News from 07/08/2005
2005; Gale Group;
Autores
Jonathan, David Mills, Sally Brock, Professor Gideon Garter, Steven Ramsey, David O'Leary, Roger Woolfe, Neil Wormald, Mark Hughes, S Cox, Martin Jol, Paul Jewell, Richard Herring, Joseph Dunn, Martin James, Rosie Millard, Patrice de Villiers, Hugh Canning, S L, Sarah Dempster, Steve Brown, Sir Menzies Campbell Liberal Democrat Mp, David Thorpe, Holly Watt, Giles Hattersley, Shelley Von Strunckel, Jackie Cole, Blower, Kate Saunders, Lawrence Booth, Emma Smith, Keith Cameron, Alan Pardew, Amanda Blinkhorn, Spindle, Stephen Lawrence, John Elliott, John Kampfner, Maurice Chittenden, Claire Sweeney, Marilyn Day, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, John Elliott Consumer Affairs Correspondent, Pelle Neroth Taylor, Dan Box, Victoria Aitken, Chris Haslam, Bill Clinton, Matthew Campbell, John Carey, David Hutcheon, Mary Braid, Liam Clarke, Graham Norwood, David Budworth, Clive Arrowsmith, Simon Sebag Montefiore, Stewart Mitchell, Richard Hodson, Sarah Baxter, Kate Spicer, Keith Mills, Jason Dawe, Sian Griffiths, Jonathan Northcroft, Roger Jukes, N J, Peter Whittle, D M, Andrew Longmore, Paul Marinko, Kate Middleton, David Maxwell, Richard Green, E P, Clive Davis, Michael Lynch Chief Executive, Simon T Anderson, Sir Alex Ferguson, Peter Jones, John Phelan, Mike Pattenden, Victoria Segal, Edward Porter, Fergus Garrett, Adrian Turpin, Dave Pollard, Jane Pace, Robert Cairns, Sarah Bridge, Jeremy Taylor, Jeff Potter, Alan Curbishley, Peter Parker, Christopher Silvester, Paul Donovan, Steve McClaren, Garth Pearce, John Follain, Richard Brooks, Christopher Tombs, Anthony Reregrine, Stuart Andrews, David Leppard, Richard Brown, Hugh Pearmen, Diana Wright, David Moyes, S B, Steve Bruce, Natalie Graham, Spencer James, Stephen Armstrong, Bryan Robson, Colin McDowell's, Bethan Cole, Michael Sheridan Far East Correspondent, N R, Tom Lynch, Sir Malcolm Rifkind Shadow pensions secretary, Louise Armistead, M E, Sam Allardyce, John Crossland, Michael Smith, Adrian Dannatt, Cosmo Landsman, Iris Brosch, Jeremy Langmead, R H, Tahir Shah, Angus McCrone, Nigel Powell, Daniel Emery, Ben Dowell, Jeremy Lazell, Mary Smyth, Jonathan Futrell, Gordon Brown, Hugh Pearman, Kevin Pietersen, Clover Stroud, David Nowell, Jonathan Doran, Simon Wilde Cricket Correspondent, Richard Lewis, Helen Stewart, John Dugdale, William Kay, Barbara Hall, Graeme Souness, Jon Swain, Nicholas Rufford, Rob Hughes, John Peter, Mickey Skinner, Susan d'Arcy, Ramita Navai, Mathias Döpfner, Kenneth Wood, C D, Joe Pistone, D C, Tom Walker, Arsene Wenger, Alison Kelvin, John Gribbin, Robert Winnett Whitehall Correspondent, Anthony Phillips, Edward Portor, Hugh Mcllvanney, Stewart Lee, Nicola Smith, Jon Austen, Mark Gould, Paul Sutton, Jeremy Guscott, Chris Woodhead, David Bebber, PhB, Tony Fearon, Mark Edwards, Darius Sanai, Rachel Bridge, Susan Clark, Chris Coleman, Mark Walker, John McCririck racing pundit and friend, John Chamberlin, Romy Fraser, Jonathan Carr-Brown Health Correspondent, Raymond Keene, Iustin Langer, Marie Colvin, Tim Micklebrugh, Robin Welland-Jones, Stephen Bleach, Louise Armitstead, I C, Michael Keaton, Trevor Lewis, Mark Stucklin, Victoria O'brien, Roland White, Mark Franchetti, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Michael Sheridan, D L, John Waples, Ernest Smith, Andrea Klarin, Simon Jenkins, Stephen Pettitt, Eric Brown, David Waleh, Mark Hodson, Andrew Frankel, Joe Lovejoy, Hug Canning, Tim Manns, Dan Cairns, Rick Stein, Alice Jones, Chris Feetenby, Roderick Luis, Karen Robinson, Philip Marsden, D Guillemots, Helen Davies, Kate Mulvey, A J, Lord Foulkes Labour peer, Cathy Kasterine, Frank Whitford, Sybil Kapoor, Kathryn Cooper, Andrew Taylor, P D, Benedict Allen, Richard Lines, K R, Andrew Porter, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Gemma Scott-Martin, Robert Winnett, Irwin Stelzer, Robert Hewison, Peter Wilson, David Dougill, Sarah-Kate Templeton Medical Correspondent, Jason Allardyce, Paul Forsyth, Jeremy Clarkson, David Cairns, Bob Walker, Robert Ryan, Greg Struthers, Lydia Slater, Rafael Benitez, Jasper Herald, Tom Mickleburgh, Steve Waugh, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, Michael Woodhead, Ian Hawkey, Paul Durman, John Wheeler, Heston Blumenthal, Mick McCarthy, Harriet Perry, Greg Searle, Jane Murray, Gerard Lyons, Bob Graham, Rod Liddle, Fiona Morrow, Cosmo Landesman, Sharon Ridoynauth, Dominic O'Connell, Adrienne Connors, Jose Mourinho, Claire King, Caroline Donald, Dr Chris Higgins, Ned Sherrin, Miranda Seymour, David Gowed, Hayley Westenra, Clare Francis, Alain Perrin, John Harlow, Paul Inwan, Mark Kleinman, Claudia Croft, John Kinnaird, Deirdre Fernand, Will Iredale, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, Sally Kinnes, Tom Pattinson, Naomi Caine, Minette Marrin, P W, Lucy Pugh, Janie Omorogbe, Matthew Goodman, India Knight,
ResumoContents Robin Cook dies while hillwalking Wife Gaynor and walkers in 30-minute fight to save him Pups not pills: NHS offers dogs on prescription Contents BT Contents Inside the sect that loves terror Insight Contents The Sunday Times New readers flock to The Sunday Times Contents Newspapers Support Recycling Contents Campanile Watch for women and child bombers, says Met Law may halt Blair's war on extremism Special forces turn sights from Iraq to hunt terrorists in Britain Man on Tube Charges Crop tops are so me: Tiffanie Darke, editor of The … London suspect: I am no kamikaze Cook, founding member of the awkward squad Northern Rock plc Principles Came First Olivier worn out by love and lust of Vivien Leigh Keypoint endowment claims Britain prepares for bird flu death toll of thousands Locals use new drink laws to shut binge pubs Top hotel to have wing for women only Labour to offer Asian donors seats in Lords Clinton advises Cherie to be MP Contents Mercedes-Benz British sub launches Russian rescue Seven crewmen trapped on seabed Volkswagen Fears over health risk to children of mercury in tuna Sunny jaunts of the working MPs Shuttle crew ready to land Bar prepares to host UK's first gay wedding Last Post sounds for army bugle National savings & investments Treetop path will give bird's-eye view of forest Fuel error costs Abramovich £1m Ford Olympics chief plans America's Cup bid CitroËn French surgeon botched half his NHS work Contents Dob-dob Gadaffi: dictator reveals debt to Scouts True love gets into bed with Thelma & Louise London Energy Undercover in the Academy of Hatred Insight While London reeled under attack, the teachers of extremism were celebrating — and a Sunday Times reporter was recording every word Blair's extremism proposals attacked Behind Tony Blair's crackdown on Muslim extremism there is a realisation that Britain faces an elusive new enemy with no overall command, report David Leppard and Robert Winnett As the hunt continues for terror's new breed Blair's Terror Crackdown Brainwashed by Bigotry Ordeal of a British Muslim Tahir Shah vanished for two weeks into a torture cell while on a film-making trip to Pakistan Saviour Sect's bloodcurdling sermons call for more martyrs Abhorrent but Legal: The Difficulties in Prosecuting Those who Preach Hate Seems like a perfect match — so where's the catch? Profile It's almost treason, by George Nationwide Rush to judgment Wagging the NHS tail Nine national charities working together A shocking death on the No 43 bus Prescott Towers, the height of architectural imbecility Picture Gallery Two Brains Willetts sets his brand new Penny a challenge Atticus Tory MP David Amess has been let down gently Atticus Mandelson soft soaps Cherie in effort to keep Tony at No 10 Atticus Tory leadership hopefuls are running nowhere fast Atticus Veritas has announced the date of its first annual Atticus Robin Cook was one of the greats — out of office Never mind how the mighty are fallen, life can be even Atticus With a pregnant mistress and an angry wife, you'd think Atticus As MPs sip poolside cocktails and ignore criticism Atticus Barclays After the IRA terror, truth will aid reconciliation Rav4 Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street Putting our trust in the rule of law Well Funded Passport to paradise or just a ticket to a gilded cage? Plucked from obscurity and richer by more than £80m, Dolores McNamara now faces the real test: will it make her happy? Maurice Chittenden reports How to Spend £80m Saga Holidays Ltd. Vegan Vixens bite beef eaters Department of Health Lastminute. com Heels put boot into 'Imelda' Schwarzenegger UN oil scandal chief hits back St. Joseph's Hospice Times Online Iran's new leader rejects nuclear pact Lexus Royal Saud senses wind of change P&O Ferries Young French choose Britain for good life Volvo Koreans cast shadow over Hiroshima AOL Thirteen die as holiday plane crashes into sea off Sicily Rising IQ condemns a killer EU plans to set asylum targets US gives female president screen test Bush's neocon friends shocked as he backs the Darwin-doubters Saab 95 Contents Today's weather Land Rover Murder police hunt hoodie youths News in Brief Doorstep runway Ireland urged to arrest Colombia three Iraq protest Correction Two tickets share £4.4m Lotto jackpot Legal protest Teenagers held Daughters of two Putin opponents take on Kremlin The Sunday Times New route for Chinese to get fake UK visas Marilyn reveals her smarter side on the couch We will never forget the destruction of an iconic Jaguar Modesty forbids pushiness in Wills's squeeze Mothers lose the maternal instinct No wonder we worried how the Tories would spend Contents Freddie Star England poised to level series Contents Mitsubishi Motors England two wickets from glorious victory England turned the tables in the second Test and bullied Australia to the brink of defeat on a day when 17 wickets fell England v Australia Defiant Warne adds lustre to his legend How the king of spin has changed his bag of tricks Edgbaston rises to heroic SuperFred The allrounder threw down the gauntlet to Australia yesterday with both bat and ball to revitalise England's Ashes hopes Renault Freddie's rollercoaster day Captain must find his feet Michael Vaughan is out of form and keeps being bowled. He must refine has technique or his struggles will continue Times Online All-out attack replaces test of patience Batsmen are prepared to take more chances in their pursuit of victory, and it makes for great entertainment Captain in crisis: Michael Vaughan's sliding batting average Giles is key to home success England's pacemen have been aggressive and fiery but it has been their under-rated spinner who has played a crucial role 'i want England to win and I want to be the best cricketer ever' Kevin Pietersen's confidence in his own ability has been crucial to his brilliant start as an England player The long road to England: Pietersen's life and times Ifill late show snares Foxes Coca-Cola League Blackwell plots promotion on a shoestring Barely a year ago, the Leeds manager was struggling to field a team. He faces Millwall today believing the club can return to the Premiership Ten-man Stoke denied by penalty miss Windass adds to Hartlepool's final hangover Defiant Niemi halts Wolves Coca-Cola League Lively Luton shock Palace Forster off to a flyer Peschisolido's saver Carlisle return to make their point Ashton back in the old routine Misfit The soap opera that is Chelsea's battle to sign Michael Essien is nearly over, but at what price to the young Ghanaian? Wenger hopes to find community spirit in Cardiff Arsenal and Chelsea will be focusing on the season ahead as they line up for the Community Shield, but both would relish victory today, writes Rob Hughes Volkswagen Essential Essien Return of the Blues Everton hope to defy the critics when their Champions League adventure begins against Villarreal on Tuesday This week's crucial clashes in the Champions League The Sunday Times Nakamura steals show as Celtic lift gloom Coca-Cola Championship League One League Two Pools The week's transfers and rumours Tale of the tabs Other Football Fixtures Catch us if You Can Arsène Wenger and Alex Ferguson may claim otherwise, but no team looks capable of halting Chelsea's march to another title, says Joe Lovejoy Orange Back in the Running He has eight Premiership titles to his name, but that doesn't mena Ryan Giggs is any less hungry for success Multiple Display Advertising Items Benitez builds for success on home front After European glory, the manager said there would be changes at Liverpool. He has been true to his word and now expects a return. By Jonathan Northcroft This season's. . . Players you love to hate Arsenal Birmingham Blackburn Aston Villa Bolton Charlton Everton Fulham Chelsea Liverpool Man City Middlesboro Newcastle Man United Portsmouth Sunderland West Brom West Ham Tottenham Wigan Raging Bull This season's . . . Surprise buys The Sunday Times Wigan face peer pressure The Latics begin their first season in the Premiership by hosting the champions. Can they prove they belong at the top? Sky Boks burst All Black bubble The Sunday Times South Africa win puts Lion tamers in context The 2005 Lions weren't up to the task, but the battling Boks proved that the All Blacks are no world-beaters yesterday Le Bon pushes the boat out The Duran Duran lead singer is reuniting his old crew to compete in the race in which he was nearly killed 20 years ago Enthralled by strife on the ocean wave It is best described as 'controlled chaos' but crewing a racing boat during Cowes Week is a unique and glorious sporting experience, writes Marie Colvin Skandia Cowes Week Sotherton sees golden hopes shot down Britain's Olympic bronze medallist fought back with a stunning 200m performance after a poor shot-put left her trailing in the heptathlon, writes Richard Lewis The week ahead in Helsinki Radcliffe runs out of time The athletic failed in the first partj of her attempt to double up in 10,000m and marathon at the world championships Airberlin The Sunday Times 'i celebrated my second place at The Open. It must … Colin Montgomerie says he is taking pleasure from his achievements, not beating himself up, as he prepares for the US PGA Fearless Saltman chases American dream After finishing as the leading amateur at The Open, the teenager is confident of tasting team glery at the Walker Cup in Chicago this week, By Paul Forsyth The Sunday Times Absent friends open door A tournament hit by the withdrawal of star players is led by a Belgian who seeks his first win today. Report by Paul Forsyth Ayr meeting abandoned after Winston's horror fall Sports round-up Rugby Union Results round-up Rugby League Other Sport Today's racing Fixtures Racing This Week Elegant Loudon makes his mark County scoreboards Derbyshire enjoy Gray day Anderson in groove again Udal gets reward Round-up The Times Caught in Sheffield United win promotion to the First Division, 1961 Sport Letters Write to: The Sports Editor (Letters) Questions answers Heroes' … Greg Searle, Olympic gold medal-winning rower, on Mickey Skinner The Sunday Times Travel Magazine Any Answers? Sport on TV Don't miss this Times Online Sure Men The Sunday Times Owen is seen as a costly gamble How to make yourself hated Heat is on salaries Contents Easyjet man is offered chief executive's job — and then resigns China telecom group in talks to buy Marconi Permira takes 30% stake in casino operator Gala Investec Contents Friends Reunited lines up adviser to prepare sale London leads in carbon market Special Report Trading in emission allowances has reached £40m a day and is set to grow rapidly, writes Angus McCrone Contents 12 pages of business Press Complaints Commission Multiple Display Advertising Items Funds turn the screw on C&W Cinema group to float for £400m Tasty deal tempts former BBC boss Eurotunnel facing legal fight over axed contract Osmond to seal £900m finance line for HHG Lil-lets firm wants to keep it Simple Business Digest French accused of 'market abuse' in BPB bid battle Ferry sale may be worth a Packet Red Letter saviours forced to dig deeper Nanjing plans rebirth of mighty MG Midget Tennant denies guilt in Christie's price-fixing case HSBC Allsports holds crisis talks as sales nosedive High tech no refuge from the Chinese threat Agenda UK needs more than low rates The cut in base rate will have little impact on the economy. Britain needs to become more competitive in world markets, writes Gerard Lyons Exshellent The long tail Dragon's dent America starts to boom as growth takes off American Account Gaming Winners The internet gambling boom has created a new generation of entrepreneurs. With 17 online gaming groups having floated on the stock market in the past few years, Matthew Goodman and Dan Box report on the founders who have hit the jackpot What They are worth The Times London takes pole position as carbon market hots up Carbon Traders Clean up IBM The Other IBM BT loosens its hold on the local loop The telecom giant's rivals will at last get equal access to its wiring network. Paul Durman meets the man who will make it happen Putting the vroom back into Daimler Chrysler Dieter Zetsche did a good job in Detroit. Can he do the same in Germany? By Michael Woodhead in Frankfurt Will podcasts kill the radio ads? Advertisers fear their messages may get edited out by the growing band of iPod listeners, writes Paul Durman Multiple Classified Advertising Items Britain's real Olympic hero Keith Mills, the man who masterminded London's winning bid for 2012, is not resting on his laurels. Now he aims to bring home the America's Cup Experts predict £9bn boost from games The government's ambitions will be revealed in the list of firms to manage the project, writes Dominic O'Connell Keith Mills's Working Day Vital Statistics Working Space The Sunday Times Hold the front page a minute The Peter meter Natural cures are a formula for success How I Made It Romy Fraser founder of Neal's Yard Remedies Todd Enterprises A slice of the Dolce Vita Italy is proving an attractive place for Britons starting up a business. Report by Sarah Bridge in Florence Hiring the right staff to work away from base The Business Doctor Turning into a Limited Firm World share markets Databank Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates / Bonds Currencies Commodities Adidas pounces to catch up with Nike The takeover of Reebok puts it almost on a par with the market leader, but will the deal work? Mark Kleinman reports King's death pushes up price of oil The Week that was Business on the Box Contents The Week Ahead Quote of the Week Rattled Goodwin gets royal tonic Prufrock Land Rover Bra firms stripped of suitors Three's a crowd at Standard Times must be tough at Alton Towers Big Rod bows out with a flourish at BA Inside the City Scottish & Newcastle Online Extra On Wall Street, by Dominic Rushe, appears Contents What the rate cut will mean for you The fall in base rate to 4.5% will have big implications for homeowners and savers, writes Clare Francis Should you go for a fixed deal? More bankruptcies News in Brief Contents Top Tracker Loans Identity theft grows Strong results push Footsie higher F&C The Investment Solution Contents Credit card holders are free to be negligent Multiple Display Advertising Items Sporting caterers cook up a tasty return for bosses Directors' Deals Dividend rises could be your saving grace Better payouts from shares may help to offset the effects of last week's rate cut. By David Budworth Taxman is rapped for 'intimidating' offshore investors The Revenue is sending threatening letters to hundreds of savers, and giving them just 30 days to respond, writes Kathryn Cooper Multiple Display Advertising Items Time to pick up unloved shares Top Income Sectors Housing is the key to lower interest rates Multiple Display Advertising Items Banking on misery Comment Ethical boom Get a grip on your gap year cash You've worked hard for your travelling money, so don't let a thief or a greedy bank take it off you, says Clare Francis Students face repaying more than £22,000 A big hike in university tuition fees means some graduates will still be paying off loans in their thirties, writes Clare Francis Get Cover for your Gap Year Funding Gap Mortgage Deals Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares Best Savings Accounts Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Factfile Doggone, you need a policy Multiple Display Advertising Items Are we heading for a 1914-style collapse? A top historian sees parallels between today and the first world war — and he is not alone, writes Kathryn Cooper Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Watchdog gets swayed by blue shoes Fame and Fortune TV consumer champion Nicky Campbell's early morning starts often lead him to buy garish clothes, he tells Natalie Graham Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Death of an Idealist Steven Vincent believed Iraqis wanted to live the American dream. His mistake cost him his life, reports Tony Allen-Mills Comet Contents Marbella mourns its own King Midas King Fahd's epic spending enriched his favourite part of Spain, says Deirdre Fernand Talking a TV revolution Ned Sherrin devised That Was the Week That Was for a late-night BBC slot - then saw it change television for ever That was fun that was: the memoirs of a patter merchant Ned Sherrin, master of anecdotes, tells Jasper Gerard of his accidental showbiz life You've been blogged Europe's cowardice in the face of enemy fire The response to terror has been abject, says German publisher Mathias Döpfner The Catch 22 of taking exercise The Comeback Kid isn't finished Interview What's up doc? Lack of jobs, that's what A glut of new doctors has met a dearth of NHS training posts. The result is a mess, finds Mary Braid I was an undercover literary agent Giles Hattersley left novels around the capital to see if the 'bookcrossing' craze will spread the word The Sunday Times crossword Ah, Newton, we forgot science Experimental rigour has gone out of the window, says John Gribbin The Sunday Times Doing it his way, right to the end Michael Gearin-Tosh's unconventional cancer treatment both divided and inspired, says Andrew Taylor How The Sunday Times theatre critic saved Godot's life Beckett's great play might have been lost but for one man's stubborn belief, says John Peter The Sunday Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items Fighting fire with fire A firefighter has countered gang attacks by inviting inner-city teenagers to train at a fire station, says Bob Graham Multiple Classified Advertising Items Worth an extra A-level? Summer schools could become a way of boosting a gifted child's chances of getting to a top university, says Sian Griffiths Only need not mean lonely Being an only child doesn't mean you'll end up selfish and alienated, says Amanda Blinkhorn Multiple Display Advertising Items Parent power can buy a teacher Answer the question Learn to police your computer Security attacks have become shocking in their sophistication. Nigel Powell offers wise precautions to keep the virtual thieves at bay Buyer's guide You've packed the music player and digital camera. Doors explores four other gizmos to make a summer holiday sizzle Ultimate Tour Guide The Virus Writer The Rogue Dialler 21St-Century Hero Flashpacker's Companion The Phisher The Pharmer Web wise The Hacker Spyware If this place is the Swan, who's the ugly duckling? Winner's Dinners She shops, she scores This Life People of the Week A Tattoo? Where's the 'arm? It'll Take how Long for the AA to Get Here? The Daily Telegraph: Wim Duisenberg Last word . . . The Guardian: June Haver Winner's Letters Talking Heads P. S. Contents A cook's tour Rick Stein takes a slow boat through gastronomic France Country cooking. Rick Stein celebrates the scenery, the scrapes and the long, long Britain's top seafood chef has struck it lucky — he's bagged a barge trip from Bordeaux to Marseilles in search of the best French country cooking. Rick Stein celebrates the scenery, the scrapes and the long, long lunches Ryanair Travel Adaptor Good Gear Guide Digital SLR Rick Stein's slow boat through France Multiple Display Advertising Items Sunscreen Clothing How to follow in Rick's wake Tough Luggage Compass Watch Britain's coolest new hotel Susan d'Arcy has an exclusive first test of Endsleigh House, the latest country-house delight from Olga Polizzi Multiple Display Advertising Items . . . and its orangest Stephen Bleach drew the short straw and got to test EasyHotel Drought and fire hit scorching Med The Turkish bombing campaign continues as two people Holiday money Multiple Display Advertising Items If you'd rather do the festival scene without the scramble … Your bag's in Calcutta Bargains of the week Where was I? Land ahoy! After Toronto: safety questions answered It's time to ban wetbikes Readers' rants Doesn't look like Qatar. . . You don't have to holiday in the Gulf states: just take their cheap flights and run. By Mark Hodson What the Gulf state airlines offer Mastercard Daddy, can I keep it as a pet? On a tour of Tasmania's heavenly landscapes, Robert Ryan and family made a pact with a devil Kuoni The stork doesn't deliver in a heat wave A 'fertility break' is very modern, but not, as Lucy Pugh learnt, that effective in Italy Olympic Holidays Travel brief The City Page Cologne Who said the Germans don't know how to have fun? Harriet Perry revels in the Rhine's pretty party city Qantas Where to stay, where to eat, what to do Keycamp Holidays Bermuda Safari with style, and substance Just because these lodges are good for Africa, it doesn't mean they're not good for you. Jeremy Lazell reveals the places where being responsible has never felt so deluxe Lake Manyara Tree Lodge The Sunday Times Campi Ya Kanzi Loisaba Lodge Kenya Sarara Camp Kenya Nkwichi Lodge Mozambique Podcasting: the beginning of the end for guidebooks? Podwhat? Stephen Bleach gets to grips with the downloadable audio guides we could all be using soon Damaraland Camp Namibia Multiple Classified Advertising Items Buffalo Ridge South Africa Nkwali Camp Zambia Tsumkwe Lodge Namibia Phinda Rock Lodge South Africa Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items My hols Claire Sweeney has travelled from Goa to St Lucia — and all thanks to Butlins Multiple Display Advertising Items Where was I? The competition Contents Contents How Much? A windmill in . . . Is It worth It? Moving on Local girl goes global Time and place Teenage classical singer Hayley Westenra wishes she could spend more time at the family home in New Zealand Bernières bookcase Design Classics Spirit of the Thirties £12m Houses of the week Two rooms with a view £250,000 On the lochside . . . £635,000 Octagon Fine & Country 'i don't dine. I don't cook' Billie Whitelaw likes to make her mark wherever she lives — that's why she's abolished the dining room in her Hampstead flat, she tells Karen Robinson Towering ambition After eight years of toil and £425,000 over budget, the owners of a Victorian water tower have a home that takes their breath away, says Victoria O'brien Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Now I need a second home The accidental landlord Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Clever tactics keep you in full control They have their own way of conducting property transactions Spain — and it all hinges on the notary. Understand how the system works to keep out of trouble, says Mark Stucklin Chelsea's Landing Foxtons Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Foxtons Costa Crete? Greece's largest island has become a magnet for British househunters — but will too many buyers spur overdevelopment and a price bubble, asks Helen Davies On the Market Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Red Leaves Multiple Display Advertising Items Hitting the deck Installing a hot tub needn't turn you into a footballer's wife. Victoria O'brien finds plenty of tasteful designs around The Sunday Times Hotting up Ask the experts Multiple Display Advertising Items Gunwharf Quays Tropical fireworks Plants with all the exotic hues of the tropics can flourish in Britain. Fergus Garrett reveals how to give your garden a does of jungle fever Garden Cuttings What to Do this Week Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Knight Frank Westbury Who'll be there for them? A change in the definition of multiple occupancy finds Rosie Millard on the lookout for a new type of tenant Savills The Market Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Berkeley Homes Contents The funday Times Contents Twist & Shout News Fresh! Horse & Hound Scooby-Doo! - Mystery Macabre! Tall Guy Press Start Curry King Get out . . . and about with our seven things to see and places to go this summer Most Requested . . . Fact File Good Enough to Eat Nutty Detail Meet the Animals Funday finds the best animal encourters for 'young visitors to America's sumshine state of Florida Comforting Words Book Mark Grab a Pizza the Action! Win It! Squirt Jarvis Dennis and Gnasher Quick Fire R&B Star Akon Be an Open-Air Star Close up Puzzle Zone Identify the mystery objects in these two pictures Fun Doku Wonka X-Word Knit One, Purl Doom! The story so far-The girls look set to find a fresh use for the knitting skills that Ms Keane taught them earlier today F-Mail Puzzle Zone Answers Home Truths Dear f-mail The Zoe Factor Funday meets Blue Peter presenter Zoe Salmon The Simpsons Contents Inside this Week Car Advertising Peugeot faces fine in price probe Up to Speed Drivers flout mobile phone laws They'll nick them on the beaches Cars on TV Sorry, Herbie, I fell for another love bug Me and my Motors Subaru Parking penalties sans frontières Think you've escaped that Spanish fine? A firm is tracking down British drivers for offences throughout the EU, reports Emma Smith EU Moves to Make Speeding and Parking Fines Europe-Wide Lotus Exige 240R Lotus and Mitsubishi offer two very different takes on cars that are a blast on both track and road. But which is best? Nicholas Rufford and Andrew Frankel had to agree to differ Shootout of the hot shots Mitsubishi EVO IX Multiple Display Advertising Items Ingear The Stuff of Motoring Dreams Keep a Watch on Formula One The Knowledge Biodiesel All you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Winning Lines Bentley Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Used Car: Aston Martin Vanquish The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Pass the joystick, sonny… his is the future of driving Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Reader Rescue For Readers who Can't Decide what Car to Buy The Challenge To find a 4x4 with serious pulling power that will double as a people carrier Budget £30,000-£40,000 The Cars They Tested Winner Mitsubishi Shogun Warrior Lwb 3.2 Di-D Auto (£31,499) Land Rover Discovery 3 Tdv6 HSE Auto (£43,495) The Internet Fast Lane Saab Approved It's lovely when you give it a little tickle Janie Omorogbe Times Online The Internet Fast Lane Garmin Letters Multiple Classified Advertising Items Car Clinic Your Motoring Problems Solved Deal of the Week My First Crash Sroda Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Waterstones Contents In at the shallow end He's the king of mainstream comedy, with a $10m role in Bewitched. Will Ferrell is making waves, says Garth Pearce The class of Saturday Night Live Now you see it Gauguin's Vision of the Sermon helped change the course of European painting. A fascinating show in Edinburgh sheds new light on its creation. By Frank Whitford Queen's Theatre Two men and some jokes Stewart Lee and Richard Herring have done Edinburgh for more than 15 years, much of it as a double-act. As both launch solo stand-up shows there, they each tell tales on the other Multiple Display Advertising Items Who's that lady? Meet Sov, the 'white midget' from Neasden who's taking the rap world by storm. And she ain't no chav, as she tells Dan Cairns Biteback Graham takes a trip on the mild side To coin a phrase Black Narcissus PG, 101 mins Rest of the week's films The Sunday Times Shake Hands with the Devil Dear Wendy Herbie: Fully Loaded U, 101 mins Arakimentari Short Cuts Stealth The Devil's Rejects Chunky Monkey A current affair? Ignore the post-9/11 themes and arty gimmicks — Yes is really a love story at heart, says Cosmo Landesman How to crash through the ratings The castaway drama Lost has riveted US audiences. Will it be a survivor here, asks Fiona Morrow Royal Shakespeare Company McLaren's racy HQ is a winner, says Hugh Pearman Renault Sex is everywhere You've got to hand it to Salzburg for a first-class Austrian rarity. But what a baffling Magic Flute, says Hugh Canning Megane On record Bruckner Symphony No 8 Royal Concertgebouw, cond Classical CD of the week Wagner Tristan und Isolde Placido Domingo, Nina Stemme, Rene Pape, Chorus and Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, cond Antonio Pappano EMI 5 58006 2 (three CDs, plus bonus audio DVD) Berio Rendering, Stanze Dictrich Henschel, French ARmy Chorus, Orchestre de Paris, cond Christoph Eschenbach Ondine ODE 1059 2 Boulez The Three Piano Sonatas Paavali Jumppanen Pop and Jazz The week's essential new releases SYD Matters Someday We Will Foresee Obstacles V2 Vvr1031838 Dawn Landes Dawn's Music Ocean Music Refom9 The Proclaimers Restiess Soul Persevere Persrec Pop CD of the week Monta Where Circles Begin Rewika Rew034 Buck 65 Secret House Against the World WEA 2564 Vialka Curiosities of Popular Customs VIA via002 Mayo Thompson Corky's Debt to his Father Drag City Dc49cd Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen Nhop: The Bass in the Backgroud Storyville 101 8400 Various Artists Raging Bull EMI 5603222 (2CDs) Get on down Parent Power New kids in town The Sunday Times Shaken and stirred to the core For eight weeks every summer, admits Paul Driver, the Proms reduce him to 'a state of quivering over-stimulation' Watch It from Cover to Cover The top arts events of the coming months Bestival Richard II The Forsythe Company Film The critical list Charlie and the Chocolate Factory The Sunday Times top fives Theatre What the Butler Saw Art Salvator Rosa: Wild Landscapes Long players Opera Concerts Snape Proms Dance Pop Summer Sundae Dance Edinburgh Festival Auroara Nova Art Francis Bacon: Portraits and Heads Theatre Jump Comedy Political Animal This week, don't miss Film War of the Worlds Theatre Sejanus: His Fall Art Stubbs and the Horse Comedy Helping Hand for Beslan Opera Flight Dance Les Liaisons Dangereuses Concerts Stephen Hough Pop Goldfrapp Games Infinite Sudoku PC, £9.99; all ages The Times Deep Sea Tycoon 2 Somersault Metrodome, 15,102 mins; £19.99 A Summer's Tale Artificial Eye, U, 113 mins; £19.99 An Autumn Tale Artificial Eye, 15,107 mins; £19.99 War of the Worlds Drunken Angel/The Bad Sleep Well BFI, PG, 93 mins/144 mins; £19.99 each At Last the 1948 Show Boulevard, 15,172 mins; £19.99 (2 DVDs) Do Not Adjust Your Set Boulevard, 15,280 mins; £19.99 (2 DVDs) Through the looking glass The RSC's Comedy of Errors takes a glorious Peek at the dark side By Victoria Segal down a rabbit hole Rest of the week's theatre Behind the Iron Mask Multiple Display Advertising Items The Fever Albert's Boy Multiple Display Advertising Items The Island The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinema The Official Guide of the Society of London Theatre Hymn to a lost way of life Bertie, May & Mars Fish Country Memories of Wartime by Xandra Bingley HarperCollins £14.99 pp240 Read on. . . From slavery to nobility Gannibal: The Moor of St Petersburg by Hugh Barnes Profile £16.99 pp300 Diary Bringing up babe Breakfast with Tiffany An Uncle's Story by Edwin John Wintie Simon & Schuster £12.99 pp311 Waterstones Strangers on the shores Passage to Torres Strait Four Centuries in the Wake of Great Navigators, Mutineers, Castaways and Beachcombers by Miles Hordern J Murray £20 pp290 Orion Children's Books Book events What's happening in the literary world In the news Books behind the headlines: Stephen Lawrence Sun, sand and dirty little secrets A Serpent in Eden by James Owen Little Brown £17.99 pp288 On her majesty's absurd service My Life as a Spy by Leslie Woodhead Macmillan £16.99 pp250 Onwards and upwards On Thin Ice by Mick Fowler Baton Wicks £18.99 pp223 The Hike by Don Shaw Ebury £10.99 pp245 Jacqueline Wilson Clean Break Waterstone's Waterstone's Mummy, I hardly knew you Memoir Statues without Shadows: A Daughter's Search for the Parents She Never Knew by Anna Swan Sceptre £14.99 pp219 The time traveller's life Specimen Days by Michael Cunningham Fourth Estate £14.99 pp308 Waterstone's Offer of the Week Children's book of the week WHSmith Paperbacks In Praise of Slow by Carl Honoré Maharanis by Lucy Moore Germs by Richard Wollheim Ceaseless Turmoil by James Lees-Milne Stand up and Fight: When Munster Beat the All Blacks by Alan English The Sunday Times concise crossword No 908 Bad Dirt by Annie Proulx No Room for Secrets by Joanna Lumley Coma by Alex Garland Janice Gentle Gets Sexy by Mavis Cheek read by Kim Hicks You really must read. . . Before the Fali-out: From Marie Curie to Hiroshima by Diana Preston (Doubleday £20) Trafalgar Inside story What's making news in the Sunday Times bestsellers list Pile 'em High Hardbacks Paperbacks Contents Watch it: the best of the week ahead Summer sport World Championship Athletics (today, BBC2, 9.45am) Only Angels Have Wings Today, Sky Cinema 1,4pm Better late . . . |Africa Live: The Roll Back Malaria Concert (Tuesday, BBC4, 10pm) Best drama Lost (Wednesday, C4,8.30pm) Drama? Cricket: England v Australia (thursday, C4,10am) Horror show Shepperton Babylon (Thursday, BBC4, 9pm) Hero or villain? The man who Bought United (Friday, ITV1, 8pm) Pick of the week The South Bank Show Today, ITV1, 11.10pm Final curtain Big Brother (Friday, C4,10pm) Picks of the day Radio Pick of the Day BBC Proms (R3,4pm) Contents On the ball Community Shield Football: ARsenal v Chelsea (Sky Sports 1,2.30pm) Down on the farm The Real Good Life (ITV1, 6pm) Franklin, my dear . . . Warlords (C4,8pm) Meet 'er indoors Britain's Worst Wife (Five, 8pm) Pick of the day Hiroshima (BBC1, 9pm) Talking pictures We're Not Afraid (BBC4, 8pm) To the Emerald Isle Coast (BBC2, 9pm) He's so fine . . . Jimi Hendrix On The Dick Cavett Show (Biography, 10pm) Films Critics' choice BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Pick of the Day Brain Of Britain (R4,1.30pm) Proof of the pudding Roobarb And Custard Too (Five, 8.45am) Soap moment EastEnders (BBC1, 8pm) Ciao, Londonistan Dispatches: Why Bomb London (C4,8pm) Death becomes her Silent Witness (BBC1,9pm) Pick of the day Transford (ITV1, 9pm) Terror's front line The New A1-Qaeda (BBC2, 9pm) Home help The House Of Obsessive Compuisives (C4,9pm) A cold frontier Iceberg Cowboys (Discovery, 10pm) Films Critics' choice None But The Lonely Heart (BBC2, 1.10pm) BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Monday8August Radio Pick of the Day Hollywood And McCarthy (R2,8.30pm) Contents Wish you were here? The Best And Worst Places To Live in The UK (C4,8pm) Uplifting stories Born To Be Different (C4,9pm) Missing persons 1 Without a trace (54,9pm) Pick of the day Sad To Be Gay (BBC2, 9pm) Missing persons 2 The Hunt For Hitler's Scientists (National Geographic, 9pm) Office politics The Smoking Rook (BBC3, 9.30pm) Rebel rebel My Life As a Child (BBC2, 9.50pm) Pass marks Bunking Off (BBC1, 10.35pm) Geordie (C4,12.35pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Wednesday10August Pick of the Day Oscar At 80(r2,10pm) Girls, uninterrupted Gilmore Girls (Hallmark, 8am) Bear necessities Grizzlies—Living With Alaskan Bears (five, 7,15pm) White men's burden The Slavery Business: Sugar Dynasty (BBV2, 9pm) Regicides wanted How To Start Your Own Country (BBC2, 10pm) Pick of the day Farewell to high days Quitters (BBC4, 10pm) Dirty laundry Naked Us (BBC1, 10.40pm) Winning by a nose Nip/Tick (C4,11.25pm) Films Legend Of The Lost (C4,2. 25pm) BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Wednesday August Radio Thursday August Pick of the Day The Material World (R4,4.30pm) Disguised repeat A Place In The Sun Revisited (C4,8pm) Sex and the city? The City Gardener (C4,8.30pm) Best comedy Extras (BBC2, 9pm) Bunch of softies Bad Lads Army—Officer Class (ITV1, 9pm) Pick of the day Shepperton Babylon (BBC4,9pm) The sun always sets Life And Death in Rome (Sky One, 9pm) So-so comedy The Catherine Tate Show (BBC2, 9.30pm) Best drama House (five, 10pm) Films Bachelor Knight (BBC2, 1.25pm) BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Thursday August Radio Friday12August Pick of the Day White Van Man Speaks (R4,11am) Hero or villain? Sitcom limbo Committed (Five, 7.30pm) Foxy doc comedy Scrubs (C4,8pm) Cosmic crusades Stargate: Atlantis (five, 8pm) Pick of the day Kennath Tynan—In Praise Of Hardcore (BBC2, 11pm) Requiem Dead Men Talking (History, 8pm) Sub infested waters Coast (BBC2, 9pm) Cat out of the bag? 8 Out Of Cats (C4,9. 30pm) Cap-in-hand comedy Still Game (BBC2, 10pm) Films Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House (BBC2, 1.30pm) BBC1 Friday12August ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Friday12August Radio Saturday13August Pick of the Day Archive Hour: Oh What a Lovely Pier (R4,8pm) War and peace VJ Weekend (History, 8am) Alfred the greater Alfred Hitchcock (Biograph, 6pm) Business as usual Casualty (BBC1, 8.45pm) Stars' night out Celebrity Stars In Their Eyes (ITV1, 9.35pm) Pick of the day Match Of The Day (BBC1, 10.25pm) Dog eat dog The Shield (C5,11.30pm) Millions viewing week ending Jul 17 Films It Happened One Night (Sky Cinema 1,2.30pm) BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Saturday13August Answer time Channel 4 News Contents MaZDa Contents Bupa Secret Britain: What you won't find in the guidebooks 16 King Street, London Wc2: chaotic stronghold of the extreme left From the Boffins A stinker of a job Born on the Same Day The record breaker and the record maker Flashback Blunders of the World Unexpected complications of a bypass Rootfinder To "bite the bullet" The Unlikely Event Big Spender What it cost then. . . and what it's worth now Dfs IPA Jonathan Aitken, 62, resigned as a Tory minister and Ducal Amdega Comet Joe Pistone Guys were Killed for Being Associated with … was Found Floating in the River … Nokia The Gestapo Killer who Lived Twice Tesco Good Year What the Big Things Did next Singers, athletes, actors, even sex-aid entrepreneurs, have all featured in this magazine's Next Big Thing section. But who went on to find fame and acclaim? And who flopped? Report by Scott Athorne. Photographs by Clive Arrowsmith Myla Alina Cojocaru Still Waiting in the Wings Smart Car Emma Catherwood October 13,2002 Villages of the Doomed The Talented Mr Leigh He's a master of the vanishing act and reinvention. First he dressed the stars at the Oscars, then he sold art to the rich, and now he's a movie director. Every time he disappeared and changed his name, leaving behind a trial of suspicion. Who is C S Leigh? Bose Smallbone Elephants & Spices Neville Johnson Dalmatian Odyssey Apropos The Wonders of Asia and Africa Bridge Chess Teaser 2238 Nimble thinking Bob Walker Bookwise Mephisto 2346 Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Achie Stallone The Sunday Times Furniture Village Blanc Contents Bombay Sapphire Inside Picture Gallery Celebrity Fiances Loving It The Intekllectual's Guide to Fashion Horizontal Dancing Going up Fashion Moment Sony Too shy The voice of Antony and the Johnsons is famous for its ethereal quality, but nobody …time Some thirtysomething women don't want marriage and children—they're having far too much fun behaving badly, says Kate Mulvey Most Likely to Vintage APGs and their Mottos Style Summer Party Sometimes you don't need an excuse for a porty—just a great place, great weather and great peoople. And then the night can get a little crazy No Fixed Abode You don't have to be a hippie to be a traveller. Clover Stroud meets people who prefer life on the read to the ball and chain of a mortgage What a Dahl She's been holed up writing her new book, but now she's back … Dahl returns to fashion looking more beautiful than ever. Photographs by Iris Brosch … by Cathy Kasterine Claudia Croft Wardrobe Mistress Revenge On certain occasions, only a killer dress will get the point … that you're perfectly fine without him, says Claudia Croft Shopping by Sharon Ridoynauth It's so every season Peugeot Posh Birds Can't Dance They may seem to have it all, but the one thing the well-heeled lack in spades is rhythm Spencer James explains why it's wise to take cover when they star shaking their booties Island Toyota Collector's Item Beauty The Sybarite Hair Bitch! Travel Shop Big Softie Happy Return Golden Delicious Pick of the Best Bug off The explorer Benedict Allen, on the run from goldminers, ended up eating his dog and nearly died of malaria. He says it pays to keep taking the tablets Before Traveling Muiller What's the Alternative? The Sunday Times Wine Club Holy Cow Style Take 3 Ingredients Plane FAB Spotted Tip from the Top There are two types of British cooks—flower Cooking … power into your dishes, says Sybil Kapoor … by Patrice de Villiers A Guide to Cooking with Edible Flowers BAA Slice of Life Want to make the ultimate cheese on toast?It's all in the garlic wine, says Heston Blumenthal Wapping Project True or false? Wine improves with age Shore Thing A sailing enthusiast pushed the boat out when he built a wooden home for his nautical collection, says Jackie Cole Starbucks Coffee Nautical but Nice Style gives you Stealing Why bother with an interior designer when you can nick your ideas from public places, asks Darius Sanai In the Stars Janina and Ama Ladies' Man Oh dear, Kate Spicer has had enough of music-in-a-fieio chic Mrs Mills Solves All your Problems Times Online B L U…
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