News from 27/11/2005
2005; Gale Group;
Autores
Richard Mabey, Maggie Rosen, Jonathan Northcroft, Toby Elliott Commanding Officer, Waldemar Januszczak, William Leith, Hala Jaber, John Dugdale, Malcolm Brown, William Kay, Chris Whyham, Barbara Hall, Helena Frith Powell, Maya Jasanoff, Jeff Dawson, Sally Brock, Helen Davies, Peter Whittle, Michael Burleigh, Rob Hughes, John Peter, Maggie Alderson, Uzi Mahanaimi, Samuel Palmer, Jasper Rees, Terry Coleman, Julie Earle, John Waples Business Editor, Spencer May, Jack Humphrey, Ruth Rogers, Peter Day, Shaun Bailey, Norma Barzman, Frank Whitford, David Gower, Christy Campbel, Kathryn Cooper, Peter Feltham, D Marchessini, P D, David Smith, Olwyn Ni Chroinin, Neil Wormald, A A Gills, E P, Clive Davis, Mark Kieinman, Michael Munn, Andrew Porter, Anthony G Philips, Irwine Stelzer, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Martin James, Gemma Scott-Martin, Tom Walker, Anthony Sattin, Robert Winnett, Rob Long, Dipesh Gadher Transport Correspondent, Clive Coates, Matt Rudd, Sean Fitzpatrick, Peter Wilson, Tim Richard, Rosie Millard, David Dougill, Julia Bailey, Joan Didion, Matthew Sweet, Christopher Hart, Robert Winnett Whitehall Correspondent, H Bradley, Stuart Barnes, Stewart Lee, T J R, Matt Skinner, David Vise's, Cally Law, Hugh Canning, Vincent Gasnier, Stphen Jones, Jeremy Clarkson, Andrew Stone, Edward Porter, Peter Conradi, Victoria Segal, Nicola Smith, Dean Nelson, Michael Portillo, Clare Gascoigne, Michael Talbot, Tommy Gemmell, Anthony Peregrine, Patricia Nicol, Greg Gordon, Sarah Dempster, James Sharpe, M P, Paddy Crerand, Nigel Perry, Nick Caln, Richard Fletcher, Lydia Slater, Jeff Potter, Niki Lauda, Andrew Porter Deputy Political Editor, Dan Drillsma-Milgrom, Christopher Frayling, John Blundell, David Walsh Chief Sports Writer, Dr Joseph Watson, Robin Scott-Elliot, Christopher Silvester, Roger Eglin, Guillermo Gabriel Zotta, Kathrina Burroughs, Paul Donovan, Julian Fellowes, Tom Stubbs, Giles Hattersley, Phyllis Maxwell, Chris Woodhead, C Higgins, Roja Dove, David Furnish, Jasper Gerard, Clare Frencis, Michael Woodhead, Paul Driver, John Humphrys, Jared Diamond, Pat Brennan, Sarah-Kate Temoleton, Ian Hawkey, Stuart Andrews, Liz Loxton, Elton John, David Leppard, David Pollard, Paul Durman, Phil McGuiness, Peter Kemp, Suzanne Finstad, Kirsty Lane, Mark Edwards, Bernica Rubens, Janet Daley, Rachel Bridge, Rachel North, Richard Doherty, Duncan Atherton, Emily Laurence Baker, Laura Shine Cunningham, Caroline Waldegrave, Lucien Musset, Richard Benson, Fiona Jerome, James Fox, Patrick Cockburn, Lois Rogers, Rose Prince, Patricis Nigel, Raymond Keene, Derek Dougan, Darwin Porter, Rod Liddle, Ian Bradwell, David Cracknell, Dominic O'Connell Deputy Business Editor, Zoe Brennan, Lauren Booth, Kipper Williams, Diana Wright, Robbyn Swan, Emma Smith, Helen Hawkins, Dr Margaret Gullan-Wh, Stephen Jones, Stephen Bleach, Andrew Holgate, Nick Cain, Ian Gray, Thomas Jarrett, Anna Gavela, Natalie Graham, Chris Roberts, Caroline Donald, Tom Stevenson, Colin McDOWELL, Jessica Brinton, David Walsh, Caroline Gascoigne, Helen Stewart, Bryan Appleyard, Stephen Armstrong, John Elliott, Mark Stucklin, Zoe Brennam, Janine Shaw, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Woods, Roland White, Shane Watson, P J Harris, Abul Taher, High Mcllvanney, Dr John Pitts, Richard Rae, Mark Franchetti, Roberta Taylor, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Fizz Carr, Jonathan Leake, Clive Davies, M E, Michael Sheridan, Clare Francis, Damian Spellman, Anthony Summers, Tony Judt, Tilda Swinton, Thomas Lynch, Chris Haslam, Tom Baird, Edward Scissorthands, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, E p, Diana Melly, Lynn Whittlesea, Nigel Slater, Alex Pell, David Diprose, Alistair Sampson, Philip Kerr author, Tom Hennigan, David Sanderson, Stephen Jones Rugby Correspondent, Jamie Goode, Simon Jenkins, Stephen Pettitt, Claudia Croft, Will Iredale, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, Peter Heather, Claudia Roden, Sally Kinnes, Naomi Caine, Stanley Brahams, Nigel Powell, Baroness Young, David Wickers, Roger Dobson, Rose Gray, Brian Doogan, Helena Christensen, Ben Dowell, Michael Underwood, Clifford Bishop, Neil White, Nicholas Faith, Andrew Frankel, Graham Norwood, Seb Morton-Clark, Joe Lovejoy, John Hays, Jonathan Futrell, Shelley Von Strunckel, Hugh Pearman, Sarath Dempster, Andrew Davidson, Dan Cairns, Jamie Oliver, E A M, M Mistry, Gereth Huw Davies, David Smith Economics Editor, Frank Whifford, Stefan Gates, Sarah Baxter, Cosmo Landerman, James Luckhurst, Brian Schofield, Joanna Simon, Matthew Goodman, C J Jackson, Fleur Britten, Sara Hassan, India Knight, Simon Howard, Tom Holland, Jason Dawe, Dominic Rushe, David Thomson, Paul, Sian Griffiths, Stephen Pollard,
ResumoContents Dipping their oars: Two blonds get ready to row Giant mosque for 40,000 may be built at London Olympics Contents British Airways Brown rips up deal to retire at 60 Suspect arrested over killing of policewoman Contents The Sunday Times Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Plan to make families pay into nannies' pensions Brown aims to put brakes on public spending Five die and train is derailed as blizzards sweep Britain Police who shot Brazilian on Tube 'to escape charges' Royal cover-up of illegitimate son revealed Northern rock Tycoon takes balloon to edge of space New tax may fund nuclear stations Multiple Display Advertising Items Fifty babies a year are alive after abortion Maxjet Lloyd-Webber looks to reality TV for a star The Queen Doctors will get right not to treat self-inflicted illnesses Store prices slashed by up to 30% online Superjumbo makes waves Abigail's miracle baby baptised Memo reveals Blair's clash with Bush I'm sorry, this is not an apology. . . Aus Liebe zum Automobil MoD probe into naked marines' initiation fight Tsunami families damn 'inept' envoy John Lewis A little charity makes a huge difference John Humphrys explains why he set up a life support system for the tiniest of aid agencies - and why you should help Multiple Display Advertising Items Money Well Spent Tsar turn: our rag trade king rocks Russia Cameron says no to Archer return Multiple Display Advertising Items My Battle with Shaun Bailey was born on the west London estates that have been linked to investigations into the murder of WPC Sharon Beshenivsky. Here he describes how pop culture and liberal politics have created a feral generation hooked on drugs, crime and violence Thistle Hotels Bailey's Law: Six Ways to Stop Youngsters Growing into Criminals The Pension Service A Nation of Two Halves George Best was much more than a great footballer, says Rod Liddle. As an icon of anti-authoritarian cool you were either for or against him Free Easy Internet Guide Other Great Opposites Tribute to a Legend White Witch takes a red and pink ride to stardom Profile Help the obese: snigger Training and development agency for schools Cameron's clause 4 Acrewood Boyz N the Hood Pretending that women aren't grown-ups Blair's slow, embarrassing death by a thousand leaks Peerless optimism as mystery lord puts £4,000 on a Tory win Atticus At last! Signs of life among the Liberal Democrats … Atticus Road safety minister dents his pride in high-speed Top Gear crash Frequent flyer Jowell dreams of soaring to higher office The following story has been doing the rounds of the Two bold steps to get us out of Brown's pension blunder There's a cruel streak at the BBC. Just three If you thought Tony Blair was a master of political On the back of a dirty white van spotted trundling … Bose Blair's police belong back on the streets Ford Doctors drink so why can't we smoke? Honest MPs A nuclear Falklands Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street Some were expecting an early Christmas gift — Labour's … VC Land Rover Spielberg set for an Oscar-winning row Sharon's new rival picks up support Knowing your carbon footprint is a step in the right Europe plans naval taskforce to stop illigal African migrants Death by drunken execution squad Hollywood stars bowled over by trendy 10-pin Beppe the comic guns for Italy's corrupt MPs Beyond petroleum Dead Saddam aide leaves a chilling video Bulldog Bruce Willis comes out fighting for Iraq's forgotten GI heroes Rumsfeld's Al-Jazeers outburst China sends troops into its poisoned city Wedding hit by Onassis money feuds Nigeria drags up dirt on governor Running envoys try to stop a war HD ready Multiple Display Advertising Items Today's weather Football club boss attacked News in Brief Girl in drug arrest Man overboard Mowlam bequest Corrections Two tickets share £8.9m Lotto jackpot Iran missile deal CIA prison claim The middle class flees Prescott's pipedream cities The flamboyant Prince Edward had a weakness for fancy The Sunday Times Al-Jazeera gives Blair a break Best's big secret — how he kept going Jeff's only just looking to get back into the Tory Peugeot Contents Bad Moody Flanker is first England player sent off at Twickenham Winterthur Contents Fans united in applause for George Best At grounds across Britain, fans paid tribute to the most joyous of players, with only a handful choosing to spoil the occasion, reports Jonathan Northcroft Van Persie goal flatters the Gunners Davis provides Villa spark Contents Gray strikes to boost Bruce Pompey fury at Cole penalty Riise cracker lightens gloom over Crouch Busy Davids ushers Wign back to reality Airberlin Pure Genius with a George Best's official biographer remembers him as the greatest British footballer of all, but acknowledges that the Ulsterman was a flawed individual who could delight and disappoint in equal measure Best of times Maradona:'Best's moments of magic were my inspiration' Contents Taste for Trouble Rougue male: the women who failed to tame George Best Best of times Best on Best. . . 'He paid the price physically for making people look like fools' To this day I still don't know how George managed to do some of the things that he did on a football field Best of times Breathtaking audacity that stunned a World Cup winner George Best's cheeky header to dispossess Gordon Banks was perhaps his finest moment, says the former Northern Ireland international Derek Dougan The foul price of fame: how football's hard men left a genius black and blue George Best was a marked man in every way, the close — often illegal — attentions of defenders leaving him battered and bruised. This article by James Fox first appeared in The Sunday Times Magazine in 1968 He was so good I couldn't even kick him Playing against George Best was a nightmare for defenders like me - even if he was doing it drunk The entertainer Even as his off-field antics began to take their toll on his body, the old artist could still deliver some footballing cameos Best of times The Sunday Times Best off the rails Happy to be Blue He was once one of Europe's most wanted, but Andy van der Meyde is now glad to be playing for Everton against Newcastle today, says Jonathan Northcroft IPA Survival of the fittest Teddy Sheringham faces his former boss, Sir Alex Ferguson, at Upton Park today with both men still hungry for success Sunderland chairman hurt in glass attack The Sunderland chairman suffers facial injuries after a late-night incident in a Newcastle restaurant Jeep Barclays Premiership Coca-Cola Championship League One League Two Pools Nationwide Conference Scotland Other Football Fixtures Saints thwart Hoddle Vauxhall Luton climb high on Vine Leeds leave it late to edge in Warnock losing his grip Coca-Cola League Fleming saves day Reading lifted by Little Derby happy despite ldiakez penalty miss Ross winner rocks Celtic Scottish round-up Toni the renaissance man Fiorentina have been revitalised by Italy's new scoring sensation, who intends to continue his goal-a-game run against Roma tonight, reports Ian Hawkey Magic Show Ronladino's box of tricks has earned him the European Footballer of the Year award, which he will receive in Paris tomorrow Kings of Europe: the line of succession Wanadoo Standard bearer The rising star of Springbok rugby tells David Walsh how he deals with the unique pressures of the Rainbow Nation The flying Springbok who went from obscurity to pin-up boy in the blink of an eye Aussies will lose if Jones is fired Many people Down Under have fallen out of love with their brash coach, but he remains a class act, which cannot be said of their current prop forwards All Blacks stutter to slam in second gear Current vintage stands comparison with 1996 giants Home nations were lambs to the slaughter The tourists deserved the Grand Slam they desperately wanted and have set a benchmark for the 2007 world cup Finale fails to reach heights New Zealand's tour ended with a damp squib in which they didn't have to live up to their status as the world's best Kiwis lead way to new world order Choosing a side from the world's best players still sees New Zealanders take pride of place, writes Stephen Jones The Sunday Times Scotland 10 New Zealand 29 How the Grand Slam was won England 19 New Zealand 23 Ireland 7 New Zealand 45 Wales 3 New Zealand 41 Punch and Moody show Player ratings England Solid shape hides stodge Match statistics Wales rally stuns Aussies French fireworks blow away Boks The Sunday Times Trimble steers Ireland home Class Akhtar If England are to salvage the series it is essential that they find a way of taming the ferocious pace of a rejuvented Shoaib Akhtar, writes Simon Wilde Pulsar Lara rewrites record books The West Indian great overtakes Allan Border's record in Adelaide to establish himself as the highest run-scorer in Test history, writes Robin Scott-Elliot Sound as a Bell The young Warwickshire batsman has made the most of his England reprieve and is now beginning to look the part Yellow cards would keep playeers in check The Sunday Times The all Blacks The top 10 Diego Maradona Anton Ferdinand Multiple Display Advertising Items Jose Marie Olazabal Eddie Waring Darren Gough Lee Sharpe Denise Lewis Mark Gastineau Book of the week Football Gentry: The Cobbold Brothers By Brian Scovell, Tempus, hb, £17.99 Shahid Afridi 60 seconds in sport With Stephen Maguire, who defends his UK snooker title next month Aussies thrashed as Kiwis fly high Nissan A champion to the end Richard Burns won the world rally title in 2001, but illness struck and his untimely death robbed the sport of a major talent, writes Richard Rae Results round-up Today's English racecards Fixtures Tweddle wins second world championship medal Sports round-up Golf Rugby Union Cricket Skiing Rugby League Fixtures Racing Hockey Athletics Squash Netball Battered Hatton wins war The IBF champion stands bloodied but unbowed as he adds the WBA title with a bruising triumph over Carlos Maussa The Sunday Times Trabolgan repays faith with Hennessy win Nicky Henderson's exciting young chaser produced a superb weight-carrying performance at Newbury to put himself right in the top rank Murray runs out of steam The young Scot's fitness problems dogged him again as he was beaten by a determined Greg Rusedski in the inaugural Aberdeen Cup, reports Neil White The Times Caught in time Sport Letters Questions & answers Your sporting conundrums tackled Heroes' Thomas Muster, former world No 1 tennis player, on Multiple Display Advertising Items Sport on TV Don't miss this Davis Cup final, Slovak Republic v Croatia, Sky Sports Xtra, 1pm The man who defied gravity Sky Sports The Sunday Times Group of dearth tells a sad tale Contents Cambridge dons declare war over technology millions Brown pledges biggest ever red tape blitz Revealed: the 25 Britons who wield most influence in the US The American dream has come true for countless British business people who have found fortune by crossing the Atlantic. Dominic Rushe and Julie Earle identify the most successful stateside expatriates Virgin Furious shareholders round on SkyePharma boss Gowrie-Smith Permira revealed as De Vere suitor Business Digest Vivendi examines bid for games developer Jersey firm fined over money laundering Eggar to float oil company Caravan park operator set for sale Amazing plan for Taiwan casino Hindujas look at parts of Lex Private-equity pairing follows Compass Multiple Display Advertising Items Empire knew of threat to Party Gaming link Glaxo boss set to give R&D extra billions Clothing revival suits Wright Reubens rekindle feud with oligarch Rolls ready to build engine factory in US Aussies slot into arcades company Tchenguiz's Spirits rise 'Edgy' Selfridges bounces back Leighton targets wobbly retailers Top estate agent lifts the lid on its fortunes COLT Gas price raises burning question on energy No easy answers as the pensions battle hots up Economic Outlook Thanks a billion Land of plenty Destruction that is creating a better America Hunter's bounty Happy Clickmas This season 24m people will spend £5 billion doing their shopping online but it is the high-street retailers who have cornered the biggest slice of this market. Richard Fletcher reports Royal Mail Spending: The Net Effect Brits Living the American Dream The Sunday Times Wine Club Martin Sullivan, president and chief executive officer of American International group (AIG), age 51 Sir Howard Stringer, Sony chairman and chief executive, age 63 Jonathan Ive, Apple vice-president and designer of the iPod, age 38 See panel Jeffrey Urwin, co-head investment banking, Bear Stearns David Munns, chairman and chief executive, EMI North America, age 54 David Sidwell, executive vice-president and chief financial officer, Morgan Stanley, age 52 John Walsh, head of credit markets, RBS Green-wich Capital Chris Rodrigues, president and chief executive, Visa International, age 56 Ian Cook, chief operating officer Colgate Palmolive, age 52 Michael Moritz, partner Sequoia Capital, age 51 Sir Andrew Crockett, head of JP Morgan International, age 62 Sir Deryck Maughan, managing director KKR, age 57 Andy Bird, president Disney International, age 41 Andrew Mooney, chairman Disney consumer products, age 50 Daniel Battsek president of Miramax Films, age 47 Mark Burnett, president Mark Burnett Productions, age 45 John Barbour, president Toys R Us, age 41 David Pyott, chairman Allergan, age 52 Frances Farrow, chief executive Virgin USA, age 42 Terry Donovan & Sam Houser, founders Rockstar Games, both aged 35 See panel Ron Zwanziger, chairman, chief executive officer and president, Inverness Medical Innovations Multiple Display Advertising Items Jim Reid-Anderson, chairman, president and chief executive, Dade Behring, age 46 Colin Reed, chairman and chief executive Gaylord Entertainment, age 55 Professor John Quelch, senior associate dean, Harvard Business School, age 54 Blythe Masters, chief financial officer of JP Morgan's investment bank, age 35 Multiple Display Advertising Items Skype chief takes his place as tech hero from zero London-based niklas Zennstrom sold his internet start-up for $2.6bn last month. But don't ask him how he is going to spend his share Germans flock to British-style discount village Scott Malkin had to overcome powerful local opposition to realise his vision Niklas Zennstrom's Working Day Vital Statistics Working Space Multiple Display Advertising Items Gas shortages leave industry in cold Heavy users are demanding greater transparency in the way the market fixes its prices. Report by Dan Drillsma-Milgrom Multiple Display Advertising Items Google turns its search power to the hunt for genetic drugs David Vise's book reveals how it is sitting information to help scientists advance medicine Garnier's rules for innovators The Glaxo boss will tell the CBI that industry must not be afraid of failure — it can be the best way to learn The Sunday Times Travel agent basks in sun How I Made It Multiple Display Advertising Items School pupils get a lesson in enterprise The government is giving schools £180m to equip students for the real world The Art of Running a Business World share markets Databank Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates / Bonds Currencies Commodities The music stops for nightclub operator Judgement Day: Should You Buy Shares in Luminar? The Week that was Scottish Power snubs German bid Business on the Box The Week Ahead Quote of the Week Harry Potter tilts at book giants Prufrock Nokia Jumbo set in polo goal Martin Edwards, Manchester United's former chief Food for thought for Kelly Robert Tchenguiz and Punch boss Giles Thorley will … Betting on a bid doesn't always pay off Inside the City J Sainsbury Online Extra Playboy has teamed up with the home-shopping arm of Dowding & Mill Contents Rachel's Story Rachel North nearly died in a vicious rape and thought she had suffered the worst ordeal of her life. But then she boarded a crowded Tube train on Julu 7 this year. . . Contents BT How I Feel about the Fellow Survivor who Concealed the Fact the Had Raped Oh baby, this is the generation that will never die Baby boomers have had charmed livces: now that the slightly inconvenient fact of death has reared its head, they can't accept it The Good Life Boots Bad, bad vibrations. . . What's left, right, centre and neocon all over A new group shows that the old party political divides have broken down, says Stephen Pollard Naughty nights in heartbreak hotel Now we are (nearly) married Interview Boys in the buff risk their skins on the Atlantic challenge What makes TV presenter Ben Fogle want to row 3,000 miles, even if he has an Olympic champion to help. It's primal, he tells Giles Hattersley Multiple Classified Advertising Items Now for Blair's dodgy nuclear dossier Do we really need new nuclear power stations or is the prime minister about to railroad us into a disastrous error, asks Jonathan Leake Saab95 The Alternatives Evolution of the mobile moves to warp speed The UK's £1 billion mobile market is booming as new species of phones climb the evolutionary ladder. Alex Pell selects 10 of the fittlest Collins Video on the Hoof Internet-Friendly Information Addiction Jargon-Buster Teenage Kicks For the Family Simple Life Heavyweight Multitasking In Business Mobile E-Mailer Catwalk Superstar Fashionistas Pix and Sounds The Entertainers Multimedia Dazzler First Things First Which Features? High-Flyer Phones and printers worth £5,000 to win How to Enter Next Week: A-Z of Online Christmas Shopping Don't Panic Correction Tots of the world, unite! Is there any point trying to make your children agree with your politics asks Lauren Booth Multiple Display Advertising Items Take your holiday in the holidays Answer the question Turning out tycoons or shop girls? The chancelor wants more children to learn entrepreneourial skills but is enterprise really a school's business. Zoe Brennan reports Multiple Display Advertising Items High-tech schools fit for the future Multiple Display Advertising Items Mephisto 2362 Sudoku Bookwise Multiple Display Advertising Items Bridge Chess Teaser 2254 The Sunday Times Crossword 4149 Clue Writing Contest 1041: Eventual Winners Winner's Dinners Single man seeks decent lunch in west London Jungle fever strikes again Gratuitous pun of the week This Life Survey of the week Error of the week Thongs Ain't what They Used to Be People of the Week Blair Thinks Chan's the Man Bouncing pet of the week Celebrity of the week The Independent: Alfred Andrson Last word. . . Take Me for Walkies or the Cat Gets It David Austin Winner's Letters Talking Heads Nick Newman's Week Contents Archie Andrews revives auction activity The ventriloquist's dummy was sold for £34,000 — a sign that the lean years may be over, writes William Kay How to be a saleroom success Parenting costs up News in Brief Contents Property picks up FTSE 250 reaches record high of 8,307 Abbey Axa won't be moved by earth tremor claim A Question of Money Multiple Display Advertising Items Investec chief banks his gains as operating profit surges Contents Tips to take the heat out of soaring energy costs Multiple Display Advertising Items Warm to the rising price of gas As temperatures fall, heating costs are going up — bad news for consumers, but an opportunity for investors, says Kathryn Cooper Private investors get that sinking feeling in today's floations Comment Multiple Display Advertising Items Age-old problem Golden outlook The most promising shares to pick in a choppy market A panel of financial experts convenced by The Sunday Times looks at where the markets are heading MB: If the slowdown in this country's consumption Multiple Display Advertising Items SW: I'm optimistic about the consumer and optimistic about Jus: Don't underestimate mergers and-acquisitions activeity next year especially Investing WK: What about other markets? The Nikket index in Tokyo WK: What do you think about commodities? Sales of bond funds branded 'very wrong' Rising inflation and interest charges should set alarm bells ringing for investors, warns Kathryn Cooper Multiple Display Advertising Items Internet lenders and borrowers happy to cut out the middleman Playing Safe Best Savings Accounts Mortage Deals Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Cheap Credit Cards Windfall Shares Factfile Why Gordon Brown's big ideas fail the reality test Multiple Display Advertising Items Heartbeat keeps family going strong Fame and Fortune The role of Peggy in the TV series enables actress Gwen Taylor to boost her pension and treat her family. By Natalie Graham New Stars Shop around to beat top credit card deals Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Groomed for the top from start Energy company Eon develops its graduates from day one to make the most of their skills and personal attributes. Report by Roger Eglin Multiple Display Advertising Items Women are on the way up: just be patient Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Public sector strikes gold over pensions A good retirement package may be one of the most valuable reasons to become a teacher or join the NHS, says Naomi Caine Multiple Display Advertising Items Watchdog bites as well as barks A Week in the Life of Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Contents A-List Island: £75 One of the Caribbean's most exclusive corners now has a budget option. Chris Haslam is first to check in Anguilla: the insider's guide Doc Holiday Can the Doctor fix a three-week walking holiday on a tight budget? The Doctor Says The Stokeses The Doc's quick fixes Ryanair Sun+ Want to escape the winter chill, but find the beach a bore? David Wickers has the answer: hot locations with a little added excitement Multiple Display Advertising Items +Slurps +Scenery Multiple Display Advertising Items Gatwick Offers +Sails +Scuba +Squawks +Sustenance Multiple Display Advertising Items +Soirees +Serves +Sweat Let It Snow Oh, the weather outside is fightful, but the fire is so delightful—in these British hotel rooms with their own roaring health. Stephen Bleach gets all stoked up Balinakill Country House Hotel, Argyll Roxburghe Country House Hotel, Scottish Borders The Inn at Whitewell, Lancashire Butley Priory, Suffolk The Old Court House, Herefordshire Le Manoir Aux Quat'saisons, Oxfordshire Rudloe Hall Hotel, Wiltshire Bailiffscourt, West Sussex Britain's Best Babs Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Dom Joly is. . . Travel Brief How does it work? Multiple Display Advertising Items Instant weekend Bologna It's all about social climbing and fine dining in La Grassa, says Matt Rudd In-Flight Remedies Good Gear My long-haired lover in La Paz Could Kirsty Lane's man measure up to Lars—or would he get the chop? Travel Golf Clubs Vive la France Down Jacket Car Seat Multiple Display Advertising Items Cornwall getting more remote Directions French air travellers' tax Multiple Display Advertising Items In brief Readers' rants Last-minute bargains Where was I? Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Booze cruise in style It's cross-Channel wine-run time. Anthony Peregrine explains how to make it a pleasure, not a chore Where to shop Where to eat Where to stay Getting there Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times My hols Where was I Win a week's family summer holiday for four in Ortakent, Turkey, with Crystal Holidays The competition Multiple Classified Advertising Items Thinkisrael On her Toes Contents Retro Sweet Grabber Picdoku Christmas Wish Star Wars Battlefront II Blue Skies Tights Gromit Hot Water Bottle Cover Creature Comforts: Series 2 Part 1 Turtle Power Scooby-Doo! in Dread and Breakfast Venus Clues? Bling, Bling Down Boy! Singin your Sparetime Most Requested Did You Know? Big ears Trunk munch Family life Will Elephants Die out in your Lifetime? Danger zone Phoenix rises Fire Away New Flames Meet Goblet of Fire's new cast members Dramatic Paws Book Mark F-Mail Squirt Robot Crusoe Jarvis Deep and Gnasher Quick Fire Super Fun Doku Puzzle Zone Word List On your Marks Where in the World? Reigning Cats & Dogs The Powerpuff Girls A Recipe for Fun Puzzle Zone Answers The Funday Times Swapits Christimas Auction The Simpsons Contents Contents Cars on TV Contents A Morris is a super model Me and my motors From catwalk to camera On her Car Radio Honesty takes a dent Up to speed Safety blow for Jeep Cherokee Britons are Ferrari winners Slow Torture in Cone Country Congestion costs us up to £20 billion. With the latest figures out this week James Luckhurst and Emma Smith ask what is being done about it Get Clever to Be a Jam Buster Calculating the Cost Chasing the record is doing my head When rallycross champion tries to outrun and outbrake a Ferrari in a Citroën Xsara, Andrew Frankel feels the pain too Diesel Castrol Saab Approved Sound Investment In gear The Stuff of motoring dreams Power Trip The Knowledge Laminated Windows All you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Get a Grip Bentley Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Times Online Used Car: Renault Vel Satis Second Opinion The Internet Fast Lane Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Utterly, stunningly jaw droppingly brilliant The Internet Fast Lane Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items This'll Spook the Boys at MI5 Drives the Lexus is The Internet Fast Lane Multiple Display Advertising Items Reader Rescue The Challenge To find a sporty but practical car for a 6ft 6in former rugby player and his family Budget Up to £21,000 The Cars They Tested The Internet Fast Lane Times Online Garage Squeeze Measuring up Multiple Display Advertising Items Invisible Sidelights Fall Guys Dazzling Cult Oil Consumption Fast and Loose Navman Car Clinic Your motoring problems solved Deal of the Week The Sunday Times My First Crash Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Porsche Contents Contents How much? A pied-à-terre in. . . Room for a little one Time and Place Moving on Is It worth It? Cavers Castle, Hawick, Scottish Borders, £250,000 Design Classics Avoid trade wars French mistress It's not always a good idea to hire British workmen in France. For a start, you could encounter inexplicable planning delays. . . Contents Richmond Lock Riverside Quarter Builders Bite Back To get a job done on time, you have to be a good client. Follow these top 10 rules, says Emily Laurence Baker Medieval manors £2.25m Half a pile £800,000 Houses of the week Investment with a view £180,000 Ballymore Funky country A former music producer has spent £2m renovating his Palladian pile in the Cotswolds. The result, says Katrina Burroughs, could revolutionise country chic Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The project manager There's more to DIY shelving than just getting it straight Multiple Classified Advertising Items On call Multiple Display Advertising Items Big plans but big problems, too Can the Thames Gateway provide a lasting solution to the southeast's housing crisis, asks Graham Norwood Powergen Hamptons Up and Away Rosie Millard gets a glimpse of the skyscraping vision coming to Canary Wharf during the next three years: 820 apartments on 50 floors, in the UK's tallest residential building Multiple Display Advertising Items Foxtons Foxtons Foxtons Berkeley Homes Sharpe's Smart Move Author Tom Sharpe's 1995 decision to buy a villa in Llafranc was astute, says Mark Stucklin, as it is now one of Spain's On the Market Licence to thrill Bond girl Luciana Paluzzi's £7m Mexican pad is for sale, says Helen Davies Barclays Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Pure Multiple Display Advertising Items Met 3 Ask the Experts Multiple Display Advertising Items Born from a byre Few would have seen the potential in a derelict New Forest cow shed. But Guy and Nina McNair-Wilson turned it into a sung family home, reports Cally Law In the mood With mid-century modern all the rage in interiors, Christy Campbell explains how to take the look outside The Sunday Times Garden Cuttings What to do this week Multiple Display Advertising Items Knight Frank Multiple Display Advertising Items The Stream Edge Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Savills Doing a runner What can you do when a tenant disappears, asks Rosie Millard The Market Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items MWB Group PLC Contents PC World Better safe than very, Businesses must balance easy-to-use IT systems with a good level of security, warns Liz Loxton The Sunday Times Everybody's a link in the Chief executive/board Finance IT department Human resources Sales Consultants and suppliers Intruder Alert PC World Cover your assets or risk exposure Most firms lack proper plans to recover information after a major disaster, says Thomas Jarrett Going Digital—with Back-Up The enemy at the next-door terminal They may not mean to, but a firm's staff can damage its business if there is no clear strategy for their IT use, says Clare Gascoigne Client Confidential Under Threat Who knows what you know? Thomas Jarrett says look out—as new technologies multiply, so can data theft and sabotage Watch out for Safe Citizens Security Healthcheck The remotest idea Wireless networks and mobile technology give firms more freedom, provided they deal with the risks it can bring, says Andrew Stone How to Set up a Secure Wireless Network At home and on the hoof A Taste for Blackberry Buzz Words PC World Training Legality Help is at hand to keep it legal From compliance to licences, training will keep you within the law, advises Gareth Huw Davies Compliance and regulations Making life easier for SMEs Green issues What is Weee? Useful contacts PC World Contents Physical education Contents If the hat fits. . . Light shineth on the Darkness What are they like? With their glam spandex suits and weird falsetto sound, are Lowestoft's pomp rockers just having a laugh? Erm, no, says Dan Cairns Will the lion go from strength to strength? Movie franchises are manna from heaven for producers—but adapting the Narnia books is a leap of faith, says Jeff Dawson Lower City Mad Hot Ballroom Donmar Everything is Illuminated Noel Transporter 2 Atash Short Cuts The Exorcism of Emily Rose Flying by the seat of its pants Flightplan takes off Well enough, but it's too much like Hitchcock for comfort. By Edward Porter There ain't nothing like a dame Royal Opera House Thirteen months. Minus 57 degrees. Luc Jacquet tells Stephen Armstrong the human story of March of the Penguins Donmar Bitepack Why David is bigger Television The plot thickens Carbon Trust The picture of health? Waldemar Januszczak finds two female painters thriving—though their celebrity subjects are anything but Comedy 1 Just what the doctor ordered Why can't all hospitals be as well designed as the Evelina, asks Hugh Pearman Royal Academy of Arts Best of the BBC Not just a TV crimper, Ben Daniels is a real-life English National Ballet Where is the Truth Lies The Hypochondriac Rest of the week's theatre The Emperor Jones When You Cure Me Jerusalem Snow! The Musical Miller lite The Rubenstein Kiss is a pale copy of the master, says Victoria Segal Royal Shakespeare Company Shostakovich On record Classical Monteverdi Schubert Classical CD of the week Rachmaninov Vaughan Williams Pop and Jazz Stacey Earle and Mark Stuart Girls Aloud Various Artists Pop CD of the week The Electric Soft Parade Jeffrey & Jack Lewis Zu/mats Gustafsson Marta Topferova Various Artists Get on down ABBA New kids in town Jont A recital that doesn't go by the book Chicago's Pacifica Quartet juxtaposed Beethoven with readings from TS Eliot, to captivating effect. By Paul Driver Now Sjowing in Cinemas across the Country Birthday treat MacKerras had a ball with Verdi, says Hugh Canning, but Handel disappointed in Dublin British Land The top arts events of the coming months Look ahead Tintin King Kong The Late Henry Moss The Nutcracker Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Opera Dance Concerts Pop Comedy Film Harry Potter and the Goblet of fire This week, don't miss Theatre Paul Art Comedy The League of Gentleman Opera a Midsummer Night's Dream Dance Royal Ballet Concerts London Symphony Orchestra Pop The Rachid Taha Band, featuring Brian Eno The Family Stone Sterling Sylvia Ballet's best-looking couple, in one of Ashton's finest creations—why did it have to end, asks David Dougill The Sunday Times The Xbox 360 is about to go on sale Xbox 36D console Core system £210, full package £280 The Sunday Times Looking at the Xbox 360's launch line-up, the Kameo: Elements of Power £44.99; ages 12+ Fifa 06: Road to Fifa World Cup Call of Duty 2 Tiger Woods PGA Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Toy Story: 10th Anniversary Edition Living a Dream Katherine Jenkins The Polar Express Herbie: Fully Loaded Born to Run 30th Anniversary Edition 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 Tommy Steele Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items All you want for Christmas It's been a very good year 2005 produced a slew of lively, rewarding and accomplished novels, says Peter Kemp. He recommends the best Top five Bestsellers Who won what Next week Stars in their eyes Christopher Silvester rounds up the year's most enthralling books about the entertainment business WHSmith Shepperton Babylon Top five Warren Beatty Olivier Jimmy Stewart Frank Sinatra The Whole Equation Howard Hughes The Red and the Blacklist Set up, Joke, Set up, Joke Sergio Leone Bestsellers All things bright and beautiful From impressionism to beautiful Japanese woodcuts and the frankly erotic, Frank Whitford chooses volumes on which you will want to feast your eyes this Christmas Durrant Editions Limited Top five Bestsellers The Sunday Times concise crossword No 924 Living at full tilt Caroline Gascoigne finds extraordinary tales of human resilience and determination in this year's best memoirs When I Grow up Take a Girl like Me Top five The Hungry Years Nature Cure Sleeping Arrangements Booking Passage The Farm The Year of Magical Thinking The Broken Boy Bestsellers On the move Anthony Sattin follows in the footsteps of incredible journeys Bestsellers Top five The elegance of the image Colin McDowell travels the world for his selection of the most arresting photography, design and picture books of the year Top five Borders Bestsellers All sorts of yeasterday From the Persian and Roman empires to Guy Fawkes and post-war Britain, Andrew Holgate finds books on the past that make perfect presents The Sunday Times The Bayeux Tapestry The Fall of the Roman Empire Top five Postwar: A History of Europe since 1945 Remember, Remember the Fifth of November Persian Fire: The First World Empire and the Battle for the West Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Survive Edge of Empire: Conquest and Collecting on the Eastern Frontiers of the British Empire Earthly Powers Serious Readers Bestsellers Taste sensations Lydia Slater sups with Rose and Ruth, Jamie and Nigel, as well as finding some inspring new names The Kitchen Diaries Gastronaut River Cafe Two Easy The New English The River Cottage Family Cookbook Leith's Fish Bible Jamie's Italy The Silver Spoon Arabesque Bestsellers Top five Wine: A Life Uncorked Joanna Simon raises a glass to some authoritative tomes, a witty stocking-filler and a memoir from Hugh Johnson in her selection of the year's books on drink Cognac Wine Science Top five The Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia Drinks Thirsty Work Wine The Great Wines of France Bestsellers Inside story What's making news in the Sunday Times bestsellers list Picture Gallery Hardbacks Paperbacks Fiction Contents Watch it: the best of the week ahead Boy racer Best films Old 4 eyes is back Stoned again Time Team Special (Monday, C4,9pm) Films of the week St George is cross Francis Fulford—Why England's F***d (Monday, Sky One, 9pm) Talking heads Dinner With Portillo (Tuesday, BBC4, 8.30pm) Dumbing up The British Documentary Awards (Tuesday, BBC4, 9pm) Foreign affairs This World (Thursday, BBC2, 9pm) Cardiff calling Cnex (Friday, S4c, 9.30pm) Pick of the week One Life Tuesday, BBC1, 10.35pm Picks of the day Radio Sunday November Pick of the Day BOy racers Not fade away The young lady sings Talking stones Way of the dragon Pick of the day Vive la difference Best repeat? Bedtime stories Open Water (Sky Movies 2,8pm) Films BBC1 Sunday 27 November ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Sunday November Radio Monday28November Pick of the Day Stoned again A really wild show Holy moly Enjoyable drama One for eggheads Pick of the day Best cop drama Best documentary Lost cause The First Of The Few (C4,1.20pm) Films BBC1 Monday 28 November ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One MOnday28November Radio Pick of the Day Pick of the week A fistful of treasures Too familiar? Best cop show (US) Oh, never mind Pick of the day Best cop show (UK) Best documentary The modern world The Awful Truth (Sky Cinema 1,4pm) Films BBC1 ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Radio Wednesday November Pick of the Day Hot-blooded mammal Romance, actually Typical men South coast boys Pick of the day Ooh-la-la Life on the front line Sex bombshell Film choice Films BBC1 Wednesday 30 November ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Wednesday November Radio Thursday December Pick of the Day Foreign affairs A touch of Glass Puppets on display A day at the doc's Pick of the day The new Madonna Watch with mother Cringe comedy Animal but not magic Films Film choice Critics' choice BBC1 Thursday December ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Thursday December Radio Friday2December Pick of the Day Cardif calling Oldies but goodies A class act indeed Stunting their growth Finest drama Pick of the day Trouble afoot Laugh out loud Singing and winning Films Film choice Critics' choice HMV BBC1 Friday 2 December ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Friday2December Radio Saturday3December Pick of the Day Life on the Strip Protect and serve Selfish kids To the manor bought Pick of the day Casualty it ain't Top 10 TV programme Film choice Films BBC1 Saturday 3 December ITV1 Meridian Variations Sky One Keepingmum Contents Hotpoint Bang & Olufsen Contents Sony Secret Britain Born on the Same Day The British hero and the Canadian treasure Roberts The Triumphs of Tamsim Panasonic Katrina and Theodore Leskanich The Enchanting Tale of the Fairy Fair The Pen Shop Elizabeth Gage Lexus Nurture of the Beast Brother Theakston Barclays Pass the Poison, Dear Apple iPod shuffle Beyond petroleum Windows Mobile Cyprus Cyprus A Passion for the High Life Je Suis God's Gift Stlvel advance Clever Milk T Mobile Remy Martin Ekornes The House of Your Dreams Blizzard of Oz Siemens Energy Neville Johnson Noble Caledonia Limited Baumatic KEF Thomas Tempur Clipper SEBO Clifford James Boogaloo Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Motilium 10 From the Boffins Lucky dip The Rational Inquirer Myth World Bats are blind It Didn't Catch on The Bristol Brabazon passenger plane Flashback Peter Tatchell The Sunday Times Roland Citizen Eco-Drive Contents De Beers Picture Gallery Vertu Diorjoaillerie Contents Cartier The Intellectual's Guide to Fashion Posh Chocolates Lovingit Relight Those Fires Celebrity Sex Clinic Going up Gabb Time out? There's an idea for a present Go for Bespoke Presents: How Do You Take Yours? A Dunhill Ltd Perhaps the greatest luxury of all Architects (Love) You can't buy it, or hunt it down, or make it happen through your contacts. And it's because it's so rare that it's so wonderful, says Shane Watson (Love) (Love) Win her over with some cashmere. Just know what you … doing when it comes to quality, says Sara Hassan Merry Clinque He's the One Agent Provocateur Them Teen Spirit L'eau D'issey L'oreal Paris Samsung We adore them John Lewis Burberry Time Louis Vuitton Marc Jacobs Limited Edition Collection Lost in Time (Time) Make sure you give him the best Pure Paul Smith Extreme Donna Karan New York At your Service Are they too busy to sort their lives out? Then buy them a little helper, says Fleur Britten An Irresistible Force Following the huge success of its light, bright and Diamond Service V Eye P Christmas Very, Irresistible Givenchy Jaeger-Lecoultre Originality Chaumet Paris How to Buy Art First, buy it because you love it, says Frank Whitford. Second, know where to go Other Places to Try Dior How to Buy Antiques What to Buy—the Trends Learning the Lingo Introducing Eau de Parfume Globetrotter Pringle Boots Make your Mark Van Cleef & Arpels Only Mont Blanc Jewellery It's Personal A piece of statement jewellery will bring you closer together Christmas Beauty L'orÉal Kodak Little Beauties Body Matters Get her some lingerie that shows off her assets Jaeger Heaven Scent Perfume started life as a gift to the gods, endured mass marketing and has re-emerged as luxury again. Roja Dove introduces the £115,000 bottle The Best of the Rest Nivea Raymond Weil Geneve Remy Martin Quality T. K. maxx Courvoisier His Luxe List Tom Stubbs names the finest things a man can own Lladro Her Luxe List Claudia Croft has the ultimate collection for the ultimate woman Life Savers Toys, tools and instruments—improve their quality life with the latest gizmos Pentax Comfort Habitat (comfort) Peasmades, blankets, pillows and … India Knight knows how … take it easy Homing Instinct IKEA Cointreau Soft Landings Mastercard Pleasure Carr's Eat your Heart out Everyone loves a hamper, says Lydia Slater Porato Heads Olympus Getting away with it Pixma Porsche Do It Yourself Got no money? That needn't be a problem, says Jessica Brinton A Sure Thing They're difficult, they've got everything, or you don't really know them. You need a gift that can't fail says Maggie Alderson Nikon Sainsbury's The Eleventh Hour After everything we've done for you, you've gone and left it to the last minute. Claudia Croft tells you what to do Harvey Nichol Style gives you In the … How Do You Treat Yourself? These days, indulging isn't always about foie gras and Cristal, says Shane Watson Mrs Mills Solves All your Problems Blacks Prada The Sunday Times The Jungle Book
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