowes this week Schumacher back on top The world champion will head the grid for today's Hungarian Grand Prix—his first pole position of the 2005 season The Sunday Times Contract row hurts Button The Bar driver has been told to honour his contract with Williams, a team that appears to be going backwards Hungarian grid Fearless Davies out to rule waves Surfing is on the up in Britain, and the champion hopes to deliver at Newquay this week in her bid to join the World Championship Tour Singh sets the pace with Tiger on his tail The Fijian is well placed to clinch the Buick Open today unless Tiger Woods can match the form he showed in his record round of 61 Jang dwards big names The tiny Korean starts the final round of the British Women's Open today five shots clear of a pack of the world's top players Airberlin Davies beats Hackett to set up Olympic rematch Sports round-up Skandia Cowes Week Football Results round-up Rugby Union Rugby League Other Sport Athletics Pools Tennis Golf Fixtures Cricket Motorcyling Racing Darts Equestrianism This Week The moment Culloty knew he had to quit It was every jump jockey's nightmare, and as he lay on the ground, the Irishman vowed that he would find an easier way to make a living Lucky Fallon has a real Gift The jockey won the Stewards' Cup at Goodwood on Gift Horse, but only after a scare in the parade ring and a hairy ride in the race itself Contents Chester Today's racecards Newbury Market Rasen The Times Caught in time Glamorgan win the County Championship, 1969 Sport Letters Questions answers Your Sporting conundrums tackled Heroes' Sally Gunnell, gold medal-winning Olympic hurdler, on The Sunday Times Sport on TV Don't miss this Times Online No place to hide for Strachan The voice of sport Renault United's jaunts could prove costly Giles in a verbal spin Contents The $50m pay package that lured new boss to Amvescap Bookmark Coral set to gamble on £800m float Base rate vote too close to call as retail gloom persists Nationwide Dragons judge Elnaugh on the brink at Red Letter Days Contents American treatment for Astra Zeneca Special Report With little global experence, David Brennan faces a big step up as he takes over the drugs firm Contents Arab pay-TV operator ponders switching on a London listing Multiple Display Advertising Items Army's high-tech comms hitch Priests are shocked by unholy share bet Chinese set to pick Rover partner Business Digest Chairman of RBS is to stay on for a year How the Bank of England had to bail out Lazard Retail entrepreneur tops up stake in ailing M&S Tax threat hits NTL deal with Telewest Extreme aims for high flyers US hedge fund backs Montgomery Bow Street hits end of the road Su doku numbers add up to £100m for Puzzler The Sunday Times Rattling of French sabres in the telecoms sector Germany makes a comeback Britain's economic ascendancy in Europe could soon come to an end as German competitiveness recovers, writes Christopher Smallwood Run over Astranomic profits Revaluation will barely dent US trade with China The English Patient Jaguar the American company has injected £2.5 billion of life support into the British marque - and watched it haemorrhage another £1.2 billion. Is the disease terminal, or can William Clay Ford Jr find a cure? Domonic O'Connell and Ray Hutton report Starbucks Coffee Value your audit Golf stops being a bogey for financiers Plans to build smaller courses and attract more women herald a new era of profitability Mobile music man is on the right track Monstermob boss Martin Higginson's hugely successful phone entertainment business had drawn in Orange's founder and the billionaire Barclay brothers Martin Higginson's Working Day Vital Statistics Working Space The Sunday Times Red faces at firm run by Dragons judge TV celebrity Rachel Elnaugh has had to call for help at her own firm 'Warlord' starts world's biggest privatisation Michael Sheridan in Tokyo says that Premier Koizumi is staking everything on his break-up of Japan's post office Pernod's boss has little time to toast success Within days of buying Allied Domecq, Richard Burrows is tackling job losses and integration Multiple Display Advertising Items Tune in to Orange's SPV C550—if you have five minutes Top 100 ideas for starting a new business Readers' entries to our £100,000 competition have been whittled down to the first short list. Rachel Bridge looks at some of the best ones The Sunday Times And the Ideas that Didn't Bear Fruit. . . Gaming man belt on going solo How I Made It Ed Ware founder of 32Red Todd Enterprises Databank World share markets Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates / Bonds Currencies Commodities Ringing success for big mobile retailer Judgement Day: Should You Buy Shares in Carphone Wareshouse? LSE bids 'would hit competition' Business on the Box The Week Ahead Quote of the Week City bigwigs at play with the polo set Jaguar True Exponents of style Best are still on in the case of the widget gambler Prufrock The long guessing game at Pearson may have ended with Things could hardly be worse for Stephen Byers, the Hands up for inquiry Tougher times for British banks Newcastle United Sunday-times Market Mole Contents Hazy Days He arrived as a nobody but immediately had London's greatest rock stars at his feet. Charles R Cross reveals the wild rise of Jimi Hendrix Contents BT The truth about the night Hendrix died of an overdose Big in America: When Jimi Returned to an Arousing Welcome Made in Britain A fatal failure to identify with this nation or the country of their parents turns young Muslims to Islamic extremism, writes Aatish Taseer . . . But Midwest Muslims share the American dream In the suburbs of Detroit, the largest Arab city outside the Middle East pledges its loyalty to the stars and stripes, says Douglas Rogers It's natural to make up Eureka: now we can legislate for happiness A government adviser is looking for towns to volunteer to have their lives enhanced, writes Stephanie Clark Children really don't want toys Everything in the morgue's lovely Augwfree22 Why Gerry Adams finally blinked Last week's IRA announcement took many by surprise, but it was the result of lengthy brinkmanship, says Liam Clarke The Sunday Times crossword Key Dates in the History of the Troubles The Sunday Times Where did that come from? Unexpected swearing incidents are breaking out all over mainstream songs. Giles Hattersley asks the producers why Hoaxed of America raise their defences against the devilish Ali G Sacha Baron Cohen may be about to run short of willing dupes, reports Sarah Baxter The Sunday Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items Grammars: the regeneration Are grammer schools set for a Doctor Who-like rebirth? Quite possibly if unions are voting for them, says Deirdre Fernard and Jaspser Gerard Multiple Classified Advertising Items A reference is not private property How to really perform as a mother Starring in a West End musical and caring for two young daughters doesn't have to be a song and dance, Ruthie Henshall tells Amanda Blinkhorn Multiple Display Advertising Items Niche sports arrive with a splash Enthusiasts of specialist sports can now get that adrenaline rush online, on demand, finds Matthew Wall Snap out of the numbers game Sounding off Tell us your Views Don't panic Now Click Here You think I'm ghastly . . . you should try this place Winner's Dinners Loves me, she loves Shock exchange The tabloid week This Life The Daily Telegraph: Edward Bunker Last word. . . Just Plane Too Tall The Daily Telegraph: Susan Lydon I'm Taking a Gap Year, Says Nicole Doctor who, by Royal Appointment Winner's Letters Talking Heads P. S. Contents Faking it Need to prove you've still got what it takes? Matt Rudd though he had the answer: to cross the Andes on foot It sounds impressive and it should have been easy. . . Ryanair-Fly Cheaper Mini Computer Good Gear Guide How to be a fake adventurer Multiple Display Advertising Items Lightweight Boots Kids' Swim Kit Six other ways to impress Rain Gauge Sport Camcorder Star-struck on South Beach Celebrity cats, pet lions, rappers at breakfast, Estefan for dinner: Dom Joly indulges in America's celeb-soaked riviera Multiple Display Advertising Items Travel brief Egypt bombings: what next for travellers? Multiple Display Advertising Items Holiday money Tourists now a global target New flights EUjet leaves thousands stranded Where was I? Death by chocolate Take the new Willy Wonka film one step too far: combine your next holiday with a chocolate orgy. Rob Ryan did and found seven of them England's Own Chocolate Factory An Italian Choc-Fest Choco-Sculpture in Belgium Salon Du Chocolat, Paris The Swiss Chocolate Train Chocolate City, USA Mastercard Chocolate and Chicken in Mexico Multiple Display Advertising Items An in-tents experience Despite memories of childhood camping disasters, Mark Hodson agreed to tackle the outdoors again It was all going well until I kissed her Ian Hollingshead thought he'd found a playmate in Paris. What a sucker! Travel brief Sunken treasures Simon Rogerson picks his top wreck dives, from a Swedish ferry to the only diveable aircraft carrier The Zenobia, Cyprus Multiple Display Advertising Items The Yongala, Australia The Umbria, Sudan SS Thistlegorm, Egypt USS Saratoga, Bikini Atoll Ticket to ride: make a rail escape into rural Britannia Sleeper trains could face the axe in government cutbacks. Tom Walker sleeps his way to Scotland before it's too late Multiple Display Advertising Items Lights out for the sleeper? Travel brief The New Forest (90 minutes from Waterloo) Multiple Display Advertising Items Heart of Wales Line (An hour from Birmingham) Minnis Bay, Kent (90 minutes from Victorica) St Cyrus, Angus (Two hours from Glasgow or Edinburgh) King Edward's Bay Sudbury (73 minutes from London Liverpoot Street) West Pennine Moors (33 minute from Manchester) A free booklet Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items My hols To survice the beach, Joan Bakewell recommends a copy of War and Peace Multiple Display Advertising Items Where was I? Win a week's walking holiday for two on the Greek island of Evia, with Exodus The competition Contents Alternative ways to beat the Footsie Investors are being tempted by shares in oil, radio licences and Croatian drug companies Are you happy to take a risk? Card firms rapped News in Brief Contents 18 days to disaster Footsie climbs to three-year high F&C Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Parent gets lucky with premium bond gifts A Question of Money Clothing store boss proves he has a talent for selling Directors' Deals Contents Rising school fees mean it's best to save now Isas, special funds and VCTs can help when planning for you children's education, writes Clare Francis Multiple Display Advertising Items Venturing into Speculative Investments to Meet the Cost of School Brown must give the man in the street a reason to invest Multiple Display Advertising Items Not so happy Abbey Lenders slash the cost of releasing your equity Competition is making it cheaper for the elderly to take money from their homes. But they should still be wary, says Clare Francis Islamic mortgages to grow by 47% a year Equity Release Plans Compared Diy Loan Profit potential of China revaluation China's decision to unpeg the renminbi from the dollar will have repercussions around the world, writes Kathryn Cooper How to cash in on the float of the renminbi Kathryn Cooper looks at tactics for investors who want to profit from the liberation of the Chinese currency China The Sunday Times Firefighter Picks a Hot Asia Fund Asia The West Panicky banks unleash deluge of junk mail With their profits under pressure, banks are flooding their customers with mailshots The Sunday Times Last Post for Co-Op Mailshots Back the managers who invest in their own funds Bosses whose friends and families have a stake in their schemes often perform better, says Kathryn Cooper A joyful summer of mouldy fruit and Dial-a-Ride Mortgage Deals Cheap Credit Cards Best Savings Accounts Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Windfall Shares Take a leap into salmon farming Multiple Display Advertising Items Batsman celebrates with Aussie wine Fame and Fortune Australian cricketer Adam Gilchrist enjoys a good bottle—especially one from his country's vineyards, he tells Jessica Bown Legal & General Returns from targeted funds may not be what they seem Firms are rushing to offer schemes that aim to beat deposit accounts. But check what you're getting, says Jessica Bown Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Finds your hidden talents If you want to strike out in a new direction, you need to be clear about what skills you possess. Andrew Taylor looks at how to make the most of your life experiences Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Shape up with master's degree in charity work Master of Voluntary Administration is a qualification that is tailor-made for those who are running charities Multiple Display Advertising Items Selfish motives of the selfless Multiple Display Advertising Items The Funday Times Contents Lemur Alert Fresh! Yes, Way! Scafby-Boy in Mystery MacAbre! Ice Base Golden Bear Clever Boy Face your fear, and the ground, on Busch Gardens' new … Most & Requested Fact File Two by Two My Pet Caracal Under Harry's Spell Book Mark Take a Summer Snap Jarvis Fans utd Dennis and Gnasher Creature feature Quick Fire Super Summer Grand Finale Swap It! Gone Fishing My Word Fun Doku Guess who? Spot the Ball Knit One, Purl Doom! F-Mail Puzzle Zone Answers Jumping Jones Fact File Simpsons Contents Contents Daimler cruises out of retirement Up to Speed Field advertising faces a fight A new Lotus for £15.20 Cars on TV Vie and my Motors Stelios Haji-Ioannou Me and my Motors Stelios Haji-Ioannou On his CD Changer Sneaky ways to beat that parking ticket A retired police traffic officer has blown the gaff on parking dodges, reports Emma Smith Best of all possible worlds? Drives the Mercedes R-Class Vital Statistics The Opposition Model Mercedes E 55 AMG estate £65,930 The Internet Fast Lane Euro Ncap Return of the Saint A British TV cult classic led to an expensive obsession for an American collector, reports Giles Chapman Where are They now? The Fate of the Cars of the Stars Multiple Display Advertising Items Not a Lot of People Know that Ingear The Stuff of Motoring Dreams Play your Cards Right The Knowledge Kia Motors All you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Speed Check Bentley Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Used Car: MG ZR The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items You'll like this one, Belgium Vital Statistics The Internet Fast Lane Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Garmin Be careful out there—the idiot's guide to Euro travel Driving on the Continent this summer? It's easy, as long as you remember that every country has different rules, says Joseph Dunn France Germany Belgium Holland Spain Portugal Italy Greece Sweden Eastern Europe Beware of hyenas with bad haircuts Some European road signs are harder to understand than your average No Entry, writes Roland White Confused? You Will Be when You See These Signs The Sunday Times Letters Safety Camera Locators and In-car Satellite Navigation Car Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Deal of the Week Times Online My First Crash Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Regtransfers Porsche Contents Inside Much? Worth It? Moving on Hazelton Rigg, Alnnam, Northumberland, £160,000 A child in lawyers' London At Gray's Inn, author-illustrator Sally Gardner played with a toy theatre and dreamed of dragons Time and place Design Classics La Conica coffee maker by Aldo Rossi Houses of the week Directors' choice Underground in London Lakeside retreat Multiple Display Advertising Items Modernism comes of age- at last Once derided as cold and problem-prone, 1930s modernist houses are now being lovingly restored. Dominic Bradbury visits some concrete classics The Grenville Homes Group Who claims Tichborne tenancy? Crest Nicholson The Zaparyments What you get for a million. . . For a bit less. These days a budget of about £1m can buy you a Scottish estate or a flat in Manchester—but choose your area if you want to beat the price down says Graham Norwood Hammer time for my antique When Wendy Sloane realised small children and large pieces of glass don't mix, she decided to try the London auction houses to sell her Victorian mirror Foxtons Foxtons Foxtons Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Fashion heaven Reclusive designer Yves Saint Laurent's most extravagant creation—his chateau—is for sale, says John Follain On the Market Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Scenes from my car-wreck marriage Spiritual conversion Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The world in two acres Helen Davies meets a plant collector whose obsession nearly ended in tragedy when he was kidnapped in Colombia, a brush with death that has inspired him to create a global garden Garden Cuttings What to Do this Week Ask the experts Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Sleek and chic for mum and dad Developers building funky city-centre flats are finding many older buyers want to trade in the chintz for modern urban living, says Nicola Venning Multiple Display Advertising Items Grrr! Let me keep the cash New legislation means landlords will lose control of their tenants' deposits, says Rosie Millard Savills The Market Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Battersea Reach Contents Mercedes-Benz Contents Lowe must go on A costume drama with muddy hems What? No sewing, no simpering, no empire-line frocks? A new film of Pride & Prejudice is Austen with grit, says Joanna Briscoe Ballad of a shy man His new single Bad Day has been a global triumph, but Daniel Powter is a reluctant pop star. By Robin Eggar Putting the promo in the picture The cult Directors Label DVDs are giving pop videos a new lease of life, says Stephen Armstrong ENO Good vibrations Cecily Brown is that rare thing, an artist who captures the sensation of sex, says Waldemar Januszczak Biteback In pursuit of the Poll positions Rest of the week's films In the Realms of the Unreal The Last Mitterrand The Gruffalo Whisky Victim The Skeleton Key Twentynine Palms Short Cuts Shallow Ground Originality has gone for a Burton It looks sweet, but Charlie and the Chocolate Factory smacks of stale ideas. By Cosmo Landesman 25 years ago today Two Fringe institutions that changed popular taste celebrate their birthdays this year Alex Fringe in your eyes He's got a lovely set of CocoNuts Jordi Milan's Festival return is as anarchically fabulous as ever, says Andrew Burnet The Woman in White Renault Fall from grace Adam Cooper's Les Liasons Dangereuses shows flashes of inspiration, but fails to live up to previous incarnations, says David Dougill The Sunday Times Megane On record Classical Beethoven Classical CD of the week Szymanowski Plano Works Plotr Anderszewski (plano) Virgin 5 45730-2 In Due Temp! Boulez Le marteau sans maitre Ensemble Intercontemporain, Hilary Summers (mezzo-soprano), cond Pierre Boulez Pop and Jazz The week's essential new releases Anthony Hamilton Soulife Atlantic/Rhino 8122746952 Nikka Costa Can'tneverdidnothin' Virgin 80429 2 Pop CD of the week Various Artists London is the Place for Me 2 Honest Jons Hjrcd16 Lee Ryan Lee Ryan Brightside 828766719152 Various Artists Chris Coco Presents: The Dub Club Trojan Tjdc251 Evan Parker with Birds For Steven Lacy Treader Trd001 Various Artists Concord Picante — 25th Anniversary Collection Concord Ccd4 2269-2 (4 CDs) Leon Redbone Live at the Olympia Theatre, Paris Dixie Frog DFGCD 8596 Get on down A New Career in a New Town New kids in town HMS Pinafore The Sunday Times What the Butler Saw Thieves' Carnival Plot and counterplot A timely revival of Sejanus: His Fall is a reminder of the perils of absolute power, says Victoria Segal The Times The top arts events of the coming months National Theatre Waiting for Godot Alvin Alley American Dance Theater Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Concerts Dance Opera Pop Comedy Film War of the Worlds Theatre Mary Stuart Art Impressionism Abroad: Boston and French Painting Comedy Chris Addison: Atomicity Opera Kirov Opera Dance Les Lialsons Dangereuses Concerts Academy of St Martin in the Fields Pop Editors Zenith Games Fantastic Four Ps2, Xbox, GameCube, £39.99; The Times F1 05 PS2, £39.99; all ages The Claude Chabrol Collection Ghetto Gospel 2Pac fast ettom John Alexander Warner, 15,175 mins, £22.99 (2 DVDs); Director's Cut, 15,167 mins, £17.99 Koktebel The Machinist Voices of angels Three uplifting choralorchestral Proms reached the rafters of the Albert Hall, says Paul Driver The Lowry The Sunday Times 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 Shock and awe Before the Fall-Out From Marie Curie to Hiroshima by Diana Preston Doubleday £20 pp438 Shockwave: The Countdown to Hiroshima J Murray £20 pp352 Read on. . . Her years of living dangerously Take a Girl like Me by Diana Melly Chatto £14.99 pp 280 Away days Diary Caught between cultures My Fathers' Daughter a Story of Family and Belonging by Hannah Pool H Hamilton £14.99 pp304 Banking on their power Medici Money: Banking Metaphysics and Art in Fifteenth-Century Florence by Tim Parks Profile £15.99 pp273 Old man's river Rome or Death: The Obsessions of General Garibaldi by Daniel Pick Cape £16.99 pp288 Book events In the news Books behind the headlines: shoot to kill How Hitler tricked Stalin Stalin's Folly The secret History of the German Invasion of Russia, June 1941 by Constantine Pleshakov Weidenfeid £20 pp352 What Stalin Knew Thew Enigma of Barbarossa by David E Nurphy Yale £17.95 pp400 Read on. . . A descent into mania Ivan the Terrible: First Tear of Russia by Isabel de Madariaga Yale £25 pp484 Waterstones The troubles he's seen Revolt on the Tigris The Al-Sadr Uprising and the Governing of Iraq by Mark Etherington Hurst £15 pp252 A Zen kind of magic Henri Cartier-Bresson a Biography by Pierre Assouline In his beginning is his end The Portrait by Iain Pears Harper Perennial £8.99 pp215 Twisting through time Labyrinth by Kate Mosse Orion £9.99 pp531 When two pasts collide The Stranger House by Reginald Hill Harper Collins £12.99 pp470 The Girl who a Married a Lion Children's book of the week WHSmith Pick of the week Paperbacks I'll Go to Bed at Noon by Gerard Woodward Himalaya by Michael Palin The Vesuvius Club by Mark Gatiss Hawkwood by Frances Stonor Saunders Lucia Joyce The Sunday Times concise crossword No 907 The First Detective The Real Cruel Sea Ghosting: A Double Life Gielgud's Letters edited and Introduced by Richard Mangan, read by Derek Jacobi Audio book of the week You really must read. . . The Sunday Times Inside story What's making news in the Sunday Times bestsellers list Hardbacks Paperbacks Contents Watch it: the best of the week ahed The Lady From Shanghai Monday, Sky Cinema 1,4pm Have faith Sugar and spice Blood and guts Lest we forget The big match Pick of the week The Slavery Business Wednesday, BBC2, 9pm Current affairs Picks of the day Radio Pick of the Day BBC Proms (BBC4, 7.50pm) Not one for goths Worth the weight Melodrama Pick of the day Mummy, dearest Smile, you're on. . . The scenic route Teenage rampage Critics choice Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Back to the future Loadsamoney Pull the udder one Change and decay Pick of the day Deadly cells Sceptred isles Him again Critics choice Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Tsunami Prayers (BBC2, 7pm) Doomed Enterprise? Conservative values There is no society Pick of the day Butt of the jokes Boys to men Such sweet sorrow Punishment park Operation Amsterdam (C4,12.35pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day The Slavery Business Appetising Predator puss Daktari update Pick of the day Best documentary Heartbeat Studenty jape Films Shall We Dance (BBC2, 1pm) BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Thursday August Pick of the Day Cricket: England v Australia More, more, more All part of the drill Cracking crime Pick of the day Radioactive fallout Iffy comedy Off the wavelengths Films Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Fox hunting Best whodunit Best comedy Of human bondage Pick of the day Greatest hits Oddest documentary Best history The Mummy (BBC1, 8.30pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day The big matches History remembered A classical education The Kecks files Pick of the day Same old same old Top 10 TV programmes Donnie Darko (BBC2, 9.35pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One The Cult of The Suicide Bomber Contents Nokia Mitsubishi Motors Contents Dfs Eyeopener. . . Butler's Wharf, E1: east London's artists' colony and party central From the Boffins Born on the Same Day Wonder Woman and Wonder Man: one birth date Rolex The Wolf Man Flashback Blunders of the World Not Abyssinia's brightest spark Rootfinder "Bob's your uncle" The Unlikely Event Big Spender Strachan CitroËn Sophie Ellis-Bextor and her Mother, Janet Ellis The Sunday Times Wine Club Amdega North east england Frank McCourt Ariel Coming of the Fence Evelyn Parker Allison Leverton Rosy Bremer He's Iraq's most notorious terrorist, with a $ 25m … Death of the Magic Leffe Off the Shelf: Drugs Withdrawn The Travel Collection Staying Healthy Shouldn't Be a Consumers' Supermarket Visit Stagecoach Worried? Don't Panic Bupa Baumatic Once-In-A-Lifetime' Limited Offer on Professional Empiredirect Gardening Direct Anglian Visa Bridge Chess Teaser Bookwise Sudoku The superion version Mephisto Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Web Directory Stephen Simon Temples & Tigers Siemens Contents Sony Ericsson Inside Revlon VW Beetles The Serial Spouses Going up Going down Fashion Moment Tipa 2005 Teenage Kicks Joss Stone has sold 5m albums, performed in front of two bilion people and replaced Sarah Jessica Parker as the face of Gap. Oh, and she's also desperately in love. Not a bad life for an 18-year-old, says Craig McLean Ain't Life Great? The rave generation may have hit middle age and given up sweaty clubs, but the party must go orregardless. Jessica Brinton introduces Britain's new, chilled-out middle class Volkswagan Who Adores Dior? To-die-for couture at the shows; flashy logo-ed jeans and plastic porno mules in the shops. So who is the Dior woman Toyota Follow a Pattern Garnier To help resist the signs of ageing Garnier Garnier Fashion Style Faking It Skinted Minted Going Solo How often do you see a girl out alone in a pub, a restaurant, at he theatre? Hardly ever. And yet, finds Jan Masters, it is one of the most exhilarating and rewording ways to go out Syeltesse Reality Check The Sybarite Play the Tuberose Hair Bitch! Do It now Hit the Matt In the Monoi Cultta Fabulous How did a man who spends his life in fetid, smoky nightclubs become the star of a beauty ad campaign? Simon Mills finds out why Dj David Guetta is worth it Boys this is how You Do It Tomline Colonic irrigation is as popular among the ladies who lunch as Botox. But is it really the harmiess internal cleansing it is claimed to be, ask Amanda Ursell The Sunday Times What's Alternative? Quaker Oat Sticky Moment Nice Ice Nothing impresses like a home-made ice cream. Joanna Simon gets funky with the flavours Or You Could Try. . . Make It Saucy Table Talk Aubaine Joanna Simon Sauce Cellar Notes Wine Bluff Romance The setting for Out of Africa. this Kenyan house has seduced nomadic jewellery designer with a passion for finding treasures on her travels, says Lisa Grainger Get the Look Get into Shapes Some vases are such a triumph of farm over function, you don't even need to put flowers in them. By Talib Choudhry Vauxhall In the Stars Nectar We're so in Love Felix and Enobarbus Ladies' Man Mrs Mills Solver All You Problems Why Did He Do that? What makes a man cheat with a less attractive woman, asks Shane Watson Shiseido Bombay Sapphire
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