News from 12/11/2008
2008; Gale Group;
Autores
Gráinne Gilmore, Andrew Robson, Greg James, David Wighton, Carol Lewis, Lord Laming, Andrew Billen, Leo Lewis Asia Business Correspondent, Martin Birchall, Frances Gibb Legal Editor, Simon Barnes, Robin Pagnamenta Energy and Environment Editor, Peter Lansley, Robert Lindsay, Theodore Dalrymple, Mark Souster, Philip Howard, Hilary Finch, J. Forrester, David Chater, Emma Pierson, James Ducker, Patrick McKAY, Kamalesh Sharma Commonwealth Secretary-General, Carl Mortished, Will Pavia, Sam Marlowe, Kaya Burgess, James Hider, Leslie Morphy Chief Executive, Robin Pagnamenta, David Sharrock, Ben Webster Transport Correspondent, Nancy Durrant, Francis Elliott, Dominic Walsh, Mickey Arthur, Peter Stiff, Daniel Finkelstein, Rosemary Bennett, Laura Dixon, Randhir Singh Bains, Nico Hines, Nick Wyke, Marcus du Sautoy, Valerie Elliott Consumer Editor, Charles Bremner, Jonathan Richards, John Carruthers, David Charter, Lilly Peel, Susan Thompson, Guy Beringer, Richard Hobson Deputy Cricket Correspondent, Russell Kempson, Jonathan Fenby, Claudia Fromme, Suzy Jagger, Gary Duncan Economics Editor, Lisa Armstrong, Mark Henderson Science Editor, Louise Cave, Patrick Hosking Banking and Finance Editor, Tom Baldwin, Sam Coates, Ann Treneman, Simon de Bruxelles, Bryan Chadwick, Rob Wright, Neil Harman Tennis Correspondent, Raymond Keene, Adam Sage, Christine Buckley, Matthew Pryor, Julian Burgess, John Marais, Sarah Campbell, Kaveh Solhekol, Richard Lloyd Parry Asia Editor, Alice Thomson, Robert Chandler, Helen Nugent, Richard Lloyd Parry Asia Correspondent, Lindsey Bareham, Marcus Leroux, Erica Wagner, James Charles, Nick Hasell, Carolyn Asome, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Tom Dart, Rosemary Bennett Social Affairs Correspondent, Julian Muscat, Paul Simons, Owen Slot Chief Sports Reporter, Adam Fresco, Nick Szczepanik, Robert Crampton, Steve Hawkes, Dominic Maxwell, Emily Gosden, Alice Fordham, Michael Moran, James Allan, Frank Greaney, David Wrighton, Peter Riddell, Pete Taylor, Tony Dawe, Joe Clay, Philip Webster, David Sinclair, Jason Mellor, Martin Waller, Lewis Smith Environment Reporter, Chris Ayres, Valentine Low, Carl Mortished World Business Editor, Ashling O'Connor, Benedict Nightingale, Lesley Carty, Rick Broadbent Athletics Correspondent, Stephen Dalton, Richard Morrison, Adam Sherwin, John Krebs, Michael Evans, Chris Smyth, Olav Bjortomt, Cary Cooper, Fiona Hamilton, Christopher Irvine,
ResumoIndex Tragic life of Baby P raises old questions Child protection under renewed scrutiny A Veterans' Day hug for his Senate successor? Recession claims 4,000 jobs in a day US carmakers in peril Burmese crackdown Sterling plummets Humiliation in Bombay Inside today Index Time for Prudence Leading articles Fiscal stimulus is back in fashion, to mitigate a nasty-looking recession. But overborrowing could be a mistake Index Realism about Russia However obstructive Moscow's policies, only diplomacy can achieve Western goals Sail Away The QE2's fans should not mourn its new life in Dubai, but celebrate it Times2 News Opinion Obituary Sport Picture Gallery Letters to the Editor Today's weather 4,000 jobs go in a day as recession bites Credit card firms attacked for hiking rates to 17% Timesonline Where the axe is falling Bvlgari QE2 runs into spot of bother before final journey to be ripped up for floating hotel Timesonline Ships we have lost The Workout Assisted deaths to be debated in Commons Third runway revolt Care home concern Murdered model Most read at timesonline. co. uk Spot-the-Minister isn't too taxing, but the wit cuts sharply through the cynicism Theatre Gethsemane Cottesloe Inside today Zurich After 17 months of unimaginable cruelty, Baby P finally succumbed Child protection The professionals Why well-meaning social workers must be sceptical As in Climbié case, no senior staff likely to lose job Inside today Lessons from cruelty Test case could make prenuptial deals binding Church's Woman gives birth after first full ovary transplant Multiple Display Advertising Items Reprieve for curvy cucumbers and crooked carrots as Europe bends rules on fruit and veg The regulations sprouting from Brussels Ryanair Hovis How a bachelor became paterfamilias Case study Audi Single men invited to adopt a child, despite public disapproval Nestle Beeb tries in vain to lance Manuelgate Boyle People Christopher Ciccone, Madonna's less successful brother, Could James Naughtie nab the Christmas No 1? The Today Boots Wag Carly Zucker leaves Joe Cole, the England football star, to jet off the Australia for I'm a Celebrity . . . Brian Paddick, Simon Webbe, Martina Navratilova and George Takei will be joining her in the "Jungle" Postscript Mavis Staples, the Gospel legend, sends a reminder … Picture Gallery Trouble at the coral face? The BBC newsroom staged a two-minute silence after this captioning horror during yesterday's Armistice Day commemoration The organ grinder and the East The Face Damon Albarn Ten-child limit on sperm donors 'should be scrapped' Barclaycard New role for statins—fighting ovary illness Multiple Display Advertising Items Congested capital Freak tornado leaves a trail of damage across county Going nowhere fast — the tourism chiefs stranded on way to London travel show BT Dell I'll take my chances, says girl who refused heart swap HSBC plus Vodafone 112-year-old's gallant attempt to lay wreath said more about war and grief than any prayer Remembrance Think differently about autism The National Autistic Society Sarkozy leaves it late to praise soldiers of Verdun In a week, Britain learns to love America again We are MacMillan. Cancer Support Sky Energy miser with tiny carbon footprint Triodos Bank Wasted effort Swinging vicar banned after drunken slips Tax becomes a treacherous battleground Brown and Cameron set out strategies for cuts Small-town Dave proves no match for Gordon the Global Leader Tory tax plan Inside today Leak from nuclear sub New technology risks City payout for sisters Ferry stays in custody Dfs Steer clear of drink and loose women, King wrote to sailor son (it didn't work) Heirs and graces Cadillac Thar she blows. Model aircraft sniff out ailments in whales Lost Pre-Raphaelite beauty for sale Squirrel monkeys stolen from park Developer faces murder extradition Intelligent pill has good gut reaction Call-centre employees calling in sick Halifax Triumph of those who dare to resist violence Obama's is a victory not just over the white supremacists, but also the black separatists — for democracy over terrorism Beware. There's a Barack—lash on the way Michelle, my belle This charming man Sexy tomatoes: how to make 'em eat up their GM He will survive Picture Gallery We can't be surprised by the death of Baby P A lethal mixture of bureaucracy, blame culture and fear of violence blinds us to the horror that is staring us in the face Don't count on China to save the world Beijing's £375bn economic package makes it a world player. But its own interests will come first Obamalogical studies Graphic view In the year of the nine Thunderer: Thunderer BBC World Service and editorial control The oldest profession Councils no longer provide a housing safety net There's no racism in British politics Timesonline Power cuts ahead Globe looks to US Juvenile celebrations Cat and mouse game A work of its time Tomatoes with added Viagra: how to get consumers to love GM crops If famine-hit Africa is to benefit from the new foodstuffs, Europeans must accept them. Here's how they might be persuaded, John Krebs says Victorinox The Daily Universal Register Timesonline 65 years' jail: the cost of defiance as junta cracks down on dissidents Valentine poet and blogger imprisoned for insulting general Poetic justice US car industry teetering on the brink of collaps Anarchists seized after saboteurs use iron bars to wreck power lines on high-speed rail network Multiple Display Advertising Items Targeting the TGV The wanted oligarch, software tycoon and zealous rabbi vying to become mayor Which? Rivals to run Jerusalem Car giants run out of road as crash forces them to seek rescue deals One of America's 'big three' carmakers could be bankrupt by Christmas and the others are in dire trouble, write Tom Baldwin and Suzy Jagger The Times The 'big three' Forget 42, Palin's meaning of life is pinned to the number 12 Hurry up and wait … the dilemma facing Obama Rugby captain shot dead in drugs feud 'mistake' Emergency laws sought to deal with crime families Ireland Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Seabed sensors to stop another tsunami tragedy Shareholder revolt at Barclays fundraising Britain's exports fall AWD Chase fine Quote of the day US to help borrowers Oil prediction Sterling hit as funding fears mount over soaring government borrowing Colao reveals £1bn-a-year cutbacks to ride out storm 'The Japanese market for casual gaming has matured' Lenders offer new tracker mortgages — but no rate cut Lessons to be learnt by HMS UK Picture Gallery Heathrow decision up in the air Commodities Riding for a fall Timesmobile Graham's Currencies Stock markets Need to know Results in brief Multiple Display Advertising Items Meltdown puts the brake on Tesco's US dream Capgemini Leahy pleads for government help to survive the downturn This is the location of the crock of gold — at the end of the rainbow, as snapped by reader Robin Hawkins Bose Robert Peston suddenly seems even spookier City Diary The curse of magazine deadlines strikes again City Diary Inside information from Scottish bank lifts FSA City Diary Back in the rough and tumble In the blue corner I hear there are plans to set up a Memorial Trust to … City Diary Picture Gallery The crunch index Investors threaten revolt over Barclays fundraising Union leader accuses Scottish knights of arrogance by seeking to derail HBOS deal Qantas Bank of Ireland Washington relaxes rules to ease threat of repossessions by Fannie and Freddie Subway sees struggles on Britain's high street as its chance to expand InterContinental Hotels feels the cold Just when the game seemed so easy, Japan's software sales take a dive The Times Russia backs rouble by selling $7bn of reserves World needs four new Saudi Arabias, warns IEA Iran hints at emergency Opec meeting as crude price tumbles to 21-month low Anglo Irish Bank The Times unit trust information service Full funds service at timesonline. co. uk/funds The Windmill International British funds Obama knows that Africa needs to be left well alone Multiple Display Advertising Items Timesonline London Financial Futures Wall Street Major indices Commodities Eurotop 100 Money rates % Sterling spot and forward rates FTSE volumes European money deposits % Gold/precious metals Baird & Co Goldline. co. uk Dollar rates Other sterling Exchange rates Analyst warnings make hedge fund a marked Man Market report Investors give boost to UTV Smaller companies Gilts Rumour of the day Babcock has engineered the formula for a promising outlook What's the game? Deal of the day Timesonline Bet of the day Penna Consulting Tiddler to watch Equity Prices Boyden Managers and their staff can do a lot better Ideas at work Workers have improved productivity but there is still room for improvement, reports Carol Lewis It's time to steer your reluctant boss in the right direction Answer the questions of Generation Y For those unfamiliar with the new kids on the block, Sarah Campbell explains Take Five Moving on Timesonline WPP Tomorrow Multiple Display Advertising Items J. D. North Prolific scholar whose close study of antique astronomy and cosmological ideas bridged the humanities and the history of the sciences Professor John D. North, historian of the exact sciences, was born on May 19,1934. He died of cancer on October 31,2008, aged 74 She danced with Nureyev in his London debut Rosella Hightower Elegant US ballerina who based her career in Europe and set up one of the world's finest dance schools Rosella Hightower, ballerina, was born on January 20,1920. She died on November 4-5,2008, aged 88 Gerald Arpino Choreographer who co-founded the Robert Joffrey dance company for which he created and directed many new works Gerald Arpino, choreographer, was born on January 14,1923. He died on October 29,2008, aged 85 Lives online Timesonline Harold Cooper Imaginative businessman with a keen fashion sense who transformed his father's ailing denim overalls business to dress millions of Britons in jeans Harold Cooper, proprietor of Lee Cooper, was born on March 5,1918. He died on November 7,2008, aged 90 Ralph Pinder-Wilson Lives remembered James Skinner Anti-terror UN orders are conditionally valid Law Report Court of Appeal Bridge Chess Winning move Births Forthcoming Marriages Timesonline Deaths School Notices Public Notices Legal Notices Flood watch on the Norfolk Ouse Times Archive Timesonline Court Circular Service dinners Legal Notices Legal, Public, Company & Parliamentary Notices Multiple Display Advertising Items Enjoy all the fun of the festive fair Britain's cities have much to offer the discerning shopper British Isles Late deals Five nights in a cottage by the River Tweed, £225; a week on the Algarve from £152; Antigua for seven nights all-in from £699 The Times Short haul Long haul Cruise into an Indian summer with a twist Timesonline Reader Offers Ltd Weather The Times Weather Eye Weatherquest Winning Move The Times Weather Line 09067 577200 McCoy holds strong hand for Power title Kempton Park Bet of the day Bangor All the action from the fourth round of the Carling … There will be an inspection at Stratford at 1pm tomorro Southwell Course specialists Exeter Yesterday's results The Times Lingfield Park Wolverhampton Paul Blockley runs Zafisio in the Criterium de Saint-Cl Sedgefield King Johns Castle, second to Comply Or Die in the Grand Cautious England refuse to take their past strength for granted Vickery returns as Johnson shuffles pack to face Australia How they line up for Saturday's internationals Kidney plays it safe against full-strength New Zealand Thomson returns to port for repairs Sailing Football Results American football Basketball Bowls Boxing Ice hockey Snooker Squash Tennis Football Fixtures Other sport Leading coach pays price for 'affair' with Olympic star Gardner has key role as Smith keeps faith Rugby league Yellow cards will go on trial next season Mensah-Bonsu in row Carter tumbles out Britons in the medals Elosu's ban is upheld No need to panic, cries Pietersen Cricket Roll of shame Survivors' guide to the sub-continent Mickey Arthur, the South Africa coach, issues his ten commandments to England after his side adapted to the unique conditions in India this year Djokovic first through but courts ensure slow progress Tennis Timesonline Purchase price will be small change for entrepreneur with the Midas touch Man in the news Portsmouth wait to see if golden age is coming to South Coast club South African tycoon lurks in background City owner will provide Hughes with 'unlimited' funds in January Football Sheikh Mansour has confidence in manager The Times Milner hopes his omission signals step up with England Wenger's young and gifted put frighteners on stunned Bruce Referees given chance to make their case to managers New evidence in fraud inquiry The Sweeper Gillett and Hicks face possibility of Anfield fire sale to clear their debt Carling Cup Sunderland v Blackburn Rovers (7.45pm) Chelsea v Burnley (7.45pm) Jewell counts his blessings after Leeds run the show The Times Persevering Tévez cashes in on exuberance of Welbeck Carling Cup Stoke City showed they can win without Rory Delap's … Timesonline Hargreaves out for season as further surgery looms Crock and a hard place — four expensive injury flops Times Crossword 24,069 Picture Gallery The Times Players risk bans already as drugs-test rule creates fear factor Exclusive Stars have been caught in clampdown The Times Uplifting: new kids on the block move Arsenal to next level Bomaby duck for Pietersen as England show little appeti Index Baader-Meinhof: the twisted legacy Three decades after the terrorist gang's bloody heyday, the makers of a new film have been accused of glamorising a brutal chapter in Germany's history. Claudia Fromme reports and interviews four people at the centre of the terror campaign The terrorist The judge The prison officer The Times The hostage Timesonline Radical chic Why we lionised Ulrike and friends How to get the upper hand at poker Further reading Lest we forget . . . night falls Times offers Mapping out skulduggery, distortion and lies The Times Calling all shops: here's the way to make us say buy, buy, not bye-bye Style fix First (lady) impressions 40 not out A guide to the clothes, accessories and beauty trends that do (and don't) work for the grown-up woman. This week: Michelle Obama Beauty fix Das Auto WHSmith The Mutton: At the cutting edge Mutton dressed as lad Youth violence has given the blade a bad name but the maker of the Swiss Army knife has opened its first UK store, where clothes and accessories boast the same versatility as the iconic knife, says The Mutton The Mutton: Franca Sozzani Fashionista questionnaire I'd love to dress like Lucrezia Borgia Please help me to find fab flats I walk to work, so need hardwearing flat shoes. Nothing looks good without a heel and I cannot find stylish flats anywhere. I am in a dowdy rut! Bohemian rhapsody Fashion's love affair with folk enters a new phase The original of the species A marvellous show at the Natural History Museum which pays bicentennial respects to Charles Darwin is stuffed with eureka moments, says Simon Barnes Inside today Darwin The natural selections Off with Barbie's head In Beirut, an exhibition mixing images of Barbie with those of Christ and the leader of Hezbollah has fallen foul of the culture police, reports Alice Fordham First night OLiVer! Cracking up behind the pane First night Theatre State of Emergency Gate, W11 The Royal Opera Comedy Russell Howard Hammersmith Apollo, W6 Pop Razorlight Exeter University Opera The Cumnor Affair Riverside Studios, W6 Multiple Display Advertising Items Theatre Dear Heart King's Head, N1 An evolved character Young times Darwin's father despaired of him but he turned out to be the world's most famous biologist The Times Daily dingbat Which word or phrase is this? Say what you see Puzzle of the day Picture ladder TV & Radio Last night's tv But is it science? Horizon: How Mad Are you? (BBC Two) Imagine (BBC One) True Stories: Thriller in Manila (More4) Artichoke linguine Dinner tonight Eat it with Emma Pierson Little Dorrit BBC One, 8pm Tv today The Times Oceans Viewing guide Oceans BBC Two, 8pm The Bill ITV1, 8pm The Riddle of the Sands (1978) Film choice Channel 4,1.35pm Howards End (1992) Film choice Film4,6.15pm Variations Charles at 60: The Passionate Prince BBC One, 8.30pm Dangerous Adventures for Boys Five, 9pm That Thing You Do! (1996) Channel 4,1.35am Tomorrow in times2 . . . Today's tv Prime time digital planner Daytime sport Higher net worth Web watcher Answers from Page 24 Word Watching Today's radio Radio choice Mind games Times2 Crossword No 4683 Polygon Codeword No 364 Word Watching Times2 Quiz Great Ormond Street Hospital Yesterday's Solutions
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