Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 27/08/2006

2006; Gale Group;

Autores

Hants, Anthony Adolph, Hala Jaber, John Dugdale, William Kay, Patrick French, Barbara Hall, Aa Gill, Christine Wang, Leicester Tigers, Berks, Sally Brock, Helen Davies, Peter Whittle, Rob Hughes, John Peter, Rabbi Brian Fox, Mark Brewster, Joshua Key, Jasper Rees, Robin Eggar, Andrew Longmore, Gloucester Rugby, Aer Lingus, Gerry Cottle, Brian Dawson, Gareth Walsh, P Beaumont, Frank Whitford, Paul Burgon, Michael Atherton, Kathryn Cooper, Billy Hendry, P D, Lucy Hughes-Hallett, Professor Colin Leach, David Cracknell Political Editor, Emsworth, Neil Wormald, Duncan Bannatyne's, Heston Blumenthal's, John Bent, Martin Brundle, Clive Davis, David Simmons, Terry Field, Mike Fitzjohn, Lucian Read, Tony Allen-Mills, Simon Wilde, Ariel Leve, Ryan Johnson, Robert Winnett, Irwin Stelzer, Kiran Stacey, Fiona Watson, Peter Wilson, Rosie Millard, L Davies, David Dougill, Malcolm McIntyre, Lucy Barnard, Christopher Hart, St Helens, Elaine Duncan, Alee Nacamuli, Oliver McGrane, Stuart Barnes, Stewart Lee, Paul Flynn, Maurice Waterworth, Tom Cruise, Nicholas Berry, Jean-Christophe Novelli, Stephen Venables, David Jamieson, Darrell Anderson, Paul Forsyth, Hugh Canning, Geraldine Hackett Education Correspondent, John Aizelwood, Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Wilson, Alec Forty, David Cairns, Simone Lahbib, Rebecca Caseby, Dean Nelson, Michael Portillo, P Thacker, Lawrence James, Bob Walker, Edward Porter, Sarah Bakewell, Sarah Dempster, Dave Pollard, Bath Rugby, S W, Rachael de Thame, Jeff Potter, Sarah-Kate Templeton Health Correspondent, Helen McCormack, Timothy St Ather, Holly Watt, Patrick Lilley, Max Hastings, Graham Keeley, Robin Scott-Elliot, Eva Langlands, Stuart Wavell, London Wasps, Paul Donovan, John Paul Warner, Frances Spalding, Vincent Crump, Giles Hattersley, Chris Woodhead, Christopher Barker, Steve Boyd, Jasper Gerard, Halley McCallum Founder of BTS Group, Paul Driver, John Follain, Dr Zhigniew Pelezynski, Ian Hawkey, Stuart Andrews, Christopher Morgan, Shelley Von Strunckel, Paul Durman, Ted Richards, Peter Bainbridge, Jim Baggott, Amanda Gotham, Andrew Perry, Mark Edwards, Phil Baker, Hugo Barnacle, Randhir Bains, Alec Taylor, Peter Fosker, Lois Rogers, Bob Graham, Christopher Silverster, Nicci Smith, Raymond Keene, Alex Delmar-Morgan, Rod Liddle, Ian Greaves, Cosmo Landesman, Robbie Hudson, Christopher Smallwood, Jay Leno, Helen Hawkins, Stephen Jones, Dominic O'Connell, Stephen Bleach, Barry Flatman, Uzi Mahnaimi, Louise Armitstead, Robert Douglas, I C, Diana Mead, Jonathan Foyle, Amanda Blinkhorn, Vernon Scarborough, Caroline Donald, Vicki Butler-Henderson, Nick Rennison, Colin McDOWELL, Bob Bullock, Miranda Seymour, Ian Critchley, Helen Brown, John Stern, Trevor Lewis, Jack Grimston, Talib Choudhry, George Alagiah, Stephen Armstrong, John Elliott, Rob Hodgetts, Isabel Oakeshott Deputy Political Editor, Christopher Goodwin, David Beal, Jonathan Leake Environment Editor, B Godfrey, Roland White, Sir Anthony Bamford, Neil Boorman, Steven Swinford, Jeremy Mart, Abul Taher, Maurice Chittenden, B Clay, Brian Cutts, Beverley Guinness, Richard Brooks Arts Editor, Richard Rae, Ray Hutton, Christopher Whittle, Mark Paul, Daniel Tyler, London Irish, Wj Cheltenham, Simon Bell, M E, Clare Francis, John Harlow, David Knights, Simon Brooke, Chris Haslam, Dipesh Gadher, Mark Kleinman, John Holden, Paul Rowan, Matthew Campbell, Jeffrey Robinson, Sybil Kapoo, Stephen Pettitt, Will Iredale, Jonathan Leake Science Editor, Jonathan Milne, Jessica Bown, Rw Johnson, Bristol Rugby, Sally Kinnes, Angus McCrone, Daniel Emery, Johanna Thornycroft, Roger Dobson, Nick Hood, Sw, Wendy Robinson, Stephen Price, Minette Marrin, Mark Hodson, Graham Norwood, Andrew Frankel, Joe Lovejoy, Jonathan Futrell, Catherine Lloyd Burns, Andrew Male, David Budworth, Hugh Pearman, Burrower, Andrew Davidson, Dan Cairns, Richard Caseby, Dan Clark, Stewart Mitchell, Neil Hanson, Clover Stroud, Simon Reeve, Sarah Baxter, P Stephens, Carolyn Simpson, Matthew Goodman, India Knight, Philip Jacobson, Kate Spicer, Colin Walker, Kathleen Nutt, Jason Dawe, Joan Smith, Karen Robinson, Helen Stewart,

Resumo

Contents Call my life coach, not a spin doctor Kuoni Contents Festival fever: 80,000 fans converge on Reading Footballers use babies for 'repair kits' 10m want to quit 'over-taxed' UK Contents The Sunday Times Contents The Sunday Times Contents Newspapers Support Recycling Contents British Gas Hamza henchman defies law to praise 7/7 bombers He'd 'love to kill troops' What the Public Thinks about Tax Brick attack on boy, 4 Translators Shot Coded Message from a Waspish Joker Fools Biographer … Betjeman love letter is horrid hoax 205mm x 320mm approx internal dimensions Sunseeker Umpire Hair runs into new row Contents History digs into royal lawns Bustards killed by their tracking devices Prescott Jr 'held talks in Whitehall' Exam tables devalued as schools ditch GCSEs Alternatives Hospitals botch 300 births a year Boeing hydrogen plane set to lift off PC World Laser breakthrough lets stars sing again Specsavers Footballer is cautioned for blessing himself Hindujas to build 'palace' on the Mall Appalling British weather blew out early settlers Fingerprinting plan for pupils angers parents Bishop banned from pulpit for swearing JCB Folk singer opens the door to privacy law Britain is the most burgled nation in Europe The All New Mitsubishi Colt Blue 3 Door Kennedy was ousted by his young Turks Currys Olivier's widow speaks of fight with his demons Times Online Benefits rise will increase single mums Fiat How Many Others Can we Squeeze in? In the past two years Britain has experienced its biggest single wave of migration. Steven Swinford reports on the rush from the east Post Office Up at 5am, work till you drop: the imigrant's story A Romanian tells Bob Graham what he and other migrants get from a life of relentlessly hard graft in Britain BT SNP wants abolition of 'anti-English' university charges Barclays link in drug cash route Tories in probe over £15m HQ windfall British GP charged over rocket sales Private cancer centres to aid NHS Dumped, but the Top Gun may still have the last laugh Safety can be bad for you Halifax Life in the old dog yet Bobby Moore Fund Nuclear power poker Obesity? This is a job for Supernanny How right wing the left sounds after its moment of racial truth Picture Gallery Samantha's raspberry to stop hubby's diet going pear shaped Atticus We also know who wears the trousers at No 10—and now Atticus Labour plays host to Sir Alex, but will it be a pre-season friendly? Atticus Cameron sets it out in black and white: we were wrong Atticus A show on TV's Living channel this Wednesday asks Atticus France about-turns into a bigger military mess There couldn't be a more unlikely combination of sport Atticus Sir Ming Campbell has called for better treatment of Atticus There's nothing more embarrassing than a middle-aged … Atticus Focus Fees don't make a quality student Homebase Locals also suffer in rip-off Britain Sharia calls will abate Hitler Youth: In Nazi Germany, Gunter Grass Death and tax Birthdays Letters to: The Sunday Times, l Pennington Street Curse of the Count Count von Bismarck, a direct descendent of the Iron Chancellor, became infamous when a minister's daughter was found dead in his bed 20 years ago. Last week tragedy struck again Thomson Royal family rivals face a TV due Nissan Arnie settles TV presenter's groping case Article Withdrawn Barclaycard Humbling of the supertroops shatters Israeli army morale War machine loses its shield of invincibility Cluster bombs leave 'toys' that kill children Iran takes new nuclear step The Bathstore Hard-work holidays at Castle Prodi PM leaves fun to Berlusconi Economy-class Saudi royals cramp Marbella's style HSBC Washington hit by curse of the kid bloggers Guy talk hits career women where it hurts New Orleans sees symbol of failure in a shiny Superdome BT The Research Six-day forecast Lexus Police injured at illegal rave BA diversion Cameramen hit by Israeli airstrike Shooting spree Think tank calls for new tax on rubbish Two tickets share £4.8m Lotto jackpot Milkman killed Comedy award Half of us are a fat lot of good—the rest, fit for nothing China announces it is banning striptease shows at funer The Times If ever a show deserved to perish You can't have it both ways on terror Darrell Hair, the Australian umpire who accused Pakista Ford Contents Two sent off for elbowing Contents BT Johnson strikes to end 21 winless years Barton punishes Arsenal Contents Heskey shows new boys the way to do it Bent stars amid mayhem Renault Warnock given taste of things to come Giggs maintains perfect start Match stats Cardiff roll back the years Cureton drives Colchester Agger too hot for Hammers Kisnorbo rescues Foxes Johnson sees Wolves home City hit five to reach second Round-up 1 Australian cricketers' bootcamp The top 10 Crazy training regimes 3 a heart attack for John Daly 5 Gunfire for South African rugby players 7 Monkey glands for Wolves 9 a soldier's life for Alan Minter 10 Ballet for Sheffield United 2 a shed for Eddie 'The Eagle' Edwards 4 Cold showers for Cambridge United 6 Turtle's blood for Ma's Army 8 Todd White's sledge Elbow Rob Hughes Yesterday's dismissals at The Valley for elbowing will only add to the furore surrounding on-field violence sparked by Ben Thatcher's actions last week No funny bone: how the elbow has played an unwelcome part in football Sunderland's Saviour? Roy Keane and Niall Quinn were once at each other's throats, but if Keane takes the reins at the Stadium of Light all the bad feeling will be forgotten Who said Quinny was a muppet? Picture Gallery The Sunday Times Sunderland—are you sure, Roy? Benni's from Heaven After being linked with a host of Premiership clubs, Benni McCarthy finally lines up against the champions today Srooa Boruc finds Old Firm rivary remains stained by history The police's decision to caution Celtic's Artur Boruc for crossing himself at Ibrox shows how Scottish football is still torn apart by sectarianism, writes Richard Wilson O'Neil plays loyalty card Gary O'Neil joined Portsmouth at 13 and can prove the benefit of continuity tomorrow against Middlesbrough Old Firm: when the passion spills over Bmi Barclays Premiership Coca-Cola Championship League One League Two Pools Nationwide Conference Scotland Other Football Fixtures The Sunday Times Moving mountains Andorra face England on Saturday, rightly classed as European whipping boys. But they are an improving team Injury scare over Rio A scan on a suspected broken toe today will reveal whether the England defender will be fit to face Andorra Sport on TV Times Online The Sunday Times Questions Your sporting conundrums tackled Caught in Kent win the Gillette Cup, 1967 Sport Letters Kirtley delivers decisive blow The former England bowler's five wickets capped a gutsy fightback by Sussex in the C&G Trophy final Clyde Walcott: the man who lit up Lord's One of the legendary three W's, the great West Indian, who died yesterday, helped establish his team as a force in international cricket, writes Robin Scott-Elliot The Sunday Times Aussie Umpire who Simon Wilde Darrell Hair may have made his position in the game untenable, but the case of the 'tamper tantrum' saw over-reactions from all involved Hair savaged by gleeful Pakistan Contents Bad Hair days: controversies involving the umpire Inzamam's record ensures awkward future Pakistan still have plenty of issues to address, notably the captaincy and the future of a management that has failed to rise to the occasion, writes Simon Wilde British four sweep to gold The coxless four could afford a stutter on the way to beating Germany to extend their unbeaten run to 24 races Shell Optimax Phillips closes in on world crown The British three-day event rider needs a clear round to secure the individual title at the World Equestrian Games in Germany today, writes Rob Hughes Long sparks glorious Saints The Sunday Times Heroic Huddersfield fall short at final hurdle The 13-man game and its devoted followers warm to the home of rugby union with only a few reservations E. on Energy The Sunday Times Feathers will fly in Turkey The Sunday Times Club-by-club guide to the Guinness Premiership It's a Shaw thing He has played more Premiership games than any player, but giant Wasp forward Simon Shaw is hungry for more Thirteen seasons at the coalface of club rugby Recycling Drive England brought home the World Cup playing it fast and loose, but it's breakdown ball that is now winning games Stuart Barnes's 12 newcomers to watch NEC Harlequins Tiger's motivation is not there when it comes to the Ryder Cup Paul Forsyth Luke Donald believes the world No1 struggles in a team environment because his entire focus is on winning majors The Sunday Times American rookies untainted by losing habit Much has been made of the quality of Tom Lehman's Ryder Cup rookies, but Paul McGinley is certain that they will not be found wanting, writes Paul Forsyth The end for Agassi Andre Agassi prepares to big an emotional farewell to the sport he has graced for 20 years when he takes his final bow at the US Open Sky Sports Carter's awesome All Blacks thrash Springboks Sports round-up Rugby Union Results round-up Rugby League Powergen Challenge Cup Final Other Sport Multiple Display Advertising Items Today's racing Racing This Week No time to duck the issue Rod Liddle The Times Heavy cross to bear for Boruc Gallagher the fall guy Contents What a scandal: the truth The broadband market is in chaos. Stewart Mitchell investigates an industry rife with spurious claims and mis-selling Miserly monthly caps and murky 'unlimited' deals Customer-service villains exposed About British broadband Choosing the Best ISP for your Family Why move to a pricey new suite? The Sunday Times Travel Direct Toyota Contents Barclays' hidden £1.2bn pay bonanza Permira tucks into Captain Birds Eye BAA to 'defy government' in Heathrow runway move Audi Sweet figures at model agency The City's secret seduction society Special Report Angus McCrone lifts the lid on the ever-so-discrect world of the nation's top headhunters Chinese hospital beds roll towards UK Business Digest Hurricane fear drives up oil price Logan Orviss thinks about a float Judge halts airline strike SMG set to turn down Ulster merger Public switches on to plasma TVs Coles attracts more suitors Press Complaints Commission The Sunday Times Vodafone slashes mobile bills Private equity bosses to cut ties with Pru Parry plans to end ITV buyback Multiple Display Advertising Items Dotcom veterans offer video help Fitness chain weighs up £150m deal Livingstone blow for £600m airport sale Suitors stalking troubled Isoft Customer exodus forces mobile phone firm 3 to face harsh facts Company doctor's cure for Smart cars Old Vic group to stage Billy Elliot fundraiser Coke Zero sales fall to deflate sugar-free fizz Aer Lingus float ready for take-off Consortium builds team to tackle NTL takeover New challenge for mild-mannered man of steel 'Reserve army' can defuse demographic time bomb Britain's labour shortage can't be solved by immigrants alone. It is better to use over-fifties who want to work, writes Christopher Smallwood Breathing space A rich seam House-price fall poses dilemma on interest rate American Account Jac back? The Battle for Britain's Airwaves Leading Contenders to Take over the Frequencies Vacated by Analogue Television Multiple Classified Advertising Items Buy to let tycoon checks out hotels Andreas Panayiotou has made a fortune from flats in London—now he is hoping for a warm reception abroad, writes Matthew Goodman Multiple Display Advertising Items Gold miner Oxus stops glittering in central Asia The firm has lost its licencess in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Could this spell trouble for other western operators? The unsung queen of banking Marion King has transformed Voca, the company that clears most of the UK's bill payments. Is a job with an FTSE 100 firm her next step up? The Sunday Times Marion King's Working Day Americans sweep aside blue-blooded Britons Corporate broking was dominated by three English firms. Now the global banks see it as a way of winning new business Times Online Vital Statistics Downtime Look for exit as soon as you get started How to win at business Week 5: Devising an exit strategy Being clear about long-term goals will help you to plan you business much better The Business Doctor: How to dismiss absent workers Postponing the Year's Accounts Buying a good name allowed tree surgeon to branch out How I Made It Peninsula The Times Newspapers, the Attention Medium Plumber comes in from the cold Prufrock BAA is no black sheep Here's an interesting vacancy. I hear Gazprom, the … Needed very urgently: the I-Spy book of trees for Ofex Logica must regroup after buying spree Inside the City Fun Technologies World share markets Databank Major share movements UK economy at a glance Top 200 companies Indicator of the week Interest rates / Bonds Currencies Commodities 'Fake owners' are ruining capitalism Beware investors such as hedge funds, which care chiefly for the short-term share performance of a business, argues Nicholas Berry Business Letters Jaguar Contents My Life as a Thug Contents Vauxhall The Predatory Priest Next Week 'we'll Beat You if You Talk'-The Chill Reality of a Seminary Green is the new black, darlings Celebrities have developed a mania for all things ecologically sound. But don't count on it saving the planet, says Rosie Millard Now everyone's a gambler Sport has always been addicted: now the nation is too, says Michael Atherton Boots Guys, a word of advice And the middle class can kiss their a*** For 600 years the underclass has proved resistant to the reforms of their masters, and that won't change, says Lawrence James I'm calling time on silly watches Be clear, this is Asian apartheid L'orÉal Paris Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Eiger is my kind of therapy Sir Ranulph Fiennes tells Stephen Venables why he is risking his life one more time Making £4 jeans a bargain for the whole world Globalisation is a fact. The challenge is making it work for everyone, says Stuart Wavell It wasn't such a bad scandal The expose was a disaster for her husband but a curious liberation for her, Belinda Oaten tells Giles Hattersley Shredded Wheat Beating the first day blues Starting at school is always momentous but it needn't be traumatic, says Amanda Blinkhorn The superhead who fell back to earth with a bump Dame Jean Else tells Kiran Stacey why she thinks she was sacked from being a 'superhead' The Sunday Times Office Direct Avoid 'studies' if you want to study Multiple Display Advertising Items Mephisto 2400 Sudoku Bookwise Optimax Bridge Chess Teaser 2292 The Sunday Times Crossword 4187 Nobody does British better than the foreigners Winner's Dinners Haven't I not seen you? This Life Caprice who? … a Bird? It a Plane? No, It's Supermodel The Daily Talegraph: Lord Deramore Last word That's All … The Daily Telegraph: Mick Dillon Avast Behindi Winner's Letters Talking Heads Contents Mis-selling fear over inheritance tax plans Some advisers seem more interested in fat commissions than helping your heirs avoid death duties Simple ways to cut death duties Revenue rate hike News in Brief Contents New Star The Sunday Times Out of time (and luck) on endowment claim Question of Money Multiple Display Advertising Items NatWest took half a year to get it right Woolwich called to account over Isa Outdoor clothing director fills his boots with cheap shares Directors' Deals Cold comfort on freezer breakdown Reader's anger at unjustified payout E-mail Diana Wright at the address below one attachment Investors get a taste for spread betting Gambling on price movements used to be seen as a risky game for the rich, but not any more Multiple Display Advertising Items How Spread Betting Works How CFDs are Different Deathbed mortgages are a perverse way to avoid inheritance tax Comment Multiple Display Advertising Items Weird weather threatens like in home cover The heatwave, high tides and even the threat of tornados could lead to a rise in premiums, writes Jessica Bown Firms push fields of dreams Savers are snapping up land for their pensions, but there are doubts over some schemes, says Money Editor Kathryn Cooper It has never been cheaper to insure your own life A-Z Money L is for life Insurance Anglo Irish Bank Eco homes Abbey Is it too late to fix your energy bills? There is confusion over whether power prices are going to go up or down this winter. Clare Francis offers some advice Leeds Building Society Multiple Display Advertising Items Why HD TV could cost more than you expect Mortgage Deals Cheap Credit Cards Factfile Best Savings Accounts Low-Cost Loans Top Annuity Rates Take a lesson from the chavs Banks shamed into silence on payment cover Multiple Display Advertising Items Aap Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Life is sweet for virtuoso chocolate maker Fame and Fortune Paul Young earns thousands making chocolate sculptures, and is investing the money in his own shop Legal & General Northern Rock 'tracker' fails to track base rate Accounts that Give Peace of Mind Contents Contents Elephants in the shed Time and Place Moving on Get Cottles Is It worth It? 30 Warwick Park, Tunbridge Wells, Kent, £450,000 Design Classics Swiss on a £35m roll One of the world's richest men has just bought a second pile along the Thames, says Helen Davies The Property Investor Show Berkeley Homes Dr who Calls Times After a spell living in France, Tom Baker is revisiting his roots, finds Rosie Millard Discover your Home's History Every building tells a story. Anthony Adolph explains how to research the past of your own home and of the people who lived in it Frasers Property Group What lies beneath Even stripping wallpaper can reveal a house's secrets, discovers Jonathan Foyle Start searching Fine & Country The country mole With two invitations in one evening on her calendar, is life looking up at last for our country correspondent? Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sunday Times Foxtons Foxtons A Cotswolds banker £6m Project in the park £550,000 Houses of the week Up against the wall £150,000 Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward Multiple Display Advertising Items Eager beavers Not since the 18th century has there been so much British interest in Canada. John Harlow reports on a new breed of settler getting close to Mother Nature On the market Spanish Showrooms Foxtons Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Galliard Homes Ltd Ask the Experts E-mail your questions to propertyexperts@sunday times. co. uk The Sunday Times Bentley Grove Multiple Display Advertising Items Send in the Marines Show your love of the sea in the garden, even an inland one — Just don't go overboard, says Rachel de Thame The Sunday Times BooksFirst Garden Cuttings What to do this week Up for a fight Eddy Shah is causing more controversy, this time with plans for a holiday village in Witshire, says Lucy Barnard Multiple Display Advertising Items Wyevale Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Savills Don't be seduced Fancy investing in France? Dream with your eyes open, says Rosie Millard The Market Contents Multiple Display Advertising Items Savills Contents The fore! shore Pool inflation Starry nights Taking Al-Mickey Beak viewing Roll up, Roll up for the Mystery Tour Walking shoes and thinking caps on: Vincent Crump presents the ultimate travel puzzle — three trails around Britain, each strewn with fiendish clues. There are crates of Canard-Duchene bubbly and stylish Hotel du Vin short breaks waiting for the winners Your picture questions are Sunsail Clubs Fiendish questions, fabulous prizes Picnic Set Good Gear Surprise catch in the Amazon Rob Hodgetts landed more than piranha on a steamy night's fishing in Ecuador Espanil Dog Life Jacket Multimedia Mobile Washable Deck Shoes Euro Tunnel Quick Fixes Your Hols Cheap flights in South Africa, where's still hot in Europe Timeonline Multiple Display Advertising Items When holidays Attack Multiple Display Advertising Items Camp with the cows Luxury tents, working farms: a new take on country breaks leaves the herd behind, says Mark Hodson Not into Tents? Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Migh Aphrodite Incest, paganism, bloody violence and miraculous anti-ageing treatments: the goddess of love still moves in mysterious ways on Cyprus, says Chris Haslam Travel brief The Sunday Times Directions Online rip-off warning Eurostar Where was I? Dragons, Indian deities and abstract artwork will form … Dogs hunt safari gunmen Holiday money Readers' rants News now Tough Love They're fearsomely strong, endlessly gentle — and they're Kleptomaniacs. Boreo's endangered organ-utans will steal your lunch, your cance . . . and your heart, says Simon Reeve Travel brief Instant weekend Granada Fiona Watson salutes the City's sublime Moorish architecture Stena Line Travel Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items My hols Furious elephants and Hollywood royalty make a holiday, says Simone Lahbib Where was I Win a week for two at the five-star Hawaii Grand Hotel in Limassol, Cyprus, with Libra Holidays The competition Multiple Display Advertising Items Queen Mary 2 Contents Contents . . . And just add Cayenne pepper Me and my motors BMW joins drop-top war Up to speed Dipstick! Spending on cars jumps At the third attempt it's a winner Drives the Vauxhali Corsa The maharaja's motor rolls back Rolls-Royce, once the chariot of India's princes, is making a comeback thanks to a new breed of entrepreneur, says Jeremy Mart Audi Learning to Why wait until 17? Richard Caseby and Francie Clarkson gave their children an early taste of life behind the wheel Lap after lap he ups his pace until I'm beginning to … Multiple Display Advertising Items Pocket Map The stuff in gear of motoring dreams Speed Spy The Knowledge Fuel and Oil Additives All you wanted to know about cars but were afraid to ask Bright Idea Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Look what muscled its way out of history Multiple Classified Advertising Items Good Wood Used Car: Ferrari 575M Second Opinion Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Clear Indication Danger Signs Nav Now Calling Time Phone Pest State of Repair Second Opinion One Track Mind Card Sharp Badge of Pride Car Clinic Your motoring problems solved Deal of the Week Aus Liebe zum Automobil The Sunday Times My First Crash Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Contents Billy Elliot Contents How do you solve a problem like Gadaffi? Has ENO gone too far with its pop portrait of the colonel asks Dan Cairns AA Gill asks: can they be serious? Ducking and diving throught the traffice … the appointed … She's her father's daughter all right. Charlotte Gainsbourg is turning her hand, reluctantly, to Pop — with super results. Dan Cairns gets behind he Hollywood's new risk-takers The dotcom moguls now bankrolling films are rewriting the rule book in terms of what we watch and when, says Christopher Goodwin Colour blind He was the first black actor to play a Shakespearian king with the RSC. Now David Oyelowo appears in a controversial BBC drama that has been accused of racism He defends its content to Jasper Rees Look Both Ways 12A, 101 mins Rest of the week's film Oklahoma! U, 148 mins You, Me and Dupree 12A, 109 mins Marilyn Hotchkiss Ballroom Dancing & Charm School 12A, 104 mins Severance 15,96 mins Watching the films of Pedro Almodovar always makes … Where are the real women in Almodovar's latest, asks Cosmo Landesman The Sunday Times George W Bush is dead. At least he will be on Channel … Culture Soapbox This thriller doesn't have the legs Television Sue sails away Radio waves Girls on top Women's comedy is right up there on the best of the autumn TV schedules, says Stephen Armstrong Hp invent An almost famous singer Springsteen is a Jeff Finlin fan. And with good reason, says Robin Eggar The monthly rock magazine for elderly people. Q has ELO and Meat Loaf were bad then and are bad still. Let's not pretend otherwise, says Rod Liddle In the 1970s, you should have been listening to. . . Liddle's top 20 Have you seen this face some What do a German status. Joan Crawford and Disney's wicked queen have in common? A French show reveals all to Frank Whitford Bob Dylan Peter Morgan's new work dramatises a key moment in 1977. When the ambitious Superb performances cover up the flaws in Frost/Nixon. says Christopher Hart Now Showing in Cinemas across the Country Royal box Look Back in Anger Theatre Royal, Bath The best has bite Seven Brides for Seven Brothers Rest of the week's theatre Bruckner Symphony No 4 in E Flat London Philharmonic Orchestrea, cond Klaus Tennstedt LPO Live LPO 0014 On record Classical Mozart Solo Keyboard Works Lilli Kraus (Piano) Music & Arts CD 1001 Vivaldi Concertos and Sinfonias Venice Baroque Orchestra, cond Andrea Marcon Archiv 00289 474 5092 Classical CD of the week Mozart Piano Sonatas K279, K280, K281 Robert Levin Deutsche Harmonia Mundi 82876 84237 2 Stuart MacRAE Violin Concerto Christian Tetzlaff (violin), BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, cond Ilan Volkov Hugh Canning, David Cairns, Stephen Pettitt and Paul Driver Pop, rock, jazz Amp Fiddler Afro Strut Genuine Geno40cd Micah P Hinson Micah P Hinson and the Opera Circuit Sketchbook Sketch013 The Roots Game Theory Def Jam/Mercury 1706204 Bob Dylan Pop CD of the week Modern Times Columbia 82876876062 Kasabian Empire Columbia Paradise37 Gary Lucas/gods and Monsters Coming Clean Side Salad Sidecd006 Perfect pitch High note Fined-tuned Marking time off Key Download this Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band Live — London '74 EMI Cdve2238 Yusef Lateef Eastern Sounds Prestige 7230012 Various Artists The Rough Guid to West Aftican Gold World Music Network Rgnet1173cd Mark Edwards, Dan Cairns, Stewart Lee and Clive Davis New kids in town The Victorian English Gentlemens Club This is your inner comic calling The if. com Eddies shortlist is out. So why are Comedians looking inward? Eurostar Moved, but not to tears The season nears its end, yet Paul Driver gets throught with dry eyes Optimax Peter Stein's epic Mazeppa is a rebuff to all his critics, … The top events to book now World Trade Center Royal Court Tom and Viv Spamalot Velazquez Film The critical list The Sunday Times top fives Theatre Long players Art Classical Dance Pick of the Proms Pop Comedy Jo Caulfield Film Harsh Times This week, don't miss Theatre Henry VI Art Rembrandt & Co: Dealing in Masterpieces Comedy Alan Carr Opera Die Zauberflöte Dance Ballet Nacional de Cuba Music Snape Proms Pop Get Loaded in the Park Agon and ecstasy Scottish Ballet live up to their promise, and a young Russian thrills, says David Dougill Starducks Coffee Company Odd Man Out Film Extras Ballets Russes Film No extras Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead . . . Hans Zimmer U-Carmen e-Khayelitsha Film Extras Ninety-Nine Nights Xbox 360, £44.99; ages 12+ Premier Manager 2006-2007 Ps2, PC, £19.99; ages 3+ The Sunday Times The Sunday Times Guide to West End Cinema Official London Theatre Guide Multiple Display Advertising Items Diplomatic baggage The High Road to China George Bogle, the Panchen Lama and the First British Expedition to Tibet by Kate Teltscher Bloomsbury £20 pp316 Read on. . . Books The Sunday Times Monarchs Doctors Send your answers on A4 paper, with your name and Cars Books behind the headlines: cricket scandals You really must read Our choice of the best recent books It Hit Me like a Ton of Bricks A Memoir of a Mother and Daughter by Catherine Lloyd Burns Nice and easy does it The Beatles, Football and Me: A Memoir by Hunter Davies Headine Review £18.99 pp344 The Arms of the Infinite Somewhere to Lay my Head How we've been framed Fake, Forgery, Lies and eBAY: Confessions of an Internet Con Artist by Kenneth Walton Weidenfeld £9.99 pp298 Painting himself into a corner I was Vermeer: The Legend of the Forger Who Swindled the Nazis by Frank Wynne Bloosbury £14.99 pp288 What's happening in the literary world Book events Publishing's hottest deals Inside information Keeping up with the Joneses The Middle Class: A History by Lawrence James Little Brown £25 pp704 A reputation restored Ireland's Minstrel A Life of Tom Moore: Poet, Patriot and Byron's Friend by Linda Kelly IB Tauris £20 pp262 Waterstone's Offer of the Week Immigration Offences in the skin trade Selling Olga: Stories of Human Trafficking and Resistance by Louisa Waugh Weidenfeld £16.99 pp262 Onward Christian soldiers: the real story behind the missions undertaken in God's name God's War : A New History of the Crusades by Christopher Tyerman Allen Lane £30 pp1,024 A holy vagabond The Troublemaker: Michael Scott and His Lonely Struggle Against Injustice by Anne Yates and Lewis Chester Aurum £16.99 pp338 Colour Bar: The Triumph of Seretse Khama and His Nation by Susan Williams Allen Lane £25 pp408 Are we There yet? Chasing a Childhood Through South Africa by David Smiedt Ebury £7.99 pp302 A Child Called Freedom An African Journey by Carol Lee Century £12.99 pp305 War in their worlds Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Fourth Estate £14.99 pp437 The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai H Hamilton £16.99 pp326 Bombay nightmares Sacred Games by Vikram Chandra Faber £17.99 pp900 Children's book of the week WHSmith Paperbacks Untold Stories by Alan Bennett The Argumentative Indian by Amartya Sen The Death of Achilles by Boris Akunin|trans Andrew Bromfield The Ice Soldier by Paul Watkins Bess of Hardwick The Sunday Times concise crossword No 962 Saving Fish from Drowning by Amy Tan The Wit in the Dungeon The Life of Leigh Hunt by Anthony Holden The First Psychic by Peter Lamont The KGB and the World by Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin The Buddha's Noble Eight Fold Path by Urgyen Sangharakshita read by Kulananda The Sunday Times BooksFirst Pile 'em High Guides & manuals Hardbacks Paperbacks Contents Sunday August A life out short Scapy missry The Chase (BBC1, 8pm) Muphy's Law (BBC1,9pm) Film choice The Polar Express Pick of the day Equator (BBC2, 9pm) Reading And Leeds Festival (BBC3, 9pm) The Virgin Diaries (MTV, 9pm) Special women Iconoclasts (Artsworld, 9pm) Girls Who Do Comedy (BBC1, 10.15pm) You say BBC1 Sunday August Variations Sky One Sunday August Films Radio Sunday August Pick of the Day Flying tonight Monday August Red Arrows (BBC1, 5pm) Flying no longer Who Downed Douglas Bader? (C4,7pm) Enigma remains Betjeman And Me (BBC2, 9pm) Film choice Pick of the day Anne Frank Remembered (More4,9.15pm) Bitty part Hidden Lives: Honey I Suckle The Kids (Five, 9pm) Sad tale The 34 Stone Teenager (BBC3, 9pm) Gong show The Emmys (Living TV2, 9pm) Best doc Remembering Mum (C4,11pm) You say BBC1 Monday August Variations Sky One Monday August Films Radio Monday August Pick of the Day Not cutting it A New Life — Risking it All (C4,8pm) Tough love Supernanny (C4,9pm) Film choice Cup half-empty My Small Breasts And I (BBC3, 9pm) Pick of the day Time Shift: British Spies (BBC4, 10pm) Imitation of life Great Writers Of The Twentieth Century (Artsworld, 9pm) Duty of care Real Story With Fiona Bruce (BBC1, 10.35pm) Keep holding on I'm All Shook Up — Parkinson's At 25 (C4,11pm) Pane in the neck The Window (C4,12.05am) You say BBC1 Main channels 29 Variations Films Sky One Satellite & digital Radio Satellite, digital & radio 29 Pick of the Day Climate of fear Wednesday August The Life And Times of El Nino (UKTV Documentary, 6pm) Dishing the dirt When Kim And Aggie Went To Hospital (C4,8pm) Colour clash Shoot The Messenger (BBC2, 9pm) Film choice Pick of the day Respectable (Five, 10.30pm) Pride of place Admission Impossible (C4,9pm) Talk to the hand The Teen Tamer (Five, 9pm) The beauty myth Too Ugly For Love (BBC3, 9pm) It's no joke Swinging (Five, 10pm) You say BBC1 Wednesday August Variations Sky One Wednesday August Films Radio Wednesday August Pick of the Day The one to watch Thursday August The Sopranos (E4,10pm) Songs of praise BBC Proms (BBC4, 7.30pm) Spanish hustle One Year To Pay Off Your Mortgage (C4,8pm) Family matters Breaking Up With The Joneses (C4,9pm) Film choice Pick of the day Grey's Anatomy (Living TV, 10pm) Stop, ewe! Asbo Fever (Sky One, 9pm) Thin on laughs F***Off, I'm Fat (BBC3, 9pm) Slap of the day Happy Slapz (C4,12.20am) Toil and tide Death In The Bay—The Cockle-Pickers' Story (C4,12.50am) You say BBC1 Variations Sky One Films Radio Pick of the Day Fiday September 30 Minutes (C4,7.35pm) Restoration Village (BBC2, 9pm) Film choice Pick of the day The Best Of The Worst (C4,9.30pm) Legends Of Jazz (Artzworld, 9pm) The Charlotte Church Show (C4,10pm) Da Ali Show (C4,10.50pm) Blast Friday!(BBC2, 12 midnight) You say BBC1 Variations Sky One Films Radio Pick of the Day BBC Proms (R3,7.30pm) First course A Taste Of My Life (BBC1, 11.30am) Deliverance Film choice Pick of the day The Flaming Lips—The Fearless Freaks (Artsworld, 9pm) Pop music Singing in The Shadow: The Children Of Rock Royalty (Biography, 9pm) BBC1 Top 10 TV programmes Millions viewing week ending August 6 Rawk 'n' roll MTV Video Music Awards (MTV, 9pm) Tube tale Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (Five, 10.20pm) BBC1 Variations Sky One Films Radio Pick of the Day Breaking up with the Joneses Contents Rolex Contents Golf GT with TSI Petrol Technology Fanta Chloe Hanship Ford Cassandra Tesco Sachin Tendulkar Land Rover Cavanoun KIA Motors Modern life abounds with men who aspire to be great Cathay Pacific Matki Showering Amdega Nikon Taking Candy from a Baby Jill Greenberg made these children cry by confiscating their sweets, then photographed their reactions. Did she go too far in the name of art? You Wouldn't Catch Me Dead in Iraq Darrell Anderson Joined the US Army just before the … Joshua Key Ryan Johnson The Britons who are Saying No It's not just Americans: hundreds of our own troops have 'retreated' from Iraq. Philip Jacobson reports Toshiba Ivan Brobeck Starbucks Coffee Multiple Display Advertising Items Band Aid Nivea Airmiles Birds Eye Out Neville Johnson Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items A Life in the Day Cancer Research. UK The Sopranos is Back on E4, Capichep? Contents Bu…y The boy-slags Contents Motorazr … 43, skippered the first all-female crew to sail around the world Celebrity Sex Clinic Riding the Butterscotch Stallion Going up (Fashion Moment) Fantasie Leather trousers For years, they were favoured by predatory surburban sexports in the Lesley Joseph mould. Now leather trousers are reclaiming their cool status. Wear them skintight, sexy and with rock attitude Pain no object What kind of woman wears a 3in heel? Kate Spicer claims membership of … Sony Ericsson The man with Previously a label-obsessed fashion junkie, Neil Boorman is preparing for a new life without logos. Ad industry : beware! L'orÉal I feel my wardrobe is missing a fab jumper Volkswagen Financial Services (UK) Limited Campbell had her daughter at the age of 30 and her … Choosing your Is there a right age to have a baby? Young mums and fortysomething career women alike go through the highs and laws of motherhood, but their experiences are very different, finds Clover Stroud Designed with attitude Had my first orgasm when I was 34 Debenhams Bliss Aunt Sally The New Wave With Christina Aguilera Dita Von Teese and Gwen Stefani rocking well-groomed waves, the shampoo and set is due for a revival. About time too, says Helen Brown Photographs by Christoph Grothgar Müller Shampoo and Set Kit Müller Bethan Cole Green spirit Work your eyes with Origins feathery-soft Automagically Gently does it Hydroactiveworkoutmusic Staying young Working It Open-air swimming Body Matters What You Should Try Encyclopedia of Healing Foods What You Should Read Natural Tree Syrup What You Should Know about Sensodyne (What's the Alternative?) To the Occasion Sweet or savoury, soufflés ooze culinary panache and confidence. Follow Sybil Kapoor guidelines, and you'll find they're surprisingly simple to make Top Tips for the Perfect Souffle McVitie's Worth their salt There's more to raw fish than sushi, you know. Cured and marinated, Heston Blumenthal's red mullet fillets make for the perfect light supper I'm writing this in the Wolseley on London's famed … The interior designer Peter Nolden showed his new client, … Laying It on Rich colours, traditional patterned fabrics and 18th century furniture—it's a refreshingly long way from minimalism Words by Johanna Thornycroft Photographs by Andreas Von Einsiedel The interior designer Peter Nolden showed Dulux I'm Aiming for Global Domination He revived the fortunes of Habitat, now Tom Dixon is turning his attention to his own brand. He tells Talib Choudhry about the business deal that could win him the recognition he craves MacMillan In the stars Have you ever had a personal consultation with an astrologer? Mrs Mills solves all your problems Do the Right Thing Christa D' Souza 1661 Body envy Style Boodles

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