Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 09/07/2006

2006; Gale Group;

Autores

Jonathan Northcroft, Tracey Boles, Patrick Cooper, John Dugdale, William Kay, Barbara Hall, Zinedine Zidane, Rob Kingston, Fred Redwood, John-Paul Flintoff, Newby Hands, Sally Brock, Helen Davies, Peter Whittle, Robert Muir, Nicholas Rufford, Rob Hughes, Leslie Phillips, Denise O'Leary, A Burgess, Iain Chapman, Jasper Rees, Anthony Rhodes, James Fuller, Andrew Longmore, John Waples Business Editor, Neil …, Thomas Stapleton, Susan d'Arcy, Ian Marchant, Widiane Moussa, Gareth Walsh, Frank Whitford, Rachel de Thame, Ken Johnston, Andrew Ledingham, Nicolette Jones, David Gower, Paul Marinko, Alan M Rind, Andrew Taylor, P D, David Smith, Joshua Robinson, Nick Pitt, Susie Whalley, E P, Alison Kervin, Andrew Sullivan, Clive Davis, David P Morgan, Joe Lauria, David Simmons, Flora Bagenal, Martin Jol, Joseph Dunn, Martin James, Simon Wilde, Sara Hashash, Paul Beaver, Carolyn Wright Principal, Sally De Witt, June Greenfield, Ariel Leve, Robert Winnett, Robert Sandall, Irwin Stelzer, Matt Rudd, Robert Hewison, Peter Wilson, Rosie Millard, Bob Russell MP, David Dougill, C H, John Arlidge, Christopher Hart, John Bryant, Dave Riley, Paul Flynn, Cally Law, Paul Forsyth, Hugh Canning, Isabel Oakeshott, Jeremy Clarkson, Dave Crandall, Edward Porter, David Cairns, Stewart Lee, Nicola Smith, Claire Newell, Michael Portillo, Dean Nelson, Tim Huffer, Alan Williams, Ed Mayo, Nick Middleton, Patricia Nicol, Sarah Dempster, Dave Pollard, Anita Chaudhuri, Robert Pires, Gill Chant, Richard Fletcher, McIlvanney, Greg Struthers, Yuha Bessaoud, John Cuthbertson, Sunil Pal, Sarah-Kate Templeton Health Correspondent, Holly Watt, Rosanna Della Corte, Jeff Porter, Mark Heath, Stuart Wavell, Roger Eglin, Paul Donovan, Sarah Bailey, Bruce Sher, Graham Collins, Vincent Crump, Paul Kimmage, Tom Stubbs, Hugh McIlvanney, Chris Woodhead, Monsieur Mangetout, Steve McClaren, Bridget Stott, Jasper Gerard, Paul Driver, Michael Woodhead, Giles Hattesley, John Follain, Richard Brooks, Steve Lunt, Ian Hawkey, Jon Phillips Communications Director, Stuart Andrews, Christopher Morgan, David Leppard, Shelley Von Strunckel, Paul Durman, Gavin Bell, Jeff Hall, Harald Doornbos, Mark Edwards, Rachel Bridge, Nick Doff, Sophie Anderton, Heston Blumenthal, David Miller, Brian McCullough, Christina Lamb, Lois Rogers, Donald MaCkay, Gerrard Abel, Raymond Keene, C L, Gareth Huw Davies, Rod Liddle, Alex Delmar-Morgan, Harold Reiter, David Cracknell, Cosmo Landesman, Zoe Brennan, Marie Colvin, Paul Hughes, Gavin Conway, Edward Wheatley, T Carter, Bob Edwards, Dominic O'Connell, A C Watt, David Phelan, Louise Armitstead, Mat Snow, Adrienne Connors, Lucy Atkins, Margaret Aitchison, Tim Moorey, Caroline Donald, Barry Mason, Aidan Doran, Barry Flatman Tennis Correspondent, Alan Buck, Colin McDowell, Bryan Appleyard, Jennifer Harper-Deacon, Stephen Armstrong, John Elliott, James Taylor, Isabel Oakeshott Deputy Political Editor, Bethan Cole, Michael Sheridan Far East Correspondent, Richard Woods, Roland White, Ed Carlisle, Steven Swinford, Alison Jane Reid, J Higgins, Rolf Harris, Shane Watson, Maurice Chittenden, Graham Ede, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, Dr Mohmmed Wajed, Richard Rae, Mark Franchetti, Ray Hutton, Sarah Beeny, Jon Ungoed-Thomas, Martin Ivens, Louise Armistead, Richard Corrigan's, Jonathan Leake, Katharine Hibbert, Clare Francis, Michael Smith, John Harlow, Denis Knowles, D G Shute, Chris Haslam, Dipesh Gadher, Claudio Franco, Mark Kleinman, Oliver Chastney, St John Brown, A A Gill, Matthew Campbell, Ross Manning, Daniel Foggo, Brian Glanville, Simon Jenkins, Stephen Pettitt, Will Iredale, Jonathan Calvert, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, Jessica Bown, Imre Karacs, Sally Kinnes, Daniel Emery, Jonathan Simms, Sir Peter Lampl Chairman, Peter Done managing director, Brian Doogan, John Aizlewood, John Cornwell, Simon Kurs, James Scoltock, Peter Goves, Joe Lovejoy, Ian Ogden, Jonathan Futrell, Andrew Frankel, David Budworth, Hugh Pearman, Graham Norwood, Andrew Davidson, Dan Cairns, Julian Ryall, Ed Habershon, David Smith Economics Editor, Sue Nelson, Sarah Baxter, Brian Schofield, Kate Spicer, Joanna Simon, India Knight, Tony Fazackerley, Simon Wilde Cricket Correspondent, Ed Hughes, Simon Howard, Jason Dawe, Joan Smith, Richard Lewis, Sian Griffiths, Karen Robinson, Helen Stewart,

Resumo

Contents ID cards doomed, say officials Thatchers hold court: mother and daughter celebrate … FA sends off Wags for non-stop partying Contents Lastminute No 10 lines up Miliband for Prescott job Contents The Sunday Times Contents Standby buttons face axe to curb energy waste Blair's peerage list to be vetted Who needs Ascot: High fashion came to Sandown Park … Hain backs NatWest 3 fight Use of heroin and crack soars Special forces to strike at Taliban No Tape No Disc Tories lost in swirl of backbiting Cameron aide's e-mails leaked Northern rock Go on, Give Hoodie Teenagers a Bit of Love and Understanding Fatty thighs to give breasts uplift MI5's terror alert system to be made public Miele July 7 ringleader linked to Tel Aviv suicide bombers Joking Muslim cleric mocks victims of London blasts Insight That's handsome: good-looking do better in exams Fertility experts urge end to 'selfish' late motherhood 'Worn out' Blair is given resting place at old school Church rebels plan £1bn property grab Carrier bag tax sparks EU row Please sir, Jamie is back wanting more Multiple Display Advertising Items Mills let off with fine after lies to taxman Insight Soldier weds comrade he saved from Iraq mob Barrage will tame Severn to power Britain Nation may lose £3.5m Shakespeare first edition Relatives of dead troops to contest ministers' seats City financiers to buy stakes in top footballers Article Withdrawn Carbon Trust Penalty Pointers Clapton's ex reveals lost love song Seat State pupils to get lessons in happiness Climate change brings Eiger to earth Jessops Israeli soldier faces Yard probe over Briton's death Camera sharpshooters drive SAS out of Brecon Beacons Online doctors happily dole out drugs AOL Prezza's Big Gamble on Dome Billionaire John Prescott is on the ropes again after failing to declare a visit to a reclusive US billionaire's ranch. We unravel a high-stakes tale of money and influence that goes all the way back to Blair's great folly—the dome PC World High-Rollers of Supercasino Row The Secretive Citizen Anschutz Bubbly bursts as bling crowd desert Cristal over 'racism' You're nicked, live on helmet cam Nationwide BBC chief's pension leaps to state sector record of £3.85m Shuttle Briton walks in space Gems retrieved in deepest salvage op The grace of a dancer, the grimace of a serial killer Profile Caving in to America BT Saving face over ID Tough choices on energy Scandinavian Airlines Don't mess with Mr In-Between Prescott must quit for the one thing he didn't do—his job Heard the one about the archbishop and the dinner party? Atticus The archbishop's dinner was held to mark the Church … Atticus Cameron's home improvements may be green, but he'll end up in the red Atticus An easy way to measure irritating trading rules Atticus There's often a heady whiff of power in the Commons Atticus No offence, imam, but we must call it Islamic terror Politicians flock to The Spectator's summer party in … Atticus When John Prescott discussed William Wilberforce with Atticus Lord (Chris) Rennard is too modest to confirm this, … Atticus Carte Noire Reality of the Afghan fields Secrets of Sellafield Tesco Points Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, 1 Pennington Street Beeston's terrors Capitalism Offences Look Mum, watch this! All of a sudden jumping between buildings and springing over pillar boxes has become cool. Even Madonna is at it. John Elliott reports on the new craze of 'free-running' or parkour Street Stunts: A Parkouriste's Guide The Sunday Times West mounts 'secret war' to keep nuclear North Korea … Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents West mounts 'secret war' to keep nuclear North Korea … NtI: Telewest Thoughts of Kim Wildcat strikers put blocking tackle on Prodi's reforms Les Bleus fail to heal racial rift Riots flare amid France's World Cup joy 'Brits out' theory over bombing of top chef's hotel Germans lose with new tax penalties 'Skinterns' get Washington panting NtI: Telewest Hispanics nudge US population to 300m Putin slaps down 'Russia is back' warning to West Multiple Display Advertising Items Identical twins land Poland's two top jobs Return of the Soviet-Style Iron Grip Tourists flood to Goa for deadly monsoon US officers ignored massacre reports Girl killed as Israel tightens grip on Gaza BT Boy, 4, survives after fall of 100ft Orange Today's weather Tube traveller pushed to death News in Brief Jet ski amputation Goldsmith to rule on paedophile Child database Da Vinci Code wrangle goes to appeal Seven tickets share £4.3m Lotto jackpot Go slow victory Killer smog Age is no barrier to childrearing—unlike stupidity It was so hot in Rome, the bride almost passed out The Times Lord have mercy, Keef gets God The mark of a very average education Even Fat Frank Lampard would surely have scored this … Ford Contents Top that Zz Wimbledon winner Mauresmo gives boost to France Contents Dior Homme Ronaldo:'I can't stay in England' Rooney banned Italians Can Spoil Depend on Thuram for one more towering performance France's unflappable defensive organiser can inspire my countrymen to another night of glory in Berlin Zidane's Farewell After going from busted flush to trump card in Germany, where does Zinedine Zidane now stand in the pantheon? Mental strength gives Lippi's men the edge The Italians have shown a combination of brilliance, calculation and fitness that makes them my favourites tonight Italy Route to the final France Head to head Golden ball Fears of a clown As two mean defences face each other tonight, will France be let down by Fabien Barthez? Betfair Vive Page difference: young legs who have supported France's old brigade World Cup by numbers Old Lady caught in a fix Juventus have some of the world's best footballers-eight may play in the World Cup final-but relegation for match-rigging will see an exodus Roberts Inspirational Azzurri unite divided nation Parochialism and rivalry are endemic to the way Italians see each other, but Marcello Lippi's side has brought a country together, reports John Follain from Rome Samsung Unified Italy can strut on big stage Sven's battered pride will hurt As good as it gets Silver fox takes on the Stargazer Italy's coach Marcello Lippi is steeped in club football while Raymond Domenech of France is a federation man with a taste for astrology Betfair Who will be the boss of bosses? The two World Cup final managers Magic Month of Memories From Argentina's 24-pass wonder goal to Graham Poll's yellow-card disaster, the world's top tournament more than lived up to its star billing Sing on, sing on Gillette 1966 took my breath away Forgive me, but nothing beats the thrill of watching one's own nation win the World Cup. But Pele and the 1970 tournament ran it close Turn on, tune in—and enjoy the commentators' verbal own goals Our team of experts pick their World Cup highlights Skoda The World Cup's crying game Shop window to the world Premiership buyers' guide: who could be going where There are always rich pickings to be had after a World Cup finals, but managers must beware the costly impulse buy William Hill Sven leaves national team in sorry state Germany sign off in style Vauxhall Give Youth a Chance Foreign players have clearly raised the standard of football in the Premiership and rather than pointing the finger, England should try to learn from them The Sunday Times Offers Direct Venables attacks Eriksson Steve McClaren will be embarrassed by criticism of the selection policy and tactics of his former boss by the man he wants to help rebuild England Campbell and Arsenal to part company Martin Jol's blueprint for England A whole new ball game Steve McClaren is likely to find room for the experience of Terry Venables and Alan Shearer in his team as he starts to transform the England set-up The Sunday Times Jamaica? No, I'm going of my own free will Fit For captaincy Alison Kervin watches Andrew Flintoff, England's stand-in captain, undergoing a gruelling fitness regime on Dartmoor as he prepares for his comeback today Crock attack: England's other injured players Fletcher must cut England losses With Michael Vaughan ruled out of England's defence of the Ashes, it makes no sense to keep dithering over naming Andrew Flintoff as his official, permanent replacement Sport on TV Multiple Display Advertising Items Questions & answers Your sporting conundrums tackled Caught in… Yorkshire win the Gillette Cup, 1965 Sport Letters To Lord's on a Prayer England aim to rescue their horror summer when the Test series against Pakistan begins at Lord's on Thursday Scoreboard Hoggard adds to injury woe England squad The probable 12 for the first Test The wonder of Woolmer Hassan lifts Derbyshire No easy Ryder Europe's faltering Ryder Cup hopefuls will look for better fortune in today's final round of the European Open The India Pale Ale Tiger fights back Leaderboard Mauresmo clears final hurdle Young master of grass The Frenchwoman finally proved her worth after coming from a set down to win her first Wimbledon crown The Sunday Times Worthy champion overcomes fear of failure Amelie Mauresmo lays her demons to rest by storming back to deny her opponent the chance to lift the Grand Slam title she cherishes Santana relishes his Spanish successor Like the youngster who attempts to emulate him today, Manuel Santana found Wimbledon an alien environment but he worked out how to win. By Andrew Longmore Bryan twins complete sequence Haunting Federer Roger Federer has only lost to one man in 2006. Unfortunately for the world No 1, he will be standing on the other side of the net today Route to the final Swiss 1 Roger Federer's walk-on jacket The top 10 Sporting jackets 2 All change at SW19 5 The MCC's dress code 7 Cliff Richard's fashion disaster 8 Chris Eubank's tweed 10 US Solheim Cup auntie-wear 3 Ian Botham's trippy stripes 4 The Heritage Classic's not-so-classic tartan 6 The England team's Armani clobber 9 The Masters Green Jacket All Blacks off to flyer Timesonline McDermott takes over for victorious Quins Rugby League round-up Pumped-up Powell throws down gauntlet The Jamaican sprinter covered 100m in an impressive 9.85 seconds at the State de France last night. By Richard Lewis Skelton gets his revenge The Bedford fighter wins on points to strip Danny Williams of his Commonwealth title at Cardiff's Millennium stadium last night. By Brian Doogan Chain reaction I just can't help it. Show me the Tour de France and all my journalistic faculties go out the window. Well, almost. . . How Paul Kimmage saw his ninth place in a Tour stage in 1986 Honchar leads Powerful Purchase blitzes high-class Lucerne field Wimbledon Results round-up Football Fifa World Cup Third place playoff Pools Today's racecards Talk Sport Rugby Union Rugby League Engage Super League Other Sport Canoeing Sports round-up Golf Rugby league Racing Basketball The Times Ouija Board eclipsed The 2-1 favourite flops in Sandown's feature race yesterday in a week that has tarnished the sport's reputation Cool-hunters head online The web is now an interactive style bible par excellence. Simon Kurs discovers a global hip parade Jeepers! I've just tuned into my home TV from Brighton beach On test Today's musts Evolution v Faith Avian Flu Blueprint for Life Movie Buff's Dream Many desktops are supplied with modest monitors. Doors tests four worthy replacements Acer Al2032 WA—typically £445, or £411 from www. savastore. com Sensational screen pitched at a fine price Gamer's Weapon ViewSonic VX922—typically £239, or £226 from www. cclonline. com Blazing fast, traditional shaped monitor, but pricey Chicken tonight? Site test Sue Nelson tracks down online primers to the pressing issues being thrown up by 21st-century science Mission to Mars Television Lover's Treat Sony MFM-HT205S—typically £650, or £564 from www. it247. com Champion widescreen that doubles as a TV Family-Proof Design Icon Xerox Xa7 19i—typically £300, or £266 from www. openonline. co. uk Sturdy designer screen with a glossy veneer Universal Content Nano Digest Leading Edge The Sunday Times Don't panic Nigel Powell answers your technology queries The Sunday Times Contents Airlines plan controversial air traffic control sale P&O to make £6bn return to London market Armani attacks Savile Row Special Report The Italian designer describes London's centre of tailoring as a bad English comedy'. By John Arlidge Audi 'The Body' takes whopping bite of Hot Tuna Courts advisers scoop £20m New director says bye-bye to Bebo Business Digest German officials look inside Intel Train operator on legal platform Aviva finalises £2bn US takeover Teamsters in British recruiting drive Multiple Display Advertising Items Lax UK wastes £70bn a year BP poised to take key stake in Rosneft Shareholders gang up on Matalan founder Thames bosses tap the bankers Vietnam in talks with Ladbrokes EMI boss backed in Warner bid battle Premier's £400m recipe for new stock Growth in the economy slows despite recent optimism Britain's best-paid woman moves her base to Cyprus Foreign groups to team up on nuclear power plants Lara Croft's firm facing Hungarian police probe Branson ready to swoop on Homes Place Hilton launches worldwide hotel expansion drive Varley assembles his Barclays dream team Agenda Investing in the building blocks Nats buzz Powering ahead Justice is not always blind in land of the free Bankrupt ideas Singer Lily Allen shot to stardom through MySpace. … 'Social network' websites are the next big thing on the internet and the venture capitalists are piling in. Paul Durman explains the attraction Fighting the Cyberspace Perils The Sunday Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Peace breaks out in battle for Matalan The chain's founder is talking to angry investors after trying to buy out minority shareholders. By Richard Fletcher A Rival Not to Be Discounted Captain of industry with a penchant for mischief Sir Nigel Rudd has pulled off a trio of deals at Boots, Pendragon and Pilkington. Who says he's got too many top jobs now? Multiple Display Advertising Items Sir Nigel Rudd's Working Day Vital Statistics Downtime BT End of the Line Spanish dynasty with big ambitions The Cosmen family has quietly become a major player on the British transport scene—and they are here for the long term, reports. Dominic O'Connell in Madrid Ken Lay—rags to riches, then ruin The man behind the Enron sandal goes to his grave technically an innocent man, reports Joe Lauria in New York Contents To sack someone, do it by the book Business Doctor The Times Taxing times for a company van Accommodating the rise of home office workers Half of all people who start up businesses do so from their homes, and more must be done to encourage them, says Rachel Bridge Childhood experience helps son overtake stationery dad How I Made It Mark Heath founder of Bluefish Office Products World share markets Databank Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates/Bonds Currencies Commodities … is key to … alliance plan … that even the auto … can solve the … problems. By … Ray Hutton Business Letters Beyond petroleum Eh up, we collared all't bananas Prufrock Italians look like just the job for retailers It's a small world, especially for the super-rich He's here for De Vere NTL Telewest and Virgin Mobile completed their £1 Check out the Burberry boss on a mission Contents Death Trap Christina Lamb has spent 20 years covering Afghan wars and was lucky to escape with her life after a firefight 10 days ago. Afghanistan is littered with the debris of invading empires—so why do we refuse to learn from history? Contents Brittany Ferries 'Military and development anarchy' The contradictory operations in Afghanistan Contents What I've learnt about husbands When Lady Sarah Graham Moon chopped up her husband's suits she became a heroine for spurned spouses. Then she found happiness, but it was not to last, she tells Giles Hattersley Renault The new rules of ageing Stop dithering, this dictator's really got WMDs Arrested just for looking weird 'We are being royally shafted' Multiple Classified Advertising Items Here's how to handle a drunken chav During his UK-wide pub crawl comedian Ian Marchant found a girl being attacked and decided to act Griff's on a mission to revive the village people Griff Rhys Jones tells Stuart Wavell how his new Restoration series aims to breathe life back into rural communities Multiple Display Advertising Items The folly of taming the sea Last week a small part of Essex was yielded to the sea. We have to accept more of Britain is going to disappear Falafel and fish fingers, my recipe for integration Is it possible to be both Arab and British? Yes, says Widiane Moussa, who fled Lebanon with her family as a child Garnier Motherhood at 62 is fun—I know, I've done it Fellow mother in her sixties Rosanna Della Corte offers advice to Patricia Rashbrook, who gave birth at 62 last week to a son The IB gets an a from me Answer the questions Mephisto 2393 Sudoku Bookwise The Sunday Times Bridge Chess Teaser 2285 The Sunday Times Crossword 4180 Thoroughly modern Michael in the land that time forgot Winner's Dinners Who'd want to be a Wag? Shock exchange The tabloid week This Life Not Clubbing, Just Hot Desking People of the Week When we Asked You to Swap … David, this Wasn't what … Is It a Bird? Is It a Plane? Oh, It's You Again The Daily Telegraph: Sir Carol Mather Last word. . . 1919-2006, soldier and MP The Independent: Geoffrey Cass 1916-2006, civil servant Winner's Letters Talking Heads Nick Newman's Week Contents Lenders turn screw on homeowners Borrowers should keep an eye out for costly changes to their home loans. By Clare Francis and Jessica Bown Where to find the best deals Housing setback News in Brief Contents Isa voting rights Rising oil price helps push Footsie higher Jupiter BT customer kidnapped by the Post Office Question of Money Internet banking has instant pitfalls Multiple Display Advertising Items Investment plan was inappropriate Party Gaming pair follow suit to cash in £5.5m stakes Directors' Deals Claims handler hits back at 'insult' Payout was refused despite disclosure Costs and hassle in direct debit muddle Artemis Invest at home or look abroad? Two of Britain's most successful fund managers are at odds about the best place to put your money Fidelity™ International Another angle on the topsy turvy world of investing Abbey Soft sell Face to face Graduate to a better deal Students leaving university with big debts can enjoy interest-free overdrafts for up to another three years. By Jessica Bown Going for Gold Cracks show in A-Day pensions revolution Some investors are being denied the right to take full advantage of the April 6 shake-up, writes David Budworth Multiple Display Advertising Items What is Allowed? Summer holiday childcare hits £500 a week Whether you go for a childminder or a nanny, the bills can quickly spiral when school breaks up. By Jessica Bown Multiple Display Advertising Items Claim your due from the state Weekly Summer Play Scheme Costs Multiple Display Advertising Items Scandal of banks' 100 fees Current accounts, cards and loans are being loaded with charges intended to trip up the unwary, says Jessica Bown Protect yourself from the plague of penalties Britain buys into the online auction craze Record numbers are buying and selling on the internet — which also means more of us are being ripped off, warns Jessica Bown New pay-as-you-go mobile deals get a poor reception Most customers will not benefit from 'free weekend calls' offers. By Clare Francis Multiple Display Advertising Items Mortgage Deals Cheap Credit Cards Best Savings Accounts Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Factfile How to be the next Buffett Multiple Display Advertising Items Royal chef wants to be king of the road Marcus Wareing, a chef on the Great British Menu, dreams of owning one more car than his friend Gordon Ramsay. By Jessica Bown AXA Framlington Pros and cons of cashing in on your home equity 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 Marketing man's perfect pitch Working at Arsenal FC is a dream job for a former Coca-Cola brand manager. But those tempted into the field need special qualities, says Roger Eglin Multiple Display Advertising Items Hunt for scalps drives job market underground Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Prejudice and fear keep men from care jobs Even in these days of sexual equality, the male of the species is still a rarity in areas such as childcare, says Andrew Taylor Multiple Display Advertising Items My consuming passion at work A Week in the Life of Ed Mayo Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Contents Going wild in New York Can't get a taxi in the Big Apple? Then get a kayak. Matt Rudd hits the Hudson in search of the perfect Manhattan skyline Travel brief Three more ways to see the Big Apple — no kayak required Multiple Display Advertising Items Doc Holiday We want a luxury safari, but it's got to be eco' The Doc's quick fixes Smug Shot When holidays Attack Thomsonfly The Away Game Why stick with Tuscany when you can rent palatial pads in India, Australia and Africa? Susan d'Arcy explains HotelClub Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Las Vegas Ahaaar, Johnnylad St Vincent and the Grenadines — where better to walk the plank on your own pirate adventure. By Gavin Bell Ahaaar, Johnnylad Multiple Display Advertising Items Local knowledge Cumbria Six Lakeland insiders share their favourite haunts in England's wildest county Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items It's Europe, but not as you know it Slovakia is the wildest and oddest corner of the Continent, as Nick Middleton discovers on a week of mountain-walking and 'evil delicacies' Travel brief Stena Line Instant weekend Bergamo Rob Kingston gives thanks for those cheap flights that land miles from Milan Digital Camera Good Gear A long night on the casting couch Dave Riley was a Cannes virgin, until two ladies promised to make him a star Intercontinental Hotels & Resorts Cool Clothes Photo Navigator Lightweight Backpack America, can we come in, please? Directions Olympicholidays Hong Kong for a song …gains Readers' rants Ski Train on Sale To Go Boldly To the Southwest Fatal Attractions Still in London and would be with us the next day Multiple Display Advertising Items Holiday money Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Reader Offers Ltd Multiple Classified Advertising Items My hols Sarah Beeny would rather be dozing in a motorhome than plastering bathrooms Where was I Win a week for two at the five-star St Nicolas Bay hotel in Crete, with Tapestry Holidays The competition Multiple Display Advertising Items Reader Offers Ltd Contents Contents Cars on TV Contents Gimme a Morris, a real old master Me and my motors Peugeot joins the supercars Up to speed Good heavens, Pope goes 4x4 Jeremy's mum is in the pink Superb, but don't buy it Mercedes-Benz Honda So cool it runs on ice It's summer and time to pose, but which convertibles have the biggest chill factor? Andrew Frankel and Nicholas Rufford offer a guide . . . And the Big Chills Timesonline Multiple Display Advertising Items A Life in the Fast Lane In gear The stuff of motoring dreams Jam-Busting Guide The Knowledge Speed Reduction Bars All you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Collapsible Carrier Bentleyapproved Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Now the rich can buy a car just like you The Internet Fast Lane Multiple Display Advertising Items Ford Used Car: Audi A4 Second Opinion The Internet Fast Lane Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items On your Bike All Together now Multiple Display Advertising Items Code of Practice God Bless America A Class Apart Pink Prattle Car Clinic Your motoring problems solved Deal of the Week British International Motor Show The Sunday Times The Internet Fast Lane My First Crash Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Regtransfers Porsche Contents Seat London Launches into the fast lane The British motor show, once a global poor relation, is taking on the big boys, says Joseph Dunn Scene of the Action Roll up for the loudest show on wheels The ExCeL exhibition centre will host the British motor show's biggest ever display of more than 60 new cars Mitsubishi Motors Shell Shell Show stoppers: the new cars and the old stars to watch We will rock you Concerts on the side give the show an added glamour, says Jasper Gerard Eclasslondon Medion Don't just stand there, drive something! This is the show where visitors get their hands on the machines, says Gavin Conway Saab The boys from the rough stuff The Sunday Times Bosch Alfa Brera Contents Contents How much? Carrying on in Chingford Time and Place Moving on We'd only been in that house a few years when my father … Is It worth It? The Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2006, £750,000 Design Classics An Enid Blyton adventure The Famous Five would feel right at home at an artist's clifftop hideaway in East Sussex. All that's missing is lashings of ginger beer, says Fred Redwood Crest Nicholson Golf resorts go global Greenside properties are now vital to the overseas holiday home market, says Graham Norwood Europe North America & the Caribbean South Africa Golf Links Wanted: £10m big-hitters Even the best players will need pots of cash to buy into a new development at St Andrews, says Helen Davies Grosvenor Waterside Missionary vision Canny developers have saved a former Devon monastery from dereliction, says Denise O'Leary Homes Return to splendour From the moment Paul and Anna Harvey first saw Netherstead Hall, they resolved to restore it to its former glory, discovers Cally Law Lower Mill Hamptons International Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items The secret agent Our new estate agent columnist lifts the lid on the people we all love to hate Multiple Display Advertising Items Calling aspiring blue-bloods £3m Over the sea to Skye £295,000 Houses of the week Village life — without a pub £699,500 Multiple Display Advertising Items This island race Sian Griffiths meets a London couple who live in the middle of the Thames and commute to work each day by boat Winkworth Foxtons Foxtons Foxtons Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Our man in Molineta A retired diplomat is selling a Spanish hamlet he spent 40 years restoring, says Karen Robinson On the market Ivana hits Beirut Can the socialite and property developer restore the glitz to a city scarred by civil war, asks Harald Doornbos Savills Multiple Display Advertising Items Pure Barclays Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The home service Love, betrayal and vacuuming: a 'lager saga' from Electrolux aims to domesticate the Noughties man Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Ask the Experts The Sunday Times Foxtons International Foxtons International Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Where kids can get fresh A neglected secret garden in Chiswick is back in bloom, thanks to local schoolchildren, says Caroline Donald Griffiths It's all in the fingers Guitar legend Jeff Beck is as inventive in the garden as he is with a Fender Stratocaster, discovers Rachel de Thame Garden Cuttings What to do this week Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Savills Everyone's a winner Rosie Millard explores the growing use of incentives to fill empty flats The Market *How Much? Multiple Display Advertising Items Ballymore Contents Bose Better sound through research Contents He's earned his wings Best known as C4's egomaniac doctor Guy Secretan, Stephen Mangan tells Patricia Nicol how he came to comedy by accident He's earned his wings Modigliani's women might all look alike, but lean a little closer and his passion shines out, says Waldemar Januszczak The next step in brain evolution Technology is dividing us into digital natives and digital immigrants — and changing the way we think, says Richard Woods Cabaret muscles in on the act Theatre Tired of clubbing? A risqué and raunchy alternative is springing up, reports Evitathemusical Heading South Little Manhattan District 13 Awesome; I F in' Shot That! Ju-On: The Grudge 2 Trouble in paradise Johnny Depp's pirates are set to plunder, but Cosmo Landesman is feeling mutinous Rigoletto Verdi That rousing Oscar-nominated music from Gladiator is I swear, the best bird is the language Television Bird in the hand Words meet their match in pictures when poet John The Emergensea On Paper And if you don't have a poet, try an audio guide "breathtaking action sequence… Superman doesn't fly, … New spin on soft rock The Webb Sisters are weaving their own version of harmonious drivetime music. Just don't call it 'nice', writes Dan Cairns Obsessed? Us? Yes you, Sleepy Jackson, but the result is magnificent, says Mark Edwards Ripe with possibility After three testing roles at the National Theatre, Andrea Riseborough is now a Peter Hall protégée, says Jasper Rees Performances Rest of the week's theatre The Sunday Times Pulled down by gravity Fine acting fails to liberate The Life of Galileo. By Christopher Hart Keep a lid on it, Cleo Theatre Frances Barber rules Antony and Cleopatra like a true diva. Peter Whittle isn't subject Barbican The Sunday Times Doing what comes culturally Architecture While Luxembourg splashes out, Liverpool is taking a more parochial approach, says Hugh Pearman Janacek Classical On record Sinfonietta, Taras Bulba, Cunning Little Vixen Suite Bamberger Symphoniker, cond Jonathan Nott Tudor 7135 Mozart Symphonies No 40 in G minor and No 41 in C Manchester Camerata, cond Douglas Boyd Avie Av2107 Richard Strauss Classical CD of the week Lieder Jonas Kaufmann (tenor), Helmut Deutsch (piano) Harmonia Mundi HMC 901879 George Onslow/cherubini String Quintets Op 19 and 51, String Quintet in E minor Diogenes Quarter, Manuel van der Nahmer (cello) CPO 777187-2 Holst The Planets/Vaughan Williams's Symphony No 4 London Symphony Orchestra, cond Holst, BBC Symphony Orchestra, cond Vaughan Williams Naxos 8,111048 Thom Yorke Pop and Jazz The Eraser XL XLCD200 Sufjan Stevens The Avalanche Rough Trade Rtradcd305 Regina Spektor Begin to Hope Warner Bros 9362441122 Guillemots Pop CD of the week Through the Windowpane Polydor 1701603 Peaches Impeach My Bush XL Xlcd201 The Walker Brothers Everything Under the Sun Universal 983984-4 Various Artists The Blue Horizon Story 1965-1970 Volume 1 Sony BMG 82876862082 Stan Tracey Trio Let Them Crevulate Trio Records Tr573 Get on down Roxy Music New kids in town Metric Conducting a Celtic storm The Cheltenham Music Festival comes with a surprising Scottish twist Aix and pains for Rattle's Ring The Flute failed to beguile and Rheingold fell flat in Provence. By Hugh Canning Rocknroll The Rolling Stones The top events to book now A Moon for the Misbegotten Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Opera Dance Concerts Pop Comedy Film Thank You for Smoking This week, don't miss Theatre The Seagull Art Modigliani and His Models Comedy Ealing Comedy Festival Opening Gala Opera Fidelio Dance La Fille mal gardée Concerts Freddy Kempf Pop Latitude Festival Micro Machines V4 Dirtydancinglondon Turning Pixar's now animated movie Doors Titan Quest Syriana Film Extras Manderlay Film Extras Proof Film Extras Address Unknown Film Extras Official London Theatre Guide The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinema Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Children's books Hardbacks Paperbacks Slip between the covers Your 100 best holiday reads Our definitive guide to satisfying summer reading starts here with 50 novels; overleaf, 50 nonfiction titles Surfing into summer Children School's out and Nicolette Jones has some sizzling suggestions for holiday reading Waterstone's The Open University Death becomes them Joan Smith finds several crime novelists writing at the top of their form in this season's pick of the whodunnits Randomhouse Aspects of love From the single 'grrrl' in New York to the ill-fated Lady Jane Grey, Lucy Atkins sifts through this summer's new batch of popular fiction The Sunday Times concise crossword No 955 The Sunday Times Books First Corporeal punishments The body count is rising, reports John Dugdale in his selection of page-turning thrillers Waterstone's Sound packing advice Keep your luggage light, literary and learned, suggests Karen Robinson, by slotting in some of the best audio reads of the summer WHSmith Pick of the week Annually Retentive (Tuesday, BBC3, 10.30pm) Music The best of the week ahead BBC Proms (From Friday, BBC2, 7.30pm) Sport World Cup/Wimbledon Documentary Truly, Madly, Deeply (Thursday, C4,9pm) Drama Soundproof (Wednesday, BBC2, 9pm) Film A Canterbury Tale (Tuesday, BBC2, 1pm) A Shaw thing Critics' choice One Tree Hill(C4,9am) In memory 7/7 Remembered (ITV1, 9.25am) Holding court Wimbledon (BBC1, 1.25pm) Stuart Little (Five, 5.15pm) Pick of the day World Cup (BBC1, ITV1,6pm) Their generation T In The Park (BBC3, 7pm) Play's the thing William Shakespeare (ITV3, 8pm) It's a mystery Decoding The Past (History, 9pm) Best comedy Curb Your Enthusiasm (More4,9.30pm) You say BBC1 Variations Sky One Films Sport Entertainment Radio UKTV History Cbeebies Pick of the Day Pick of the day The Swenkas (More4,9pm) Get back The Sixties — The Beatles Decade (UKTV History, 1pm) A losing battle The War Of The World (C4,8pm) Old favourites Still Game (BBC2,9pm) Play Misty For Me (BBC1, 11.40pm) Child-catching The Baby Mind Reader (Five, 9pm) Midlife crisis Saxondale (BBC2, 10pm) Best drama Big Love (Five, 10pm) Car-crash TV Medicine's Strangest Cases (Five, 11.10pm) You say BBC1 Variations Sky One Satellite & digital Films Sport Entertainment Radio Factual Children's Pick of the Day Pick of the day Britain's First Suicide Bombers (BBC2, 9pm) The one to watch Annually Retentive (BBC3,10.30pm) Feelgood factor Fred Dibnah's World of Steam, Steel And Stone (BBC2, 8pm) Getting some in Bad Lads' Army — Extreme (ITV1,9pm) Film Choice Culture shock Tales From Copenhagen (BBC4, 9pm) Drama or crisis? Sex, Love And Secrets (ITV2,9pm) Mild spookiness Ghost Whisperer (E4,9pm) Horror relived Seconds From Disaster (National Geographic, 10pm) Best comedy Modern Toss (C4,11pm) You say BBC1 Variations Films Sky One Satellite & digital Sport Entertainment Radio Satellite, digital & radio Factual Children's Pick of the Day Pick of the day Wednesday 12 July Critic's Choice Jane Hall (ITV1,9pm) Home thoughts Property Ladder (C4,8pm) We're doomed Mega Disasters: San Francisco Earthquake (History, 8pm) Do the strand Mozart — Looking For Traces (Artsworld, 8pm) Film Choice Silent running Soundproof (BBC2, 9pm) Fault finding Journeys Into The Ring Of Fire (BBC4, 9pm) LA confidential Robbery Homicide Division (ITV4,10pm) How could you? Sex in The 90s: Stags And Hens (C4,10.50pm) You say BBC1 Variations Sky One Films Sport Entertainment Radio Factual Children's Pick of the Day Pick of the day Truly, Madly, Deeply (C4,9pm) Revenge time Cricket (Sky Sports 1,10am) Big dipper Little Britain's Big Swim (BBC1, 8pm) Gone fission Horizon (BBC2, 9pm) Paparazzi (Sky Movies 2,8pm) OTT drama Bad Girls (ITV1,9pm) So-so sitcom Scrubs (E4,9pm) Dire sitcom The War At Home (E4,9.30pm) Mind the gap The London Underground (History, 10pm) You say Variations BBC1 Sky One Films Sport Entertainment Factual Children's Radio Pick of the Day Pick of the day The Kumars At No 42 (BBC1, 9.30pm) Pocket money Teenage Tycoons (BBC2,7pm) Song of summer BBC Proms (BBC2, 7.30pm) Faith healing 30 Minutes (C4,7.30pm) House of Usher (Sky Cinema 1,8pm) Missing links Vanishings: The Lost Explorer (History, 7.30pm) Meat is murder Law & Order (Five, 9pm) Behind the times Angelina Jolie (Biography, 9pm) Hard boiled The Shield (Five, 11pm) You say BBC1 Variations Sky One Films Sport Entertainment Radio Satellite, digital & radio Factual Children's Pick of the Day Pick of the day Critics' choice The Curse of Superman (C4,10pm) A good cause Sport Relief (BBC1, 7pm) Killing fields Serengeti: Assault On The Megaherd (National Geographic, 7pm) Batman Begins (Sky Movies 1,8pm) Best drama A Very British Coup (ITV4,10pm) Top 10 TV programmes Millions viewing week ending Jun 18 Age concerns Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (Five, 10pm) Bad old days GBH (More4,10.15pm) BBC1 Variations Sky One Satellite & digital Films Sport Entertainment Radio Satellite, digital & radio Factual Children's Pick of the Day Truly, Madly, Deeply Contents Dfs Maserati Contents Specsavers Opticians Sir Jonathan Miller, 72, studied medicine at Cambridge Cassandra Energizer The 33-year-old comedienne, daughter of the renowned Energizer Shell My Tussle with Russell Russell Crowe has a reputation for being vocal But when Jack Marx was enlisted by Crowe for a special mission, the writer had no warning hed have to listen to the actor sing Ford John Lewis Lose Yourself in the Toblerone Triangle A Head for Trouble We like to think it's our choice to help and old lady across the road or push her into the traffic. But an increaing number of scientists say we're fooling oarselves. are some of us just hard wired to be had? John Cornwell reports Lexus Tesco In the Shadow of the Sun Rejected and feared, for generations they have suffered from burns and skin cancers without knowing why. Now the curse is lifing for tanzania's albinos Lay down, Sally She owns the Old Vic and Ronnie Scott's. Her best friends include the Clintons and Labour's elite. So why is the impresario Sally Greene avoiding the limelight? By Robert Sandall. Portraits by Howard Sooley Bordeaux Birds Eye The Republic of Deceit Samsung Wickes The Knightsbridge London Discover Cadman Fine Wines We Sebo Interiors Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The 31-year-old teaches knitting in schools and colleges around London The Sunday Times Furniture Village Mercedes-Benz Contents Clinique Contents Christa D'Souza: 1661 Specsavers Opticians I am what I am Celebrity Sex Clinic Going up Going down Stephen Jones (Fashion Moment) Life without Passion is Unforgivable Special Kate Kate Bosworth, the actress formerly known as Orlando Bloom's girlfriend, is set to soar into the big time playing Lois Lane. But will she like it there, asks Kate Spicer … found? An exclusive Cotswold eco-estate for the super-rich isn't quite the life style utopia it seems, says Anita Chaudhuri Samsung Claudia Croft Wardrobe Mistress (Fashion Style) Made to measure Supermodel Eugenia makes this summer's couture frocks look more fabulous than ever NY-Lon New York job, London fella — romance is a transatlantic juggling act for Sarah Bailey Rediscoveryoursenses Samsung It's pants Undes maketh the man. Tom Stubbs reveals how to impress down under Motorola Q When I was 18 (I'm now 32), my mum's long-term boyfriend Dove How to do festival chic Luscious lip plump Chinese wonder Clean sweep Med Scents In love with the Needle Forget the scaremongering — Botox is perfectly safe, has long been used as a medical treatment and can make you look years younger, says Newby Hands The Lure of the Laser It's not just wrinkles that dermatologists can treat these days. Everything from sun spots to spider veins can be rubbed out increasingly effectively with the new generation of laser technologies. Newby Hands gives her recommendations Just Say No Bethan Cole on why she'll never get injected 72 hour Party People A Friday-to-Monday club culture has sprung up around Britain's latest dane drug. But you shouldn't mess with meth, warns Paul Flynn Which Body Do You Want? New WAG on the block Carly has set the tone for the season's most wanted muscles. Susie Whalley shows you how to shape up Times Online (What's the Alternative?) Fish tales Keep it fresh, keep it simple — with Richard Corrigan's delicious fish recipes Photographs by Brent Darby Message in a Bottle Matching food and beer is a bigger treat than you'd imagine, Joanna Simon gets the measure of which ales taste best with which dishes A little crush Heston Blumenthal's mint granita is as fresh as it gets Ocean Spray A A Gill Local Pioneers Red Sea beaches Reflected glories Queen of the desert Welcome to Palm Springs — where 1950s architecture meets California sunshine Words by Bridget Stott Photographs by Ryan Alosio Cif In the stars Tyber and Pancha (So in Love) Linzi Stoppard, violinist The first time. . . The last time. . . Summer Madness What grips a girl and her credit card in the run-up to a holiday, asks Shane Watson Mrs Mills solves all your problems The Sunday Times Wine Club Louis Vuitton Chocolat Chocolat

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