You are on page 1of 64

<O:@K@E>

;@89<K<J
:LI<FE
K?<N8P
9iXm\8e^\c`eX1
@d]\\c`e^^i\Xk
J<<G8><<@>?K
J<<G8><K?I<<
MIGRANTS are to face tougher rules
before they can claim benets, it
emerged last night.
In a direct snub to the European Union, Iain
Duncan Smith is determined to scrap any
automatic eligibility for handouts.
The Work and Pensions Secretary wants to ensure
no new arrivals can receive cash until they have
paid into the welfare system for up to a year.
His plans go further than existing rules, which
last week sparked legal action over discrimination
by the Brussels-based European Commission. But
Whitehall insiders insist Mr Duncan Smith is
prepared to escalate the row with the Eurocrats.
One friend said: Of all the people in the Cabinet,
theyve picked a ght with the wrong person.
His determination to take on Brussels is expected
to delight Tory backbenchers and campaigners who
want to cut the amount of taxpayers cash handed
over in benet payments.
Tory MP Peter Bone said: What is being pro-
posed here sounds sensible. Certainly people in my
KLIEKFG8><)
9pDXZ\i?XccGfc`k`ZXc<[`kfi
Angelina Jolie beaming at London premiere last night
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
:

J
A
M
E
S

W
H
A
T
L
I
N
G
/
S
P
L
A
S
H

N
E
W
S
DFE;8PALE<*#)'(*,'g K?<NFIC;J>I<8K<JKE<NJG8G<I N<8K?<I1JLEEPJG<CCJ
\ogi\jj%Zf%lb
('
g
:?<8G<IK?8E
K?<;8@CPD8@C
8E;K<EK@D<J
9<KK<I
N@E
J<<G8><)-
)'
#
'''
F=M@CC8
?FC@;8PJ
Premium rate phoneline
CONTINUES IN
TOMORROWS
DAILY EXPRESS
MIGRANTS
FACE NEW
BAN ON
BENEFITS
2 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
OPlNlON OO DlARY OO LL11LRS OO1V OOS1ARS OOCROSSWORDS OOCl1Y OOSPOR1 OO
This newspaper adheres to the system of self-regulation set out in the Editors Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about the
editorial content of the Daily Express, or our website, and you believe the Editors Code has been breached, please contact our
Editorial Code Committee promptly, including a postal address for correspondence. By email: code.committee@express.co.uk;
by post: Editorial Code Committee, Express Newspapers, 10 Lower Thames Street, London EC3R 6EN.
OPlNlON () DlARY (- CROSSWORDS *-S1ARS *01V +(LL11LRS +,Cl1Y +-SPOR1 ,(
This newspaper adheres to the system of self-regulation set out in the Editors Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about the
editorial content of the Daily Express, or our website, and you believe the Editors Code has been breached, please contact our
Editorial Code Committee promptly, including a postal address for correspondence. By email: code.committee@express.co.uk;
by post: Editorial Code Committee, Express Newspapers, 10 Lower Thames Street, London EC3R 6EN.
9i`kX`ep\jk\i[Xp
Amsterdam Fair 15C/59F
Brussels Fair 14C/57F
Dublin Cloudy 17C/63F
Frankfurt Cloudy 15C/59F
Geneva Sunny 16C/61F
Lisbon Sunny 29C/84F
Madrid Sunny 25C/77F
Paris Fair 17C/63F
Rome Showers 21C/70F
Amsterdam Sunny 18C/64F
Brussels Fair 17C/63F
Dublin Fair 17C/63F
Frankfurt Fair 18C/64F
Geneva Fair 19C/66F
Lisbon Sunny 29C/84F
Madrid Sunny 26C/79F
Paris Fair 17C/63F
Rome Sunny 20C/68F
9i`kX`e
<oki\d\j1
(24 hours
to 2pm yesterday)
Warmest: St James's Pk 19C (66F)
Coldest: Saughall 0C (32F)
Wettest: Giant's Causeway 0.12in.
Sunniest: Bude 15.1hr.
C`^_k`e^$lgk`d\j Glasgow 9.53pm-4.36am
London 9.10pm-4.47am
Manchester 9.30pm-4.44am
Newcastle 9.36pm-4.32am
Belfast 9.51pm-4.52am
Birmingham 9.22pm-4.48am
Bristol 9.20pm-4.56am
New Moon
8 June
MOON rises: 2.11am, sets: 3.56pm
SUN rises London: 4.47am, sets: 9.10pm
Manchester rises: 4.44am, sets: 9.30pm
Dffe#jleXe[k`[\j
HIGH TIDE
London Bge (10.23am), (10.47pm)
Liverpool (7.51am), (8.28pm)
Greenock (9.00am), (9.35pm)
Dover (7.53am), (8.10pm)
Jlggc`\[Yp Meteo0roup
8ifle[k_\nfic[p\jk\i[Xp
North West: Some sunshine, but also a
fair amount of cloud at times with isolated
showers possible. High 19C (66F).
East Anglia: It will be a fine day with
lengthy spells of sunshine and only patchy
cloud. High 18C (64F).
Northern Ireland: After a dull start with
patchy rain, it will turn brighter but with a
few showers. High 18C (64F).
London/South East: Dry with plenty of
morning sun, but a partial increase of
cloud in the afternoon. High 20C (68F).
Wales: Dry with sunny periods, but there
will be a partial build up of cloud through
the day. High 19C (66F).
South: After a sunny start, it will be fine,
but with cloud building somewhat. Feeling
rather warm. High 19C (66F).
Midlands: After a sunny start, it will be a
dry day but with cloud amounts increasing.
Light winds. High 18C (64F).
South West: Dry and fine with sunny
spells, these lengthiest through the first
half of the morning. High 18C (64F).
Channel Isles: Fine with mostly blue
skies and lots of sunshine. There will be
very little, if any, cloud. High 16C (61F).
Sea: North Sea: Slight. Irish Sea: Slight.
Channel: Slight.
Joday's summary: Jleepjg\ccj
Scotland: Patchy rain in the west to start.
Otherwise, it will be bright but with a few
showers. High 20C (68F).
UK OUTLOOK TOMORROW: It will be a dry and fine day across much of the UK with
sunny intervals. However, there is the chance of a few showers in northern areas.
North East/Yorks: Dry and fine with sunny
spells and variable amounts of cloud.
Feeling rather warm. High 19C (66F).
Aberdeen 6.8 0.00 7 14
Aberporth 11.8 0.00 9 13
Alnwick 9.4 0.00 7 12
Belfast 1.5 0.00 8 16
Birmingham n/a 0.00 7 16
Bmouth 12.1 0.00 6 18
Bristol 11.2 0.00 8 18
Cardiff 9.8 0.00 7 15
Durham n/a 0.00 6 18
Edinburgh 10.8 0.00 5 17
Glasgow 15.2 0.00 5 16
Hull n/a n/a n/a n/a
Ipswich 9.3 0.00 8 16
Leeds n/a 0.00 5 17
Lincoln 10.0 0.00 8 16
London 12.2 0.00 8 18
Manchester n/a 0.00 9 15
Oxford 14.1 0.00 6 17
Shampton n/a 0.00 9 19
St Andrews 12.9 0.00 5 17
24 hours SUN RAIN TEMP
to 5pm (hrs) (ins) (min) (max)
: = : = : =
Amsterdam . Sunny 16 61
Athens . . . . . Sunny 24 75
Barcelona. . . Sunny 20 68
Berlin . . . . . . Rain 11 52
Budapest . . . Cloudy 19 66
Cairo. . . . . . . Sunny 43 109
Cape Town. . Rain 10 50
Casablanca . Sunny 24 75
Corfu . . . . . . Rain 18 64
Dublin. . . . . . Cloudy 14 57
Dubrovnik. . . Cloudy 17 63
Faro . . . . . . . Sunny 24 75
Florence. . . . Fair 20 68
Gibraltar . . . . Sunny 21 70
Guernsey . . . Sunny 14 57
Hong Kong. . Sunny 33 91
Istanbul. . . . . Shwrs 21 70
Jersey. . . . . . Sunny 15 59
Larnaca . . . . Fair 29 84
Las Palmas . Sunny 24 75
Los Angeles. Fair 22 72
Luxor . . . . . . Sunny 42 108
Malaga . . . . . Sunny 21 70
Mallorca . . . . Sunny 26 79
Malta . . . . . . Fair 22 72
Melbourne . . Cloudy 13 55
Miami . . . . . . Thndr 27 81
Moscow . . . . Shwrs 22 72
Nairobi . . . . . Fair 21 70
New Delhi. . . Fair 36 97
New York . . . Fair 31 88
Nice . . . . . . . Sunny 20 68
Nicosia . . . . . Fair 32 90
Perth. . . . . . . Cloudy 14 57
Prague . . . . . Shwrs 11 52
Singapore. . . Fair 31 88
Stockholm . . Sunny 24 75
Sydney. . . . . Shwrs 14 57
Tel Aviv. . . . . Sunny 34 93
Tenerife . . . . Sunny 23 73
Toronto. . . . . Cloudy 25 77
Tunis. . . . . . . Sunny 26 79
Venice . . . . . Cloudy 17 63
Vienna . . . . . Rain 13 55
Warsaw . . . . Sunny 18 64
Kf[Xp Kfdfiifn
<lifg\]fi\ZXjk
In association with
N\Xk_\i]fi\ZXjk
d`e dXo d`e dXo d`e dXo d`e dXo d`e dXo d`e dXo
J@O$;8P=FI<:8JKTemperatures in Centigrade
J0 R0 Jh0 fkI 5kJ 50N
/ )' 0 (' () (* (* )' )( )* )) ))
(' 0 / 0 (' (' (0 (/ (. (/ (/ (/
. / 0 0 (( (' (0 (/ )' )) )( )(
(' (' (( () () (* )' (0 )' )) )( )'
(' 0 / (( 0 (( (0 (. (- (. (. (/
/ 0 0 (' (( (' (0 (/ )' )( )' )'
. / / / / / (- (, (. (/ (- (.
. . . 0 (' (' (, (- (0 )' (0 (0
(' (' (( () () () (. (- (. (/ (. (-
Loadoa
8e|fast
8|rm|aham
0ard|ff
0|asow
Maachester
Newcast|e
Norw|ch
P|ymouth
100
80
60
40
20
0
-20
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
-30
C F
Temperatures in Centigrade
(*
(,
(.
(-
(/
(/
(,
(-
(.
(*
(,
(+
('
,
('
,
(0
(0
IDS crackdown
in battle to halt
benefit tourists
Auction off visas say Tory MPs
Tory Kwasi Kwarteng
Duncan Smith is taking on EU
ED BALLS will enrage
pensioners today by
announcing that Labour
wants to scrap universal
winter fuel payments.
The shadow
chancellor will conrm
that a future Labour
government would
introduce means testing
for state help of up to
300 a year with fuel bills.
It will put Labour
directly at odds with the
Daily Express Respect
For The Elderly crusade
to preserve universal
benets for Britains
11 million pensioners.
In a keynote speech in
London, Mr Balls will
claim that if his party
wins the election in 2015,
it will face a tougher
task than at any time in
our living memory.
He will say: When our
NHS and social care
system is under such
pressure, can it really
remain a priority to pay
the winter fuel allowance
to the richest ve per
cent of pensioners, those
with incomes high
enough to pay the higher
or top rates of tax?
David Cameron has
guaranteed to keep
universal winter fuel
payments throughout
the current Parliament.
His aides say he would
like to see the pledge in
the Tory manifesto.
Mr Balls will also
attack Mr Cameron and
Chancellor George
Osborne for ploughing
on with their failing
plan for the economy,
insisting that action for
growth this year, next
year and the years after
should instead be the
purpose of any spending
review this summer.
He will back an IMF
suggestion to borrow an
extra 10billion for major
infrastructure projects.
Mr Balls will say:
Investing now in our
infrastructure would
give an immediate boost
to the economy.
We can now expect to
inherit an economy with
families under real
nancial pressure,
businesses that have lost
vital opportunities to
invest and public
nances in poor shape.
A source close to Mr
Osborne said: Theyre
increasing their plans to
borrow more same old
Labour.
GcXee`e^kf
Yfiifndfi\%%%
`kjk_\jXd\
fc[CXYfli
fk0M Pk0 0N
ByDXZ\i?XccPoliLical LdiLor
ByDXZ\i?Xcc
Balls: We
will scrap
winter fuel
aid for all
constituency are fed up with
migrants being able to claim
benets without having con-
tributed to the system.
We need to take back con-
trol of our affairs from Europe.
Ultimately, that is what will
be decided when we nally
hold an in-or-out referendum
on our EU membership.
Matthew Sinclair, of the
TaxPayers Alliance, said:
Its absolutely right that
measures are put in place to
prevent benet tourism, to
protect taxpayers and ensure
help reaches those who really
need it.
We need to make work pay
but also cut the bloated wel-
fare budget, and ensuring
that the right benets go to
the right people is an essen-
tial rst step.
Last week, the European
Commission conrmed that
it was taking legal action
against the UK for discrimi-
nation after the introduction
of a residency test for certain
welfare payments.
The move followed con-
cerns that a benets tourism
free-for-all could cost British
taxpayers more than 150mil-
lion, particularly with mil-
lions of Romanians and Bul-
garians poised to get full
freedom-of-movement rights
within the EU at the end of
this year. Under existing rules
dating back to 2004, migrants
are eligible for handouts such
as housing benet, employ-
ment and support allowance
and pension credit only if
they can pass a habitual
residence test that goes
beyond the legal right to
enter and seek work in the
UK.
But the European Com-
mission claimed the test dis-
criminated against other EU
citizens and breached the
EUs drive to co-ordinate
social security systems of
member states.
Britain could face swinge-
ing nes if the judges at the
Luxembourg-based Euro-
pean Court of Justice uphold
the claim.
Mr Duncan Smith last week
vowed to ght the move
every step of the way.
He said: I will not cave in
and I will continue to work on
strengthening our benet
system in the meantime to
ensure it is not open to abuse
by anyone.
Whitehall insiders yester-
day conrmed he was switch-
ing to the offensive by looking
to tighten the rules further.
One source close to the
Cabinet minister said:
Theres no point in making
cuts, reforming benets and
then allowing anyone to pitch
up and claim.
Under the plans, migrants
will have to have paid income
tax and national insurance
for a signicant period
between six months and a
year before becoming eligi-
ble for any benets.
In a separate development
yesterday, Westminster-based
think-tank Demos called for
an overhaul of payments to
the jobless.
It would ensure that any
claimants who have not paid
into the system get less.
Demos argued that the
welfare system should be
overhauled to give more
recognition to contributory
principle.
The think-tank argued that
270million could be saved by
curbing state help for jobless
households struggling with
mortgage payments.
That cash could then be
used to give up to 226,000
people a 23-a-week boost in
jobseekers allowance.
0PINI0N: Pk0 !2
A GROUP of Tory MPs are to
call for immigration visas to be
sold to the highest bidders.
Under their proposal, foreign
tycoons could make offers to pay
to come to live in Britain. Over-
seas-based rms could also bid
for visas for their employees.
Backbench MPs from the Free
Enterprise Group claim the
measure would attract business
people who were more likely to
contribute to the UK. They also
believe the plan would cut the
number of immigrants likely to
claim benets.
The proposal is among a string
of measures put forward in a
report setting out a new blue-
print for an industrial policy.
The document, written by
Tory MPs George Freeman and
Kwasi Kwarteng, urged minis-
ters to introduce market-based
immigration visas.
It said: The Government
should reform our immigration
system to make it easier for
entrepreneurs, stop welfare eli-
gibility for immigrants, and auc-
tion visas to companies or high
net worth individuals.
This would ensure that the
people coming to Britain are
those who would add signica-
tion value to the economy.
Selling visas to companies or
individuals would be less bureau-
cratic than todays system, allow-
ing the Government to control
the ow through price changes
and ensure that workers would
only come if they added signi-
cant value to the economy.
H
N0: 090! 192 530!
No text 0XM0NN0 to 866!!
Y5: 090! 192 5300
Yes text 0XM0NY5 to 866!!
1exLs cosL 35p plus sLandard charqes. Calls cosL 36p lroma B1 landline,
calls lromoLher neLworks and mobiles may vary. SP: Spoke, London, WB 2AC.
Helpdesk: 0870 00 8656 (charqed aL naLional raLe). Lines close aL midniqhL LoniqhL.
J_flc[d`^iXekjY\
jkfgg\[]ifd^\kk`e^9i`k`j_Y\e\kj6
=`e\j
Jkil^^c`e^
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 3
9iX[jY\\enfe[\i]lcjXpj8e^\c`eX
ANGELINA Jolie paid tribute last
night to her wonderful partner
Brad Pitt as she made her rst
red carpet appearance since
revealing she had undergone a
double mastectomy.
The brave star looked radiant in
a oor-length Saint Laurent gown
with ruched side panels as she
stepped out with the actor at the
world premiere of his zombie
thriller World War Z.
Angelina, 37, missed the funeral
of her aunt Debbie Martin,
who has died of breast cancer
at age 61, to attend the
premiere at Londons Empire
Leicester Square.
Angelina recently revealed
she had a double mastectomy
after learning she had a high
risk of getting cancer.
Her mother Marcheline
Bertrand, Debbies younger sister,
died from ovarian cancer at 56.
Speaking at the premiere,
Angelina said: I feel great, I feel
wonderful and I am very, very
grateful for all the support. It has
meant a lot to me.
Brad has been extraordinary,
just extraordinary.
Hes just such a wonderful man
and a wonderful father, and I am
very, very lucky.
I have been very happy just to
see the discussion about womens
health expanded and that means
the world to me.
After losing my mum to these
issues, Im very grateful for it, and
Ive been very moved by the kind
support from people.
The Tomb Raider star revealed
last month that she had her
breasts removed after discovering
she has an inherited genetic
mutation that puts her at high
risk of both breast and ovarian
cancer. Beginning in February, she
underwent three operations
which she succeeded in keeping
secret from the public in which
her breasts were removed, and
later replaced by implants.
She said the procedure had
reduced her chance of developing
breast cancer from 87 per cent to
beautiful thing is that for us, life
will go on.
It certainly brought our family
tighter together.
I was so proud of her. What
everyone is seeing is absolutely
who she is and who she has
always been.
Shes faced her problems head
on and found out her options to
make the smartest decision for
her, and shes shared that
knowledge with everyone else.
I always want her by my side.
Life will go on and were taking
care of business as usual. Were on
the other side of that.
Its the bravest thing and I get
a little emotional about the act
she did for our family and telling
her story to others.
Shes a very special woman.
Its important that this testing is
not available for everyone and it
should be.
There are surgical options and
everyone should have these
options.
Angelinas aunt Debbie carried
the same defective BRCA1 gene
that led to the death of Angelinas
mother.
Writing about her decision to
have the radical surgery, Angelina
said: My doctors estimated
that I had an 87 per cent risk of
breast cancer and a 50 per cent
chance of ovarian cancer.
Once I knew that this was my
reality, I decided to be minimise
the risk as much as I could. I
made a decision to have a
preventative double mastectomy.
As a result, the Hollywood
superstar said she was able to tell
her children that they dont need
to fear they will lose me to breast
cancer.
World War Z is released in UK
cinemas on June 21
:8E:<I;IL>?FG<1G8><(,
9pJXiX_N\jkZfkk
Xe[C`jX?`^^`ej
Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt arriving for the premiere of his lm World War Z
last night in London. The actress waved to the crowds and thanked the public
for their support since she revealed she had undergone a double mastectomy
@Xdm\ip#m\ip
^iXk\]lc]fiXcc
k_\jlggfik
under ve per cent. Paying an
emotional tribute to his partner,
Brad said Jolies mastectomy and
subsequent revelation had been
a very moving experience for
the couple, who have six children.
What it means to others has
really surprised me, he said. The
Picture: ANDREW PARSONS / I IMAGES AND WENN
***
4 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
Arrest over
mum and
baby death
A MAN has been
arrested over the
murder of a mother
and her baby who were
found dead at their
home yesterday.
Police discovered the
bodies of the 25-year-old
woman and her nine-
month-old son at a
house in Billesley,
Birmingham.
A 28-year-old man
from the Dudley area in
the West Midlands was
arrested on suspicion of
both murders.
Ofcers said there
had previously been
contact between police
and the suspect, who
has not been named.
Police have cordoned
off the house where the
bodies were found and
last night forensic
investigators were still
at the scene.
Superintendent Jo
Chilton, from West
Midlands Police, said:
This is a terrible crime
and my thoughts are
with the family of the
victims.
We have a man in
custody and are not
looking for anyone else,
but I am keen to speak
to any witnesses or
anyone who may have
seen anything which
could assist our
investigation.
Anyone with
information that
may assist police with
their inquiries can call
101 or Crimestoppers
on 0800 555 111.
9pC`Xee\Bfc`i`e
10bn off
the deficit
THE Government has
saved 10billion over the
past nancial year,
2billion more than it
had targeted, Cabinet
Ofce Minister Francis
Maude said yesterday.
It is equivalent to
nearly 600 per working
household.
The Efciency and
Reform Group, run by
the Cabinet Ofce and
the Treasury, said it had
cut civil service costs to
save the cash.
Measures included
reducing the size of the
civil service, changing
pensions, centralising
buying and selling off
empty buildings.
Mr Maude said: These
are popular savings
which support Britains
decit reduction and
encourage growth. There
can be no going back to
the old wasteful ways.
Affair claim stuns Cameron
DAVID Cameron has been left
stunned by allegations of a
love affair that could have an
impact on his Government, it
was reported yesterday.
Downing Street aides are
understood to have told the
Prime Minister about the
affair because of its expected
public signicance and the
potential to put strains on his
leadership. For legal reasons
the people involved in the
relationship cannot be named.
They were yesterday
identied only as middle
aged. It was also reported
that the affair has now
nished.
Sources said Mr Cameron
was stunned by the claims
and immediately realised the
importance of the story. The
Prime Minister is also
understood to have discussed
how any possible effect from a
future revelation of the affair
should be handled by
Downing Street.
One source said: This
revelation is dynamite. None
of us could believe it when we
rst heard it. Then we just
thought what a complete
mess. The source added that
the alleged affair had caused
great personal distress to
innocent parties.
A newspaper yesterday
reported that Mr Cameron
had been informed about the
alleged relationship in the last
few weeks.
A Downing Street source
said: This is not something
we can talk about.
9pDXZ\i?Xcc
Aides told PM of revelations
TWO peers were suspended from
the Labour Party yesterday as a
new scandal engulfed Westminster.
Former Labour Cabinet Minister
Lord Cunningham and ex-police
chief Lord Mackenzie were facing a
party probe after they were the
subject of stings by reporters
posing as lobbyists.
A third peer, Lord Laird, resigned
the Ulster Unionist whip yesterday.
The three members of the House
of Lords were alleged to have told
reporters, pretending to represent
a fake solar energy rm, that they
could inuence debate on environ-
mental issues at Westminster.
It was claimed they had agreed
to act in breach of rules against
paid advocacy.
All three peers deny breaching
parliamentary rules and referred
themselves to the House of Lords
Commissioner for Standards.
Tory Cabinet Ofce Minister
Francis Maude yesterday described
the scandal as a new low for
British politics.
But Deputy Prime Minister Nick
Clegg last night promised to bring
in laws to create a cleaner, better
politics, claiming Britains politi-
cal system has long been crying out
for head-to-toe reform.
The Coalition government, upon
taking ofce, had promised to cre-
ate a statutory register of lobbyists,
but this pledge remains unfullled.
But Mr Clegg insisted: I know
that the absence of the register
from last months Queens Speech
raised some concerns. So let me be
clear: it will happen. The detail is
being looked at thoroughly.
The lobbying row spread to the
House of Lords after Tory MP
Patrick Mercer resigned the
Conservative whip on Saturday,
having been involved in a separate
undercover operation.
The Labour Party said Lord
Cunningham and Lord Mackenzie
have been suspended pending
further investigation.
The statement added: The Party
expects the highest standards of its
representatives and believes that
they have a duty to be transparent
and accountable at all times.
Lord Cunningham, who served in
Tony Blairs Cabinet, yesterday
claimed he had been aware that the
investigators were fake.
He said: I quickly became suspi-
cious of them and the money they
were offering and sought to test my
suspicions during the meeting.
I always stick to the rules and
declare any interests.
He described an account of his
meeting with the fake lobbyists in a
Sunday newspaper as sensational-
ist and misleading. Lord Macken-
zie told the Murnaghan programme
on Sky News that he was
convinced I will be vindicated by
an investigation.
He conceded that morally it may
well look as though its not right
but defended his behaviour.
Lord Mackenzie added: Its a
very complex area, but I made sure
I knew the rules before I went into
any of this.
Its an important thing to do
obviously because what we dont
want is parliamentarians breaking
the rules. But there may well be
case for changing them.
Lord Laird said: I did not agree
to act as a paid advocate in any
proceedings of the House, nor did I
accept payment or other incentive
or reward in return for providing
parliamentary advice or services.
Ive not broken any rules. How-
ever, I have referred the situation to
the appropriate authorities.
The Sunday newspaper claimed
the peers had made it clear to the
undercover reporters that they
would have to declare any money
they were paid.
But the newspaper also said
there were discussions of ways to
get around declaration of interest
rules by asking colleagues to table
questions and host events.
9pDXZ\i?XccGfc`k`ZXc<[`kfi
Labour suspends 2
peers in cash for
questions scandal
Lord Laird says he broke no rules Lord Cunningham was suspicious
Lord Mackenzie insists he will be vindicated
D`jc\X[`e^
Simply address your envelope to FREEPOST Amplifon.
(No further address details or stamp required).
Te National Campaign for Better Hearing is a trading name of Amplifon Ltd.
D
E
0
3
0
6
1
3
E
S
S
8
Mr Mrs Ms (please tick) Other
First name
Surname
Address
Postcode
Telephone Mobile
FREE TV Amplifiers for Pensioners
As part of Amplifons National Campaign for
Better Hearing we are now giving enquirers
with hearing difficulties a FREE TV Amplifier
to help with everyday sounds around the home
- great for conversation, listening to TV, radio,
even birds singing! Most people with hearing
difficulties could benefit from this offer.
The TV Amplifier will be given free to keep,
with batteries included. There is no obligation
to purchase and all genuine enquirers will be
delighted with this free offer from Amplifon.
Hurry limited stock available.
Please tell me how I can claim my FREE TV Amplifer
Quote
DE0306 FREEPHONE 0800 028 4764


I frst realised I was losing my
hearing when I was struggling to hear
the TV. I now wear hearing aids and
no one complains about the
volume on the TV anymore.

Dr Chris Steele MBE


ADVERTISEMENT
***
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 5
White Muslim admits
plotting to kill Harry
Blair: Lets be honest
about Islam problem
One young rider taking part in the Hero Ride through central London Singer James Blunt supports the event
Harry at a London stag party yesterday
Its a magnicent sight as veteran soldiers lead hundreds of charity cyclists down The Mall yesterday to raise 1million towards Help for Heroes and in solidarity with murdered Lee Rigby
:pZc\f]_fefli]fidli[\i\[jfc[`\i
9pDXZ\i?XccGfc`k`ZXc<[`kfi 9pD`Z_X\cG`ZbXi[
9pJXiX_N\jkZfkk HUNDREDS of cyclists showed their
solidarity with murdered soldier Lee
Rigby yesterday as they rode
through London and down The Mall.
More than 1,300 took part in the
annual Hero Ride. But it had added
poignancy this year following the
May 22 death of Drummer Rigby, 25
who was wearing a Help for Heroes
sweatshirt.
The cyclists, who set off from
Blackheath, south-east London,
raised 1million for the charity.
It was the biggest show of support
that Britain has ever seen for the
organisation, which helps those who
have suffered injuries in recent
conicts, and their families.
The cyclists led by 150 wounded
veterans and service personnel
from Britain, the US and Canada
paused to pay respects at the
Monument To Women Of The
Second World War before riding
along The Mall to the nish line at
Horse Guards Parade.
Hundreds of organised bike rides
took place in the lead-up to the
nale. The rst was the Big
Battleeld Bike Ride in which 300
headed from Paris to London, waved
off by the Duchess of Cornwall.
The Hero Ride also included a
triple amputee who cycled the 420
miles from Edinburgh on a handbike.
Members of the public had ocked
from all corners of the country to
line The Mall shoulder to shoulder
with Help for Heroes celebrity
patrons and cheer on the cyclists.
Bryn Parry, co-founder of Help for
Heroes, said: This years Hero Ride
has seen more than 1,000 cyclists
nish on the streets of London in the
biggest national demonstration of
support for our wounded heroes.
The people that deserve the most
thanks are the cyclists themselves,
who have put in their own time to
train and raise funds.
Singer and ex-soldier James Blunt,
who took part, said: Its been
amazing to see such a large group of
people from every background come
together in support of our troops.
FG@E@FE1G8><()
A HOMELESS man believed to be a
white Muslim convert has walked
into a police station and confessed
to plotting to kidnap and murder
Prince Harry.
Ashraf Islam, 30, of no xed abode,
was arrested after handing himself
in at Hounslow, west London, on
May 23 the day after Drummer Lee
Rigby was murdered in Woolwich.
Islam, formerly known as Mark
Townley, is in custody after pleading
guilty at Uxbridge Magistrates
Court to making threats to kill the
Prince.
A date for his sentencing has not
yet been conrmed, but he could
face up to 10 years in prison after
being charged with threats to kill
Prince Harry under Section 16 of the
Offences Against The Person Act.
Ofcers from the Metropolitan Police
Counter Terrorism Command also
investigated his claims but decided
not to bring any terror-related
charges against him.
It is not known whether he was
acting alone or is part of a wider net-
work.
Police investigations, however, did
nd internet searches relating to
kidnapping, guns and vans on his
laptop. Originally from Northern Ire-
land, he is thought to have converted
to Islam following a prior spell in
prison.
Prince Harry, 28, has served twice
in Afghanistan, with his most recent
tour as an Army helicopter pilot end-
ing in January this year.
TONY Blair yesterday called on pol-
iticians to be honest and openly
admit there was a problem within
Islam.
The former Labour Prime Minis-
ter intervened in the debate about
how the Government should
respond to the savage murder of
soldier Lee Rigby to insist the threat
was not limited to a handful of
Islamist extremists.
He argued that hostility to democ-
racy and Western values among
some sections of the Muslim com-
munity was deeper and wider than
it is comfortable to admit.
Mr Blair, now a peace envoy in the
Middle East, raised his concerns in
a newspaper article, risking fresh
anger about his decision to involve
Britain in the invasions of Iraq and
Afghanistan. He wrote: There is a
problem within Islam from the
adherents of an ideology that is a
strain within Islam. And we have to
put it on the table and be honest
about it.
He added: At the extreme end of
the spectrum are terrorists, but the
world view goes deeper and wider
than it is comfortable for us to
admit. So by and large we dont
admit it.
Mr Blair described David Cam-
erons approach to tackling terror-
ism and extremism as reasonable.
But he said more needed to be done
to start to combat Islamist ideas by
educating children about faith
here and abroad.
I\jg\Zkj
Picture: TONY SAPIANO AND JOEL RYAN / INVISION / AP
6 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 7
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
s
:

Y
O
S
R
A

E
L
-
E
S
S
A
W
Y

&

T
U
L
L
I
O

P
U
G
L
I
A
/
G
E
T
T
Y
,

Y
U
I

M
O
K
/
P
A

a
n
d

W
E
N
N
.
C
O
M
E`^_kk_\hl\\ejf]
gfgifZb\[Xe[ilc\[
From left, Madonna demure in a black jumper, Jessie J kicking off show in a sparkly top and raunchy star Jennifer Lopez
Incredible
night,
Beyonce
told London
on Saturday
Anger over 23 fees that
can erode your pension
PENSION savings have
plummeted to an all-time
low, a report has warned.
Unless millions of
people start to put more
aside for their retirement
many will face poverty in
their old age.
According to the ninth
annual Scottish Widows
Pensions Report, one in
ve Britons is saving
nothing at all for their
retirement and more
than a third are
under-saving.
The study of 5,200 UK
adults found the typical
level of income people
felt they would need in
retirement was 25,200.
But based on what they
are putting away, they are
more likely to end up
living on around 11,400.
Ian Naismith, a
pensions expert at
Scottish Widows, said:
People are now less
prepared for retirement
than at the height of the
downturn a few years
ago, yet expectations for
income in retirement are
still increasing.
To meet these
aspirations, an average
saver would need to save
1,000 per month.
9p;Xm`[:_liZ_`cc
9pJXiX_N\jkZfkk
GIRL power hit Britain at the week-
end as a glittering line-up of the worlds
most successful female singers took to
the stage to raise funds for womens
health, education and justice.
Beyonce, 31, sent the crowds wild
with her anthemic hit Run The World
(Girls) as she took her place as queen
of a galaxy of the best female music
megastars Britain has ever seen.
The stunning singer showed off her
curves in a sequinned bodysuit as she
belted out a string of stirring songs to
the delight of 50,000 fans at
Twickenham stadium, West London.
Beyonce was joined by pop royalty
including Madonna, Jennifer Lopez,
and Florence + the Machine at the
Chime for Change concert which
reached a worldwide TV audience of
one billion and raised 2.8million.
Prince Harry opened the show with
a video welcome before Jessie J, in a
black sparkly crop top and black
trousers, kick-started the show on
Saturday evening.
J-Lo, 43, followed her risque
performance on Britains Got Talent, in
thigh-high leather boots, with shnet
tights and tasselled leotard.
Meanwhile, Madonna looked elegant
in a relatively demure black top and
trousers and lacy gloves.
Beyonce was joined by her rapper
husband Jay-Z for a duet during her
45-minute set. She said: Its time for
change. Lets chime for change. This is
such an incredible night for me.
Other artists included John Legend,
Rita Ora and Timbaland.
But Beyonce was the big attraction
for performers and fans alike.
PRIVATE pensions can be sapped by up to
23 different types of administration charges
or penalty fees buried within the small
print, a report claims.
Hefty levies include everything from
consultancy charges to penalties for
temporarily not paying in.
Research unearthed one scheme with a
64 per cent exit fee.
The analysis, by Candidmoney.com,
found the most notorious pensions were
old-style legacy schemes from the 1990s.
Pensions Minister Steve Webb has now
called for such schemes to be reviewed or
scrapped.
The research shows that if ve of the
worst charges were applied, a saver paying
500 a month for 30 years into an
old-style pension could lose more than
130,000 in fees.
Mr Webb said: Leading insurers need to
be looking at their back book of pensions.
If they come across pension policies
with charging structures that they wouldnt
dream of offering today, they should review
them. And that includes scrapping exit
penalties. It is vital that savers get the best
deal and employers feel condent about
the schemes they choose.
The study even uncovered penalties just
for moving cash between investment
funds.
The Government has vowed a crack-
down, while a report by the Ofce of Fair
Trading is due this summer.
Joanne Segars, chief executive of the
National Association of Pension Funds,
said: Anyone who has an older-style
pension should scrutinise the small print.
It could be worth transferring into a better,
newer deal that does not carry a dizzying
array of charges.
Andrew Warwick-Thompson, executive
director at The Pensions Regulator, said:
There are good examples of scale and
good governance...and we are aware too of
bad examples.
That is why we are working with the
Department for Work and Pensions and
Financial Conduct Authority to develop a
regulatory approach to stamp down on
bad practice wherever it exists.
A survey by Money Management maga-
zine suggests more than a million savers
have old-style schemes across seven pro-
viders Alba Life, Britannic Assurance,
Guardian/Scottish Equitable, Pearl
Assurance, Scottish Life, Scottish Widows
and Standard Life.
The Association of British Insurers said
it was actively scoping out the issue of
exit fees and will report to the OFT.
FG@E@FE1G8><()
D@CC@FEJN@CC=8:<GFM<IKPN?<EK?<PI<K@I<
8 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
New treatment to
end diabetes agony
9pAfN`cc\p?\Xck_<[`kfi
DIABETES could be cured in a
decade after scientists developed an
exciting new technique designed to
reprogramme faulty insulin cells.
Millions could be saved from a life-
time of chronic ill-health thanks to the
ground-breaking treatment which will
postpone or cut drastically the need
for insulin injections.
The complex process would neutral-
ise the terrible toll that high sugar
diets have on the body, saving thou-
sands of lives and slashing the risk of
amputations and blindness.
Trials in which cell structures are
reprogrammed to alter the need for
insulin are now being conducted.
Michel Pairet, head of pharmaceuti-
cal company Boehringer Ingelheims
non-clinical research and develop-
ment, said: This could be a cure if
linked with early diagnosis and treat-
ment. It is a novel wave of innovation,
which is exciting.
Diabetes costs the NHS about
8.8billion a year and that bill is
expected to almost double in the next
20 years.
More than three million in the UK
suffer from the condition and there
are at least 150,000 new cases diag-
nosed every year. A further 850,000 are
thought to be undiagnosed.
Early trials by the researchers at
Boehringer Ingelheim have shown
promising results in strengthening the
beta cells in the pancreas, which
secrete insulin to control high glucose
levels in the blood.
The process uses stem cells to
protect and regenerate beta cells that
are normally damaged by the ravages
of high sugar diets.
The rising tide of obesity in the UK
has dramatically increased the number
of people whose bodies cannot
produce insulin.
Without lifestyle changes, organs
and circulation are impaired leading
to potential heart failure, kidney fail-
ure and potential amputations.
Dr Pairet said: The next wave of
innovation is to try to protect the beta
cell in the pancreas and maybe to cure
the disease by inducing the regenera-
tion of the beta cells. We are working
on that.
We started four years ago and,
though it is difcult to say when
because it is early pre-clinical devel-
opment, the realistic timeline could be
around 10 years.
He added that the drugs potency
would depend on an early diagnosis
because diabetes is often not
discovered until it is at an advanced
stage when the ability to help is
limited. Dr Pairet said: During diabe-
tes, these beta cells progressively
disappear due to inammatory mech-
anisms but not all the mechanisms are
known yet.
You can protect the beta cells or
you can identify factors for the regen-
eration of the cells based on progeni-
tor cells and try to help these cells
regenerate.
It means you should stop or signi-
cantly delay the disease and its
complications.
A persons need for insulin would
be reduced or postponed and that is
our goal. The research is being run at
Boehringer Ingelheims centres in
Germany but future trials could be
held in the UK.
Almost 90 per cent of diabetes is
Type 2, which is principally caused by
lifestyle and diet.
It has been labelled a global epidemic
with rising costs that could cripple
health services around the world.
The NHS spends 12.3million annu-
ally on simply diagnosing new cases
and the drugs bill was 760million last
year 8.4 per cent of the annual NHS
drugs spend.
33p-a-day
superfood
pill could
halt cancer
BRITISH scientists have
created a 33p-a-day
superfoods pill which
they say is a powerful
cancer-buster.
The combination of
pomegranate, green tea,
turmeric and broccoli
could help beat several
cancer killers.
Professor Robert
Thomas, a consultant at
Addenbrookes Hospital
in Cambridge and at
Bedford Hospital, said:
These four ingredients
have the most likely
chance of an anti-
cancer effect. There is
no doubt that the
ndings were highly
statistically signicant.
His study of 203 men
with prostate cancer
showed that those who
took the twice-daily
capsule had 63 per cent
less prostate-specic
antigen an indicator of
the disease.
The pill Pomi-T,
available now, was
designed by Prof
Thomas with the
National Cancer
Research Institute. He
said: There are 800,000
men in the UK with
prostate cancer. We
hope this will help
millions.
Gifd`j`e^
+ILC<JKFC@M<CFE><I
FOUR simple lifestyle changes will
protect the heart and have a major
impact on long-term health,
according to research.
Sticking to a Mediterranean-
style diet, as shown right, taking
regular exercise, maintaining a
normal weight and, most
importantly, not smoking showed
clear benets.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins
University in the US said the
benets of the changes are
cumulative, meaning the more you
follow the healthier you will be.
The study, published online in
the American Journal of
Epidemiology, found that adopting
such changes cut the chance of
death from disease by 80 per cent
over an eight-year period.
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 9
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
s
:

C
H
A
N
N
E
L

5

a
n
d

A
N
T
O
I
N
E

D
E

R
A
S
-
S
T
A
R
/
A
P
Reeva so afraid of Pistorius
OLYMPIC sprinter Oscar
Pistorius displayed ashes of
his temper in the months lead-
ing up to the fatal shooting of
his girlfriend, an explosive doc-
umentary will claim tonight.
Model Reeva Steenkamps
parents recount talks they had
with their daughter shortly
before she was killed by the
paralympian at his home in the
early hours of Valentines Day.
June Steenkamp, ghting
back tears, says in a world
exclusive interview on Channel
5: She was so afraid.
She said: Mummy, Im in
the car with Oscar and hes
driving like a lunatic. Like a
lunatic. So I said: Will you just
give him the phone.
She gave the phone to Oscar
straight away. And I said:
Hello. And he said: Mrs
Steenkamp. I said: Listen, if
you hurt my baby, in any way, I
will have you wiped out.
London 2012 double gold
medal-winning sprinter Pisto-
rius dubbed the fastest man
on no legs has claimed he
thought his lover was a burglar
and he shot her in a case of
mistaken identity.
But South African prosecu-
tors argue the slaying at his
Pretoria mansion was pre-med-
itated because he was wearing
his prosthetic legs at the time.
Pistorius, 26, due back in
court tomorrow for a bail hear-
ing, had been dating Reeva, 29,
for only a few months but they
were known already as South
Africas golden couple.
Yet the model allegedly con-
ded to her mother that she
was frequently arguing with the
double amputee. In the lm,
Why Did Oscar Pistorius Kill
Our Daughter?, June says: She
said they were ghting a lot.
She didnt elaborate on
what they were ghting about.
There were no ghts with War-
ren [ex-boyfriend Warren Lah-
oud] ever. Or anybody else. Or
even personal ghts maybe
with friends and things. She
wasnt one for ghting.
Last week pictures of Pisto-
rius bathroom in the aftermath
of the shooting were circulated.
Prosecutors must provide a
motive to convict the athlete of
premeditated murder and part
of their case relies on two wit-
nesses who have claimed the
couple were arguing on the
night of the tragedy.
The documentary also asks
whether it is plausible Pistorius
failed to notice his girlfriend
was not in bed before he started
shooting.
Why Did Oscar Pistorius
Kill Our Daughter? is screened
on Channel 5 tonight at 9pm
9p>`c\jJ_\c[i`Zb
Reeva
Steenkamp
was shot
dead by
Pistorius,
top left. Her
parents June
and Barry,
above, have
scattered her
ashes in the
ocean, left
9li^cXi
Reeva, 29,
accused
boyfriend
Oscar of
driving like
a lunatic
10 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
House prices to
rocket by 10pc
9p>`c\jJ_\c[i`Zb
HOUSE prices are predicted to soar by almost 10 per
cent over the next 18 months as millions rush to snap
up the cheapest home loans in decades.
Condence has surged among rst-time buyers
and those with small deposits as lenders have
embarked on a bidding war to offer some of the best
xed-rate mortgage deals.
It has been helped by Chancellor George Osbornes
attempts to kick-start the housing market, including
his Help to Buy scheme which will underwrite up to
130billion of mortgage debt and begins in January.
Experts think prices will surge by at least eight per
cent and could even reach 13 per cent. The average
home was worth 167,912 last month up 1.1 per cent
on the previous year. But if the expected surge is real-
ised, it could send the price of the typical home to
300,000 in some areas of the South by the end of
2015. The buoyant assessment was made in a report
by investment bank Morgan Stanley.
It is hoped Mr Osbornes subsidised mortgages will
entice hundreds of thousands of young buyers to take
their rst step on the property ladder.
Mortgage expert Dominik Lipnicki said yesterday:
I dont think these gures will be far wrong. Schemes
like Help to Buy are very positive because it allows
people a foot on the housing ladder but also it is
encouraging people to talk to brokers and lenders.
We have also seen all the major high street banks
playing ball and going into the scheme.
FEK?@J;8P
(''P<8IJ8>F
,'P<8IJ8>F
,P<8IJ8>F
Twelve-year-old Princess Anne wins a silver cup for
her horse-riding skills at a gymkhana in Berkshire.
Antonio Pettigrew hands back his Sydney Olympics 400m
relay gold medal after admitting to using growth hormone.
Russian composer Igor Stravinsky and his wife Yekaterina
fall ill with typhus after eating oysters for dinner.
Visit the DaiIy Express Archive cnIine at www.express.cc.uk/archive
@]pfl_Xm\Xjkfip1
')'/-().'''
@]pfl_Xm\Xg_fkf1
')'/-().(.(
fi\dX`c1
\ogi\jjg`o7\ogi\jj%Zf%lb
=fi^\e\iXc\ehl`i`\j1
')'/-().'''
DO YOU
HAVE A
STORY
OR A
PHOTO?
NNN%<OGI<JJ%:F%LB
=FI>I<8KI<8;<IF==<IJ
N\Xjb\[`efligfcc
fe=i`[Xp1
J_flc[Z_`c[b`cc\ij]XZ\
k_\[\Xk_g\eXckp6
P<J10/ EF1)
CFKKF
I<JLCKJ
HLFK<F=K?<;8P
G\fgc\`edpZfejk`kl\eZpXi\]\[
lgn`k_d`^iXekjY\`e^XYc\kf
ZcX`dY\e\kjn`k_flk_Xm`e^
Zfeki`Ylk\[kfk_\jpjk\d
PETER BONE, TORY MP FOR WELLINGBOROUGH,
RESPONDS TO PLANS FOR EVEN TOUGHER
BENEFIT RULES FOR MIGRANTS
JL;FBL
=`cc`eXcck_\jhlXi\jjfk_Xk\XZ_ifn#\XZ_Zfclde#
Xe[\XZ_*o*jhlXi\ZfekX`eXcck_\[`^`kj]ifd(kf0
This is the Cuick 5udoku
Ior the solver in a hurry.
For today's solution call:

'0'.(/(),.(
(calls cost 77p per minute
Irom a BT landline)
For extra clues call:

'0'(*)),-')
(calls cost 77p per call
Irom a BT landline)
8efk_\iJl[fbl1G8><*-
J8KLI;8PJJFCLK@FE
3 9
1 7
8 1
2
6
6
1
9
2
7 5
2 8
8
3
5
9
2 7
8 9
3
4
7 8
9
8
6 3
1
4 7
3
2 1
7 5 4
9
6
8 3
9 7
1 8 3
2
5
6 4
8 3
6 2 9
5
4
1 7
1 7
4 9 6
2
8
3 5
2 5
7 1 8
6
3
4 9
4 6
3 5 2
8
9
7 1
7 9
3 6 8
5
1
4 2
5 6
4 7 2
9
8
3 1
3 4
1 9 5
7
2
6 8
Todays
answers can
be found on
page 36
*'$J<:FE;
:?8CC<E><
JUST follow the instructions from left to
right, starting with the number given to
reach an answer at the end of the row. Set
your own 30-second challenge: for the
very young or arithmetically rusty, you
have 30 seconds for the BEGINNER task.
For a greater challenge, try BEGINNER and
INTERMEDIATE in 30 seconds. True mental
gymnasts should try INTERMEDIATE
and ADVANCED in 30 seconds together.
PFLI
8EJN<IJ
9\^`ee\i
16
TAKE THE
SQUARE ROOT
+11 x3
REVERSE THE
DIGITS
-16
50% OF THIS
+59 6
@ek\id\[`Xk\ 255
80% OF THIS
-35
TAKE THE
SQUARE ROOT
+183
6/7 OF THIS
+66
8/9 OF THIS
-29
8[mXeZ\[
514 -225
TAKE THE
SQUARE ROOT
+268
INCREASE BY
20% +164
8/11 OF THIS
+88
7/12 OF THIS
CFKKFGCLJ,
June 2
(/(0)*).*0+++*
J8KCFKKF
June 1
(((*)+*)*++.0
T-BaII: 13 15 22 26 39 B
<LIFCFKKF
Friday May 31
).)/)0*++*
ClZbpJkXij,#('
D`cc`feX`i\iX]\
AI> +*.++,
T-BaII: B 14 23 35 39 (+
N<;CFKKF
May 29
*,),***+*,(+
T-BaII: 2 3 9 19 32('
<LIFCFKKF
Tuesday May 2B
/(*)-*+*/*((
Fe\LBk`Zb\kjZffg\[/(d
D`cc`feX`i\iX]\
?HM 0+,.+/
K?<?<8CK?CFKK<IPELD9<IJJ8KLI;8P#ALE<(
) 0 )0 *, +* *'
9FELJ
98CC
K?<?<8CK?CFKK<IPELD9<IJN<;E<J;8P#D8P)0
() (. *' +( +- )*
9FELJ
98CC
N\Xjb\[`efligfcc
feK_lij[Xp1
J_flc[mXe[Xcn_f[\c\[
nXid\dfi`Xcj]XZ\aX`c6
PHONE POLL RESULTS
P<J100 EF1(
9lfpXek
Condence among rst-time buyers has been rising
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 11
BRITAIN is about to sizzle in the
hottest week of summer as
temperatures soar higher than the
Mediterranean.
The mercury is expected to rocket
to 80F (27C) by Thursday as a burst
of hot air sweeps in from the
Continent.
The entire country will enjoy blue
skies and sunshine in a long-awaited
blaze of glory.
Forecasters said the scorching
conditions could hold out for a fort-
night as high pressure dominates.
Thousands headed outdoors at
the weekend as the sunshine arrived
after the coldest spring for 51 years.
The Met Ofce said the average
temperature across March, April
and May was a chilly 43F, making it
the fth-coldest spring on record.
Thermometers started to rise
yesterday, nudging 68F in London,
as families ocked to parks and
headed to the coast to soak up the
golden rays.
Supermarkets said barbecue
supplies, including food and drink,
started ying off the shelves on
Friday.
Jonathan Powell, forecaster for
Vantage Weather Services, said the
entire country will enjoy tempera-
tures of at least 70F this week, with
80F possible by Thursday.
He said: This could possibly be
the best week of the summer and a
real change from the past few
weeks.
There is a very strong high pres-
sure system dominating the weather
which means virtually the entire
country will see temperatures soar
this week with lots of dry, sunny
weather on the way which could last
right through into next week.
He warned that the hot weather
may trigger thunderstorms at the
end of the week although there is no
sign of it cooling down for at least
seven days.
Britain will enjoy temperatures
hotter than Greece where the mer-
cury is only expected to touch 72F.
The UK will also give Australia,
Spain and the Canary Islands a run
for their money, as temperatures in
these countries are forecast to hover
around the low to mid-70s.
The Met Ofce said temperatures
would continue creeping up from
today with dry and sunny weather
for most places through the week.
Forecaster Mark Seltzer said Brit-
ain could comfortably see the hot-
test day of the year so far beating
the 75F recorded at Drumburgh,
Cumbria, last month. He said:
Temperatures will push to the
maximum we have seen so far this
year, particularly towards the end of
the week when it will feel warmest.
Jim Dale, forecaster for British
Weather Services, said warm air
crossing Spain and France is likely
to brush against the UK this week
helping to raise temperatures.
Although thousands will be cele-
brating the summer nally arriving,
the bad news is the rest of June is
not so promising. Met Ofce deputy
chief forecaster Bob Wilderspin said
overall temperatures are likely to be
below average this month.
9pEXk_XeIXf
At long last, summer is on
its way with a sizzling 80F
>cfi`flj[Xp]fi:fifeXk`fegX^\Xek
lec`b\iX`ep;`Xdfe[AlY`c\\fk`ccX
WHAT a difference a year
makes. This was the sunny
scene yesterday as 100 boats
with Union ags and well-
wishers in royal masks sailed
down the Thames at Henley to
mark the 60th anniversary of
the Queens Coronation.
If only it could have been like
that 12 months ago when more
than a million spectators braved
miserable wind and rain to see
the Queen and Royal Family sail
aboard a London otilla to
celebrate her Diamond Jubilee.
9pJXiX_N\jkZfkk
Fine weather favours river celebration for anniversary yesterday
Having right royal fun with masks yesterday
K_le[\i
Pictures: GEOFFREY SWAINE/REX
12 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
K_\gXikpji`j\`jXe
`e[`Zkd\ekf]:Xd\ife
C\fDZB`ejkip
;X`cp<ogi\jjZfclde`jk
Lb`g`j_Xdd\i`e^
k_\gfc`k`ZXc\c`k\
`eN\jkd`ejk\i
8
MOOD of rebellion is
sweeping the country,
fuelled by anger at the
treachery and incom-
petence of our rulers.
The three main parties
are now paying the price for
treating the British public with
contempt for far too long.
The widespread fury at the
Westminster establishment has
been crystallised by a couple of
recent factors. One was the
shocking slaughter of Drum-
mer Lee Rigby in Woolwich, an
atrocity that exposed the
devastating failure of the
states ofcial dogma of multi-
culturalism. Another is the
growing recognition that, due
to the EUs systematic demoli-
tion of our borders, no fewer
than 29 million Bulgarians and
Romanians will be able to
settle here next year with rights
to claim housing, benets,
education and healthcare.
The public knows that Brit-
ain is facing an identity crisis.
Our very integrity as an inde-
pendent nation is under threat
from European integration and
mass immigration. In the face
of this discontent the politi-
cians have reacted with a pre-
dictable mix of bullying and
propaganda.
Prattling about the joys of
diversity, politicians claim that
millions of jobs are at risk if
Britain does not remain under
EU subjugation. But this blus-
ter and blackmail is no longer
effective. For voters now have a
real alternative to the fashion-
able, destructive orthodoxy of
the three main parties. The
phenomenal rise in support for
Ukip shows the strength of the
publics disillusion with a fail-
ing establishment.
K



HE latest poll, published
at the weekend, shows
Ukip on 21 per cent, far
ahead of the Liberal Democrats
on just six per cent and just ve
points behind the Tories. This
follows remarkable results in
last months county council
elections when Ukip won
almost a quarter of the vote.
Another recent survey
showed that Ukip could top the
poll in next years European
parliamentary elections, driv-
ing the Tories into third place.
And Nigel Farage, Ukips leader,
is more popular than David
Cameron or Ed Miliband.
Ukips surge is a disaster for
the Conservatives. Cameron
once described Farages party
as a gang of fruitcakes, loonies
and closet racists but his
offensive insult has backred,
with Ukip now almost on level
terms with the Tories. In its
sneering condescension Cam-
erons language encapsulated
the arrogance of the progres-
sive metropolitan elite. But it is
precisely that patronising atti-
tude which has done so much
damage not only to the fabric
of our country but also to the
standing of the Tory party.
Indeed the rise of Ukip is an
indictment of Camerons entire
modernisation strategy. He
claimed he was reaching out to
the centre ground through pol-
icies such as green taxes, gay
marriage and more foreign aid.
But in truth he only succeeded
in alienating mainstream vot-
ers who want tough action on
immigration and the EU. There
is now an air of desperation
about the Conservatives as
defections to Ukip mount and
major donors withdraw.
Flailing around, Cameron
and fellow senior Tories now
try to sound tough with rheto-
ric about cracking down on
benet tourism and giving us a
referendum on the EU. But
their credibility is shot. The
public no longer believes what
they say. Ministers boast about
cutting net immigration for
instance but the reality is that
more than 500,000 foreigners
are still arriving here each year.
In the same vein few people
trust Cameron to stick to his
pledge to hold a referendum on
membership of the EU.
Tory strategists try to com-
fort themselves with the
thought that Ukip voters will
ock back at the general elec-
tion in 2015 when faced with
the possibility of Ed Miliband
becoming prime minister. But
that is wishful thinking. The
Ukip vote is more solid than
the Conservatives admit.
Where I live on the Isle of the
Thanet in Kent the Tories are
in meltdown, having been the
dominant party for decades. At
the recent county elections,
Ukip won every seat except one
while in a district council by-
election last week, caused by
the jailing of the former Tory
leader for fraud, Ukip won
easily with 41 per cent of the
vote, the Conservatives slump-
ing to just 17 per cent.
If Nigel Farage stood in either
of the two Thanet seats, both
currently held by Tory MPs, I
have little doubt he would be
elected in a landslide.
@



NDEED there is a real pos-
sibility that the Conserva-
tives could be obliterated
at the next general election.
That might sound far fetched
but it is exactly what happened
in Canada in 1993. There the
ruling but unpopular Progres-
sive Conservative Party held
156 seats going into the cam-
paign. But they came under
severe pressure from the
Reform Party, a populist, anti-
government, anti-immigration
movement very similar to Ukip.
Incredibly the Conservatives
lost all but two of their seats
and were never a force again in
Canadian politics.
Yet Labour shouldnt be com-
placent about Ukips growth. It
was telling that in the county
council elections Ukip per-
formed most strongly in tradi-
tional Labour areas. Its hardly
a surprise given that its the
working class, once the back-
bone of the Labour movement,
that has suffered most from
mass immigration, the elite
being insulated by their wealth.
These abandoned voters are
hardly going to be won back by
Miliband, who clings to the elit-
ist progressive agenda. What-
ever the outcome in 2015 Ukip
has already transformed poli-
tics. The old parties can no
longer suppress debates about
immigration and the EU. The
people of Britain are at last
nding their voice.
HAPPY DAYS: Nigel Farages party is on the up
1HL NOR1HLRN & SHLLL BUlLDlNC
NUMBLR 0 LOWLR 1HAMLS S1RLL1, LONDON LC3R 6LN
1el: 0208 62 7000 (ouLside UK: +^^ 208 62 7000)
K_\^i\Xkg\ej`feji`g$f]]
j`dgcpdljkY\jkfgg\[
N_Xk_Xgg\ej`]n\cfj\6
8[\Z`[\[cp_\if`ZZXlj\
@
N THE age of modern personal
nance with its often too-clever-by-
half products, private pensions are
immensely complicated things.
Consumers are hugely dependent on
the good faith of providers and cannot
be expected to come to a fully informed
view about the robustness or value for
money of the products they invest in.
Yet pensions are profoundly
important, largely determining the
standard of living people can expect in
retirement. There is therefore a very
strong case for regulation of this
industry to be erce and unrelenting.
The case has got even stronger with
revelations that some pensions
products sold in the Nineties have up
to 23 different sets of fees and charges
draining them of funds.
This is appallingly exploitative and
risks bringing the entire private
pensions industry into disrepute.
Annual management fees of three per
cent and initial charges of ve per cent
may sound modest to the non-expert
investor but in fact take giant chunks
out of long-term capital gains. So-called
exit fees are another potential rip-off.
No wonder that many people now
simply assume that money put in a
pension fund is money that may well
never be seen again. This is a disastrous
situation that undermines society by
piling huge burdens upon the state
which could be borne by individuals
were their faith restored sufciently to
persuade them to resume saving.
This newspaper rarely commends
further Government interference in
private industries but in the case of
pensions these rip-off practices simply
must be stopped.
:
ABINET minister Iain Duncan
Smith is said to be raising the
stakes in his benets war with
Brussels by preparing to impose
further restrictions upon welfare
payments to foreigners.
Nobody should question his desire to
rebalance the benets system in favour
of British taxpayers but whether he has
a successful game plan is still open to
grave doubt.
Most Brussels-watchers expect the
European Court of Justice to side with
the European Commission and against
the British government in this row. If
that is what happens, what will Mr
Duncan Smith do then?
?
ELP For Heroes has quickly
become established as one of the
most inspiring charities in Britain
and its latest fundraising effort
has been magnicent. The Hero Ride
was a fantastic success. It is difcult to
see how they can top it but experience
suggests that they will.
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
:

E
P
A
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 13
9p:c`m\8jc\k
8
S WE left Houghton Hall
somebody said: The trou-
ble is we just dont have
enough sleaze in public
life. Houghton, set amid
the protable farmland of
north Norfolk, was created by Brit-
ains rst prime minister, Sir Rob-
ert Walpole, in the early 18th cen-
tury and he managed to make
rather better use of his largely ill-
gotten gains tha n the pigmy politi-
cians of today have achieved.
It isnt so much a country house
as a palace. You ascend the stair-
case past a life-size bronze gure of
a Roman gladiator into a stone hall
where the focus is a bust of Walpole
himself. Since he was devoted to
hunting the fox and the hare it
stands in front of a relief showing a
sacrice to Diana, goddess of hunt-
ing. Thats nothing though to the
dining room.
With grand disregard for the chill
you can sometimes feel as the wind
whips in from The Wash he had it
made from different coloured mar-
ble. Bunches of grapes, carved
around the replace, gilded on the
ceiling, are everywhere (Walpole
liked his wine). The one item in this
extravaganza of opulence that
wasnt richly decorated is the din-
ing table presumably because the
mahogany would have been all but
obscured by gold and silver plate
heaped upon it. Even Walpoles
contemporaries in an age which
was generally tolerant of display
thought it was a bit much.
But later members of Sir Roberts
family lacked his political genius
and his capacity for self-enrichment.
In fact his grandson found the
house so difcult to maintain that
he was forced to sell Walpoles
princely picture collection. Its
calibre can be gauged from the per-
son who bought it: Catherine the
Great of Russia. The masterpieces
that had looked so well in Norfolk
customarily shed their lustre on
the walls of the Hermitage and
other palaces.
Art historians of a later genera-
tion could still gaze in wonder at
Houghton as an architectural tri-
umph. It was preserved by its very
poverty, being shut up throughout
the 19th century when it might
have been altered by a richer family
until the fortune that Sybil Sas-
soon brought on her marriage to
the 5th Marquess of Cholmondeley
enabled it to be put on its feet
again. The shutters were closed for
so long that the colours of the tap-
estries are still fresh. But of the pic-
tures ah well, aesthetes could
only dream of the vanished glory.
L
NTIL now that is. Almost
incredibly given that most
of the art is usually on pub-
lic display in President Putins Rus-
sia, the picture collection has been
returned in more or less its entirety
to the rooms for which it was pur-
chased. Here it is being shown till
autumn. If Houghton was dazzling
before, visitors this summer practi-
cally need sunglasses to protect
their eyes from the splendour.
Walpole, who weighed 20 stone, liked
to give the impression that he was
a convivial, hard-drinking Norfolk
squire but he was in truth a man of
immensely sophisticated taste and
an excellent judge of pictures.
He didnt count the pennies when
he was in pursuit of a masterpiece
and he had some good advisers.
One of the revelations of the
exhibition is a sketch made in Italy
by William Kent, the architect who
designed Houghtons interior.
It is a beautiful copy of one of the
works that Walpole subsequently
bought. There were no cameras in
those days and the only way that
Kent could show his patron an
image of the painting was by draw-
ing it himself.
Kent painted some of the ceil-
ings at Houghton but he was only
allowed to do so in the mono-
chrome known as grisaille. Other-
wise his work might have detracted
from the paintings beneath. Some
were voluptuous for example two
beauties by Sir Peter Lely from the
court of Charles II. Its noticeable
though that Walpole also liked
heads of people. Psychological
perception was after all his stock in
trade as a politician.
So his collection included Knel-
lers portrait of the philosopher
John Locke as well as his splendid
three-quarter length of the virtuoso
carver Grinling Gibbons which has
been returned to hang between
garlands carved by the master.
There is a Frans Hals of a thought-
ful if self-indulgent young man,
painted in bravura brushstrokes, a
Rubens of a Franciscan monk and
a Rembrandt of an elderly woman
who is believed to have been the
artists mother.
Best of all, I feel, is Velazquezs
study of Pope Innocent X as sharp
and bitter as neat Campari, which
is also the colour of his robe and
hat. How Walpole must have loved
surrounding himself with such dif-
fering characters.
However he paid even more for
Nicolas Poussins The Holy Family
with Saints Elisabeth and John the
Baptist. Not only has it been
returned to the Embroidered Bed-
chamber but the curator Dr Thierry
Morel has reunited it with its
original frame, designed by Kent.
One drawing room, usually deco-
rated with white silk, has been
rehung with an imitation of the
original green velvet. It is an effec-
tive foil to the paintings in their
ornate gilt frames many of them
by Carlo Maratta, then an ultra-
fashionable artist whose star no
longer shines quite so brightly. This
exhibition gives us a chance to
appreciate what Walpole saw in him.
In the Saloon is Paris Bordones
luscious celebration of female
beauty Venus, Flora, Mars and
Cupid, lent by the Metropolitan
Museum in New York. Near it is a
fervently religious Murillo of the
Immaculate Conception. To this
day Walpole remains our longest-
serving prime minister. After the
uncertainty and wars that followed
James IIs expulsion in 1688, his 20
years in the job serving from 1721
until 1742 without a break brought
stability and peace. Walpole also
steered the country through a
Jacobite rebellion and all the anti-
Hanoverian plots.
?
IS JOB of political man-
agement was made easier
by George I, newly arrived
from Hanover and bored by the
House of Commons. He delegated
to Walpole. Critics accused Walpole
of corruption and the evidence of
Houghton suggests they had a
point. The charitably disposed might
say it was not only a showcase of
great art but a tool of statecraft. It
could supposedly accommodate
100 guests at an hours notice.
For Dr Thierry Morel and the
present Lord Cholmondeley to
have negotiated the loan of these
pictures from Russia is a feat of
diplomacy worthy of Walpole him-
self. Perhaps the curators coming
from a land that not so long ago
was behind an Iron Curtain were
impressed by this spectacular
house. Amazingly its not only still
in private hands (the Marquess of
Cholmondeley actually owns two
stately piles, the other being Chol-
mondeley Castle in Cheshire) but
like Goodwood, Arundel Castle,
Chatsworth and Alnwick Castle, it
is ring on all cylinders.
Lord Cholmondeley has restored
Walpoles avenues and wilderness
gardens. A mong the latter he has
sited avant-garde sculptures to
great effect. There was a horse
show taking place in the grounds
when I visited. If you can possibly
get there this summer, go. Best to
book your timed ticket in advance.
If anything, Houghton is in better
condition now than at any time
during the past two centuries. Its
open to all. David Cameron might
think of chillaxing there. I just hope
he doesnt get any ideas.
Clive Aslet is editor at large
of Country Life.
Fg\e_flj\XkgXcXZ\
f]`cc$^fkk\e^X`ej
Fliijkgi`d\d`e`jk\i
jkl]]\[?fl^_kfe?Xcc
`eEfi]fcbn`k_Xik
nfibjXe[k_`j
jldd\ik_\pXi\fe
j_fnkfk_\glYc`Z
SPLENDOUR:
Houghton Hall,
home of Sir
Robert
Walpole, and
the superb
Velazquez
study of Pope
Innocent X
Pictures: ALAMY; GETTY
14 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
SPIDER-MAN has some great
swinging moves, the Hulks anger is
strangely liberating and Superman
has an appealing dignity along with
the ability to leap skyscrapers in a
single bound.
Batman may not possess innate
superpowers but he has a tycoons
budget to fund his vigilante boy
toys. But if you could boast a
superpower what would it be?
Not surprisingly the ability to y
was voted the most desired in a
new survey by Airkix, the brand
behind Britains rst wind tunnel for
skydiving. Invisibility and X-ray
vision were further down a list which
appeared to show that our desires
had changed little from similar polls
from the Sixties through to the
Nineties.
Try asking family and friends what
their favoured superpower would be
however and you may hear some
contemporary twists. Its not the
ability to catch a bullet between the
teeth or to turn the world to ice that
rocks their boats.
The desire to stop time and catch
up was a common answer from the
time-challenged as well as the wish
to turn the clock back 25 years and
do it all again but with the knowledge
they had now.
Another friend wished she could
disappear when the children asked
what was for dinner while yet
another wished he could act and
think like a child (though his wife
already thought he did that).
Other genius works of the
imagination include a taser stare,
the ability to heal with a touch and
the power to instantly disable the
car that has just cut you up.
However I try to live as if I already
have my own superpowers as a life
coach. For I wish that all my clients
were free of the fear that holds them
back and that everything they aim
for culminates in a happy ending.
You have the power!
COACHING TIP: If you want instant charisma start acting like
youre the star of your own movie.
Go to new places, do new things and say things that will make
people nd your life more interesting than theirs. Red carpet
here you come.
by Carole
Ann Rice
Happy Mondays
Leading life and happiness coach
PFL?8M<K?<GFN<I8CI<8;P
NNN%I<8C:F8:?@E>:F%:FD

OPENING my inbox of
correspondence this week
unleashed pink plumes of
perfumed thoughts and piquant
moments as you wrote about the
scents that make you smile.
As featured in last weeks column
certain smells can become the
signature of your life, tunnelling you
back to an instant in history when
your heart leapt, consciousness
somersaulted or a special moment
seared itself into your psyche for
evermore.
I loved your olfactory
observations, from garlicky seafood
wafting from a harbour caf, or
the resinous aroma of pine cones
popping in the heat on a hot
Mediterranean afternoon to the
smell of coconut suntan oil on hot
skin instantly conjuring holiday
bliss, romance and carefree fun.
Some loved the scent of freshly
washed hair, others the sweet aroma
of a loved ones ear or chin. For the
homesick the vaguely industrial pall
of the Pier Head in Liverpool or the
deep, dank greenness of the Thames
raised a tear of longing.
But certain scents occupy their
own unique sell-by date too. At
the rst whiff of Calvin Kleins
Obsession, Christian Diors Poison
or YSLs Opium, Im instantly
channelling Eighties shoulder pads,
big hair and Duran Duran.
I know some women can never
wear the perfume their mothers
wore as it seems somehow obscene
but I may be the exception.
Recently the smell of cigar smoke
left in a room instantly whooshed
me back to a childhood in the
Sixties and parents enjoying parties
to the sounds of Bert Kaempferts
Swingin Safari.
I could see, smell and practically
touch the beehives petried into
place with lacquer, the pipe and
cigar smoke and hear wild good
cheer amid the brandy and
Babycham. But underpinning it all
was the smell of my mothers Tabu
perfume rst bought on a trip to
Spain in 1964. So rich, heady and
of its time I simply had to order
a bottle online to recreate this
snapshot of my life and relive it
in Sensurround glory.
In the reviews of this perfume on
a website one buyer said that she
had been wearing it for 37 years
and had bought up stocks in case
it ran out. Another said she had
purchased a bottle solely to
remember her mother who had
sadly passed away and it brought
back such fond memories. How
magical.
Take that deep breath in and ll
your head, heart and lungs with all
you love and who you love. Its
worth putting down this aromatic
deposit in your memory banks as
an investment for the future.
A slice of the action at last
ACTOR Sir Patrick
Stewart, pictured,
recently confessed that
he had just sampled
his rst slice of pizza at
the age of 72.
Circumstances and a
smidgen of prejudice had
prevented the former Star
Trek captain from ever
trying this delicious food.
Just think, to have gone
through life with a
culinary paradise that
could have been closed off
to him for ever.
If you do nothing else
today decide to sample
something new and see
your world and its
potential expand before
you.
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
:

G
E
T
T
Y
Find out how to release
the cash from your home!
For your copy of the guide, call FREE on
0800 531 6013
Lines are open 7am-7pm, 7 days a week.
www.keyrs.co.uk/express
This is an equity release plan. To understand the features and risks ask for a personalised illustration.
If youre a homeowner aged
55-95 then you could use an
equity release plan to unlock the
cash tied up in your property.
This FREE impartial Express guide
will let you know the whole story,
including the types of plans
available from leading providers
and how your entitlement to
state benets could be affected.
The guide is sponsored by Key
Retirement Solutions, the UKs
leading independent specialists
for equity release.
Free Guide to Equity Release
NEWFOR
2013
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 15
My gruesome
talks with April
killer, by priest
New hope for women with breast cancer
?@:B<P
ACTOR Henry Cavill will soon be seen on
the big screen as Superman but purists will
be agog to learn that the Man of Steel will
appear without his distinctive red-pants-
over-blue-tights look.
This is a new take on a classic character
and that includes the
costume, says Jersey-
born Henry, pictured.
It is still very much
Superman but certain
elements have been
brought up to date
including the pants.
I never quite worked
out why he wore them on
the outside like that anyway.
MEANWHILE speaking of missing underwear
I was underwhelmed to learn that Boris
Johnson gamely agreed to auction off a
signed pair of his underpants in support of a
charity appeal by London radio station LBC.
By the weekends deadline it emerged that
the mayors pants auctioned along with a
Help For Heroes wristband had helped raise
the princely sum of 205. Surely such a
garment will have huge historic value in the
decades to come?
DURING Commons Speaker John
Bercows recent visit to Romania, where
he addressed the nations MPs in the
Chamber of Deputies, he lavished praise
on the countrys retired tennis hero Ilie
Nastase, whom he described as his biggest
childhood hero.
Was Bercow, himself a one-time Great
Britain junior tennis player, being
diplomatic with his hosts?
Colleagues now mischievously recall that
during one previous interview, he admitted
his favourite player was, in fact, one of
Nastases biggest Seventies rivals. My
tennis hero was Bjorn Borg, a Wimbledon
champion several times over, he once
gushed. Borg really didnt know the
meaning of defeat; it was just alien to him.
FOLLOWING her grilling on BBC One by
veteran interrogator Andrew Neil yesterday,
feisty Tory backbencher Nadine Dorries
angrily took to Twitter to label the perma-
tanned Scot as overweight and orange
toupe wearing.
The pair have long enjoyed distinctly hostile
relations. Neil once incurred her wrath when
he cheekily coined the phrase madder than a
box of Nadine Dorrieses on the airwaves.
SOME people are just
never happy. Hugh
Jackman has decided to
tarnish his reputation of
being the nicest guy in
Hollywood.
The Les Misrables
actor, pictured, says hes
not always as lovely as he
comes across on the red
carpet and in interviews.
Never trust an actor, says Hugh. You
guys see that [nice] side of me but Im sure
there are plenty of people close to me who
have seen the other one. I think if we are
all honest with ourselves, we all know that
internal rage. There are many, many things
that could get me to that kind of rage.
RECENTLY the UKs reduced bee population
has hit the headlines but now natures
pollinators have found an unlikely champion
in Happy Mondays dancer Bez.
He has been asking locals in his native
Manchester to help. I want to do something
good for the city. The bee is the symbol of
Manchester so we should all be getting
behind the bees. We need to be getting them
back in the city centre, so Ive said Ill donate
a hive to [local venue] The Printworks, says
Bez, whose real name is Mark Berry.
I need everyone in Manchester to get
planting owers now so that the bees have
got something to feed off. Good to know that
Bez has a natural buzz about him these days.
<$dX`cd\Xk1_`Zb\p7\ogi\jj%Zf%lb
THE priest who heard Mark
Bridgers cell confession to killing
April Jones has spoken of listen-
ing to his twisted mind games.
Bridger, 47, has told friends he
plans to appeal against his con-
viction and fears for his life in jail
after threats by fellow inmates to
slice him with a razor.
He was jailed for life last week
by Mr Justice Grifth-Williams
after a jury at Mold Crown Court
convicted him of abducting and
murdering April, ve, and dispos-
ing of her body.
While on remand at HMP Man-
chester, known as Strangeways,
Catholic prison chaplain Father
Barry OSullivan had 20 hour-
long meetings from last November
until March with the killer.
He told Fr OSullivan that he
had thrown Aprils body in the
river last year, claiming he hoped
the information might help the
suffering of Aprils parents Paul
Jones, 41, and Coral, 43.
But police believe Bridger cut
up her body at his cottage, called
Mount Pleasant, and scattered
her remains in several locations.
Fr OSullivan, 51, said: My
meetings were intense and dif-
cult. On a scale of one to 10, he
would be up there with the eight
or nines.
He said he was 99 per cent cer-
tain that he remembered putting
the body into the river and
wanted the opportunity to tell
the parents the spot so that they
could erect a monument.
Fr OSullivan, who has been a
priest for 26 years, admitted he
expected a guilty verdict, adding:
It didnt come as a surprise. The
evidence was overwhelming. The
crime is unspeakably heinous. It
is difcult to know how anyone is
capable of that. My heart goes
out to the family.
He is able to discuss his meet-
ings because he was giving Bridger
counselling as a prison chaplain
and not confession as a priest.
He said Bridger played manip-
ulative mind games, persisting
with the story that he had acci-
dentally run over April and was
so panic-stricken that he could
not remember how or where he
had disposed of her body.
He added: When he arrived in
prison he was traumatised and
part of the duty of care of the
prison is to offer any support they
can.
I was asked if I would take him
as a client because he was in a
bad way. As a member of the
British Association for Counsel-
ling and Psychotherapy, he said it
was his responsibility to pass on
information to the authorities.
If he had gone to confession,
this story could not be told
because I would have been struck
off as a priest, he added.
As a specialist in child protec-
tion in the Catholic Diocese of
Salford, Greater Manchester, Fr
OSullivan has learned to spot
the signs of an abuser. But he
said he had to discard such
signals from Bridger.
He said: You cant help having
an ear for things, but I was able
to lay them aside.
Bridger has been kept on the
hospital wing at Strangeways to
prevent attacks by other inmates.
He is likely to be moved to Wake-
eld, West Yorks, or Long Lartin,
Worcs, within a few weeks. Mark Bridgers victim April Jones
9p:_i`jI`Z_\j
9pC`Xee\Bfc`i`e BREAST cancer sufferers who
take tamoxifen for 10 years rather
than the current recommended
period of ve are more likely
to keep the disease at bay, new
research has revealed.
The drug, which is inexpensive,
has long been available to
younger women who are found to
have the disease in its early
stages. Most begin to take the
oestrogen-blocking drug as soon
as they have surgery or complete
chemotherapy.
About 70 per cent of breast
cancers are oestrogen-receptor
positive, meaning they are fuelled
by the hormone.
Guidelines issued by the
American Society of Clinical
Oncology call for women at
increased risk of breast cancer to
take the drug for ve years.
But the annual ASCO meeting
in Chicago this weekend heard
that compared with taking no
tamoxifen, 10 years of the drug
reduces breast cancer death
rates by a third in the rst 10
years and by half after that.
Dr Sandra Swain, medical
director of the Cancer Institute
at Washington Hospital Center
and president of ASCO, said: I
think its huge because its the
second trial to show a benet for
10 years versus ve years.
Between 1991 and 2005, 6,953
women in Britain who had been
taking tamoxifen for ve years
were randomly assigned to con-
tinue treatment or to stop imme-
diately. Breast cancer recurred in
16.7 per cent of the 10-year group,
compared with 19.3 per cent in
the ve-year group.
Longer treatment also reduced
the risk of dying from breast can-
cer. The women who continued
tamoxifen treatment had a 25 per
cent lower recurrence rate and a
23 per cent lower breast cancer
mortality rate than the women
who stopped after ve years.
Rare side-effects of the drug
include increased risk of endome-
trial cancer a disease of the
uterus blood clots and stroke.
***
16 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
Secrets...
&
;Xm`[[\g\e[j
SUPERB SLEUTH: Suchet
Day&
EDITED BY LIZZIE CATT WITH LISA HIGGINS
HE MAY have rst appeared as the
eccentric Belgian detective Hercule
Poirot in 1989 but David Suchet
reveals he still suffers from a crisis of
condence when stepping back into
the moustachioed sleuths shoes.
The 67-year-old actor confesses he
spends hours watching previous
episodes before the cameras roll. I
usually have to watch up to 10 hours
(of previous footage) prior to lming
and then practise getting the voice
correct so that I match exactly, apart
from natural ageing and things like
that, he says ahead of the shows
return to ITV for its 13th series on
June 9.
Although the scripts allow me
some development every time I come
back to Poirot I have to come back to
FORMER footballer
JAMIE REDKNAPP wont
be too pleased when
he hears that his wife
LOUISE has given away his
beauty secrets. The 38-year-
old ex-pop star and TV
presenter tells us he wears
her make-up.
Mum-of-two Louise
says she often urges
Jamie and his friends
to use her Wild About
Beauty products.
Jamie uses my
mattifying balm
when hes on TV.
Him and all the
boys. I always say:
Take the balm.
You dont need
powder!
Louise has
always looked
fresh-faced and
recently made a
programme for
Channel 4 about
natural ways to
stay looking
young. I tested
out some stuff
when I was
making the
programme and
what I champion
now is acupuncture
in the face.
I felt it was
great for my skin
and its not
something I ever
heard you could
do. Will Jamie
be trying it?
FOREVER
YOUNG:
Louise
Redknapp
gives husband
Jamie, inset,
beauty tips
MANC MOVIE: Ian Brown with Shane Meadows
WHICH actress is telling her
friends to call her by her
surname only?
DAY & NIGHT
ventured to
a warehouse
in Manchester on
Thursday for the
premiere of Made Of
Stone, a documentary
about Eighties cult band
The Stone Roses.
The lm, which
features former Oasis
guitarist and Roses fan
Liam Gallagher,
follows the band from
their announcement that
they were reforming
after 20 years last year
to their big Heaton Park
gigs last June.
Singer Ian Brown
chose director Shane
Meadows, famous for
gritty 2006 drama This
Is England, to make the
movie after hearing
he was a die-hard fan.
But Shane was very
nervous about meeting
his idols. He says: I
was never cool. They
still have all this hair and
I started receding when
I was nine.
Guitarist John
Squire added that he
was thrilled things were
going so well second
time around. Theres
something special about
our four spirits when you
put us in a room
together. We could feel
it as soon as we started
playing, he said.
&
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
:

S
O
L
A
R
P
I
X
.
C
O
M
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 17
&
feXZk`e^Zcl\j
I KEEP A DREAM DIARY, A YOGA DIARY AND DIARIES ON PEOPLE IVE MET.
Night
AND JACK TEAGUE email us at diary@express.co.uk
his voice, his walk and his
mannerisms. What I always think is
going to be an easy glove to t again,
its always very hard, explains David.
Over the years he has had a greater
input into the lming and is now an
associate producer for the series. He
says the pressure to achieve a perfect
performance not only comes from
fans but also a desire to remain true
to Agatha Christies original
character.
It is always more difcult than
I ever imagine it will be for two
reasons: I do so many things in
between and play so many different
characters but also because Poirot is
so particular and so precise. Agatha
Christie was famous for never
changing his character.
IN LONDON: American
actress BLAKE LIVELY
on the phone in Pimlico Road, Chelsea
HELENA BONHAM CARTER shopping in
Hampstead
Spotted...
YASMIN LE BON has an unlikely daydream
to land a part in medical drama Holby City
on BBC One. The model and mum of three
says it has been a desire of hers for years.
I admit it one of my secret pleasures is Holby
City on a Tuesday night, said Yasmin. I wouldnt
want to play one of the patients. I could never be
covered in all that blood and gore. I see myself as one
of the staff: a nurse or doctor. I would absolutely love
that. I never miss a show.
Yasmin, 48, was at the Chime For Change concert
at Twickenham Stadium supporting husband Simon
who performed with rapper Timbaland. Im always
proud of his work ethic, she said. And our kids think
dads cool when he teams up with popular artists. I
think thats why he does it to impress them!
&
IF YOUR
kitchen
shelves are
groaning under the
weight of celebrity
chefs cookbooks
you arent alone.
But even the
professionals are
bewildered by the
number of foodie
tomes available, with
restaurateur Mark
Hix speaking out on
the subject at the
Hay Festival.
Mark believes it
really is a case of too
many cooks and
too many books.
There are too
many cookbooks. A
lot of them end up in
remaindered shops
in no time, says
Mark, 50, who owns
the Hix chain of
restaurants.
If I was on TV
Id probably sell
200,000 more books
than at the moment,
he says. But its
very difcult running
lots of restaurants
and Id rather be in
my restaurants than
in a TV studio.
The best ideas
can come when you
open the fridge and
theres hardly
anything in there, so
you think about what
you can use.
Ready for wooden
spoons at dawn
CRITICAL: Mark Hix
TONIC: Yasmin Le Bon would love to be in Holby
&
THEY were recently seen
joking around together on
The Graham Norton Show
but JADEN SMITH says it wasnt
all fun and games working with
dad WILL on new action lm After
Earth which opped at the US
box ofce in its opening weekend.
The 14-year-old says Will isnt
always the comedian everyone
thinks he is.
Working with my dad is great
but if I step out of line its
punishment, says Jaden. Being
on a movie set doesnt mean I get
away with anything.
EMMA WATSON IS A SECRET SCRIBE: I HAVE 10 DIFFERENT PERSONAL DIARIES.
WILL POWER: Even on set dad is the boss
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
:

T
I
M

P

W
H
I
T
B
Y
/
G
e
t
t
y

f
o
r

G
u
c
c
i
18 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
Womans body
found washed
up on a beach
MYSTERY surrounds the discovery of a womans
body that washed up on a beach.
Police conrmed last night that they are not
treating the death of the woman, believed to be in
her 60s, as suspicious.
She had not been formally identied last night.
A post mortem examination is due to take place to
establish her cause of death.
A stretch of the coastline was cordoned off
following the discovery at Winterton-on-Sea in
Norfolk, eight miles north of Great Yarmouth.
It is an area of outstanding natural beauty popu-
lar with surfers, walkers and wildlife lovers.
A walker alerted police after spotting the body
at 3.45pm on Saturday a mile and a half from a car
park and cafe.
It was three hours after high tide and the sea
was going out.
A message posted on Twitter suggested a party
had been held on the beach on Friday night but
Alan McMurchie, the controller of Winterton
Coastwatch which operates a look-out post, said
there was no evidence of that.
He said: Most people who come here are very
environmentally aware and quick to tell you about
any bottles or cans left on the beach.
A Norfolk Police statement said: Ofcers were
alerted to the discovery at about 3.45pm on Satur-
day. The woman is believed to be in her 60s. Inquir-
ies to establish her identity continue.
9pD`Z_X\cG`ZbXi[
The discovery
was made at
Winterton-on-
Sea in Norfolk
WORLD football chiefs ran
up a 10.5million bill for a
two-day meeting on the para-
dise island of Mauritius.
The Daily Express can
reveal that the cost included
more than 2million on luxury
accommodation alone.
A lavish opening ceremony
came to 714,000 while foot-
balls ruling body Fifa also
spent 100,000 on a sumptu-
ous banquet.
Yesterday Fifa president
Sepp Blatter hailed the
organisations 63rd annual
congress a great success after
pushing through new meas-
ures to combat racism and
match-xing.
Reforms to the ruling body
were also introduced to clean
up the organisation following
its biggest bribery scandal
two years ago.
But a Daily Express investi-
gation can reveal that behind
the scenes the great Fifa
gravy train continues to
hurtle out of control.
One delegate said: The
whole circus was extraordi-
narily extravagant.
Some important changes
were made but all the big
decisions had already been
taken and the delegates went
through the motions of voting
them through. Fifa arranged
for up to three delegates from
209 member associations to
jet to the Indian Ocean island
from across the globe.
One senior ofcial at a for-
eign football association told
how delegates were each
given a tablet computer worth
more than 300 as a gift.
The source said even the
most junior delegates were
also handed 300 a day spend-
ing money, even though all
their expenses were paid. In
total, 1,200 people attended,
including Fifa staff, observ-
ers, police and consultants.
Sixty tons of equipment
was shipped from Fifas
headquarters in Zurich to
Mauritius for the event,
including technical gear and
tables and chairs.
Fifa set up its island HQ at
the InterContinental Resort
at a cost of 378,000.
Blatter, 77, was one of the
rst to arrive ying in to
Mauritius on May 26. He
checked into the Royal Palm,
one of the worlds most exclu-
sive hotels, which was
reserved for Fifas executive
committee.
Speaking before the con-
gress, Blatter made no apolo-
gies for choosing Mauritius
for the event.
He said: There have been
some voices around the world
because you can never make
everybody happy asking
why should Fifa go to these
shores of Mauritius to
organise this?
Is it a competition? No, it
is a get-together. We are com-
ing here to enjoy and I can tell
you we enjoy the hospitality
of this country.
He said Fifa had emerged
from one of its most troubled
periods, adding: As the
captain, I am pleased to say
we have weathered the storm.
We have emerged from the
troubled waters stronger and
can look forward to the future
and waters as calm as the
beautiful sea around us in
Mauritius.
Soccers 10.5m own goal with
a two-day paradise isle junket
JZXe[Xc
The beach in front of the exclusive Royal Palm hotel in Mauritius where Fifa members stayed, including president Sepp Blatter, inset
<O:CLJ@M<
=ifd;Xm`[G`c[`kZ_
`eDXli`k`lj
Picture: ALAMY
Picture: ALBAN PIX
CHOOSE FROMARANGE OF TITLES INCLUDING:
PUZZLE
BOOKS
To order please send a cheque or postal order with your details
and order to Express Bookshop, PO Box 200, Falmouth TR11 4WI,
phone 0871 988 8367 with your credit card details, or order
online at our website, www.expressbookshop.com
Calls cost 10p per minute from a BT landline. UK postage free.
PRICE
5.99
EACH
Alphapuzzles:
Volumes 1,2,3 & 4
Small Crosswords:
Volumes 1,2,3,4,& 5
Crusader Crosswords:
Volumes 1,2,3,4 & 5
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 19
Britons told:
Steer clear of
Turkey riots
Young cannot
handle money
Fresh hope for
the bumblebee
Police re anti-disorder device against protesters near the PMs ofce in Istanbul
Picture: AP
EFFORTS to reintroduce an
extinct bumblebee to Britain is to
get a boost with new queens being
released into the wild.
Scientists from the Natural
England project have collected
short-haired bees from Sweden and
are releasing them at the RSPBs
nature reserve at Dungeness, Kent.
Many of the bees released last
year struggled in the cold and wet
summer.
Project manager Dr Nikki
Gammans said: Bumblebees are
an intrinsic part of the British
countryside, but some species are
disappearing before our eyes.
YOUNG people are entering adult
life with dangerous gaps in their
ability to handle money.
Almost half (42 per cent) are
unable to tell the difference
between being in credit or being
overdrawn on a bank statement
and 13 per cent did not even know
what an overdraft was, says a study
by Barclays and the charity
Personal Finance Education Group.
The ndings mark the start of My
Money Week in UK schools. Tracey
Bleakley, of the charity, said the
ndings underline the need for
schools to teach the skills pupils
need to manage their money well.
9pN`cc>Xek BRITISH tourists have been warned
to stay away from the anti-govern-
ment violence sweeping Turkey.
More than 90 protest rallies took
place on Friday and Saturday, with at
least 1,000 arrests and hundreds
injured in Istanbul and the capital,
Ankara.
The Islamist ruling party is being
accused of a brutal police crackdown,
with water cannon and tear gas
turned on the furious crowds.
One video shows a protester being
hit by an armoured police truck as it
charged a barricade.
Tour operators said worried UK
holidaymakers had been asking about
safety in the country, but bookings
were so far holding up.
Around 1.7 million British tourists
visit the traditionally secular Muslim
state each year, with most going to
southern coastal resorts over the
summer holidays.
Some 15,000 were thought to have
been in Turkey during the half-term
break last week, along with tens of
thousands of expats.
A spokesman for the Foreign Ofce
said there were no reports of Britons
being caught up in the mayhem, but
added: We advise British nationals to
avoid all demonstrations.
Its advice currently warns Britons
against all but essential travel
to areas bordering volatile Syria, Iraq,
and Iran.
On Saturday, BBC reporter
Shaimaa Khalil wrote on Twitter: So
rst day of holiday in #Istanbul didnt
go as expected!
She included a photograph
showing two buses that had been
spray-painted and had their windows
smashed.
The unrest, the worst Turkey has
seen for several years, began last week
in response to unpopular plans to
build a shopping mall and mosque on
the site of a public park in Istanbuls
Taksim Square.
It has since developed into anger at
the way Islamist Prime Minister
Tayyip Erdogans Justice and
Development Party is meddling with
everyday life. Recent rulings include
restrictions on where women can
have a caesarean to banning steward-
esses on the state-owned airline from
wearing brightly coloured lipstick.
Mr Erdogan has vowed to press
ahead with the development, and
labelled protesters looters.
9ffb`e^j
Neostar
35mm Film
and Slides to
SD Scanner
Exclusive
Online
Offer
June
3rd - 10th
Offer ends 10am Monday 10th June
www.shop.express.co.uk
visit us
now
PLUS FREE
1 GB SD CARD
SAVE 40
NOW 59
.99
FREE p&p
WAS 99.99
Transfer 35mm lm and
slides direct to SD card
without a PC
Preview and edit images
on large 2.4 LCD screen
Playback images saved
on SD card on a digital
photo frame, PC or have
them printed

Prof. A. H. Beckett
OBE, PhD, DSc
(1920-2010)
Professor Emeritus,
University of London
Originally developed with
From Boots, Superdrug,
Holland & Barrett, Lloyds,
supermarkets, heal th stores
chemists, & menopace. com
Vi tami n suppl ements may benef i t those wi th
nutritionally inadequate diets. Professor Beckett is
not cited in the capacity of a health professional, but as
a product inventor and former Chairman of Vitabiotics.
Many thousands
of women have
d i s c o v e r e d
Menopace
comprehensi ve
nutritional support.
Specially formulated by
exper ts, i t i s i deal
whether or not you are
on HRT and can be taken
for as long as required.
THIS IS NOT HRT
MENOPAUSE
FORMULA
Voted No.1
for the
menopause
in Boots
2012 Awards
MENOPAUSE?
/lmx
20 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
By 8eeXGlbXj
K?<GIF=LDF8==8
It had it all sex, glamour, spies and high
society but what became oI the characters at
the heart oI the scandal that rocked Britain?
=
IFTY years ago tomorrow
the then Secretary of State
for War, Jack Profumo,
returned from a holiday in
Italy and sat down to write
a letter that would change
not only his life but the future of
the country. Writing to the Prime
Minister, Harold Macmillan, Pro-
fumo admitted lying to Parlia-
ment about his extramarital
involvement with a 19-year-old
model and showgirl named
Christine Keeler who was also
sleeping with Yevgeni Ivanov,
naval attach at the Soviet
embassy and a spy.
Rumours about their affair had
been circulating for months but
in March 1963, Labour MP George
Wigg repeated them in the Com-
mons, claiming it was an issue of
national security. On March 22,
1963, Profumo assured Parlia-
ment that there was no impro-
priety whatsoever in their rela-
tionship and threatened to sue
anyone who said otherwise.
In fact the Cabinet minister
and the party girl had begun a
sexual affair after meeting at a
party at Cliveden, Lord Astors
Buckinghamshire estate in July
1961. Keeler was staying there
with Stephen Ward, an osteopath
with many society clients who
rented a cottage on the Cliveden
estate. Profumo watched her
emerge naked from the swim-
ming pool and the die was cast.
The affair lasted for only a few
weeks before Profumo was
warned off by MI5. But he might
still have got away with it had
Keeler not also been the lover of
Johnny Edgecombe, a West
Indian-born drug-dealer, drifter
and sometime pimp. When Keeler
ended their three-month affair
just before Christmas 1962, Edge-
combe followed her to Stephen
Wards at and started shooting
at the front door lock. The
incident gave the press the excuse
they were looking for to delve into
the rumours linking Keeler the
good-time girl to Profumo the
government minister.
Ten weeks after that denial
Profumo admitted the truth. His
resignation on June 5, 1963,
unleashed the biggest political
scandal of the 20th century. The
fall-out ended his career, drove
Stephen Ward to suicide and has-
tened the fall of the Macmillan
regime ushering in Harold Wil-
sons Labour government.
History took a different turn.
But what happened to the main
players in this drama afterwards?
AF?EGIF=LDF
The 5th Baron Profumo, known
to all as Jack, was an old Harro-
vian who was decorated both by
Britain and the US for his war
service in Italy and in the Nor-
mandy landings. He was 25 when
he was rst elected to Parliament
in 1940 while serving in the Army
and 48 when the scandal broke .
Shortly after his resignation
Profumo started working as a
volunteer cleaning toilets at
Toynbee Hall, a charity in Lon-
dons East End. He remained
there for the rest of his life even-
tually becoming the charitys
chief fundraiser , chairman and
ultimately president.
Although he withdrew from
public life Profumo was still very
well-connected. Among the
friends who did
not desert him
were Alec
Douglas-Home
(Macmi l l an s
successor at
D o w n i n g
Street), Ran-
dolph Churchill
(son of Sir Win-
ston) and the
Queen Mother
who telephoned him after his res-
ignation to say, So far as I was
concerned you were an ideal min-
ister, and invited him regularly
to Clarence House.
In 1975 he was awarded the
CBE for charity work. Further
proof of his rehabilitation came in
1995 at Margaret Thatchers 70th
birthday party where he was
seated next to the Queen.
Jack Profumo died on March 9,
2006, after a stroke, aged 91. He
never referred publicly to the
scandal but spoke of it shortly
before his death to his son David.
I felt I couldnt tell the truth at
that stage. I thought it was all
going to go away from me in a
while. He bore no malice towards
those who deserted him. I dont
blame them. I had behaved
shamefully and they thought I
was a bloody s***.

JK<G?<EN8I;
The catalyst to it all, Ward was the
extraordinarily well-connected
osteopath who hosted the
Cliveden pool party on July 8,
1961, where he introduced Chris-
tine Keeler to Jack Profumo and
to the Soviet spy Yevgeni Ivanov.
As well as counting Churchill,
Ava Gardner and Gandhi among
his patients, he was also friends
PALACE OF PASSION: Cliveden estate was where the Profumo affair began
OVER 50s HOME INSURANCE
RIAS is a trading name of Ageas 50 Limited. Ageas 50 Limited registered ofce: Deansleigh House,
Deansleigh Road, Bournemouth, Dorset BH7 7DU. Registered number: 1324965. Registered in England
and Wales. Authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. Insurance provided by Ageas
50 Limited is not available in the Channel Islands.
*50.7% of new RIAS customers who took out a
combined buildings and contents policy between
01.10.12 and 31.12.12 paid less than 168.
Half of new RIAS
customers paid less!*
Over 50? Call RIAS to check
your buildings and contents
insurance premiums now!
If youre paying more than
168* per year, RIAS could
insure you for less thats
because we specialise in
providing insurance to
people over 50.
Call our UK-based advisors
for a quote now!
l 1,000,000 buildings cover
and 50,000 contents cover
as standard.
l RIAS Home Insurance has
been awarded a 5 Star Rating
by Defaqto for its comprehensive
level of cover.
Paying more than
168?
*
RING RIAS FREE
0800 183 0867
Lines are open 8.30am-8pm Mon-Fri & 8.30am-4pm Sat
www.rias.co.uk
Quoting ref TA1237
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 21
8@I,'P<8IJFE
with Prince Philip
and Roger Hollis,
the head of MI5,
for wh om Ward
was working at
the time.
Although Chris-
tine Keeler and
later Mandy Rice-
Davies lived with
Ward at his Wim-
pole Mews at their relationship
was never sexual rather Keeler
was the honeytrap for Ivanov.
On July 22, 1963, Ward went on
trial for pimping and living off
immoral earnings. On the penulti-
mate day he took an overdose of
sleeping pills. He was in a coma
when he was found guilty of living
off the immoral earnings of Keeler
and Rice-Davies and died three
days later on August 5, 1963, aged
50. In a suicide note he wrote: I
despaired of everything after I
heard the judges summing-up. My
case which rested almost entirely
on my word was hardly put at all.
AF?EEP<;><:FD9<
Edgecombe was sentenced to seven
years after the shooting at Wards
home and served ve. He always
insisted his conviction was racially
motivated. The British people
wouldnt wear a situation where a
minister was
sleeping with
the same chick
as a black guy.
He became a
jazz promoter,
ran a club and
worked as an
extra. He mar-
ried Danish au
pair Vibeke
Filtenborg and
had two daughters and another
daughter by Jane Jones. He died in
2010 aged 77.

M8C<I@<?F9JFE
A celebrated actress and beauty of
the Thirties and Forties Valerie
Hobson left her rst husband and
gave up her career to marry the
up-and-coming Tory politician Jack
Profumo in 1954 and though she
briey considered separation she
stood by him right
up to her death in
1998. She never
spoke publicly of
the scandal but
thereafter hated
having her photo-
graph taken.
The Profumos
moved from their
smart London
home to rural
Hertfordshire but according to their
son David, Valerie never relished
country living and missed the heady
social life of the pre-scandal days.
On their wedding anniversary in
1969 Valerie wrote to her husband:
Never once since I met you have I
been bored, never once have I not
wanted you. And never once even
for a moment have I not loved you
with all my heart.
Valerie died in November 1998
aged 81. It was the only time that
Jack Profumo wept in his sons
presence. On New Years Day 1999
David scattered her ashes over a
moor on their Scottish farm while
Jack now disabled by a stroke
raised a glass of champagne.
P<M><E@@M8EFM
The Cold War was at its height when
Ivanov was set the task of nding
out (via Profumos pillow talk with
Keeler, their mutual mistress) when
the US was
tr anspo r ti ng
nuclear mis-
siles to what
was then West
Germany.
However MI5
saw Ivanov as a
potential defec-
tor and told
Stephen Ward
to befriend him.
Ivanov was recalled to Moscow six
months before the scandal broke
whereupon his wife immediately
left him, the Kremlin all but washed
their hands of him and Ivanov sub-
sequently became a drunk.
Thirty years later in 1993 he had
dinner with Christine Keeler in
Moscow and apologised for his
behaviour, adding that many of his
KGB colleagues envied him. Ivanov
died in January 1994, aged 68.

CFI;8JKFI
A true scion of the Establishment
William, 3rd Viscount Astor, inher-
ited his title in 1952. His family
estate was the
stage for the Pro-
fumo Affair in
which he was
named as a lover
of Mandy Rice-
Davies. After the
scandal Astor ran
Cliveden and bred
racehorses. He
was married to
his third wife at
the time of Profumo. Astor died of
a heart attack in Nassau in the
Bahamas in March 1966. He was 58.
KEY PLAYERS:
Mandy Rice-Davies,
left, and the iconic
Christine Keeler
:?I@JK@E<B<<C<I
She left home two converted
railway carriages in a Berkshire
village at 17 after giving birth to a
premature baby boy who lived only
six days. Two years later she was
the most notorious woman in Britain.
It did her little good. After Profumo
the modelling work dried up and she
drifted through a string of dead-end
jobs. She was made to leave a job
as school dinner lady when the
head discovered who she was. She
shared the money she made from
selling her story with her mother but
they are now long estranged. She is
twice-divorced with a son from each
marriage but Jimmy, her eldest,
doesnt speak to her and she rarely
sees her younger son, Seymour,
who lives abroad.
Keeler reserves particular
loathing for her fellow party girl
Mandy Rice-Davies, calling
her vindictive, a nasty piece of
work, a true tart.
Now 71 Keelers luminous beauty
has faded, worn down by
emphysema. Four years ago she
moved to Wales but couldnt settle
and now lives in a London at she
has described as near derelict.
D8E;PI@:<$;8M@<J
Never has one woman made so much
capital out of four words. During the trial of
Stephen Ward, the prosecuting counsel
pointed out that Lord Astor had denied ever
meeting her, let alone sleeping with her.
He would, wouldnt he? replied
18-year-old Mandy. The phrase entered
the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations.
The daughter of a Welsh policeman she
was only a bit-part player in the Profumo
affair but unlike Keeler she knew how to
exploit her notoriety. After her court
performance she bought a mews house
with money paid to her by newspapers. She
was paid 150 a night to sing in a bar in
Munich which led to an even more lucrative
2,000-a-week contract. She was deported
from Turkey for singing Cole Porters Lets
Do It and then toured Spain, Australia,
Hong Kong, Singapore and British working
mens clubs. She was, however, banned
from New Zealand and was refused a visa
for Las Vegas.
In 1966 she married Israeli businessman
Rafael Shauli and opened several clubs
and a dress factory. They separated in 1971
but remained business partners. She went
on to write her autobiography and a novel .
Now 68 she lives comfortably in Virginia
Water, Surrey and says: My life has been
one long descent into respectability.
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
s
:

G
E
T
T
Y
;

N
O
B
L
E
/
D
R
A
P
E
R
;

R
E
X
;

S
T
U
A
R
T

M
A
S
O
N
;

P
A
22 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
Lifes a drag
for Bake-Off
star Paul after
marriage split
Paul Hollywood pictured with his wife Alexandra last year
Alone with his thoughts...Paul nips out for a smoke
Paul with Marcela on the US baking show. She says she has no plans of starting a new relationship
9pKXddp?l^_\j
GREAT British Bake-Off star
Paul Hollywood cuts a lonely
gure as he pops out for a
cigarette.
He has been kicked out of his
marital home after being roman-
tically linked to the attractive
co-presenter of the US version
of the hit cookery show.
But Marcela Valladolid, 34,
has now told friends that she is
concentrating on caring for her
young son rather than starting a
new relationship with Paul, 46.
The pair were reported to
have grown close during lming
of The American Baking Com-
petition but scenes broadcast
so far betray very little sign of
any on-screen chemistry.
Since news broke of the scan-
dal, the TV network behind the
show has received comments
calling him a dirty dog and
asking: Will Paul Hollywood be
sacked for breaking the heart of
his wife?
To add to his woes, the US
show has so far opped in the
ratings, attracting less than half
as many viewers as Gordon
Ramsays rival show Masterchef
when it was aired last week.
Critics described it as half-
baked and American viewers
complained they could not
understand Pauls Liverpudlian
accent.
One viewer, Stefanie Garfun-
kel from New York, said: I had
read all the stories about what
may or may not have happened,
and it was as if producers cut
any scene of them going any-
where close out of the nal ver-
sion.
They barely talked to one
another and most of the episode
was focused on the contestants.
They spent a lot of time individ-
ually talking to camera.
They actually lack on-screen
chemistry. Paul is the star and
Marcela a poor second.
Back in the UK, Paul was
kicked out of the 800,000 home
he shared with his wife of 15
years Alexandra, 49.
The couple met in 1994 in
Cyprus where she was working
as a scuba diving instructor and
he was teaching baking at a ve-
star hotel. In previous inter-
views he said he wooed her by
baking Danish pastries, saying
that her favourite had a cham-
pagne and orange lling.
Alexandra is currently on
holiday with the couples
11-year-old son Joshua. They
have gone to Cyprus, where she
and Paul also married in 1998.
At the weekend, she posted a
picture on Twitter of a large
plate of sh and tweeted: Got
my appetite back at last. A
friend said: Alex just needed to
get away from it all. Her split
with Paul came as such a
shock.
They seemed rock solid until
a few weeks ago.
Marcela has recently moved
out of the home she shared with
her former husband Fausto
Gallardo into an apartment in
San Diego in California.
A friend said: Its a fresh start
for Marcela as she begins a new
chapter in her life.
=cfgg\[
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
s
:

F
L
Y
N
E
T

a
n
d

D
A
V
I
D

F
I
S
H
E
R
/
R
E
X
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 23
Man, 83, crushed to death
by a runaway police van
UK shire
horses on
brink of
extinction
Pictures: BEN LACK
SHIRE horses are at
risk of dying out in
Britain, experts say.
They were once the
backbone of our
agriculture but
thousands were
killed in the First
World War and
tractors later
replaced many of the
remaining horses.
Now, there are just
a few thousand left in
the countryside.
David Ralley-
Davies, secretary of
The Shire Horse
Society, said: Its
shocking. They are
already on the
national risk register
and theres a real risk
that they could
become extinct.
Five centres are
being set up this
summer in Wales,
Wiltshire, Cheshire,
Sussex and
Cambridge in a bid
to protect the breed.
The revelation
comes ahead of a
shire horse race to be
held at Lingeld Park
racecourse in Surrey.
On June 15, eight
shires will take to the
track in Britains rst
professional race
over two furlongs.
9p:_i`jI`Z_\j
9pAf_e@e^_Xd
<em`ifed\ek<[`kfi
Scene of the police van tragedy, with Mr Bennetts walking sticks clearly visible, inset
N@E8J@C<EKE@>?K('''
:C8JJ@:GF:B<KD<DFIP9<;
Silentnight has teamed
up with the Daily
Express to give away a
1000 Classic Pocket
Memory bed to two lucky
readers, as part of its
With Our Compliments
campaign.
Part of Silentnights
best-selling Classics
collection, the 1000
Classic Pocket Memory
features Silentnights
advanced Mirapocket
spring system with
targeted zoned support
and a layer of body
moulding memory foam
for ultimate pressure
relief with no loss of
movement or
support.
All beds in the Classics
collection are available
in a choice of
upholstered divan base
fabric options and
coordinating
headboards.
For more information or
to nd your nearest
stockist visit www.
silentnight.co.uk.
Please Note: You cannot
enter the competition via
this website.
CALL 0911 719 0724 OR TEXT DXBED FOLLOWED BY YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS, NAME AND
ADDRESS TO 86660. Texts cost 2 plus your usual network rate. Calls cost 82p per minute from a
BT landline plus network extras and last 2.5 minutes. Calls from other networks and mobiles may
cost more. Or to enter via post send your details on a postcard to Luxury Bed , PO BOX 12581,
Sutton Coldeld B73 9BX One entry per postcard. SP: Spoke, London, W1B 2AG, Helpline 0870
010 8656.
Entrants must be 18 or over. Competition closes midnight 15.07.13 and three working days later for
postal entries. Winners will be selected at random from all valid entries. For full terms see express.
co.uk/campaigns/terms/7. The editors decision is nal. Maximum of 200 premium rate SMS per
promotion, per day. For SMS you may receive other related promotional offers/services: if you do
not wish to, send NSNOINFO at the end of your message. Express Newspapers/Northern & Shell
reserves the right to offer these promotions in its portfolio of titles. Prize is subject to availability.
Images are for representational use only.
?Xe[YiXb\
A MAN of 83 was crushed to death
by a runaway police van as he rested
on a park wall eating an ice cream.
Grandfather Donald Bennett,
who used walking sticks, could not
escape being struck by the two-ton
vehicle, which rolled down a slope
with no one inside.
The Independent Police Com-
plaints Commission is investigating
Saturdays tragedy in Leeds.
Last night Mr Bennetts family
gathered at his home nearby to
console his widow Marjorie, 83.
A family member said: It is all
very shocking and sad. We are
devastated.
He was a loving grandfather. The
matter is in the hands of the IPCC.
Retired joiner Mr Bennett had
been walking with the aid of two
sticks because of a recent
operation.
He had been driven to West Leeds
Country Park by his son.
Dog walker Barry Smith said: His
son had left Mr Bennett sitting on a
wall eating his ice cream while he
went ahead to watch bowls.
It was a lovely sunny day and the
area was packed, I just hope none of
the kiddies saw what happened.
The policeman and policewoman
in the van had been called to deal
with youths who had been causing
trouble and they parked at the top
of a slope near the parks gates.
Mr Smith said: Apparently, they
jumped out to go to speak to the
young lads who were being a
nuisance.
The van rolled forward and
crushed Mr Bennett to death.
He couldnt move, he needed two
walking sticks to get around because
he had just come out of hospital
after an operation.
Mr Bennetts walking sticks made
a tragic scene as they remained in
situ with the police van for several
hours on Saturday before accident
investigators allowed the cordon to
be lifted. They are investigating
whether the handbrake was
accidently left disengaged or whether
it had been faulty.
A West Yorkshire Police spokes-
man said: At 2:15pm on June 1, a
police van responded to reports of a
disturbance in Pudsey Park, Church
Lane in Pudsey.
The ofcers attending went into
the park and left their van to deal
with the incident.
The van subsequently rolled
forward and collided with an elderly
man walking in the park.
Paramedics were called to the
scene but the man died of his
injuries.
The matter was immediately
referred to the Independent Police
Complaints Commission.
Stone-pillared park gates mark
the entrance to the popular West
Leeds Country Park visitor centre.
The centre, in a stone barn,
attracts children with its aquarium,
rabbit warren and brown rat colony.
39.99
+ free
gold-plated
studs
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 Daily Express Offer EXLM839, PO Box 57, Diss, IP98 1HZ
2 0871 988 8300*
3 shop.express.co.uk/exlm839

Price P&P Qty Total


39.99 FREE**
Order total
reader
offer
EXLM839
If you prefer not to receive information and offers fromorganisations carefully selected by Express Newspapers, please tick here . Reg. London 141748 Express Newspapers,
The Northern&Shell Building, No. 10Lower Thames Street LondonEC3R6EN. PLEASEDONOTSENDCASH. Offer subject toavailability. Pleaseallowupto28daysfor delivery. If not
fully satised, returnwithin14days for full refund/replacement. Reg. London141748Express Newspapers, The Northern&Shell Building, No. 10Lower Thames Street LondonEC3R6EN.
*Calls cost 10p per minute from a BT landline plus network extras. **Prices refer to UK delivery, add 5.99 for overseas postage. Enquiries: 01296 641881
I enclose a cheque for
made payable to Express Newspapers Offer EXLM839.
Please write your name and address on the back of your cheque.
Or please debit my Visa
0
MasterCard
70
Amex
70
Maestro card
Card no Iss no (if Maestro)
Valid from Exp date
Mr Mrs Ms First name.... ........................................................................... Initials .................................
Surname . ............................................................... Address .....................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Postcode.................................................................. Daytime tel no ......................................................................................
Signature........................................................................................................................... Date ...................................................
.
Magnicent
Lapis Lazuli
With FREE
earrings
This stunning 18"
necklace features an
amazing 370 carats of
semi-precious lapis lazuli, known as
smooth, polished nuggets of deep blue Lapis Lazuli are interspersed with
gold-plated beads and nished with an easy to fasten T bar clasp to create
this opulent necklace. Exclusive to Anderson & Webb, team your necklace
with gold-plated ball studs, FREE with every order.
Lapis Lazuli Necklace + FREE ball studs
(LYN0721S)
/lmx
24 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
220 operations
a day cancelled
over A&E crisis
Gypsy rant councillor quits
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
s
:

S
P
L
A
S
H

N
E
W
S

A
N
D

X
P
O
S
U
R
E
P
H
O
T
O
S
.
C
O
M
=FI<@>EELIJ<JK8B@E>9I@K@J?AF9J
9p;Xm`[:_liZ_`cc
A TORY councillor responsible
for safety of travellers has resigned
after calling gypsies freeloaders
who turn the countryside into
a building site.
David Carr had been in the job
at Medway Council in Kent for
less than a week when he made
the inammatory comments.
The former Mayor of Medway
said he was against freeloaders,
adding: They move on and turn
it into a building site.
They **** all over the place,
they **** over the eld, they
throw rubbish all over the place.
Are they just people who sit in
a caravan and plant themselves
wherever they see t without
paying council tax and without
cleaning up after themselves?
Should one develop a nice
strategy for that? No.
They live on the fringe of that.
They take everything they can
get and give very little back so I
take a pretty hard line.
He was immediately suspended
as the councils cabinet member
for community safety before
stepping down at the weekend,
although he remains a councillor.
Joseph Jones, chairman of the
Gypsy Council, said: He should
hang his head in shame.
He has not one inkling of
what the gypsy culture is about.
Embarrassed council leader
Rodney Chambers said:
Councillor Carrs comments
were not acceptable and he now
appreciates this.
A TOP surgeon warned yester-
day that an unprecedented
crisis is looming as a record 220
operations a day are cancelled
with less than 24 hours notice.
A total of 19,968 elective, or
non-critical operations, were
called off in the rst three
months of 2013 up nearly 20
per cent on last year according
to gures from NHS England.
Yesterday Professor Norman
Williams, president of the Royal
College of Surgeons, blamed the
huge increases in numbers of
patients turning up at A&E.
The surge is feared to be
fuelled by the catastrophe of
the new NHS 111 out-of-hours
helpline, with patients going to
hospital emergency departments
because they cant get through.
He said the spike in visits is
having a knock-on effect and
forcing some hospitals to drop
the ball on elective surgery.
It means operating theatres
are being left idle because there
are not enough beds for
post-operative care.
Professor Williams said: The
fact that elective operations are
being cancelled for non-clinical
reasons is of deep concern.
The situation where patients
have to wait longer for their
treatment is highly stressful and
in some cases their condition
could deteriorate.
It is vital access to surgery
be provided at a time when
patients can benet most. The
current crisis in parts of the
country may be forcing some
hospitals to drop the ball on
elective surgery.
If this is the case, action
must be taken to tackle the det-
rimental effect of burgeoning
emergency care and sometimes
inappropriate admissions on
the whole hospital system.
Cancellations of urgent opera-
tions have also risen, more than
doubling under the Coalition,
from 172 a month in August 2010
to 401 in April.
But a Department of Health
spokesman said more surgery
than ever was carried out last
year, adding that the planned
roll-out of more community care
will reduce unnecessary A&E
visits and free up beds. Profes-
sor Williamss warning comes
after weeks of revelations about
irresponsible A&E visits.
One frantic mother took
her daughter to Whittington
Hospital, north London,
demanding doctors remove dog
mess from her shoe.
Shadow health secretary
Andy Burnham branded the
situation a crisis of the Govern-
ments own making and said:
The Health Secretary must act
without delay to ensure that
every hospital in England is
operating with safe stafng.
The Department of Health
said: We expect hospitals to
keep the number of cancelled
operations to a minimum.
Where this is unavoidable,
patients should receive treat-
ment as soon as possible.
WHEN the eyes of the world are upon you, you
must always look your best even if you are a
little weary from all this jet-setting.
So when little Harper Beckham yawned as
she embarked on yet another ight, mum
Victoria showed her how to put her hand over
her mouth...as any lady would do.
Looking adorable in a lemon yellow dress,
Harper, who turns two in July, was heading
home to London from Los Angeles with
brothers Brooklyn, 14, Romeo, 10 and Cruz,
eight, after a half-term break in the States.
Fashion designer Victoria looked glamorous
as usual, wearing a multi-coloured mini-skirt
that showed off her long, tanned legs.
BRITISH nurses are being
squeezed out as the NHS
recruits record numbers from
Spain and Portugal.
Funding to train 5,000 new
nurses here has been axed,
yet the number hired from
Iberia is up 14-fold since the
2010 election to 1,060 last
year, says the Nursing and
Midwifery Council.
Health Minister Anna
Soubry praised their work
but added: Their skills are
no help unless their language
ability is up to scratch.
Victoria shows off her long, tanned legs in a vivid
multi-coloured mini-skirt and tan wedge sandals
Weary Harper with Victoria at the weekend in LA
A\kj\kk`e^6@kjf_
jfYfi`e^Xci\X[p%%%
;\k\i`fiXk\
26 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
K_\ :iljX[\i =`^_k`e^]fipflii`^_kj By MAlSHA FROS1
Dc ycu have a ccnsumer prcbIem cr a taIe cf service that deserves appIause? The Crusader is here tc heIp. We can't prcmise a repIy but pIease write in with ycur fuII name and daytime
phcne number tc: 1he Crusader, Daily Lxpress, 0 Lower 1hames SLreeL, London LC3R 6LN cr emaiI us at crusaderexpress.co.uk Dcn't send criinaI dccuments ycu may need Iater.
Fc[\idfkfi`jkj[i`m\ef]]k_\ifX[
THE consequences for older driver
Bunty Hargreaves show how the
slightest change in a situation can
prompt an insurer to impose a
whole new set of conditions,
leaving customers very vulnerable.
Older drivers and higher
premiums are inextricably linked.
This underlines how vital getting
the right insurance is, the
importance of shopping around,
and the responsibility insurers
have to customers.
This is even more so amid
automated processing, where
once consumers get snarled in
a system complications multiply
while they remain in the dark.
Which? (www.which.co.uk/
money) features a handy list of
recommended providers with
maximum ages, several for the
over 80s or with no age limit.
Among its top picks are LV=,
Nationwide BS, Age UK, Toyota
Insurance, Mercedes-Benz,
Volkswagen Insurance and Marks
& Spencer Bank.
K?<I@>?KGFC@:P
F
NE DAY Bunty Hargreaves
was a careful lady driver
with a faultless no-claims
record, the next she was an
outcast, having been
stripped of her insurance
cover. She feared she would
be blacklisted by providers and
unable to use her new car.
The 86-year-olds life was turned
upside down when her premium
was axed for no apparent reason.
Bunty and her husband Brian,
also 86, live in the Lake District
and rely heavily on their cars, so
the shock action by insurer Asda
Money caused untold disruption.
It was when Bunty followed
correct procedure and informed
her insurer that she had traded in
her existing car for a similar-sized
Vauxhall hatchback that things
started to unravel.
As she was an existing Asda
Money customer, having paid a
320 annual premium four months
earlier, Bunty saw the procedure as
nothing more than a formality.
At most she imagined it might
cost her a bit more.
However, when she was directed
by Asda to put her details on its
website they were refused.
They said there was a techni-
cal problem and promised a quick
response, but none came, Bunty
explained.
Eventually they said I was over
the age threshold and not eligible.
I have been driving since 1961
and never made a claim yet, after
being told this, when I tried com-
parison websites for an alternative
insurer everyone rejected me.
As if that wasnt bad enough,
when Asda called back it informed
Bunty that as well as not covering
her car insurance there was no
guarantee her no-claims record
would be restored either. Incredi-
bly, she would also have to pay a
cancellation charge.
Feeling utterly frustrated by this
turn of events, Brian managed to
add his wife as a second driver on
his policy and asked at least for the
remaining 227 on their premium
to be refunded.
When they did not hear anything
they called Crusader.
We dont want anyone else to
get this treatment, said Brian.
My insurance came to the rescue
but if that happened to an older
person living alone they would be
in a terrible x.
Motor insurers are entitled to
rate risk according to age and to
change their criteria in a manner
they consider appropriate.
However, last year the industry
and government agreed rejected
customers should be sign-posted
to independent assistance that
could help them nd cover.
After further inquiries Asda
Money apologised for any distress.
Buntys change of vehicle
prompted a review, it explained,
and because of restrictions
imposed by our underwriter we are
unfortunately not able to insure
drivers over the age of 75. This is
currently being reviewed.
We should have done everything
in our power to ensure that we
could keep insuring Mrs Har-
greaves. In this case the usual pro-
cedures werent met and the
customer assumed they needed to
take out a new policy.
When Mrs Hargreaves let us
know shed taken out a new policy
this automatically triggered a can-
cellation fee. This should not have
happened.
Asda has now refunded 227 and
offered a 50 goodwill gesture.
STRANDED: Elderly motorists can nd it difcult to get car insurance
Picture: GETTY Posed by models
Relax at
Villa La
Canela,
Andalucia
N`e)'#'''f]AXd\jM`ccX?fc`[Xpj
Terms and conditions: Winners of the competition will be awarded one of the
following prizes provided by James Villa Holidays. 1. A giftcard for 2,500 to be used
against a James Villa holiday including villa, ights, car hire and travel insurance (if
applicable). Five giftcards available. Giftcards: If the total holiday chosen exceeds the
voucher value then the winner must pay the difference. No refund will be given if the
holiday chosen comes to under the giftcard value. All ights must be purchased for all
travelling passengers through James Villa Holidays. Villa and ights are subject to
availability. Giftcards must be used by December 30, 2013 with the holiday departing
by December 31, 2013. All spending money must be provided by winner. No purchase
necessary to enter. Prize draw is open to UK residents aged 21 and over, except
employees of James Villa Holidays, subsidiaries of Wyndham Worldwide Corporation,
Daily Express or anyone professionally associated with the competition. The prize is
non-refundable, non-transferable, has no cash alternative and no cancellation value
once booked. The winner must be a named passenger on the booking. The prize can
be used in conjunction with any other offer. Single-sex group bookings on selected
villas are not accepted. The competition booking is totally subject to standard James
Villa Holidays booking conditions: www.jamesvillas.co.uk/information/bookinginfo.cfm
These terms and conditions are correct at time of being published but may be subject
to change without notice. For foreign travel, the winners passport and the winners
companions passports must be valid for travel for a minimum of six (6) months after
the date of departure from the UK. Each winner and their companions are responsible
for obtaining any other necessary travel documentation, authorisation, immunisations
and visas. The prize does not include any other travel or other expenses including
meals, drinks, additional excursions, attractions, treatments, car hire, personal
expenses, visas and vaccinations. You are requested to understand that the prizes are
provided by James Villa Holidays and that you and your companions are required to
contract directly with James Villa Holidays. You must further understand that Express
Newspapers does not control and is not responsible for any aspect of the operation of
the prizes or their quality and you hold Express Newspapers harmless for any claims
you may have relating to the prizes.
HOW TO ENTER
Call 0911 719 0806 or text
DXVILLA followed by your
email address, name, and
address to 86660.
Texts cost 2 plus your usual
network rate.
Calls cost 82p per minute
from a BT landline plus
network extras and last
2.5 minutes. Calls from other
networks and mobiles may
cost more.
To enter by post send
your details on a postcard to
DX Villa, PO BOX 12581,
Sutton Coldeld B73
9BX. One entry per postcard.
SP: Spoke, London W1B
2AG. Helpline: 0870 010 8656.
Entrants must be 18 or over. Competition
closes midnight tonight and 3 working
days later for postal entries. Winners
selected at random from all valid entries.
Editors decision is nal. Maximum of
200 premium rate SMS per promotion,
per day. Full T&Cs: www.express.co.uk/
campaigns/terms/7. SP: Spoke, London
W1B 2AG. Helpline: 0870 010 8656. By
responding to promotions, offers and
competitions you agree that the Daily
Express may contact you by post, SMS
and/or email with offers, goods or
services of possible interest to you. To
stop receiving SMS messages text NS
NOINFO to originating number. Express
Newspapers/Northern & Shell reserves
the right to offer these promotions in its
portfolio of titles. Prizes are subject to
availability. Images for representational
use only.
:FEK@EL<J
KF;8P
CONTINUING in todays Daily Express
and running until Thursday, June 6, we
have 20,000 of villa getaways with
James Villa Holidays to be won.
James Villa Holidays is the UKs leading
villa holiday specialist, with over 2,500
villas with private pools in some fantastic
locations off the beaten track, in the
heart of the action, traditional character
properties and chic, contemporary villas...
you can be sure there is something
for everyone.
Today two lucky winners will win a
2,500 giftcard that can be used against
a James Villa holiday including villa,
ights, car hire and travel insurance.
Choose from over 50 destinations
across the Mediterranean, as well as
Florida, Egypt and beyond with some
destinations seeing sunshine the whole
year round.
James Villa Holidays has been
handpicking villas for almost 30 years
and has the experience, enthusiaism
and expertise in creating amazing villa
holidays for all the family, groups of
friends and couples alike.
Discover the benets and freedom of
a villa holiday, dining al fresco with dad
getting the barbecue on the go and kids
splashing around in their own private pool
while mum relaxes on a lounger.
Or take a stroll to one of the local
beaches or towns and enjoy the best the
destinations have to offer.
Every James Villa holiday also benets
from ABTA and ATOL bonding meaning
that you are nancially protected
KNF)#,''?FC@;8PJKF9<NFE
N@K?K?<;8@CP<OGI<JJKF;8P
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 27
Nine dead in new
tornado mayhem
Scenes of
devastation
yesterday
with an
aircraft in a
wall and,
left, the
wreck of
the car
carrying a
mother and
baby who
died eeing
Oklahoma
City
9pKXddp?l^_\j
NINE people were conrmed
dead yesterday after the latest
killer storm raged through
Oklahomas Tornado Alley.
A man and three children
under the age of ve are said
to be still missing.
The dead included a mother
and baby who were sucked from
their car as they tried to ee for
their lives on one of the main
interstate highways west of
Oklahoma City.
A second dead child, a four-
year-old boy, was pulled from the
Oklahoma River.
He was dragged into the water
when he and six of his family tried
to shelter in a drainage ditch.
A ve-month-old baby was also
in a critical condition last night
after being pulled from the river
with a woman. Another three
people died in Missouri.
The extreme weather struck
on Friday, just 11 days after 24
people were killed as a huge tor-
nado devastated the Oklahoma
City suburb of Moore on May 20.
Highway Patrol Trooper Betsy
Randolph said yesterday that
roads became congested on
Friday as families tried to ee.
They had no place to go and
thats always a bad thing.
Teaching assistant Terri Black,
51, said: My car was lifted off the
road, trees were leaning literally
to the ground, the rain was
coming down horizontally.
Mayor Mick Cornett admitted
more people than expected had
taken to the roads in this storm,
which was extremely dangerous.
He added: I think we are still a
little shaken by what happened
in Moore. We are still burying
children and victims, our
emotions are still strong.
Picture: BILL WAUGH / REUTERS
Reader Offer
Experts available: Monday Friday: 8amto 9pm, Saturday: 9amto 6.30pmand Sunday: 10amto 6.30pm
Call 0800 090 1291
Or text Deal Express to 81400 and well call you
www.express.co.uk/digital
In association with
THIS MONTHS TOP DEALS!
Fast, affordable broadband Cheap digital TV deals
Premium channels &
unlimited downloads
We are independent and our price checker is accredited by the regulator Ofcom
Our free switching support service takes the hassle out of switching we even arrange
your installation
Well search over 11,000 deals from the top UK providers and fnd the right one for you
Winner: Best Value Broadband
Service, Simplifydigital Customer
Choice Awards 2013
Winner: Best Value TV, Broadband
& Phone, Simplifydigital Customer
Choice Awards 2013
Winner: Best Superfast Broadband
Deal, Simplifydigital Customer
Choice Awards 2013
Ofers and pricing correct at 22nd March 2013. For full terms visit: www.simplifydigital.co.uk/terms. *20% of Simplifydigital customers received an average
saving of 278 per year. Data based on 2186 Simplifydigital records between 01 September 2012 31st December 2012. Standard SMS network charges apply. The
Simplifydigital 2013 Customer Choice Awards were voted for by Simplifydigital customers who switched providers in the past 12 months. For more information,
and to see all award winners, please visit http://www.simplifydigital.co.uk/customerchoiceawards2013
Want to save, but too busy?
Try our 60 second savings test. Its
so easy! Call free on 0800 090 1291
or text Deal Express to 81400
60
second
savings
test
A quick call could
save you 278 on
your TV, broadband
and phone bills
*
/lmx
28 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
As Matt 5mith says his time is
up as the Doctor, VIPCINIA
BLACKBUPN takes an aIIectionate
look at the sci adventure and
speculates on his successor
8
ND so farewell then Doctor
Who. Or should that be
au revoir? The immensely
talented Matt Smith has
announced he is leaving the
series after Novembers 50th
anniversary edition of the show and
the Christmas Day special but he will,
of course, be replaced as the Doctor
regenerates into his 12th incarnation.
Can it really be four years since he
stepped into the famous role?
Then again, time is relative for
Doctor Who although not for the
BBC, which has now started a fren-
zied search for Matts replacement.
Will the role go to John Hurt who
made a brief but enigmatic appear-
ance as The Doctor in the latest
episode? Or will it perhaps be a
member of an ethnic minority (Idris
Elbas name is in the frame) or a
woman such as Helen Mirren?
A new Doctor Who has every bit as
much impact on the public imagina-
tion as a new James Bond on which
note Sir Roger Moore has expressed
the desire to play a Who villain. The
names Who. Dr Who. It has quite a
ring to it, does it not?
All in all the pub-
licity surrounding
Matts decision to
step down and the
speculation over his
successor are signs of
quite how important
a cultural phenome-
non Doctor Who has
become. Its some-
thing the shows
original producers
could never have
imagined when they
came up with the
idea of the last of the
Time Lords travel-
ling through the uni-
verse in the Tardis
(which as all fans
know stands for Time
And Relative Dimen-
sion In Space).
It may look on the
outside like an old-fangled police box
but is innitely huge on the inside
and like a cat takes time to decide
whether or not she likes you. She also
has a mind of her own and yes, the
Tardis, to date the Doctors most
enduring travelling companion, is
quite denitely a she.
Like so many of the truly great
dramas on British television and
radio, Doctor Who started life as an
educational venture when the then
BBC head of drama, a Canadian
named Sydney Newman, decided to
make a family programme using time
travel to highlight scientic ideas and
great moments in history.
In this he was aided by head of the
script department Donald Wilson,
writers CE Webber and Anthony
Coburn, story editor David Whitaker
and producer Verity Lambert, the
team responsible for getting the show
on air. The Tardis was originally to
change shape with each location, for
example, becoming a sarcophagus in
Ancient Egypt, until everyone real-
ised that the budget couldnt stretch
that far and that her chameleon
circuit would have to malfunction
and remain a telephone box.
The rst episode, An Unearthly
Child, starring William Hartnell as the
Doctor accompanied by his grand-
daughter Susan Foreman (Carole
Ann Ford, the rst of a vast array of
changing assistants) went out at
5.15pm on November 23, 1963, but it
wasnt a success. For a start there
had been a major power failure
throughout parts of the country and
worse still, the previous day US Presi-
dent John F Kennedy had been assas-
sinated, somewhat overshadowing
the launch of a new show.
It was rebroadcast the following
week before the next episode but it
wasnt until a month later that it
really began to take off.
Writer Terry Nation had been
engaged to contribute but while he
took on board the sci- angle, he
didnt quite understand the educa-
tional remit and instead wrote a series
of episodes called The Daleks, about
a mutant race surviving on radiation
after a nuclear war. The powers that
be were horried and didnt want to
run it but there was nothing else in
the can and so they were forced to.
The rest is history.
William Hartnell was a popular
Doctor but three years on his health
was failing to an extent that it was
clear he couldnt carry on. By then,
however, Doctor Who was enormously
popular so the shows producers came
up with an ingenious idea: given that
he was an alien time traveller why
shouldnt he have powers denied to
the rest of us and be
able to regenerate?
Step forward Patrick
Troughton, the sec-
ond Doctor, in a plot
device that has been
utilised to this day.
After him came
many more Doctors
including Jon Pert-
wee, Peter Davison
and Colin Baker.
While everyone has
their own opinion
about which is the
best, the most popu-
lar (at least until
David Tennant) was
the fourth Doctor,
the highly eccentric
Tom Baker.
With seven years at
the helm (1974 to
1981) he remains the
longest serving Doctor and for a time
the storylines grew darker (remember
the stone hand that moved on its
own?). The writers had been inu-
enced by the Hammer horror lms so
much so that orders were given from
on high to tone it down.
However by the end of the Eighties
Doctor Who seemed to have run its
course and so Sylvester McCoy
became the seventh and, for a time,
last Doctor, with a show that went out
on the programmes 26th anniversary,
November 23, 1989.
K



HERE was a one-off TV lm in
1996 in which Paul McGann
became the eighth but while it
was a success, nothing more came of
it. And there matters would have
rested were it not for the prodigiously
gifted writer and producer Russell T
Davies who was also a lifelong fan of
the show.
By the turn of the century there had
been talk behind the scenes of regen-
erating the Doctor yet again and once
Davies was on board it became a
reality with Christopher Ecclestone
as the Doctor for one season only,
followed by the hugely popular David
Tennant and then Matt the young-
est Doctor to date when he took on
the role aged 26.
Some were concerned he wouldnt
have the gravitas to pull it off but his
slightly alien appearance combined
NAME IN THE FRAME: John Hurt
If you prefer not to receive information and offers from organisations carefully selected by Express Newspapers, please tick here . Reg. London 141748
Express Newspapers, The Northern & Shell Building, No. 10 Lower Thames Street London EC3R 6EN. PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH. Offer subject to
availability. Please allow up to 10 days for delivery. To UK addresses only. Please return within 7 days for full refund.
* Calls cost 10ppm from a BT landline plus network extras
buy one
get one free
19.95
inc p&p
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 Daily Express Offer FA3900, Belton Rd West, Loughborough, Leics LE11 5XL
2 0871 988 8400*
3 www.shop.express.co.uk/FA3900

reader
offer
FA3900
I enclose a cheque for made payable to Express Newspapers Offer FA3900. Please write your
name and address on the back of your cheque.
Or please debit my Visa MasterCard Maestro
Card no Iss no (Maestro only)
Valid fr Exp date Security code
Mr Mrs Ms First name ........................................................................... Initials................... Surname......................................
Address .....................................................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................
Postcode.............................................Daytime tel no...............................................................................................
Signature.......................................................................................... Date..................................
Code Price Size Qty Total
A154 19.95 Lacy Comfort Bra, buy one get one free
FA3900
Feminine lace design made from an ultra-light fabric
So comfortable you can even sleep in it
Wide, soft-touch shoulder straps and easy-hook
front fasteners
Fit beautifully from A-DD cup size
No need to select a cup size
Choose: Small (32-34);
36); Large (36-38);
(40-42); XXXL (42-44).
Made from 64 per cent cotton/36 per
cent Spandex mix. Machine washable.
Lacy Comfy Bra
The bra thats so comfortable you
forget youre wearing it.
Wide, soft touch straps
Easy front fastening
Nationwide Building Society acts as an Introducer to Liverpool Victoria Insurance Company Limited for Car insurance. Liverpool Victoria Insurance Company Limited and
Nationwide Building Society are authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. WS21333445
CAR INSURANCE
You can even guarantee this discount for the
lifetime of your policy (additional premiums apply)
And youll get a courtesy car even if your car is
written off or stolen (excludes third party only policies)
75% no claim
discount if you havent
claimed in 5 years
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 29
N_fje\okkfkXb\
Zfekifcf]k_\KXi[`j6
with huge charm did the
trick. Farewell indeed, Matt.
You will be much missed.
Viewing gures have been
falling slightly but there is no
question Doctor Who has a few
lives in him (or her) yet. But who
will Who be? All of the names men-
tioned at the start are contenders as
are Rupert Grint and Russell Tovey
but the likelihood is it will be some-
one different indeed Matt came
out of left eld.
What is certain though is that
the Daleks will continue to exter-
minate, the Tardis will in her feline
way make her opinions felt and
the Weeping Angels will go on
scaring the living daylights out
of us. And the Doctor will
regenerate once more.
TIMELY EXIT:
Matt Smith as
Doctor Who with
his assistant
Clara played by
Jenna-Louise
Coleman. Below,
a menacing
Dalek and
former Doctor
Tom Baker
;F:KFIN?F8E;K?<DFEJK<IJ
Doctor Whos monsters have become
almost as famous as the Time Lord
himself starting, of course, with the
Daleks, a mutant race that have taken
refuge inside giant tin cans with sink
plunger arms capable of exterminating.
In the early years the Daleks ambitions
to dominate the universe were severely
limited by their inability to climb stairs
but more recently they have, somewhat
sneakily, learned to y.
Equally menacing are the
Cybermen from Earths twin
planet Mondas who started
implanting articial parts into
their bodies and ended up as cold,
ruthless, emotionless machines.
Other monsters have included
Sensorites, Moroks, Silents, Headless
Monks and a particularly murderous race
of Snowmen. But perhaps the most
terrifying of all are the Weeping Angels,
statues who made their rst appearance in
2010s Blink, who can only move when
unobserved and feed on time energy by
sending their victims into the past.
They start as quiet gures of meditation
but come to resemble vampires. It was the
Weeping Angels who did for the Doctors
companions Amy and Rory.
Pictures: BBC; REX
30 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
51,000...the price
put on raising a
child to age of 18
PARENTS will spend more
than 51,000 on their child
until they reach 18, a study
revealed yesterday.
Researchers found clothes,
shoes, sports clubs, presents,
driving lessons and help with
buying a rst car set their
parents back 2,865 a year.
But it does not end there.
Those who go to university
will need 4,111 towards
fees and living costs during a
three-year degree.
Andy Oldham, managing
director at the UKs biggest
cashback website Quidco.
com, which commissioned
the study, said: Everyone
expects children to leave a
dent in your pocket, but its
staggering to actually see the
gures in front of you. You
always think about things
like clothes, school uniform
and sports clubs costing a
small fortune but there are so
many other things that mean
you have to open your
wallet.
Things like the petrol to
ferry your children around
and pocket money all leave a
hole in your bank balance.
The study of 2,000 parents
found the biggest chunk of
the 51,575 average total is
spent on sports clubs, groups
and after-school activities to
the tune of 843 a year.
School uniform and sports
kits add another 130 to the
annual total with a further
66 spent on accessories such
as belts and hats.
Going out with friends and
trips to the cinema or bowl-
ing alley set parents back
258 each year, while acting
as a taxi for their offspring
costs another 262.
New clothes and shoes
account for 251 each year
while buying toys, games,
books and DVDs adds 216.
Pocket money totals 189
annually with 154 spent on
gadgets like phones and MP3
players. Even haircuts mean
parents have to part with 47
a year. Other expenses
include 157 spent on Christ-
mas presents each year, along
with 117 on birthday gifts. A
birthday party then puts
another 83 on the total.
But the study shows little
difference between girls and
boys, with daughters costing
only about 50 more.
9p;XeKfne\e[
C\fjg`qqX
Xefepd`kp
SOME celebrities will go
to great lengths to avoid
being recognised. But
Leonardo DiCaprios
black mask is perhaps
the most bizarre.
Echoing his role in The
Man In The Iron Mask
from 1998, the star of The
Great Gatsby was
enjoying a stroll around
the streets of Venice,
famous for its masks.
DiCaprio, 38, recently
at the Cannes Film
Festival, even ate a slice
of pizza without giving
away his identity.
DiCaprio
eats in
his mask.
Below
right, the
star at
Cannes
Picture: LA PIRA / SPLASH AND PASCAL LE SEGRETAIN / GETTY
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 31
\ogi\jjpflij\c]>\kk_\c`]\pflnXek
M
a
k
e
-
u
p
:

B
A
R
E
M
I
N
E
R
A
L
S





C
l
o
t
h
e
s
:

D
E
B
E
N
H
A
M
S
JO HALLAM worried shed always
be overweight until she discovered
a way to think herself slimmer
Beauty consultant JO HALLAM, 41,
lives in Newark, Nottinghamshire,
with her children Kim, 21, Stacey,
18, and Joseph, 15.
I
DONT think there is a diet,
fat-busting exercise regime or
weight-loss pill I havent tried
in my bid to be slim. Before
having children I weighed
seven stone and was a dress
size six to eight. However, during
my rst pregnancy I ballooned and
after having my daughter Kim when
I was 20, I weighed 12st and was a
size 16 to 18, which was far too
much for my petite 4ft 11in frame.
Pregnancy triggered all kinds of
cravings for junk food Id never had
before and I found myself tucking
into stew and dumplings, crisps,
chocolate and cake.
It was a strange new feeling for
me to want to eat. As a teenager
I was extremely careful about my
diet. If my mum gave me chips for
dinner I would eat them but Id
make sure I only had a tiny portion.
Suddenly I couldnt stop eating
and this continued after I had my
second child Stacey. I ate anything
I fancied and if the children left any
food on their plates Id nibble on
that as well.
I also had an addiction to
Coca-Cola that began when I was
a child. I never liked the taste of
water so if I was thirsty I would
reach for a can. When I wasnt
eating much it didnt seem to
matter but on top of the vast
quantities of food, the Coca-Cola
was extra sugar and calories I
certainly didnt need.
After I had my son Joseph I was
diagnosed with an underactive
thyroid and it was at that point
I thought Id have to come to terms
with the fact Id be fat for ever.
I carried on eating and drinking
cola and I just thought Id be like
my mum, who was always quite big.
Then in 2004 I found out
Id have to have an
operation on my knees
to correct a birth
defect.
My knees werent in
line with the rest of the
bones in my legs and
I was in so much pain
I could hardly walk.
Prior to the operation
I was crawling up the
stairs to bed.
I had one operation
in January and a second
one in August to realign
my knees. I was in
hospital for four days
each time followed by
a six-week rest period
at home.
The extra weight
I was carrying meant
I was putting too much
pressure on my joints
and I decided I had to
do something.
Desperate to be slim,
I itted from one diet to
the next without ever
acknowledging that
what I really needed was
a commitment to a
whole new lifestyle.
I tried SlimFast,
swapping breakfast and lunch for
their shakes. I lost a stone over two
months but as soon as I came off
the diet I put all the weight back on
again plus some extra. Then I tried
calorie counting and not eating
more than 1,500 calories per day.
I lost seven pounds over six months
but again I put it back on as soon
as I stopped being careful.
I tried every diet I could nd over
20 years, yo-yoing
between 11st and 12st
and sizes 14 to 18.
Typically Id lose a bit
of weight but Id always
put it back on again
and often ended up
bigger than I had been
before I started.
I tried weight-loss
regimes by Rosemary
Conley, Atkins, Dukan,
WeightWatchers, the
cabbage soup diet and
everything in between.
Then in July 2010
I met the founder of
a company called
Thinking Slimmer who
said I needed to ditch
dieting and change
my attitude. I was
13st and a size 16.
I bought a Slimpod,
a voice recording that
claims to retune the
mind in just 10
minutes a day,
altering the way you
think about food.
I didnt believe it
would work but at
that stage there was
nothing to lose.
The Slimpod starts with relaxing
music before cognitive
hypnotherapist Trevor Silvester
starts talking, tuning into your
subconscious to retrain bad habits.
You are advised to listen every
day for 21 days at rst. I actually
listened to it every day for 12 weeks
and was amazed that something so
simple could have such a massive
impact on my life.
In that time I lost two-and-a-half
stone, shrinking to 10st and a size
12. Since then I have got down to
nine stone which Ive maintained
for two-and-a-half years through
sensible eating and lots of walking.
It was almost effortless. Id listen
to the recording for 10 minutes in
the evening and almost overnight I
had no urge to gorge myself on junk
food any more.
I took my children to Burger King
soon after I started the programme
but when I was in the queue I
suddenly thought, I dont want
this and I went to a cafe next door
and bought a salad and water for
myself instead.
It was phenomenal. I stopped
drinking Coca-Cola immediately
and havent touched it since.
I used to give it up for Lent and
Id have terrible headaches and
withdrawal symptoms each time.
Now I have no desire to drink it
at all.
Im also no longer tempted by
crisps and chocolate. I dont deny
myself anything because I dont
have to. I simply dont crave junk
food any more. My eating habits are
back to what they were when I was
a teenager and Ive never been
happier with my gure.
A Slimpod costs from 29.99.
For more information see www.
thinkingslimmer.com
Interview by
JOANNA DELLA-RAGIONE
I retrained
my brain
and shed
4 stone
SLIMPODS are CDs
and downloads that use
the latest scientic
research to create
changes in peoples
behaviour towards food
and exercise.
The aim is to help
people choose to eat less
and move more.
Thinking Slimmers
founder Sandra
Roycroft-Davis says:
Constant dieting
often leaves people
with horrendous
psychological effects,
manifesting in low
condence, obsession
with calories, binge
eating, deprivation
and generally feeling
out of control.
Slimpods reverse
these effects enabling
people to have a normal
relationship with food,
helping them to
experience lasting weight
loss and lifestyle changes
that make them look good
and feel body-condent.
WHAT IS A SLIMPOD?
MIND OVER
MATTER: With
recorded
advice Jo
learned how
to lose weight
and keep it off
Height: 4ft 11in
Weight before: 13st
Weight after: 9st
Dress size before: 16
Dress size after: 10/12
Total weight lost: 4st
32 Daily Express Mo
\ogi\jjpflij\c]
THE NEW BUN
Charles Worthington created a simple
yet contemporary look for the Erdem
spring/summer 2013 catwalk show.
The nape knot is a great festival
look but can be neatly styled for a
wedding too, says Marc Trinder, art
team director for the salons.
HOW TO: Add Charles Worthington
Front Row Mousse, 6.29 (beauty.
mysupermarket.co.uk) to dry hair.
Smooth frizzy hair with a paddle brush
and dry for a more polished look.
With the bun, x hair in a ponytail as
close to neck base as possible. Hold
with a band then massage Split Ends
Binder, 5.99 (charlesworthington.
com) in to the mid section and tips.
Twist the ponytail to resemble a
rope. Wrap once around the base of
the pony (securing with pins as you
go). Fold hair down from the top to the
bottom of the bun, then tuck ends
underneath and secure with more
pins. Apply a shine spray for sheen.
THE HIGH PONY
High ponytails were a key look at Jean
Paul Gaultiers spring/summer 2013
show and Kim Kardashian and Mariah
Carey have adopted the trend.
Top stylist Paul Edmonds says: This
is one of this seasons hottest styles,
especially when worn tousled with an
extra-low side parting.
HOW TO: Take the front section of hair,
from behind the fringe and pull back into
a loose ponytail. Add a gel or wax, such
as Shu Uemura Touch of Gloss, 22
(feelunique.com). Work into the hair and
brush upwards from the hairline and
secure with a band.
Backcomb the top and pull in the rest,
sides rst, trying not to smooth out too
much. Fix this to the rst section with
a second band. Pull into shape with a
tailcomb and cover the band with a
small section of hair from the ponytail
or a patent leather cover and spray.
COOL CURLS
Models on designer Phillip
Lims runway sported soft,
tumbling curls. The look was
created by Trevor Sorbies
team. He says: Embracing
your natural curls this summer
will give you a low maintenance
beach boho look and you will
be on-trend wherever you are.
HOW TO: For dened, natural
curls follow these golden rules.
Dont brush your hair after
conditioning. Instead use your
ngers to detangle and
separate curls.
Remove excess moisture by
gently squeezing hair with your
towel rather than rubbing it and
while hair is still damp apply
Trevor Sorbie Beautiful Curls
cream, 5.10 (boots.com)
evenly throughout the hair.
Twist around your nger for
denition before either drying
naturally or with a hair dryer
and diffuser attachment.
You can use curling tongs on
sections of hair once dry for
added denition. Apply serum
as a nishing touch for shine.
Six
style
sum
We asked cele
to give us t
looks for th
PLAYTODAY
*
T
o
p
p
r
iz
e
is
le
s
s
o
n
W
e
d
n
e
s
d
a
y
s
a
n
d
c
a
n
n
e
v
e
r
e
x
c
e
e
d
1
0
%
o
f
p
r
o
c
e
e
d
s
.
P
la
y
e
r
s
m
u
s
t
b
e
1
6
o
r
o
v
e
r
.
T
e
r
m
s
a
n
d
C
o
n
d
it
io
n
s
,
G
a
m
e
R
u
le
s
a
n
d
P
r
o
c
e
d
u
r
e
s
a
p
p
ly
.
T
h
e
H
e
a
lt
h
L
o
t
t
e
r
y
T
M
lo
g
o
is
a
r
e
g
is
t
e
r
e
d
t
r
a
d
e
m
a
r
k
o
f
T
h
e
H
e
a
lt
h
L
o
t
t
e
r
y
L
t
d
.
TheHealthLottery schememanages 51 society lotteries that operatein rotation andeachrepresents a different geographical region of Great Britain.
For moredetails on whichsociety lottery is runningeach week pleasevisit healthlottery.co.uk or ask your HealthLottery retailer.
NEW&IMPROVED!
In-store Mobile Online www.healthlottery.co.uk
WIN MORE
PRIZES
MATCH2+BONUSBALL.................... WIN 10
MATCH3 ...........................................WIN 20
MATCH3+BONUSBALL...................WIN 50
MATCH4 ....................................... WIN 250
MATCH4+BONUSBALL...... WIN 10,000
MATCH5 .................................................... WIN
NEW PRIZE STRUCTURE
100,000
*
UP
TO
nday June 3 2013 33
THE ANTI BLOW DRY
Burberry and Missoni
waved goodbye to winter
with loose kinks on the
spring/summer runway
creating the opposite effect
of a perfect blow dry.
Jonathan Soons, art
director at Headmasters,
says: Most popular in our
central London salons, this
is grunge but all grown up.
It is a sophisticated and
effortless look.
HOW TO: Spritz towel-dried
hair with LOral
Professionnel Tecni.Art Pli,
13 (lookfantastic.com).
Create a middle parting
and allow hair to drop either
side. When 100 per cent dry
use a medium tong to take
random sections of hair and
wind them around, away
from the face.
Run ngers through hair
to separate curls. Spritz
with LOral Professionnel
Playball Beach Fizz, 12.25
(lookfantastic.com) for an
effortlessly cool nish.
THE GATSBY BOB
Baz Luhrmanns lm The Great
Gatsby has inspired Twenties
ear-skimming bobs this season,
with Hollywood darlings Emily
Blunt and Drew Barrymore the
latest stars to go Gatsby.
Joel Gonalves at John Frieda
says: This resurfaces all the
time because it is a beautiful
crop. It lends itself to good bone
structure, ideally a heart-shaped
face, with strong cheekbones.
HOW TO: Create a deep side
parting above the arch of your
eyebrow. The hair should be cut
tight into the nape of the neck.
Always cut above the chin and
once cut, towel dry and nish
with a dryer. Add wax to keep
sleek. Joel uses John Frieda
Spun Gold Shape + Shine balm,
5.29 (boots.com). Curl ends
under or ick them out to suit.
e
.
r
d
n
HALO GLOW
Dip-dye and ombr colours
became popular during the past
12 months with celebrities from
Rihanna to Amanda Holden
working the trend.
Celebrity colourist Jo Hansford
says: This is the next step from
the extremely popular ombr look.
It is perfect for summer as it
creates gorgeous, naturally
graduated colour and gives the
effect of hair that has been
naturally lifted by the sun.
HOW TO: Lighten your own base
colour with an all-over tint to bring
out warm undertones.
The ombr effect is created by
colouring the ends with a shade a
touch lighter than the tint, creating
a soft transition from root to tip.
The top and front can be
highlighted in the same tone as
your ends for blended highlights
and the illusion of a halo.
top
es of
mmer
brity hairdressers
their ultimate
he new season
N\cfm\%%%E8LK@:8C?FD<N8I<

BRING a nostalgic
touch of the seaside
to your room and keep
trinkets in this beach hut
storage box, 18.95, by
Sleepyheads.
Stockist: 01332 862 440

THIS vibrant
handmade cotton
cushion from Hunkydory
Home, 25, will have
you dreaming about
sailing away.
Stockist: 0191 645 4004

KEEP your washing


shipshape until laundry
day with this stylish and
sturdy nautical-style bag,
8, from Matalan.
Stockist: 0845 330 3330

CONTEMPORARY
nautical stripes
make this ceramic
Laura Ashley jug,
22, a chic addition
to your summer
dining table.
Stockist: 0871 983 5999

TREAT yourself to a personalised


mug from The Letteroom, 8.95.
Choose a letter for one side and a
picture for the other. We went for this
cute A is for anchor print.
Stockist: notonthehighstreet.com
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
s
:

S
T
E
V
E

R
E
I
G
A
T
E
;

M
I
K
E

P
A
R
T
R
I
D
G
E
Come in
fromthe cold
5 Colors Premium Electronic Cigarettes are not intended to be a smoking cessation product. For information about how to quit smoking, or if you have
any concerns about electronic cigarettes, consult your GP. 5 Colors Premium Electronic Cigarettes are intended for use by existing smokers and are
not suitable for persons under the age of 18, women who are pregnant or nursing, or people with allergies to any components of inhalants. Each pack
contains 5 disposable, fruit avored cigarettes. KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN: Choking hazard. *One 5 color is equivalent to 20 tobacco cigarettes.
5 FLAVORS - APPLE GRAPE STRAWBERRY PEACH BLUEBERRY
WHY TRY
5 COLORS?
15 CHEAPER THAN
TOBACCO CIGARETTES
*
LEGAL INDOORS
ENJOY ANYWHERE
NOTAR, NOTOBACCO
LIGHT-UP DIAMONDTIP
TOTALLY DISPOSABLE
UP TO300 PUFFS
PER CIGARETTE
SOFT MOUTHPIECE FOR A
COMFORTABLE EXPERIENCE
To nd out more and buy, go to:
www.5colors.co.uk
18+
SCAN FOR WEBSITE
FREE
P&P
AS SEENON
TV
Only
19.99
per pack
of 5
34 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
JgXI\gfik
THE WEST BAY SPA, WEST BAY CLUB, ISLE OF WIGHT
THE West Bay Club is a
development of luxury holiday
cottages near Yarmouth on the
north-west corner of the Isle of
Wight. The spa is situated in the
Country Club, which features a
swimming pool, gym, full range
of exercise classes, tennis,
squash and badminton courts.
The place is perfect for families
with lots of activities for children
and teenagers. If you fancy a
break from the action then the
West Bay Spa has luxuriously
appointed treatment rooms,
a relaxation area, an outdoor
terrace where you can have
lunch, a sauna and steam room.
TREATMENTS AVAILABLE
This is an ESPA spa offering a
full range of treatments from the
holistic beauty company, from
therapeutic massages and body
treatments to facials.
There are also treatments for
men and mothers-to-be.
TREATMENTS TESTED
Aromatherapy Back Massage,
25 minutes, 32
The treatment started with my
therapist Deborah asking me to
smell a couple of different oils to
see which I preferred.
I chose a relaxing blend and
she tailored the treatment to
unknot my shoulders and back.
As she got to work I could feel
the tension melting away and
afterwards my shoulders felt
looser than they have done in
years. Denitely one of the most
relaxing massages Ive ever had.
Skin Brightener Facial,
55 minutes, 48
This rejuvenating facial was
designed for a dull, city-stressed
complexion. Its also good for
tired-looking skin and as the
mother of two small boys its safe
to say my face needed a boost.
After cleansing my skin
Deborah used a gentle exfoliator
before giving me a face and scalp
massage. A luxurious face mask
and nourishing moisturiser
completed the treatment,
leaving my skin radiant.
GOOD POINTS
The West Bay Club is a brilliant
place for a family holiday but if
you fancy time for yourself then
the spa is a little oasis of calm,
perfect for some me time.
The food is also fantastic and
Id highly recommend the spa
lunch. Be aware though that it
gets very busy during peak
season so book your treatments
well in advance.
WHAT DOES IT COST?
Treatments start at 12 for a
brow tint.
SPECIAL OFFERS
The Relaxation Time package
includes a 30-minute treatment,
use of the facilities and a spa
lunch, 49.50 per person.
MORE INFORMATION
For more details call 01983 760
355 or visit westbayclub.co.uk
MERNIE GILMORE
only
19.99
RRP 39.99
save 20
reader
offer
31003
Smooth in seconds and lasts
for weeks!
Remove hair from delicate
areas like underarms, upper
lip, cheeks and chin.
Removes hair from the root,
stops it from growing back for
weeks and encourages hair
depletion.
High-speed rotating head
ensures thorough removal
of even the shortest of hairs,
leaving a silky smooth nish.
Can also be used for
eyebrows, bikini line and legs.
Compact and cordless.
AAA batteries included.
Ladies Epilator
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 Daily Express Offer 31003, PO Box 87, Brecon, LD3 3BE
2 0871 911 7022*
3 shop.express.co.uk/D5714

If you prefer not to receive information and offers from organisations carefully selected by Express Newspapers, please tick here
. Reg. London 141748 Express Newspapers, The Northern & Shell Building, No. 10 Lower Thames Street London EC3R 6EN.
PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH. Offer subject to availability. Please allow up to 7 working days for delivery. Please note we do not
refund postage on unsuitable items or cancelled orders. If not happy for any reason we will accept faulty/unused goods in sealed
original packaging for refund or replacement within 10 days. PLEASE NOTE A SIGNATURE IS REQUIREDONDELIVERY.
*Calls cost 10p per minute froma BT landline plus network extras. Calls fromother networks and mobiles may cost more.
Code Qty Price P&P Total
Ladies Epilator D5714 19.99
3.95

AAA Batteries D1842 3.49
Total
Mr Mrs Ms Initials..............................Surname..................................
Address..................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................
Postcode.................................Daytime tel no ......................................................
Email ......................................................................................................................
I enclose a cheque for made payable to Express Newspapers
Offer 31003. Please write your name and address on the back of your cheque.
Or please debit my Visa MasterCard Maestro card
Card no
Iss no (if Maestro) Valid from Exp date
Security code
O
U
T
N
O
W
!
Giles Collection 2013
Enjoy more classics from
the great cartoonist
Celebrate the reputable wit and work of Carl
Giles with this brand newannual collection of
his best-loved cartoons fromthe Daily Express
and Sunday Express. Giles The Collection
2013, brings together over 150of his most
humorous and perceptive illustrations for
the rst time and is a must for Giles loyal
readers. Subjects include family life, transport,
politics and sporting moments and each
artwork is packed with humour and details
that characterises everyday life for many.
Comical, clever and compelling, this collection
of illustrations is guaranteed to leave readers
laughing and reminiscing for hours.
Order your copy now of the Giles Collection
2013 (7.99, UK postage free), please send
a cheque or postal order to Express Bookshop,
PO Box 200, Falmouth TR11 4WJ. Phone
0871 988 8367 with your credit card details,
or order online at our website.
www.expressbookshop.com
Calls cost 10p/minute from BT landlines.
WEST END
THEATRES
expresslistings
BOOK NOW!
10TH
ROCKING
YEAR!
LONDON PALLADIUM 0844 412 2957
***** 'MAGNIFICENT' S.Telegragh
A CHORUS LINE
Mon - Sat 7.45, Wed & Sat 3
achoruslinelondon.com
THEATRE ROYAL DRURY LANE
0844 858 8877
ROALD DAHL'S
CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
CHARLIEANDTHECHOCOLATEFACTORY.COM
PRINCE EDWARD 08444825152
JERSEY BOYS
Winner best Musical! Oliviers
Tue-Sat 7.30, Tue & Sat 3pm, Sun 5pm
ALDWYCH THEATRE
TOPHATONSTAGE.COM
QUEENS 0844 482 5160
THE MUSICAL PHENOMENON
LES MISRABLES
Eves 7.30, Mats Wed & Sat 2.30
www.LesMis.com
NOVELLO 0844 482 5115
ABBA-Solutely Fabulous D.Mail
MAMMA MIA!
Mon - Sat 7.45pm, Thurs and Sat 3pm
www.Mamma-Mia.com
CAMBRIDGE 0844 412 4652
Roald Dahl's
MATILDA THE MUSICAL
Tue 7, Wed - Sat 7.30, Wed & Sat 2.30, Sun 3
www.matildathemusical.com
PHOENIX THEATRE 0844 871 7629
The Musical Everyone's Falling For
Winner Of 8 Tony Awards
ONCE
***** 'Unmissable' D.Exp
oncemusical.co.uk
GARRICK0844 412 4662
ROCK OF AGES
PALACE THEATRE 0844 412 4656
SINGIN IN THE RAIN
singinintherain.co.uk
FINAL WEEK - ENDS SATURDAY
SHAKESPEARES GLOBE
020 7401 9919
Shakespearesglobe.com
CRITERION THEATRE 0844 847 2483
THE 39 STEPS
Mon - Sat 8pm, Wed 3pm, Sat 4pm
ADELPHI THEATRE 0844 579 0094
WINNER - Best New Musical
THE BODYGUARD
Mon - Thurs & Sat Eves 7.30pm
Fri 5pm & 8.30pm, Sat 3pm
www.thebodyguardmusical.com
PRINCE OF WALES 0844 482 5110
Winner of 9 Tony Awards
Including Best Musical
THE BOOK OF MORMON
www.bookofmormonlondon.com
NOL COWARD 0844 482 5141
From 8 June | Extra Tickets released
DANIEL RADCLIFFE IN
THE CRIPPLE OF INISHMAAN
www.michaelgrandagecomapny.com
LYCEUM 0844 871 3000
or book online www.thelionking.co.uk
Disney Presents
THE LION KING
Tue-Sat at 7.30pm, Wed, Sat & Sun 2.30
ST MARTINS 08444 991515
60th year of Agatha Christie's
THE MOUSETRAP
Evenings 7.30 Mats, Tues 3, Sat 4
www.the-mousetrap.co.uk
PICCADILLY THEATRE 0844 871 3055
VIVA FOREVER!
Based on the songs of the Spice Girls
Book by Jennifer Saunders
www.vivaforeverthemusical.com
DOMINION 0844 847 1775
WE WILL ROCK YOU
by QUEEN & BEN ELTON
Mon Sat 7.30, Mat Sat 2.30
Extra show last Wednesday of
every month at 2.30
www.wewillrockyou.co.uk
APOLLO VICTORIA 0844 847 1696
WICKED
WickedTheMusical.co.uk
HER MAJESTY'S 0844 412 2707
THE BRILLIANT ORIGINAL
THE PHANTOMOF
THE OPERA
Mon-Sat 7.30, Thurs & Sat 2.30
www.ThePhantomOfTheOpera.com
LYRIC THEATRE 0844 412 4661
THRILLER LIVE!
Tues Fri 7.30, Sat 4 & 8, Sun 3.30 & 7.30
flyingmusicboxoffice.com
ALDWYCH THEATRE 0844 847 1712
TOP HAT
WINNER! 3 OLIVIER AWARDS
Including 'Best New Musical'
Tue - Sat 7.30, Tue, Thur & Sat 2.30
www.tophatonstage.com
express
entertainment
TO
ADVERTISE
IN THIS
SECTION
PLEASE
CALL
0207
098 2710
HER MAJESTY S THEATRE
thephantomofheopera.com
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 35
\ogi\jjpflij\c]=Xj_`fe
P
i
c
t
u
r
e
:

G
E
T
T
Y
Stepping out
Accentuate your ankle with these strappy summer shoes
Compiled by: EMMA KNIVETON
Pictures: CAROLINE LEEMING
Amanda
Seyfried steps
out in the latest
style at a lm
premiere last
month
White shoes with double strap,
65, Ofce (08450 580 777)
Wedge, 150, Pied A Terre at
House of Fraser (020 7003 4000)
Orange snakeskin courts, 55,
Carvela at Isme (isme.com)
Wedge, 188, See by Chloe at
John Lewis (08456 049 049)
Round toe platforms, 140, Pied
A Terre at Dune (020 7258 3605)
Platform sandals, 22, F&F
at Tesco (0800 505 555)
Purple, blue and pink strappy
sandals, 40, Asos (asos.com)
Sandals, 105, KG By Kurt Geiger
at Littlewoods (littlewoods.com)
Perspex courts, 45, Fearne
Cotton at Very (08448 222 321)
Nautical wedges, 67, Ravel at
Littlewoods (littlewoods.com)
Navy and beige pointed ats,
69, Boden (0844 873 0000)
Peep toe beige stiletto, 65,
Schuh (0845 307 2484)
Lilac and beige heels, 25,
Linzi shoes (linzishoes.com)
Pink pointed court, 49, La
Redoute (0844 842 2222)
Coral and beige kitten heels,
25, Bhs (0844 411 6000)
Black courts, 55, Faith at
Debenhams (08445 616 161)
Over 2500 villas
across more than 50 destinations
jamesvillas.co.uk 0800 027 29 27
36 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
KF;8PJ8EJN<IJ19<>@EE<I4(*2@EK<ID<;@8K<4(.028;M8E:<;4)--%
K?<;8@CP<OGI<JJ*'$J<:FE;:?8CC<E><
><KK?<9I@CC@8EK<OGI<JJGLQQC<J8GGFEPFLIG?FE<KF;8P
Puzz|e none ano text serv|ces SP 1e|ecom
fxress |to w|B 2/C |e|||ne 0870 0|0 85

K<8J<I
8CG?8GLQQC<

8cg_Xglqqc\

LesLs your loqic and word power. Lach qrid number


represenLs a leLLer. Lvery leLLer ol Lhe alphabeL is used. Use Lhe qiven
leLLer or leLLers below Lhe main qrid Lo sLarL. Jfclk`fekfdfiifn%
;@==@:LCKP17/0, K8I><K122 mins, :CL<1l made breakdown ol communicaLion.
=I@;8PJJFCLK@FE18Zifjj1 Balance, Rool, Whole, Lsquire, SLaid, KiLh,
Livery, FixaLe, More, Salad, Muezzin, ldioL, Cusp, CymnasL.
;fne1 Swivel, Mimic, ALom, Overseas, AperLure (clue), CreLin, JaunLy,
LibaLion, Oriqinal, Vies, Fresh, LnLiLy.
8
9
:
;
<
=
>
?
@
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
'( * '' '' (, ( ', '& / (& - ()
(( ', ' () - / ('
/ (, ( (* '* (( () '& (, () '. ',
', - '' ', / (( ()
', () '- ', - '- () (' ' / () ((
/ , '. ') ''
(& / '/ ( * ', (, / '' ', / ((
- / '+ (, /
'- * + / + () '+ (, - (, / ''
() (( (' (( / () (,
+ (( () (& () . (' (' ( * '' /
() '. ) - - '' '-
(' - ', (( / '- ( '. (+ / '- ',
2 3 ^ 5 6 7 8 9 0 2
=
3
^ 5 6 7
:
8 9 20 2 22 23 2^ 25 26
EXTRA LETTER CLUES: '0'.(/(),-/ (Hear up Lo six LxLra LeLLers,
deducL Lwo minuLes lor each clue leLLer heard) /|ternat|ve|y, for s|x extra
|etter c|ues o|rect to your moo||e, text ;O8CG?8 to /,'//% 1exts cost | |us
norma| network oerator rate. FULL 5CLUTICN: '0'.(/(),-,,
ACPC55 CNLY: 0907 !S! 256!, DCWN CNLY: 0907 !S! 2562.
Ca||s cost 77 er m|nute from B1 |ano||nes |us network extras.
Ctner networks ano moo||es may vary.
New /|nauzz|e Books, vo|s | 4 (uo||sneo oy |am|yn Cctous) cost 5.99 eacn,
U| ostae free. far||er vo|umes (2||) ava||ao|e, .99 eacn. Seno cneque or osta|
oroer to fxress Booksno, PC Box 200, la|moutn, Cornwa|| 1P|| 4wJ, or ca||
0|872 52 3|0 w|tn your creo|t caro numoer or oroer at www.exressoooksno.com
/|nauzz|e20|3 /corn fo|tor|a| |to /|| /|nauzz|eworos aear |n Cnamoers ||ct|onary
ACR0SS
1 Person's ranqe ol
inlormaLion (9)
7 Overseas (6)
9 Close Lo (^)
10 ChrisLmas hymn (5)
12 Church recess (^)
13 1ake Lurns (9)
14 Bellow (^)
16 Beqinninq (5)
1B CounLry road (^)
19 Move unsLeadily (6)
20 NoLices and remembers (9)
D0WN
1 Marsupial (8)
2 Spoken, verbal (^)
3 Lmployee in an
orqanisaLion (6)
4 1ears |aqqedly (9)
5 Do noL resusciLaLe
(abbr.) (3)
6 PhanLoms (6)
B Spies planLed in advance (8)
11 No bled (anaq.) (6)
12 1ype ol ornamenLal
chain (6)
15 RomanLic appoinLmenL (^)
17 Droop (3)
T0crder ycur ccpycf thenewSmaII Crcsswcrdsbcck
VcIumes1-6(pubIishedbyHamIyn0ctcpus) at 5.99each,
pIeasesendachequecr P0madepayabIetcTheExpress
BcckshcptcSmaII Crcsswcrds, P0Bcx200, FaImcuthTR11
4WJ, caII theExpressBcckshcpcn01B72562310, cr crder
cnIineat www.expressbcckshcp.ccmUKDeIiveryisfree.
JD8CC:IFJJNFI;
=I@;8PJJFCLK@FE
8:IFJJ ! 5tuttered, 7 Aura, S Drone,
!0 Top, !! Ending, !3 Cuarantee, !4 Assess,
!6 Ava, !S Punny, !9 Luge, 20 Dutybound.
;FNE! 5aIeguard, 2 Turn up, 3 Taxi,
4 Era, 5 Potates, 6 Depressed, S Dynasty,
9 Adamant, !2 Design, !5 5olo, !7 Any.
For today's solution
call: '0'.(/(),/)
Ca||s cost 77 er m|nute froma B1 |ano||ne |us
network extras. Ctner networks anomoo||es may vary.
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8
9 10
11 12
13
14 15
16 17 18
19
20
K8I><K
N C B
A C C
I T D
H0W many wcrds cf fcur Ietters
cr mcre can ycu make frcm the
Ietters shcwn here? In making a
word, each letter may be used
once only. Each must contain the
centre letter and there must be
at least one nineletter word. No
plurals or verb Iorms ending in "s".
KF;8PJK8I><K
>ff[ !6, m\ip^ff[ 24, \oZ\cc\ek
32 (or more). Jfclk`fekfdfiifn%
J8KLI;8PJJFCLK@FE
glop golly goop goopy igloo
logo loll lollop lolly loop loopy
oily FC@>FGFCP olio ology
oology ploy pogo polio poll polo
poly pool yogi
The Target
uses
words in
the main
body oI
Chambers
2!st
Century
Dictionary
(!999
edition)
Call '0'.(/(),/, Ior
today's Target solution
Ca||s cost 77 er m|nute fromB1 |ano||nes |us
network extras. Ctner networks ano moo||es may vary.
:ILJ8;<IGI@Q<:IFJJNFI;
ACR0SS
1 CeL upseL abouL Lee cookinq
planL (6)
4 NoLes lisL is noL invincible (8)
10 SLop aL Lhe chorus (7)
11 Lose consciousness Lo
qualily (^,3)
12 Scheme involves one
aviaLor (5)
13 l'd cancel plan Lo lollow one
loreiqner (9)
14 1ill around Lree loq (^,8)
1B Hosiery business loses
Cerman qoods (5,2,5)
23 LnvironmenLalisL somehow
qeLs oil lirm included (9)
24 ConlronLed lellow experL
on Lhe day (5)
25 MosL apL manoeuvre lor a
supporLer ol sailinq (7)
26 Company ouLside plays new
music (7)
27 Score disasLer wiLh sample
ol loundaLion qarmenLs (8)
2B One chap brinqs anoLher
back home (6)
D0WN
1 Shell vehicle aL speed (8)
2 Lonq senLence, noL quiLe as
drab (8)
3 CriLicise Sunday dinner (5)
5 Verbalise usinq special
delivery (7)
6 Will leL oll sLeam in
shelLer (9)
7 Fair Lo blend mixLure wiLh
oxyqen (6)
B 1empL hospiLal deparLmenL
wiLh diamonds (6)
9 CorrecLinq iniLially missinq
conclusion (6)
15 MoLivaLion Lo share beer (9)
16 Vessel ol impudence and
rubbish (8)
17 ALLracLive qirl has deep
Lrouble qeLLinq
documenL (^,^)
19 CrediL LriLe varieLy ol
animal (7)
20 Undamaqed durinq
diplomacy (6)
21 Busy chap qeLs cauqhL in
charqe (6)
22 Policeman in his elemenL (6)
24 Fleas lly? NoL Lrue (5)
C8JKK?LIJ;8PJJFCLK@FE
8:IFJJ1 Backpedal, 6 Acne, 0 Droop,
NocLurnal, 2 OaLmeal, 3 Fillinq, ^ 1rench
warlare, 7 DirecL currenL, 2 Prairie,
22 LeaLher, 2^ AmounLinq, 25 1each, 26 Nerd,
27 1heorised.
;FNE1 BadmouLh, 2 CrolL, 3 Peppercorn
renL, ^ Danelaw, 5 Luciler, 7 CenLipede,
8 Luloqy, 9 Nuclear reacLor, 5 Lndeavour,
6 SLarched, 8 ChemisL, 9 Coloqne, 20 Sprain,
23 Heads.
?<I<JPFLI:?8E:<KFN@E8E8D8Q@E>('':8J?GI@Q< Complete today's crossword
correctly and send your grid to: Crusader Crossword, June 3, PC Box !257S, 5utton ColdIield B73 9BT.
fntr|es must oe ostmarkeo June 4 at tne |atest. 1ne w|nner w||| oe tne f|rst correct entry orawn after tne c|os|n oate of June |0.
N
@E
('':8J?
NAME
ADDPE55
PC5TCCDE
The Crusader Crcsswcrds VcIs 3 & 5, (pubIished by HamIyn 0ctcpus, February 2010) are avaiIabIe
ncw at 5.99 each. Tc crder ycur ccpy, caII The Express Bcckshcp cn 01B72 562 310, send a cheque
made payabIe tc The Express Bcckshcp tc: Crusader Crcsswcrds, P0 Bcx 200, FaImcuth TR11 4WJ cr
crder cnIine at www.expressbcckshcp.ccm PuzzIe phcne and text services: SP TeIeccm Express Ltd,
W1B 2AC. HeIpIine: 0B70 010 B656.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9
10 11
12 13
14 15
16 17
18 19 20
21 22
23 24
25 26
27 28
K?<8CG?89<8K<I

K8I><KK@D<132 minuLes
AlLernaLively, lor six LxLra LeLLer clues Lo your mobile, LexL ;O9<8K to /,'//% 1exLs cosL E plus your usual operaLor raLe
2 3 ^ 5 6 7 8 9 0 2

2 22 23 2^

25 26
F
27 28 29 30 3 32 33
^ 5 6 7 8 9 20
3^ 35 36 37 38
D
39 ^0
H
CAN you crack the
Alphabeater? Each grid
number represents a letter
or black square. As in
Alphapuzzle, every letter oI
the alphabet is used. But
you have to complete the
grid tooI Use the given
letters and black squares
below the grid to start. The
grid is 'rotationally
symmetrical' in other
words, it looks the same iI
you turn the page upside
down. Jfclk`fekfdfiifn%
Extra letter clues
'0'.(/(),-'
(DeducL Lhree minuLes lor
each exLra clue leLLer heard)
Full solution
'0'.(/(),,/
JXkli[Xpjjfclk`fe
9cXZbjhlXi\j1 3, 7, ,
5, 7, 9, 20, 2^, 27, 28,
32, 33, 35, 39. 8Zifjj1
BiLLer, Oranqe, Joylul,
Scabies, Amaze, ShalL,
Oddly, Servers, PlianL,
Clique, Relive.
;fne1 Py|amas, Shock,
Buys, Anorexic, ResLed,
1old, Her, Scams, Row,
Opal, FacLor, Ln|oined,
Wake, Verbs, ZyqoLic.
Ca||s cost 77 er m|nute
from B1 |ano||nes |us network
extras Ctner networks ano
moo||es may vary.
8
9
:
;
<
=
>
?
@
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
/
'+
.
)/
('
'(
)(
'*
*
'&
(&
'.
'-
)*
+
),
)-
).
.
),
(+
(.
)*
(/
).
(*
)(
*
',
'*
)'
*
+
)/
(+
''
'*
(/
'+
)(
')
',
(&
-
)*
)-
))
-
))
)&
))
'*
''
).
).
(,
)*
,
')
)&
(,
)*
''
)-
),
),
'+
)+
).
)/
),
-
(.
'-
'&
)&
'*
(&
'-
('
(-
*&
'&
)*
)(
).
)-
)
(*
((
'+
(+
'(
(&
((
'+
'.
'*
)-
(+
'
/
*
'
)(
)-
)*
''
.
()
(&
)-
'&
),
'/
),
).
)/
)*
'-
).
')
(.
)*
)'
*
(+
),
-
(/
-
(-
'(
'
'(
)&
(
-
,
)/
(.
'+
)*
)
(/
)
),
'/
')
(-
(*
),
(
(-
)*
''
)+
),
*
)-
'(
(&
)*
()
+
)&
'&
(+
)/
mensateaser: Win a Pets Rock

cushion
For your chance to win, call: 0907 181 2718
Calls cost 77p per minute plus network extras and last 2.5 minutes. Lines close at midnight on Sunday, June 9.
For full T&Cs see www.express.co.uk/campaigns/terms/7. Helpdesk 0870010 8656 (national rate). SP: Spoke, W1B 2AG.
For more brain-teasing puzzles and information about Mensa membership visit www.mensa.org.uk
or telephone 01902 772771. Mensa does not accept hyphenated words, and uses the Oxford Dictionary
of English (Second Edition Revised) as its official reference.
Answer for Teaser 27/05/13: Pacino, De Niro, Spacey and
Cusack will be read when opposite sectors are paired.
Take one letter from each
sector to give a type of
songbird. Take another letter
from each sector to give a
game played with a bat and
ball. The remaining letters
will give a famous name in
pottery. What are the words?
T
D
R
W
S
D
R
E
O A
O
D
E R
D
E
O
U
T
N
S
W
R
G
Takkoda. All rights reserved.
Fancy cuddling up to a celebrity or your favourite pet? Well now you can do
both with a cushion from Pets Rock

by Takkoda. Stylish humour, washable


and super-soft, its a best in show winner. Available from www.takkoda.com.
8 : = B C K P F I
:IFJJ;FL9K
:XepfldXb\knfZfddfe]`m\$c\kk\i
nfi[j]ifdk_\e`e\c\kk\ij^`m\e#
lj`e^\XZ_c\kk\ifecpfeZ\6PflZXe
Ylkfecp`]fe\c\kk\i]\Xkli\j`eYfk_
nfi[j`ek_\jhlXi\jfek_\i`^_k%
K_\i\jXkc\Xjkfe\nXpkf[f`k#Xe[
pfl_Xm\kf_Xm\k_\i`^_kc\kk\iXkk_\
Zifjjfm\iYlkn_`Z_fe\`j`k6
KXi^\kk`d\j1Averaqe:
(/d`ej Cood: (+ d`ej
LxcellenL: ('d`ej
Friday's soluLion:
KI8DG(across)
I8K@F(down)
5ee iI you can Iind the answer within
our target time. II you need help, ring
our clueline below to Iind out the
crossover letter. Jfclk`fekfdfiifn%
S0LUT!0N
'0'(*)),-'.
Both today's words in a moment
STUCK? CALL F0R A CLUE
'0'(*)),-'(
Halve your Target TimeI
:XccjZfjk..gg\iZXcc]ifd9KcXe[c`e\jgclje\knfib\okiXj%
Fk_\ie\knfibjXe[dfY`c\jdXpmXip%
2
3 9
1
3 4 6
9
7
6 8
2
9 7
4
2 5
3
9
7
4
1 5
6
9
5 2
7
5
4 8 9
6
3 9
1
Fill the grid so that every column, row, and 3x3 square includes all oI the digits Irom one to nine.
YE5TEPDAY'5 5CLUTICN
1Coroer your coy of tne fxress
Suooku Puzz|es (w|tn over |00
uzz|es ano t|s) at 5.99 or tne
fxress Suooku C|PCHw|tn over
|,000 r|ntao|e uzz|es at 9.99,
|ease seno a cneque or PCmaoe
ayao|e to 1ne fxress Booksno to
Suooku Puzz|es, PCBox 200,
la|moutn 1P|| 4wJ , ca|| tne fxress
Booksno on 0|872 52 3|0, or oroer
on||ne at www.exressoooksno.com
U| |e||very |s free.
JL;FBL
KXi^\k1!6 mins C\m\c1Centle
Ca||s cost 77 er m|nute from B1 |ano||nes |us network extras.
Ctner networks ano moo||es may vary.
Extra clues: '0'(*)),-'0
Ca||s cost 77 er ca|| from B1 |ano||nes |us network extras.
Ctner networks ano moo||es may vary.
Today's solution: '0'.(/(),.*
4 1
9 5 3
8
6
2 7
7 5
1 6 8
9
2
3 4
8 3
4 2 7
5
9
6 1
8 6
5 7 9
2
3
1 4
2 1
3 4 6
8
5
9 7
4 9
2 1 8
3
7
5 6
3 5
7 6 2
1
4
9 8
1 9
4 8 3
7
6
5 2
7 2
1 9 5
6
8
3 4
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 37
PlII ln thls coupon and send lt to arrlve by Prlday, 4une 7,
wlth your soIutlon tot 0alIy Express, Prlze 0rossword Ro 479J,
P0 Box tZB7B, Sutton 0oIdfleId B78 9BT
NAME
ADDPE55
PC5TCCDE
9@>DFE;8P:IFJJNFI;
S0LUTI0RS
& WIRRER
=fiDfe[Xp,
May 20
(#'''N@EE<I1
Mr D Jackson,
Coole, L Yorks.
A0R0SS
t Most extreme or perIect example,
Latin, 'not more beyond' (2,4,5)
6 Capital oI Cman, on the CulI oI
Cman (6)
9 Fast slender dog descended Irom
English greyhounds (7)
t0 Constellation oI the southern
hemisphere containing 5irius, the
Dog 5tar (5,5)
tt Mild creamy Italian cheese
produced in small rindcovered
discs, 'beautiIul country' (3,5)
tZ '5o sinks the daystar in the ___ bed'
(John Milton 'Lycidas' (!63S) l. !6S) (5)
t8 Any predatory gulllike bird oI the
Iamily 5tercorariidae, known Ior
pursuing other birds to make them
disgorge caught Iish (4)
t6 Largest lake oI Europe, in NW
Pussia about 25 miles (40 km) east
oI 5t. Petersburg (6)
t9 Closelymown part oI a golI course
Iorming the main avenue between a
tee and a green (7)
Zt Meadow on the south bank oI the
Thames near Windsor where King John
acceded to Magna Carta in !2!5 (9)
ZZ Cubanborn American musician,
actor and television producer married
to Lucille Ball Irom !940 to !960 (4,5)
Z8 Manner oI uttering or enunciating
words and sounds, Irom Latin 'to say' (7)
Z4 Enzyme occurring in the gastric |uice
oI young mammals that causes milk
to coagulate, also called chymosin (6)
ZB Ninth letter oI the Hebrew
alphabet, between heth and yodh (4)
Z6 5mall Iawncoloured antelope oI the
AIrican savannah with long legs and, in
the male, ridged spikelike horns (5)
Z7 Abandonment or renunciation oI a
religious belieI, political principle etc. (S)
8Z Freshtasting red or (rarely) white
French wine Irom southern Burgundy,
best consumed young (!0)
88 5tate oI the western U5 on the
Canadian border, capital, Helena (7)
84 Pro|ecting discshaped rim or
collar on an ob|ect such as a pipe
or shaIt Ior strengthening it or
attaching it to another ob|ect (6)
8B 5tar oI the !977 Woody Allen Iilm
Annie Hall, Ior which she won a best
actress Cscar (5,6)
00WR
t Former (!99093, !99799) and
current prime minister oI Pakistan,
elected in May 20!3 (5,6)
Z 'The labour we delight in physics
___' (5hakespeare Macbeth (!606)
act 2 sc. 3) (4)
8 Brassica napus, cultivated Ior its
large edible yellowIleshed root (5)
4 Papid keyboard composition
designed to display a perIormer's
technique, Irom Italian, 'to touch' (7)
B Cenus oI Ilowering plants oI the
birch Iamily (Betulaceae) to which
the alder belongs (5)
6 Thick brown salty paste made Irom
Iermented soya beans and barley or
rice malt, used in Japanese cookery (4)
7 Court order authorizing entry to a
person's property to look Ior unlawIul
possessions (6,7)
B In astronomy, the angle between
a planet, the sun, and the planet's
previous perihelion (7)
t4 English playwright, works include
Absurd Person 5ingular (!972) and
Private Fears In Public Places (2004) (4,9)
tB The splitting oI an atomic nucleus,
with an associated release oI energy (7)
t7 CI or relating to a simpliIied Iorm
oI Egyptian hieroglyphics used by the
ordinary literate class outside the
priesthood Irom c.650 BC (7)
tB Cld Testament Hebrew |udge who led
the Israelites to victory over their Midianite
oppressors (Judges 6:!!S:35) (6)
t9 In classical architecture, the hori
zontal band between the architrave
and cornice oI an entablature, usually
decorated with sculpture (6)
Z0 Director oI the 20!3 Iilm The
Creat Catsby, starring Leonardo
DiCaprio and Carey Mulligan (3,S)
Z8 Cerald ___, English naturalist who
wrote the !956 memoir My Family
And Cther Animals (7)
Z4 Large arm oI the southern PaciIic
in Antarctica, between Victoria Land
and the Edward VII Peninsula (4,3)
ZB Long piece oI tartan cloth worn
over the shoulder as part oI 5cottish
Highland dress (5)
Z9 Any tall longlegged wading bird oI
the Iamily Ciconiidae, having a long
heavy bill and, typically, whiteand
black plumage (5)
80 Wooden crosspiece Iastened over
the necks oI two draught animals so
they can be worked as a team (4)
8t Principal monetary unit oI
Thailand, divided into !00 satang (4)
To order the Express Crossword
Dictionary at 6.99, send a cheque, payable
to Express Newspapers, to: Express
Bookshop, PO Box 200, Falmouth
TR11 4WJ, call 01872 562 310 with your
credit/debit card details or visit www.
expressbookshop.com (UK p&p free).
Other general knowledge crossword books
are available, please call for details.
Winners announced in the Express in a
fortnight. Spellings taken from Collins
English Dictionary, 21st Century Edition.
Alternative spellings accepted,
if they intersect with other answers.
Puzzle phone and text services
SP Telecom Express Ltd W1B 2AG
Helpline 0870 010 8656
N@E
(#'''

^
2
5
3
6
^
7
5
8
6
9
7
20
8
2
9
22
0
23

2^
2
25
3
26
STOP THE CLOCK
K?<>I<8K8CG?8GLQQC<

K@D<:?8CC<E><
:XccjZfjk..gg\id`elk\]ifd9KcXe[c`e\j
gclje\knfib\okiXj%Fk_\ie\knfibjXe[dfY`c\j
dXpmXip%C`e\jZcfj\)*1,0\m\ipJle[Xp%
8
9
:
;
<
=
>
?
@
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
'0'.(/()0'/
YCUP PIN No.

_ _ _ _ _ _
Jfclk`fee\okDfe[Xp%!00 Winner (May 20): Mr T Pobinson, Hull.
C8JKN<<BJJFCLK@FE8Zifjj1PasLa, PresenL,
Alike, SAUN1LR, New, Zone, AlLar, Decoy, Boxer, Abhor,
Silo, Caq, Mercury, Ocean, Liaison, DeLer. ;fne1Piazza,
Formal, Science, AorLa, Amen, Jodhpurs, Swan, Orqy,
LquaLion, Cold, LnLer, LvidenL, 1arqeL, Corner.
TACKLE the Alphapuzzle Challenge and be
in with a chance oI a !00 cash prize.
FIP5T, call the number below and make a note
oI today's CLUE LETTEP5 and your personal
PIN NUMBEP to set your personal stopwatch
running. Then, use the clue letters to work out
the sevenletter word in the shaded squares.
When you crack the mystery word, call again,
enter your Pin Number and 5TCP THE CLCCK.
Winner selected at random Irom all correct
entrants who beat the 25minute Target Time.
Each grid number represents a diIIerent letter.
All 26 letters oI the alphabet are used.
Can you beat today's time?
ZB
D@ELK<J
WIR Et00
, (' ( - (+ (* ) (' () '(
(' () () (( '& (' '/
'' '- ', '/ (+ '+ '' () '& '/ (' ()
() '- '. ', '' ''
'- (+ (* - (+ '+ '/ (* (+ '- () (+
(+ '& (+ () (&
* (' (* '' () '/ - ', / '& () (&
() ' ' (& (+
+ - '& '* (+ (, '& - '& ') (+ ()
', (& '& (' '& '&
' . '' '& - (' () '+ '& (, (' '-
'. '& ', ' '( ', (*
( - '& (& (& (+ () (& ', (+
D < O @ : 8 E ? 8 @ I C < J J
J E F < E @ < ?
: < I 9 < I L J ; < J ; < D F E 8
F @ = 9 I F @ I
I : L @ F K I F K K < I
J ? F 8 C J K < D K F @
< C < K < > F E E <
J G < E > C < I ; : < ; 8 I
< K 8 M 8 E Q @ F @
K K N < < ; 8 F J @
= C 8 D < 8 B @ E > J K F E
< @ D 8 I : I 8 I =
K J L ? 8 B < E 8 @ I 8
C 8 E J @ E > J 8 M 9 E
F F L ? I @ L K
: < 8 L J < J : L 8 ; ; L : K F I
B I K E ? 8 F P
D @ C C 8 I ; = @ C C D F I <
( ) * + , - . /
0 ('
(( ()
(* (+ (,
(- (. (/ (0
)'
)(
))
)* )+
),
)- ). )/ )0
*' *(
*) **
*+ *,
Call 0871 988 8331
to request
a brochure
To read more about this offer visit www.expriviera.co.uk
or for other exciting offers see www.expressholidayoffers.co.uk
Calls cost 10p p/min from a BT landline. Mobile and other providers costs may vary. Prices based on per person
sharing a twin room, single rooms available at a supplement, optional insurance extra. Holiday organised and is
subject to the booking conditions of Riviera Travel, New Manor, 328 Wetmore Road. Burton upon Trent, Staffs
DE14 1SP and is offered subject to availability. ABTA V4744 ATOL 3430 protected.
traveloffer
On this wonderfully varied tour we explore Lake Como, one of the most beautiful lakes in
the world, plus some stunning icons of northern Italy and Switzerland: the amazing Lakes of
Maggiore and Lugano, the majestic Alps surrounding St Moritz and a fantastic rail journey
on the Bernina Express; furthermore, Bellagio Italys most beautiful village and Bergamo,
one of its fnest medieval towns. Described by Wordsworth as a treasure the earth keeps to
itself and an inspiration for Verdi and Rossini, this enchanting region will captivate you.
Lake Como, St Moritz
& the Bernina Express
Selected departures July to October 2013
Price includes
Return ights from London Gatwick, London Heathrow, Birmingham, Bristol,
East Midlands, Edinburgh, London Luton, Leeds/Bradford, London Stansted,
Manchester or Dublin
Seven nights half-board, staying in four-star accommodation
Visit to St Moritz in the heart of the Swiss Alps
Travel on the Bernina Express, one of the worlds most spectacular railway journeys
Visits to Lake Maggiore and Lake Lugano
Guided tour of Bergamo, the loveliest medieval town in northern Italy
Lake cruise to stunning Bellagio, acknowledged as one of the most beautiful
villages in Italy
Private visit to the enchanting Villa del Balbianello and its memorable gardens
Services of an experienced tour manager
8 DAYS
HALF-BOARD
FROM ONLY
749pp
F
u
l
l
y
b
o
n
d
e
d
a
n
d
p
r
o
t
e
c
t
e
d
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 39
:8CM@E8E;?F99<J b||| Wottersor
;@C9<IK Scott Adors
=8@K?#?FG<8E;JL< ||so W||d
ILG<IK8E;K?<N@E;P;8PNo 1c
To pre-order the Rupert Annual for 2014 (No.78) (published August) at 7.99, call 0871 988
8370, send a cheque or POto The Ofcial Classic Rupert Bear Shop, POBox 200, Falmouth
TR11 4WJ or order online at www.classicrupertbearshop.com UK delivery is free.
The stranger hoists himself up on to
the grass. Little bear, do you really
think a big man like me can squeeze
into this passage youve told me
about? he asks. Oh yes, Rupert
sounds quite certain. Theres heaps
of room further down, only its pitch
dark. Dont worry about that,
laughs the man. Theres a powerful
torch in my case. You lead and
Ill follow. So Rupert disappears
into the hole and guides the other
round the rst awkward bend on to
rmer steps.
Express Newspapers 2013
Says Rupert, Theres more space below,
Ive been down there, thats why I know.
Calls Rupert, Just you follow me!
Theres lots of room, as you can see.
8C8EJK@GF=K?<;8P1:_\Zbc`c`\jXe[]i`k`ccXi`\j]fic`cpY\\kc\jXe[k_\`icXimX\%K_\X[lckjXi\
hlXik\i$f]$Xe$`eZ_cfe^#`eYi`cc`Xeki\[n`k_YcXZbc\^jXe[k_\cXimX\i\j\dYc\jdXcc_\Xgjf]n\k#
YcXZb`j_Y`i[[ifgg`e^j%@]j\\e#i\dfm\Yp_Xe[Xe[[\jkifpY\]fi\k_\p[\el[\k_\gcXekj%DXelXc
Zfekifc`jdfi\\]]\Zk`m\k_Xelj`e^g\jk`Z`[\j%
Celebrating today: musics Suzi Quatro, 63, and tennis player Rafael Nadal, 27.
Cfi`I\`[
FlikfgXjkifcf^\i
Youre busy but will nd more
creative pursuits and social pleasures to
enjoy. Fancy taking time off with the family
or are you expecting visitors? Your stars are
highlighting the joys of home right now. Call
me to hear when secrets come to light.
Imaginative work plans go the full
distance today. Your ability to take an idea
and imaginatively nd a way to turn it into
reality impresses those who matter. Dont let
down those whore banking on you. Call me
to hear when an error catches you out.
Venus, goddess of romance, opens
your heart and lls your soul with the joys of
spring. Could it be love? Youre taken up with
new creative interests and drawn to lovely
places far away. Call me to hear when to
double-check before you press send.
Its not what you say, its the way
that you say it. How true, especially when
you put your ideas over. Sweet reason will
have others eating out of your hand. Love?
Its a pure delight. Call me to hear when you
mustnt forget that important task.
Chats, talks, meetings? Spend time
on neighbourhood matters. Youll nd there
is a lighter note to your conversations with
people whore so much more understanding.
Perfect for establishing a rapport. Call me
to hear when a friend isnt telling the truth.
Thoughts of faraway places tickle
your taste buds. How about a holiday, long
weekend or midweek break? If you cant get
away, spend time with a friend. An interest is
growing so spread the net wider. Call me to
hear when someones spinning you a line.
Perhaps you cant get away from
it all. But given your social commitments,
time to yourself would be rather welcome.
So work from home, as a change is as good
as a rest. Call me to hear when someone
tries to pull the wool over your eyes.
You dont have to get your hands
dirty to boost your income. More your style
is the world of ideas and invention. Get your
nger on the pulse and others will jump on
board. Passion? Plan that hot date. Call me
to hear when you must be extra streetwise.
Buying and selling? Its a day for
commercial enterprise, negotiating fees and
discussing nances. Or you could try asking
the boss for a rise. Stick to your budget and
resist those impulse buys. Call me to hear
when to watch out for mistakes at work.
Business affairs, especially those
linked with domestic interests, fall under
favourable cosmic auspices. Play your cards
right and youll be quids in. Decorating? Use
that creative air of yours. Call me to hear
when you must dig beneath the surface.
Whether youre getting out and
about or others are making a friendly
approach, your world is opening out in a
delightful way. From today, more invitations
will be coming your way. Call me to hear
when a partners holding something back.
Venus, goddess of romance, good
fortune and happiness, is waving her wand.
Your home may be upside down, with people
coming through the door, but theres time for
love and a creative project. Call me to hear
when you mustnt miss that important detail.
8i`\jDXi)(8gi)'
KXlilj8gi)(DXp)(
>\d`e`DXp))Ale\)(
M`i^f8l^)+J\g)*
C`YiXJ\g)+FZk)*
JZfig`fFZk)+Efm))
JX^`kkXi`ljEfm)*;\Z)(
:XeZ\iAle\))Alcp)* :Xgi`Zfie;\Z))AXe)'
C\fAlcp)+8l^)* 8hlXi`ljAXe)(=\Y(0
G`jZ\j=\Y)'DXi)'
*Calls to the Starlines cost 77p per minute from a BT landline plus network extras.
Entertainment only. Content provider Telecom Express, helpline: 0870 010 8656.
To receive Daily Express Astro Texts for 50p plus standard
network charge per message per day, text DX followed by the
rst three letters of your star sign, eg DXGEM, to 83088. This is
a subscription service and will cost 50p plus standard network
charge per message per day until you send STOP to 83088
Loris
daily
texts
Calls cost 1.53 per minute from BT landlines. Costs from other networks and mobiles may vary. Each text message received costs 1.50.
You will receive two response messages per question. Total cost 3. Standard operator rates apply for all messages you send (plus standard network
charges). Calls are recorded for your protection. You must be 18 or over. Service available 8am - 1am, seven days a week. Available in UK only.
Customer service: 0845 270 8302 (9am - 5pm). This service is for entertainment only and regulated by PhonepayPlus.
Service provider: Spoke, W1B 2AG.
LORIS PSYCHICS!
Call or text my personally selected psychics for condential
one-to-one guidance and see what they can reveal to you
Call FREE and book your reading with our friendly advisers
Call 0800 063 1512
Medium line
0906 150 5802
For your weekly and monthly horoscope Call 0907 181 2948*
Enjoy your
consultation
Book your reading with
our friendly advisers
Call freephone
Psychic line
0906 150 5800
Live Tarot
0906 150 5803
Text a psychic - Text DXSDESTINY plus your question to 88004 (2 x 1.50 per message)
Or pay on your
phone bill...
For your weekly and monthly horoscope Call 0907 181 2948*
8]ffcgiff]i\Z`g\]fik_`jgfglcXi
[\jj\ikk_Xkj^lXiXek\\[kfglkXjd`c\feXep[`e\ij]XZ\%
;fekY\glkf]]Ypk_\`eZclj`fef]jfdlZ_jl^Xi%J\im\j)%
@E>I<;@<EKJ
l00r| r|||
(''dc[flYc\Zi\Xd
l teosoor vor|||o oste (or
seeds fror l sro|| vor|||o od)
*[\jj\ikjgffejf]
^iXelcXk\[jl^Xi
c es
*[\jj\ikjgffejf]
^iXelcXk\[jl^Xi
c dessertsoorsof roru|oted
suor, for to|r
D<K?F;
(|re|eot t|e over to lS0C/l10C
for/os c.
)|o|e custord |] |eot|r r|||,
creor, vor|||o ord t|e hrst |ot of
suor |r o souceor, W||s||r urt||
||erded. S|oW|] |r|r to t|e |o||.
*W|||e t|e custord |s |eot|r u,
|||t|] W||s| |ot| es ord t|e
ot|er orourt of suor |r o |oW|
urt|| sroot|.
+!o|e t|e r||| r|iture off t|e
|eot os soor os |t |o||s ord,
W||s||r o|| t|e t|re, odd to
t|e es.
,S|eve r|iture |rto o ju ord
our |rto rore||rs. ||oce |r o |o|r
ror|e ord coo| |r t|e over for
10 r|rutes. A||oW to coo|.
-!o eoc| rore||r W|t| o hot
dessertsoor of suor ord use o
||oW torc| to corore||se.
:cXjj`ZZi\d\Yilc\\
40 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
PICKUPYOURFREE
STAIRLIFT GUIDE
ANDGET THE FACTS
Co Connsi side derr al alll yo youurr op opti tion onss an andd le lear arnn wh whaatt to to lo look ok fo forr in in th this is
complete consumer guide to buying a stairlift.
AA pra practi ctical cal sol soluti utioonn for for any anyon onee fac faced ed wit withh mob mobil ility ity dif difcu culti lties es, aa sta stairl irlif iftt is is aa cos cost e t-eff ffect ective ive
way of staying in the home you know and love. Just like any other home appliance, stairlifts
were invented to make your life easier, but this also means that theres a vast array of
different types to choose from. With the handy guide from Acorn Stairlifts, youll learn
everything you need to know.
CALL NOWFOR YOUR FREE STAIRLIFT GUIDE ON
FREEPHONE 0800 422 0673
Name
Address
Postcode
Telephone Number
Alternatively, simply ll out the return slip below, pop it in an envelope and send
it free of charge to: FREEPOST ACORN STAIRLIFTS for your free guide.
5266/Express/0113
ALL YOUR STAIRLIFT
QUESTIONS ANSWERED
WHEN CAN A STAIRLIFT HELP?
SHOULD I BUY NEWOR SECOND-HAND?
SHOULD I RENT OR BUY?
HOWDO I FIND A REPUTABLE COMPANY?
WHAT TYPE OF STAIRLIFT WILL SUIT MY HOME?
WHAT FEATURES SHOULD I LOOK FOR WHEN
BUYING A STAIRLIFT?
YOUR
GUIDETO
BUYINGASTAIRLIFT
HOWASTAIRLIFTCAN
IMPROVEYOURLIFEIN
AFEWEASYSTEPS
2
0
1
3
E
D
IT
IO
N
MOBILITY
StannahStairlifts
Freephone08009160373
local call out
Terms andconditions apply.
MASSIVE CLEARANCE NOWON
ELITE Mobility 0800 169 5910
LARGE P/ EX DISCOUNTS
0800 111 6234
exp@mobilityhire.com
www.mobilityhire.com
Avaliable to hire
long or short term
The only UK bathing
company commended by
the Arthritis Foundation
Can be fitted in one day
Our lowest price
guaranteed
Call for a FREE brochure
0800 280 0282
Please quote ref DX250S
Make bathing a
pleasure again
with Premier Care
M0BILITY
EVERY M0R0AY & SATUR0AY IR.
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 41
k\c\m`j`fe\ogi\jj
=dllZWj\\ZYi]ZCVo^h
;@;PFLBEFN6PXc\Le`m\ij`kp[ifgflkFc`m\iJkfe\
Zfdgc\k\[Xkflif][lkp`eM`\keXdn`k_k_\LJ8idp#
n`ee`e^k_\9ifeq\JkXi]fimXcfliXe[k_\Gligc\?\Xik%
K_\l\ek=i\eZ_jg\Xb\i`jXk_i\\$k`d\FjZXin`ee\i%
G@:BJF=K?<;8P
I
HE present is exciting if
youre interested in the
past. As more and more
secrecy orders expire
theres more to discover
about the secret side of
the Second World War.
SPYING ON HITLERS ARMY:
THE SECRET RECORDINGS
(Sunday, C4) offered one of the
strangest caches of information
yet, although the top-secret
operation it talked about was a
pretty simple affair.
People tend to relax when theyve
been caught. They talk, they share
and they confess, especially if they
think no ones listening.
Applying this very simple logic to
German prisoners of war, our secret
services mined an astonishing
wealth of information about the
Nazi regime, its atrocities and the
assorted forces threatening to pull
it apart.
Key to the operation was the
conversion of a stately home into a
country hotel. Pampered in soft
beds, with nice grub and laid-on
entertainment, German ofcers
were led to believe they were simply
going to sit out the war.
They didnt realise there were
listening devices everywhere and
that the aristocratic welfare ofcer
looking after their every need was
really an employee of British
Military Intelligence Unit MI-19.
Coddled and bamboozled, bored
ofcers bickered over their loyalty
to Hitler. With a need to get
something off their chests, others
spoke freely of the mass slaughters
theyd witnessed and engaged in.
Transcribing their conversations
was a team of native German
speakers, many of them Jewish
migrs with family still inside the
crumbling insanity that was the
Third Reich. The conversations
they captured gave this programme
an undeniable edge.
Normally the presence of actors
and scripted dialogue in a
documentary is a bad sign. In this
case the enacted scenes brought
real moments and people to life and
in doing so made us realise how
uncomfortably close we all are to
the evil of that time.
These ofcers werent pantomime
baddies or mythical demons. They
were simply humans. The fact that
none of them was convicted on the
basis of the recordings added an
extra edge to our discomfort.
The intelligence service said that
revealing its methods in open court
might compromise future
operations. Fair point perhaps but
theres also the matter of postwar
Germany to consider. If wed
imprisoned or executed everyone
with any knowledge of running a
country, thered have been no one
left to run the place. So people with
blood on their hands were set free.
There was no bloodshed in
AUSTRALIA WITH SIMON
REEVE (Sunday, BBC2), although
at times our presenter looked as if
he feared it. All credit to Reeve for
not just having a licence fee-funded
holiday Down Under. Hes often to
be found in the nastier corners of
the continent, as last night when he
tackled the criminalised biker
gangs of the eastern seaboard.
Granted a rare audience with the
Finks biker gang, Reeve paled as he
was met at the clubhouse by a
series of huge, bald and tattooed
bruisers in leather waistcoats.
Maybe the Finks arent quite
what people think, though. They
argued with eloquence against the
governments decision to label
them a criminal association and
they even drank bottled water but
the sight that knocked Reeve off
his stride was not a machine gun
on the wall or an amphetamine
laboratory but the Finks bikini-
clad girlfriends in a spa bath.
DXkk9Xpc`j
fek_\
n\\b\e[j
KM
IfpXckp1 !|e |eo|e's Cororot|or W|t|
ov|1 |r||e|], 7r, bbCl
:i`d\1 W|] |1 Oscor ||stor|us K|||
Our ou|ter 7r, C|orre| S
JZ`\eZ\1 |oo1 UrWroe1, 8.10r, C4
:lii\ekX]]X`ij1 Woo|W|c|, bostor
& !|e NeW !error, 8r, C4
K\Z_efcf^p1 !|e Co1et S|oW, 8r, C|orre| S
David Dimbleby revisits the 1953
coronation through those who
participated and celebrated at the time.
From the Fleet Street photographer keen
to make a name for himself to the Sussex
brewery that, 60 years on, is remaking its
potent coronation brew, this is not just the
story of the Queen and her courtiers but
also of the people who joined together to
mark a momentous day. For Dimbleby, a
teenager at the time, its also a personal
story. His father Richard presented the
TV broadcast from Westminster Abbey
on June 2, 1953, when nearly half the
population gathered around TV sets to
watch a spectacular event, once the
preserve of the aristocracy. Using
newly discovered lm, Dimbleby (left)
recalls his own memories of the event.
In this world exclusive, the parents
of South African model, paralegal
and murder victim Reeva
Steenkamp give their only in-depth
television interview. Barry and
June Steenkamp talk movingly of
the 29-year-old daughter they lost
when she was shot dead by her
boyfriend, Olympic and Paralympic
athlete Oscar Pistorius, on
Valentines Day this year. They
reveal how the loss of the young
woman they fondly call their baby
has destroyed their lives.
Featured are photographs and
letters and, in a chilling portent of
her own death, Reevas own
paintings depicting a gunman, an
angel and a stairway to heaven.
On April 15, three people died
when two bombs exploded at
the nish line of the Boston
Marathon. Just over a month
later, 25-year-old
Drummer Lee Rigby
(right) was killed on
a street near his
barracks in Woolwich,
south-east London.
In this documentary
Matt Frei asks
searching questions
about what led to the
two sets of atrocities
and investigates
whether they mark
a new chapter in
the Wests battle
against terrorism.
Theres a new face as a fresh series of this popular show
begins and its one that fans of afternoon telly might well
recognise: Countdowns Rachel Riley. Fan favourite Jon
Bentley is back as chief gadget tester, teaming up with
Jason Bradbury and Pollyanna Woodward once more,
but Riley (above) is sure to draw new fans to one of
Channel 5s most consistently attractive programmes.
Jimmy Doherty joins Kate Quilton and Matt Tebbutt for the second run of
the science series that lifts the lid on what is in our favourite foods. In a
chicken-processing factory in the Ukraine, Quilton (above) learns how
many birds end up in a single chicken Kiev and discovers how leftover
carcasses are turned into an unlikely product. Meanwhile Tebbutt asks
how supermarkets can sell English summer apples in winter.
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 Daily Express Offer FDE8438, Euro House,
Cremers Road, Sittingbourne, Kent, ME10 3US
2 0871 988 8305*
3 www.shop.express.co.uk/i-gg-kneestrap

I enclose a cheque for made payable to Express Newspapers Offer FDE8438.


Please write your name and address on the back of your cheque.
Or please debit my Visa
0
MasterCard Maestro card
Card no Iss no (if Maestro)
Valid from Exp date Security code
Mr Mrs Ms First name.... ........................................................................... Initials .................................
Surname . ............................................................... Address .....................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Postcode.................................................................. Daytime tel no ......................................................................................
Signature........................................................................................................................... Date ...................................................
Please allow 21 days for delivery. If not fully satised, please return within 14 days for a refund/replacement. Offer subject to availability. Reg. London 141748 Express
Newspapers, The Northern & Shell Building, No. 10 Lower Thames Street, London, EC3R 6EN. PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH. Offer subject to availability. Please note we
do not refund postage on unsuitable items or cancelled orders. If not happy for any reason we will accept faulty/unused goods in sealed original packaging for refund or
replacement within 10 days.*Calls cost 10ppm from a BT landline plus network extras
reader
offer
FDE8438
Magnetic Knee Strap
The Magnetic Knee Strap
has been professionally
developed and is designed
to give soothing support
and stability to those who
experience discomfort or
the occasional buckling
knee doing any type of
physical exercise. Fitting
snugly to the knee with its
secure one-touch fasteners
it remains comfortably in
place and is undetectable
under clothing. It adjusts
to t all knee sizes and is
machine washable.
*Only 9.99 each when you buy two.
Extra support
when walking,
jogging, or other
physical activity
from
9.99*
plus FREE
p&p
Compression and assistance for
weak knees
Price P&P Qty Total
12.99 FREE
19.98 FREE
Magnetic knee strap
Buy 2 Magnetic knee strap SAVE 6
/lmx
42 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
k\c\m`j`fe\ogi\jj
,
EB
-
EB
.
EB
&%
EB
&&
EB
&'
b^Yc^\]i
(S) SUBTITLES (R) REPEAT (AD) AUDIO DESCRIPTION (SL) SIGN LANGUAGE (W) WIDESCREEN v Regional variations opposite Recommended Outstanding Film
99:Fe\ 99:Knf @KM :_Xee\c+ :_Xee\c,
EASTENDERS:
Alice is almost
caught out
as she takes
Scarlett to
see Michael,
8pm
SPRINGWATCH
2013:
Michaela
Strachan reports
on the nest
cameras dotted
around Ynys-hir
reserve,
8pm
CORONATION
STREET:
Carla demands
Rob give up his
Underworld
shares,
7.30pm
RAMSAYS
KITCHEN
NIGHTMARES
USA:
The chef faces
his biggest
challenge
of the series,
10pm
THE GADGET
SHOW:
New host
Rachel Riley
tests noise-
cancelling
headphones,
8pm
8.00 EastEnders Ian is under
pressure to nish the restaurant,
and Ava tells Sam the other night
was a mistake. (AD) (W) (S)
8.30 Cancer: Hope For Sale?
Panorama An investigation
into Dr Stanislaw Burzynskis
contoversial treatment. (W) (S)
8.00 Springwatch 2013
Martin Hughes-Games gives
advice on how to track deer, there
is an update on the osprey nest
and the story of the UKs late
spring continues to unfold. Plus,
Chris Packham reports on the
latest news from the weekend. (S)
8.00 The Dales
At Reeth Show, an 11-year-old
girl takes part in her rst horse-
riding competition. (W) (S) v
8.30 Coronation Street
Tommys concern for Tina
grows after she asks to
visit the baby. (AD) (W) (S)
8.00 Woolwich, Boston
& The New Terror Matt Frei
investigates the Boston Marathon
bombings. See Pick Of The Day.
8.30 Food Unwrapped
The team explores the secrets
behind mass-produced food.
See Pick Of The Day. (S)
8.00 The Gadget Show
The return of the guide to the
latest technological devices on
the market. Pollyanna Woodward
checks out the Maverick ying
car, while actor Danny Dyer gives
his verdict on movie-streaming
services. See Pick Of The Day. (S)
9.00 The Peoples Coronation
With David Dimbleby
The presenter marks the 60th
anniversary of the Coronation
through peoples memories
of the event and recalls his
father Richard Dimblebys role.
See Pick Of The Day. (W) (S)
9.00 The Fall Eastwoods
investigation into Olsons murder
throws up some uncomfortable
truths for Burns. Gibson, feeling
under increasing pressure, revisits
the Sarah Kay crime scene with
Reed Smith, where they discover
a potential new lead. (AD) (W) (S)
9.00 Vicious Freddie and Stuart
invite Ash and his new girlfriend
Chloe to dinner. Comedy, starring
Derek Jacobi. (AD) (W) (S)
9.30 The Job Lot Karl discovers
his new girlfriend is signing on at
the job centre, which means he is
breaking his employers rules. (W)
9.00 Skint The documentary
explores the impact that addiction
can have on family life as
cameras follow residents of a
Scunthorpe estate. Gails partner
died of alcoholism in his thirties
and shes now trying to keep her
daughter from going off the rails.
9.00 Why Did Oscar Pistorius
Kill Our Daughter? Barry and
June Steenkamp talk about their
daughter Reeva, who was shot
dead in February by Oscar
Pistorius, and discuss how their
lives have been affected by her
death. See Pick Of The Day. (S)
10.00 BBC News, Weather
10.25 Local News, Weather v
10.35 Have I Got A Bit More
News For You Frank Skinner
hosts the satirical current affairs
quiz, as funnyman Matt Forde and
actor-comedian Miles Jupp join
Ian Hislop and Paul Merton. (S) v
11.20 The Graham Norton
Show The host chats to
Jennifer Lopez, who is in town
for Beyonces Chime For Change
charity concert, plus actor and
comedian David Mitchell. (R) v
10.00 What A Load Of
Buzzcocks New series.
Highlights from the comedy quizs
archive, beginning with 1996. (W)
10.30 Newsnight, Weather
Analysis of the days events,
presented by Jeremy Paxman. (S)
10.00 ITV News, Weather
Latest headlines. (W) (S)
10.30 Local News, Weather v
10.35 French Open Tennis
Action from the second Grand
Slam event of the year, with the
fourth round in the mens and
womens singles draws set to
reach a conclusion at Roland
Garros in Paris. Presented by
John Inverdale, with commentary
by Jim Courier, Amelie
Mauresmo, Fabrice Santoro,
Mark Petchey, Sam Smith and
Nick Mullins and reports by
Lynsey Hipgrave. (W) (S)
10.00 Ramsays Kitchen
Nightmares USA
Gordon Ramsay heads to
Scottsdale, Arizona, where he
meets husband-and-wife bistro
owners Samy and Amy Bouzaglo,
who reveal a shocking contempt
for customer feedback. (S)
10.00 Pistorius Trial:
The Key Questions
As Oscar Pistorius returns to
court to face a charge of murder,
two South African criminal
lawyers debate the events
surrounding the death of Reeva
Steenkamp in February. (S)
11.20 The Tudors Just days
after Anne Boleyns execution,
Henry VIII weds for the third
time, marrying the blonde, shy
noblewoman Jane Seymour.
Drama, starring Jonathan Rhys
Meyers and Annabelle Wallis. (R)
12.10 The Tudors (R) 1.00 Sign
Zone: Keeping Britain Alive: The
NHS In A Day (R) 2.00 This Is BBC
Two 4.00 BBC Learning Zone
Schools One Hundred Years Of
The Womens Movement (S) 4.30
The Imagineers (S) 5.00-6.00
Schools Ecomaths: Primary (S)
11.05 Random Acts (S)
11.10 Alan Carr: Chatty Man
The comedian presents more
celebrity chat, music and
mischief. Hes joined by TV
presenter Clare Balding, X Factor
USA judge Demi Lovato, The
Voice coaches Tom Jones and
Danny ODonoghue. (R,S)
12.10 Shameless Familiar faces
return to the Chatsworth Estate one
nal time in the last-ever episode.
(R,S) 1.10 The Fear (R,S) 2.05 My
Kidney And Me (R) 2.30 Goks Style
Secrets (R) 3.25 The Renovation
Game (R,S) 4.20 Come Dine With
Me (R,S) 5.15 Deal Or No Deal (R)
12.05 Monk Natalie suspects a
theatre critic has committed a
murder, but he has a solid alibi he
was reviewing her daughter Julies
play at the time the victim died. (R)
(W) (S) 12.50 Jackpot247 (W) 3.00
The Jeremy Kyle Show (R) (W) (S)
3.55 ITV Nightscreen 5.05-6.00
The Jeremy Kyle Show (R) (W) (S)
11.00 AVP: Alien Vs Predator
2004 (15) A team of scientists
investigates the discovery of a
mysterious pyramid beneath
the Antarctic ice, which is
inhabited by a deadly alien race.
Meanwhile, a second species of
hostile extraterrestrials are on
their way to prove their worth by
vanquishing the rst in battle
with the unfortunate humans
caught in the middle. Sci- thriller,
starring Sanaa Lathan. (W) (S)
12.45 Campus PD (R,S) 1.15
SuperCasino 3.55 HouseBusters (R)
4.20 HouseBusters (R) 4.45 Great
Artists (R) 5.10 Wildlife SOS (R)
7.00 The One Show
Matt Baker and Alex Jones
present topical stories and
celebrity chat. (W) (S)
7.30 Fake Food: Fake Britain
Special The team investigates
English strawberry jam made
with frozen fruit from China. (W)
7.00 Henry VIII: Patron Or
Plunderer? Historian Jonathan
Foyle explores how the kings
choices in art and architecture
provide clues to his mental state.
Following the monarchs break
from Rome, his desperation for a
new image was at its peak. (W)
7.00 Emmerdale
Rhona drops in at Ednas under
false pretences to get hold of
Sandys medication. (AD) (W) (S)
7.30 Coronation Street
Karl panics when Dev vows to
speak to the police about the
Rovers re. (AD) (W) (S)
7.00 Channel 4 News
Including sport and weather. (S)
7.55 4thought.tv (S)
7.00 Police Interceptors
Jason heads to a Christmas party
that has turned into a full-blown
riot, while Adam and Nick catch
a drunken woman driving.
Plus, Kev is seconds away
from disaster when he places
himself in the path of danger. (S)
6.00 Breakfast Latest headlines. (S)
9.15 Helicopter Heroes
A boy is critically injured in a farm
accident in the Yorkshire Dales. (R)
10.00 Homes Under The Hammer
The team visits properties in
Derby, Kent and Darlington. (W) (S)
11.00 Robbed, Raided, Reunited
Police raid a burglars home. (W) (S)
11.30 Cowboy Trap Jonnie Irwin
hears more tales of renovation
disasters from across the country. (W)
12.15 Bargain Hunt Two teams
search for valuable items at
Londons Alexandra Palace. (W) (S)
1.00 BBC News, Weather
1.30 Local News, Weather v
1.45 Doctors Mandys sympathies
for an unlucky elderly patient
are put to the test. (AD) (W) (S)
2.15 Escape To The Country
Jonnie Irwin tries to help a family
nd a home on the Isle of Wight. (R)
3.00 Perfection Quiz show. (R) (W)
3.45 The Hairy Bikers Food
Tour Of Britain The duo visit
Tarbet in Argyll and Bute. (R) (W) (S)
4.30 Put Your Money Where
Your Mouth Is Christina Trevanion
and Philip Serrell search for
antiques in Malvern. (W) (S)
5.15 Pointless Quiz show. (W) (S)
6.00 BBC News, Weather
6.30 Local News, Weather v
6.00 This Is BBC Two (W) (S)
6.05 Homes Under The Hammer
Lucy Alexander and Martin Roberts
explore a house in Kent, as well as
cottages in Surrey and Cumbria. (R)
7.05 Dont Get Done In The Sun
Last in the series. (AD) (R) (W) (S)
7.35 Cowboy Trap (R) (W) (S)
8.20 Sign Zone: Chefs: Put Your
Menu Where Your Mouth Is (R)
9.05 Sign Zone: Coast (R) (W) (S)
10.05 Sign Zone: Food & Drink
Michel Roux Jr hosts the revival
of the classic culinary show. (R)
10.35 Click Latest gadget news. (R)
11.00 BBC News, Weather (W) (S)
11.30 BBC World News (W) (S)
12.00 Daily Politics (W) (S)
1.00 Animal Park Three wild
warthogs arrive at Longleat. (R) (W)
1.45 Weakest Link (R) (W) (S)
2.30 Classic Mastermind (R) (W)
3.00 Springwatch In The
Afternoon Nick Baker presents.
3.45 Fred Dibnahs Made In
Britain The former steeplejack visits
a forge in Shefeld. (AD) (R) (W) (S)
4.15 Life In Cold Blood Exploring
the secrets of snakes. (R) (W) (S)
5.15 Flog It! From Portsmouth. (R)
6.00 Eggheads Quiz show. (W) (S)
6.30 The Chefs Protege
Tom Kitchins two students battle it out
to represent him in the nal. (W) (S)
6.00 Daybreak Singer-songwriter
Jamie Cullum chats about his new
single Everything You Didnt Do. (W)
8.30 Lorraine Comedienne and
writer Ruby Wax discusses her book
Sane New World: Taming The Mind.
9.25 The Jeremy Kyle Show
The host invites guests to air their
differences over family issues. (W) (S)
10.30 This Morning Celebrity chat
and lifestyle features. (W) (S)
12.30 Loose Women
Celebrity interviews and topical
studio discussion from a female
perspective, with Andrea McLean,
Carol McGifn and Denise Welch. (W)
1.30 ITV News, Weather
1.55 Local News, Weather v
2.00 May The Best House Win
Homeowners in Cambridgeshire
and Suffolk vie for the prize. (W) (S)
3.00 Dickinsons Real Deal
David Dickinson and a team of
antiques dealers visit Leighton
Buzzard, Bedfordshire, to offer locals
the chance to put their items up for
auction or accept a cash payment. (R)
3.59 ITV Weather (W) (S) v
4.00 Tipping Point Quiz show. (W)
5.00 The Chase Bradley Walsh
presents as four contestants take on
ruthless quiz genius the Chaser. (W)
6.00 Local News, Weather v
6.30 ITV News, Weather
6.00 The Treacle People (R,S)
6.10 The Hoobs (AD) (R) (SL) (S)
7.05 Will & Grace (R,S)
7.30 According To Jim (R,S)
7.55 Everybody Loves Raymond
Ray is delighted to be awarded
an honorary doctorate. (R,S)
8.30 Everybody Loves Raymond
Amys parents draw attention to
Roberts strange eating habits. (R,S)
9.00 Frasier A favour from a stranger
leads to a blind date for Frasier. (R,S)
9.30 Frasier A series of good deeds
backres, embroiling Frasier in
a humiliating scandal. (R,S)
10.00 Undercover Boss Canada
11.00 Phil Spencer: Secret Agent
The property expert helps a family in
Giffnock, near Glasgow. (AD) (R,S)
12.00 Channel 4 News (S)
12.05 Come Dine With Me (R,S)
12.40 SuperScrimpers (R,S)
12.50 The Prince And The Pauper
1977 (PG) Period drama, starring
Oliver Reed and Mark Lester. (W) (S)
3.10 Countdown With Helen Skelton.
4.00 Deal Or No Deal (AD) (S)
5.00 Four In A Bed (R,S)
5.30 Come Dine With Me
James Herbert hosts the rst dinner
party in Licheld, Staffordshire. (S)
6.00 The Simpsons (AD) (R,S)
6.30 Hollyoaks Sienna tries to
teach Nancy a lesson. (AD) (S)
6.00 Milkshake! Fun for youngsters.
9.15 The Wright Stuff
11.10 Eddie Stobart: Trucks
And Trailers Experts from the
companys rail division help transport
a 24-ton replica plane. (R,S)
12.10 5 News Lunchtime (S)
12.15 Cowboy Builders
Dominic Littlewood and Melinda
Messenger meet a couple who were
left devastated when the builders they
hired downed tools halfway through
building their extension. (R,S)
1.15 Home And Away (AD) (S)
1.45 Neighbours (AD) (S)
2.20 NCIS The team again joins
forces with PsyOps when an
anonymous hacker leaks condential
Navy les to the public. (R,S)
3.20 Together Again for the First
Time 2008 (12) An unharmonious
extended family spends Christmas
together for the rst time in seven
years, but secrets soon begin to
emerge. Comedy, starring Julia Duffy.
5.00 5 News, Weather
5.30 Neighbours Pauls life starts
to spiral out of control, and to make
matters worse, his sister Lucy
returns to Erinsborough. (AD) (R,S)
6.00 Home And Away
John learns that adopting Jett on his
own is going to be difcult. (AD) (R,S)
6.30 5 News, Weather

12.05 FILM: The Night Listener


2006 (15) Radio host Gabriel Noone
strikes up an on-air friendship with
a 14-year-old boy with Aids, who is
about to have the story of his abused
childhood published. Mystery thriller,
with Robin Williams. (W) (S) v
Followed by Weatherview. (W) (S) v
1.25-6.00 BBC News (W) (S) v
9PM TONIGHT AS THE TRIAL GETS READY TO START

Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 43


k\c\m`j`fe\ogi\jj
I<>@FE8CM8I@8K@FEJ
BBC1 Variations WALES: 7.30-8.00 X-Ray 10.35
Police 24/7 11.05 Miranda 11.35 Have I Got A Bit More
News For You 12.20 Film: The Night Listener
ITV Variations ITV CHANNEL: 12.50 The Store. A
chance to buy goods from the comfort of your own home.
2.50-3.00 Simply Gardening: Back-to-basics horticulture.
S4C 7.00 Cyw: Cymylaubychain 7.10 Cyw: Cwpwrdd
Cadi 7.25 Cyw: Tomos Ai Ffrindiau 7.35 Cyw: Cwm Rhyd
Y Rhosyn 7.40 Cyw: Sam Tn 7.50 Cyw: Ti Fi A Cyw 8.00
Cyw: Meic Y Marchog 8.15 Cyw: Heini 8.25 Cyw: Dwylor
Enfys 8.40 Cyw: Ben A Mali Au Byd Bach O Hud 9.00
Cyw: Pingu 9.05 Cyw: Pelen Hud 9.10 Cyw: Twm Tisian
9.20 Cyw: Mwncin Dweud Mwncin Gwneud 9.30 Cyw:
Oli Dan Y Don 9.45 Cyw: Wibli Sochyn Y Mochyn 9.55
Cyw: Nodi 10.10 Cyw: Y Diwrnod Mawr 10.20 Cyw:
Abadas 10.35 Cyw: Peppa 10.40 Cyw: Igam Ogam
11.00 Hwb 11.10 Cyw: Cwpwrdd Cadi 11.25 Cyw: Igi,
Tigi, Bip A Bop 11.40 Cyw: Sam Tn 11.50 Cyw: Ti Fi A
Cyw 12.00 Cyw: Meic Y Marchog 12.15 Cyw: Bla Bla
Blewog 12.25 Cyw: Sbridiri 12.45 Cyw: Ben A Mali Au
Byd Bach O Hud 1.00 Newyddion S4C Ar Tywydd 1.05
Gwyl Y Gwanwyn/13 2.00 Prynhawn Da 2.55 Newyddion
S4C Ar Tywydd 3.00 Cyw: Tili Ai Ffrindiau 3.10 Cyw:
Cwpwrdd Cadi 3.25 Cyw: Y Clwb 3.40 Cyw: Sam Tn
3.50 Cyw: Ti Fi A Cyw 4.00 Awr Fawr 5.00 Stwnsh: Dan
Datrys 5.25 Stwnsh: Mwy O Stwnsh Sadwrn 5.45 Stwnsh:
Fi 6.00 Stwnsh: Ffeil 6.05 Stwnsh: Kung Fu Panda 6.30
Newyddion S4C Ar Tywydd 6.35 Pobol Y Cwm 7.00 Heno
8.00 Pobol Y Cwm 8.25 Ffermio 9.00 Newyddion 9 Ar
Tywydd 9.30 Eisteddfod Yr Urdd 2013: Y Caneuon Actol
10.30 Aur Paralympaidd Aled Sin Davies 11.00 Hwb
RADIO 1
FM: 97.6-99.8 MHz
6.30 The Radio 1 Breakfast Show With Nick Grimshaw.
10.00 Sara Cox. 12.45 Newsbeat. 1.00 Scott Mills.
4.00 Greg James. 7.00 Zane Lowe. 9.00 Radio 1s
Stories. 10.00 Alice Levine. 12.00 Rock Show With
Daniel P Carter. 2.00 Charlie Sloth. 4.00-6.30 Dev.
RADIO 2
FM: 88-90.2 MHz
5.00 Vanessa Feltz. 6.30 Zoe Ball. 9.30 Ken Bruce.
12.00 Jeremy Vine: Current affairs chat. 2.00 Steve
Wright In The Afternoon. 5.00 Simon Mayo. 7.00 Paul
Jones. 8.00 Jo Whiley. 9.30 Big Band Special. 10.00
The Jewel In The Crown. 11.00 David Rodigan. 12.00
Janice Long. 2.00-5.00 Alex Lester: Music and chat.
RADIO 3
FM: 90.2-92.4 MHz
6.30 Breakfast. 9.00 Essential Classics. 12.00
Composer Of The Week: Ralph Vaughan Williams.
1.00 News. 1.02 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert: Live
from Londons Wigmore Hall, tenor Werner Gra and
pianist Christoph Berner perform Schuberts nal
collection of songs, Schwanengesang, published
posthumously in 1829. 2.00 Afternoon On 3: Katie
Derham presents a week celebrating Benjamin Britten
in his centenary year, and launches a month-long
Afternoon on 3 series of British symphonies. 4.30 In
Tune: Suzy Klein talks to novelist Jessica Duchen, and
violinist David Le Page performs with pianist Viv
McLean ahead of their Hungarian Dances recital at St
James Studio in London. 6.15 Composer Of The
Week: Ralph Vaughan Williams: Donald Macleod
reects on Vaughan Williams later years, from the eve
of the Second World War when he met young poet
Ursula Wood, who was destined to become his second
wife. 7.15 Radio 3 Live In Concert: Ilan Volkov
conducts the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra in a
Britten centenary concert from Amsterdam, with
soloists Sarah-Jane Brandon, Christine Rice and
Andrew Staples. 10.00 Night Waves: Matthew Sweet
interviews historian TJ Clark about his new book on
Picasso. 10.45 The Essay: What Is A Nation? 11.00
Jazz On 3. 12.30-6.30 Through The Night.
RADIO 4
FM: 92.4-94.6 MHz LW: 198 kHz
5.30 News Brieng. 5.43 Prayer For The Day. 5.45
Farming Today. 5.58 Tweet Of The Day. 6.00 Today.
9.00 Start The Week. 9.45 (LW) Daily Service. 9.45
(FM) Book of the Week: Maggie And Me. 10.00
Womans Hour. 11.00 Recycled Radio. 11.30 Bleak
Expectations. 12.00 News. 12.01 (LW) Shipping
Forecast. 12.04 You And Yours. 12.57 Weather. 1.00
The World At One. 1.45 Disability: A New History.
2.00 The Archers. 2.15 Afternoon Drama: The Hill
Bachelors: By William Trevor. 3.00 Counterpoint:
Contestants from Surrey, north London and East Sussex
compete. 3.30 The Food Programme: Sheila Dillon
speaks to US author and food expert Michael Pollan.
4.00 Rock n Roll In Four Movements: Stuart Maconie
explores how rock and classical combine. 4.30
Beyond Belief: David Livingstones legacy as a
missionary in Africa. 5.00 PM: With Eddie Mair. 5.54
(LW) Shipping Forecast. 5.57 Weather. 6.00 Six
OClock News. 6.30 Just A Minute: With panellists
Richard Herring, Paul Merton, Gyles Brandreth and
Russell Kane. 7.00 The Archers: Brians attitude turns
frosty. 7.15 Front Row: Mark Lawson reviews the lm
Behind the Candelabra. 7.45 Kidnap: By Richard
Monks. 8.00 Looking For Luddites. See Radio Choice.
8.30 Analysis. 9.00 Material World. 9.30 Start The
Week: Allan Little is joined by physics professor Jon
Butterworth, writer Jim Baggott, sociologist Hilary Rose
and stem-cell biologist Stephen Minger for a scientic
discussion. 9.59 Weather. 10.00 The World Tonight:
With David Eades. 10.45 Book at Bedtime: Blood And
Beauty: By Sarah Dunant, abridged by Eileen Horne.
11.00 Mastertapes. 11.30 Today In Parliament.
12.00 News, Weather. 12.30 Book of the Week:
Maggie And Me. 12.48 Shipping Forecast. 1.00
World Service. 5.20-5.30 Shipping Forecast.
RADIO 5 LIVE
MW: 909, 693 kHz
5.00 Morning Reports. 5.30 Wake Up To Money.
6.00 5 Live Breakfast. 10.00 Victoria Derbyshire.
12.00 Shelagh Fogarty. 2.00 Richard Bacon. 4.00 5
Live Drive. 7.00 5 Live Sport: Mark Chapman presents
the days sports news. 7.30 5 Live Sport:
Flintoffs Ashes Legends: A look at cricketers
who have made a major impact in past Ashes
series between England and Australia. 9.00
5 Live Sport: The Monday Night Club: Football
debate with Mark Chapman, who is joined by
guests including Kevin Kilbane to discuss the
latest results and transfer news. 10.30 Phil
Williams. 1.00-5.00 Up All Night.
talkSPORT
MW: 1053, 1089, 1071, 1107 kHz
6.00 The Alan Brazil Sports Breakfast. 10.00
Danny Kelly And Micky Quinn. 1.00
Hawksbee And Jacobs. 4.00 Max Rushden
And Darren Gough. 7.00 Kick-off. 10.00
Andy Goldstein And Jason Cundy. 1.00-6.00
Extra Time With Mike Graham.
BBC WORLD SERVICE
on digital only
5.00 Newsday. 8.30 Business Daily. 8.50
Witness. 9.00 News. 9.06 HARDtalk. 9.30
The Why Factor. 9.50 From Our Own
Correspondent. 10.00 World Update. 11.00
The Newsroom. 11.30 World Have Your Say.
12.00 News. 12.06 Outlook. 1.00 Newshour.
2.00 Newshour: The stories behind the latest
headlines. 3.00 News. 3.06 Business Daily.
3.30 Heart And Soul. 4.00 The Newsroom.
4.30 Sport Today. 5.00 The Newsroom. 5.30
World Business Report. 6.00 World Have
Your Say. 7.00 The Newsroom. 7.30
Discovery. 8.00 News: Latest headlines.
8.06 HARDtalk. 8.30 World Business Report.
9.00 Newshour. 10.00 News. 10.06
Outlook. 11.00 The Newsroom. 11.30 World
Business Report. 12.00 The Newsroom.
12.20 Sports News. 12.30 Heart And Soul.
1.00 News: Latest headlines. 1.06 Business
Matters. 2.00 The Newsroom. 2.30
Discovery. 3.00 News. 3.06 Outlook. 4.00
Newsday. 4.30-5.00 Heart And Soul.
CLASSIC FM
FM: 100-102 MHz
6.00 More Music Breakfast. 9.00 John
Suchet. 1.00 Jamie Crick. 5.00 Classic FM
Drive. 8.00 The Full Works Concert. 10.00
Smooth Classics. 2.00-6.00 Bob Jones.
ABSOLUTE RADIO
MW: 1215, 1197, 1242 kHz
6.00 Christian OConnells Breakfast Show.
10.00 Russ Williams: Music and chat. 1.00
Andy Bush. 5.00 Geoff Lloyd. 8.00 Pete
Donaldson. 12.00-6.00 Chris Martin.
RADIO WALES
MW: 882, 657 kHz FM: 93.9-95.9,
103.7-103.9 MHz
5.30 Country Focus. 6.00 Good Morning
Wales. 9.00 Morning Call. 10.00 Jason
Mohammad. 1.00 Louise Elliott. 4.00 Good
Evening Wales. 6.30 Best Of Value
Judgements. 6.58 Weather And Travel. 7.00
News. 7.03 The Evening Show. 10.00 Chris
Needs. 1.00-5.30 As BBC World Service.
IX[`f:_f`Z\
Looking For Luddites
Radio 4, 8pm
Technology writer Bill Thompson
investigates how the mindset
of 19th-century Luddites can
be applied to a 21st-century
environment, in which
technology is more intrusive.
The textile artisans wrecked
newly introduced machines
during the Industrial Revolution
as they threatened to replace
the workers with less-skilled,
low-wage labourers.
The host also asks what the
appropriate models are for the
introduction of new technology.
CHRIS MCHUGH
,
6.00 Teleshopping Home shopping.
1.00 Eddie Stobart: Trucks And
Trailers A trucker takes on the
challenge of racing the Eddie Stobart
train from Rugby to Glasgow. (S)
2.00 Emergency Bikers
A father with a young family is given
treatment after being violently
attacked at a city-centre station. (S)
3.00 Neighbours (AD) (S)
3.30 Home And Away (AD) (S)
4.00 Gilmore Girls Despite being
warned not to get involved, Emily
takes it upon herself to reunite Rorys
father Christopher with Lorelai.
5.00 Malcolm In The Middle
Malcolm meets an intriguing girl. (S)
5.30 Malcolm In The Middle
The brothers build a stealth weapon.
6.00 Malcolm In The Middle
Lois runs away from home. (S)
6.20 5 Access The latest showbiz
gossip, presented by James Sloan.
6.30 Home And Away
Adam decides to use Ricky to
take revenge on Brax. (AD) (S)
7.00 Neighbours Pauls life starts to
spiral out of control, and to make
matters worse, his sister Lucy returns.
7.35 My Name Is Earl
Joy has problems enrolling her
children at a camp for troubled kids
because of a barn-burning incident
caused by a younger Earl. (S)
8.00 Once Upon A Time
Cora sends Hook to retrieve the
magic compass, while Rumpelstiltskin
and Regina concoct a plan to destroy
the portal and kill anyone who tries
to use it to reach Storybrooke. (S)
9.00 FILM: Legally Blonde 2001
(12) A dizzy teenager enrols at
Harvard to try to prove to her
ex-boyfriend that she is not stupid,
but nds herself out of her depth.
Comedy, with Reese Witherspoon. (S)
11.00 Generation Sex
Discussion on attitudes toward sex.
12.00 Teleshopping Home shopping.
6.00 Teleshopping Home shopping.
12.00 Better With You Casey and
Mia come clean about how they met.
12.30 CSI: NY A practical joke turns
into a murder mystery when a
skeleton found on a tour bus turns out
to be authentic. Gary Sinise stars. (S)
1.30 FILM: The Cradle Will Fall
2004 (12) A tenacious lawyer sets out
to expose a devious gynaecologist
who claims he can help infertile
women become pregnant, convinced
he is guilty of murder. Mystery, starring
Angie Everhart and John Ralston. (S)
3.20 Law & Order A bookmaker is
arrested on suspicion of murdering his
business partner. Jerry Orbach stars.
4.20 FILM: Jane Doe: Yes, I
Remember It Well 2006 (PG)
The government puzzle-solver
searches for a missing man who has
knowledge of every British agent
stationed in the Middle East and
tries to discover whether he was
kidnapped or arranged his own
disappearance. Mystery, starring Lea
Thompson and Joe Penny. (W) (S)
6.00 Law & Order A police ofcer
is shot dead and the chief suspects
confession appears to bring an
end to the matter. (S)
6.55 Inside Hollywood Mark Morris
presents the magazine show.
7.00 CSI: NY Stella fears she may
have been infected with HIV-positive
blood while conducting inquiries at a
murder scene. Gary Sinise stars. (S)
8.00 CSI: Miami The discovery of a
body in the Everglades leads the
detectives on the hunt for an escaped
killer. Jeffrey Donovan guest stars. (S)
9.00 Body Of Proof
Megans investigation into a car
crash reveals all is not well in a
seemingly perfect neighbourhood. (S)
10.00 NCIS A murder is linked to the
break-up of Gibbs team. (S)
10.55 NCIS A helicopter is found in a
crop circle. Timothy Bottoms stars. (S)
11.55 CSI: NY Mac witnesses a
suspicious exchange of briefcases
from his window while recuperating
from an injury at home. (AD) (S)
12.55 CSI: Miami 1.55 NCIS (S) 2.55
Inside Hollywood 3.00 Teleshopping
,LJ8
44 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
ITV2 Freeview 6 - Sky 118
6.00am Emmerdale 6.25 Coronation Street
6.55 Planets Funniest Animals 7.25 The
Jeremy Kyle Show USA 8.10 Youve Been
Framed! 8.40 Judge Judy 9.05 The Only
Way Is Essex 10.35 The Real Housewives
Of Atlanta 11.35 Millionaire Matchmaker
12.30pm Emmerdale 1.00 Coronation Street
1.30 Judge Judy 2.00 The Jeremy Kyle Show
4.10 The Real Housewives Of Atlanta 5.05
Millionaire Matchmaker 6.00 The Jeremy Kyle
Show USA 7.00 Youve Been Framed! 9.00
Film: The Break-Up (2006) (12) 11.10 Celebrity
Juice 12.40am The Only Way Is Marbs 1.25
Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records:
Bonkingly Big Hits 2.15 Teleshopping
ITV3 Freeview 10 - Sky 119
6.00am Heartbeat 6.55 The Royal 8.00
Dr Quinn: Medicine Woman 9.00 Ideal World
10.00 Murder, She Wrote Noon Father
Dowling Mysteries 1.00 Heartbeat 2.00 The
Royal 3.00 Pie In The Sky 4.10 Duty Free
4.45 On The Buses 5.15 Man About The
House 5.50 Heartbeat 6.50 Murder, She
Wrote 7.50 Inspector Morse 10.00 Trial &
Retribution 11.05 Law & Order: UK 12.05am
Murder In Suburbia 1.05 The Ruth Rendell
Mysteries 2.05 ITV3 Nightscreen
ITV4 Freeview 24 - Sky 120
6.00am The Professionals 7.00 The Saint
8.00 Police, Camera, Action! 8.30 TT 2013
9.30 Live French Open Tennis 9.00pm TT
2013 10.00 Film: Nighthawks (1981) (18)
12.05am TT 2013: Conor Cummins Local
Hero 1.05 TT 2013 2.05 Worlds Wildest
Police Videos 3.00 The Store
SKY1 Sky 106
6.00am Dont Forget The Lyrics 7.00 The
Middle 7.30 Brainiac: Science Abuse 8.30
Dog The Bounty Hunter 9.00 Lie To Me
1.00pm Hawaii Five-0 3.00 Stargate SG-1
5.00 A League Of Their Own 5.30 The Middle
6.30 The Simpsons 8.00 A League Of Their
Own 9.00 Greggs: More Than Meats The Pie
10.00 Revolution 11.00 Spartacus: Blood
And Sand 12.10am Dog The Bounty Hunter
12.40 Road Wars 2.05 Ross Kemp: Extreme
World 3.05 Road Wars 4.00 Stargate SG-1
E4 Freeview 28 - Sky 136
6.00am Switched 6.25 90210 7.05 Ugly
Betty 7.50 Desperate Housewives 8.45
Scrubs 9.15 Rules Of Engagement 9.45 90210
10.40 Ugly Betty 11.40 Charmed 12.35pm
Hollyoaks 1.05 How I Met Your Mother
2.00 Scrubs 3.00 Charmed 4.00 Rules Of
Engagement 5.00 How I Met Your Mother 6.00
The Big Bang Theory 7.00 Hollyoaks 7.30
How I Met Your Mother 8.00 New Girl 8.30
The Mindy Project 9.00 Revenge 10.00 Made
In Chelsea 11.00 8 Out Of 10 Cats 11.50 The
Big Bang Theory 12.45am The New Normal
1.15 Revenge 2.10 Happy Endings 2.35 The
Ricky Gervais Show 3.00 The Cleveland Show
3.20 Life Unexpected 4.05 Happy Endings
4.25 Desperate Housewives
MORE4 Freeview 14 - Sky 138
8.55am River Cottage Veg 10.00 A Place In
The Sun 10.35 Location, Location, Location
11.45 Film: Passport To Pimlico (1949) (U)
1.30pm Time Team 3.35 Location, Location,
Location 4.40 A Place In The Sun: Home Or
Away 5.45 A Place In The Sun: Winter Sun 6.50
Come Dine With Me 7.55 Grand Designs 9.00
Simon Hopkinson Cooks 10.00 12 Year Old
Lifer: True Stories 11.15 Embarrassing Bodies
12.20am Come Dine With Me 1.25 12 Year Old
Lifer: True Stories 2.40 Embarrassing Bodies
GOLD Sky 110
6.00am Whatever Happened To The Likely
Lads? 6.30 Goodnight Sweetheart 7.40 Ever
Decreasing Circles 9.00 Porridge 10.20
Goodnight Sweetheart 11.00 Allo Allo! 11.40
Last Of The Summer Wine 1.00pm The Green
Green Grass 2.20 Keeping Up Appearances
4.20 Last Of The Summer Wine 5.40 Only
Fools And Horses 7.00 Goodnight Sweetheart
7.40 Allo Allo! 8.20 Porridge 9.00 Only
Fools And Horses 11.00 Absolutely Fabulous
11.40 Porridge 12.20am Only Fools And
Horses 2.00 The Green Green Grass
SKY LIVING Sky 107
6.00am Nothing To Declare 8.00 Emergency
Animal Rescue 9.00 Emergency Abroad
10.00 Criminal Minds Noon CSI: Crime
Scene Investigation 2.00 Criminal Minds 4.00
Emergency Animal Rescue 5.00 Emergency
Abroad 6.00 Nothing To Declare 7.00 Its
Love, Actually 8.00 Four Weddings US 9.00
Criminal Minds 10.00 CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation 11.00 Bones Midnight Jerry
Bruckheimers Chase 1.50 Supernatural 2.40
Bones 3.30 Medium 4.20 Airline USA
BBC THREE Freeview 7 - Sky 115
7.00pm Top Gear 8.00 Trafc Cops 9.00
Live At The Apollo 10.00 The Hoffs Best Action
Film Ever! 10.30 EastEnders 11.00 Family
Guy 11.45 American Dad! 12.30am The
Hoffs Best Action Film Ever! 1.00 Pramface
2.00 Live At The Apollo 3.00 People Like Us
BBC FOUR Freeview 9 - Sky 116
7.00pm World News Today; Weather 7.30
Tales From The Wild Wood 8.00 Britain On
Film: Kids Today 8.30 Only Connect 9.00
Mechanical Marvels: Clockwork Dreams
10.00 Film: Storyville: Buck: The Real Horse
Whisperer (2011) (PG) 11.25 Rome: A History
Of The Eternal City 12.25am The King & The
Playwright: A Jacobean History 1.25 Britain
On Film: Kids Today 1.55 Only Connect 2.25
Mechanical Marvels: Clockwork Dreams
COMEDY CENTRAL Sky 112
8.00am Mike & Molly 9.00 Two And A Half
Men 10.30 Friends 11.30 Mike & Molly
12.30pm Two And A Half Men 1.30 Friends
2.30 Mike & Molly 3.30 Two And A Half Men
4.30 Friends 6.00 Two And A Half Men 7.30
Friends 9.00 Whitney 9.30 Mike & Molly
10.00 Jimmy Carr In Concert 11.20 Two
And A Half Men 12.20am South Park 1.20
Friends 2.10 South Park 3.00 The King Of
Queens 3.45 Frasier 4.10 Everybody Loves
Raymond 5.00 Teleshopping
FOX Sky 124
8.00am The Ricki Lake Show 9.00 Falling
Skies 10.00 Burn Notice 11.00 Law & Order
1.00pm NCIS 3.00 Leverage 4.00 Falling
Skies 5.00 Law & Order 7.00 NCIS 10.00
Family Guy Midnight American Dad! 1.00
Leverage 2.00 Family Guy 3.00 American
Dad! 4.00 Falling Skies 5.00 Teleshopping
DISCOVERY Sky 520
6.00am Swamp Loggers 7.00 Deadliest
Catch 8.00 Gold Divers 9.00 World War
Two: The Complete History 10.00 Auction
Hunters 11.00 American Guns Noon North
America 1.00 Attack Of The Giant Jellysh
2.00 Frontline Battle Machines With Mike
Brewer 3.00 World War Two: The Complete
History 4.00 Auction Hunters 5.00 American
Guns 6.00 Mythbusters 7.00 Bear Grylls:
Urban Survivor 8.00 Wheeler Dealers 9.00
Moonshiners 10.00 Sons Of Guns 11.00
Auction Hunters Midnight Moonshiners
1.00 Sons Of Guns 2.00 Biblical Mysteries
Explained 3.00 Moonshiners 3.50 Sons Of
Guns 4.40 American Chopper 5.30 Destroyed
In Seconds
HISTORY Sky 529
8.00am Storage Wars 8.30 Storage Wars:
Texas 9.00 Mud Men 10.00 American Pickers
11.00 Shipping Wars 11.30 Counting Cars
Noon American Restoration 1.00 Pawn Stars
2.00 Storage Wars 2.30 Storage Wars: Texas
3.00 American Pickers 4.00 Hoard Hunters
5.00 Ax Men 6.00 Pawn Stars 6.30 Cajun
Pawn Stars 7.00 Storage Wars 7.30 Pawn
Stars 9.00 Cajun Pawn Stars 10.00 Shipping
Wars 11.00 Storage Wars 11.30 Pawn Stars
Midnight Cajun Pawn Stars 1.00 Shipping
Wars 2.00 Pawn Stars 3.00 Ax Men 4.00
Mud Men 5.00 Teleshopping
YESTERDAY Freeview 19 - Sky 537
6.10am Great Railway Journeys 7.00 The
World At War 8.00 Antiques Roadshow 9.00
Ian Hislops Age Of The Do-Gooders 10.00
Lovejoy 11.00 Antiques Roadshow Noon
The World At War 1.00 All Creatures Great
And Small 2.00 Ballykissangel 3.00 Lovejoy
4.00 All Creatures Great And Small 5.00
Ballykissangel 6.00 Keeping Up Appearances
6.40 Antiques Roadshow 7.40 Keeping Up
Appearances 9.00 The Crusades 10.00
Maas Greatest Hits 11.00 The World At War
Midnight Antiques Roadshow 12.50 Maas
Greatest Hits 1.40 The World At War 2.30
Great British Railway Journeys
HOME Sky 246
7.00am Ground Force 8.00 DIY SOS 9.00
Escape To The Country 10.00 A Place In The
Sun: Home Or Away 11.00 Ground Force
Noon My Flat-Pack Home 1.00 Homes Under
The Hammer 2.00 DIY SOS 3.00 Escape To
The Country 5.00 DIY SOS 7.00 A Place In
The Sun: Home Or Away 8.00 Escape To The
Country 10.00 DIY SOS Midnight Ground
Force 1.00 Cowboy Trap 2.00 Love It Or List It
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Sky 526
6.00am Teleshopping 7.00 Teleshopping 8.00
The 80s: The Decade That Made Us 1.00pm
Lost World Underwater 2.00 Earths Giant
Hole 3.00 Giant Crystal Cave 4.00 Air Crash
Investigation 7.00 Dragon Wars: Fire And Fury
8.00 Brain Games 9.00 Card Shark 10.00
80s Greatest 11.00 Air Crash Investigation
Midnight Brain Games 1.00 Card Shark
2.00 Teleshopping 3.00 Wicked Tuna
GOOD FOOD Sky 247
6.00am Choccywoccydoodah: Starstruck
7.00 You Gotta Eat Here 8.00 The Hairy
Bikers Cook Off 9.00 The Hairy Bikers: Mums
Know Best 10.00 Luke Nguyens Vietnam
10.30 Luke Nguyens Greater Mekong 11.00
Rachel Allen: Home Cooking 11.30 Rachel
Allen: Bake! Noon The Hairy Bikers Cook Off
1.00 Rick Stein And The Japanese Ambassador
2.00 Choccywoccydoodah: Starstruck 3.00
You Gotta Eat Here 4.00 Luke Nguyens
Vietnam 4.30 Luke Nguyens Greater Mekong
5.00 Rachel Allen: Home Cooking 5.30
Rachel Allen: Bake! 6.00 MasterChef: The
Professionals 6.30 The Hairy Bikers Cookbook
7.00 River Cottage: Summers Here 8.00
Choccywoccydoodah: Starstruck 9.00 Luke
Nguyens Vietnam 9.30 Luke Nguyens Greater
Mekong 10.00 MasterChef: The Professionals
10.30 MasterChef 11.30 Rachel Allen: Bake!
Midnight Choccywoccydoodah: Starstruck
1.00 The Hairy Bikers Cook Off 2.00 Home
Shopping 5.00 MasterChef
UNIVERSAL CHANNEL Sky 113
6.00am Numb3rs 7.00 Teleshopping 8.00
Royal Pains 9.00 Quincy ME 10.00 Cold Case
11.00 Without A Trace Noon Numb3rs 1.00
House 2.00 Cold Case 3.00 In Plain Sight
4.00 Law & Order 5.00 House 6.00 Numb3rs
7.00 In Plain Sight 8.00 Law & Order 9.00
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Midnight
Cold Case 1.00 Numb3rs 2.00 Law & Order:
Special Victims Unit 3.00 Without A Trace
4.00 Royal Pains 5.00 Quincy ME
TELEVISIONX Freeview 171 - Sky 903
10.00pm Freeview 10.10 Angels Gutter Girls
2 10.30 Jim Slips Coast To Coast 1 11.00
Freeview 11.10 Road Warriors 2 11.35 Doll
Maker 3 11.50 Freeview. Fun for non-subscribers.
Midnight Doll Maker 3 12.05 Better Than Life
3 12.30 Banned 2 12.55 Sherlock Homes 4
1.00 Freeview 1.10 Sherlock Homes 4 1.30
Ready, Steady, Chav 4 1.50 Rough X 2 2.15
Good Girl Gone Bad 1 2.40 Laras World Of
Uniforms 1 3.00 Layla Jade Does Hollywood 4
3.25 Life In Bras 3.45 Lust, Lingerie And Lolly
4.15 Smoking Hot 4 4.35 Sophie Studies Hard
4 5.00 XXX Factor 1
FILMS
t

Times quoted are BST
ENTERTAINMENT SATELLITE, CABLE AND DIGITAL
SKY MOVIES PREMIERE Sky 301
6.10am The Cup (2011) (PG) Fact-based horse racing
drama. 8.00 A Smile As Big As The Moon (2012)
(PG) Fact-based drama. 9.40 2 Days In New York
(2012) (15) Comedy drama sequel. 11.20 Jackpot
(2011) (15) Crime comedy. 12.50pm Resident Evil:
Retribution (2012) (15) Sci- thriller sequel. 2.30
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (2012) (15)
Fantasy thriller. 4.20 The Cup (2011) (PG) Fact-based
horse racing drama, starring Stephen Curry. 6.20 2 Days
In New York (2012) (15) Comedy drama sequel,
directed by and starring Julie Delpy. 8.00 Resident Evil:
Retribution (2012) (15) Sci- thriller sequel, with Milla
Jovovich and Sienna Guillory. 9.40 Abraham Lincoln:
Vampire Hunter (2012) (15) Fantasy thriller, starring
Benjamin Walker. 11.30 St Georges Day (2012) (18)
Crime thriller, with Craig Fairbrass. 1.20am Jackpot
(2011) (15) Crime comedy, starring Kyrre Hellum. 2.50 2
Days In New York (2012) (15) Comedy drama sequel,
starring Julie Delpy. 4.30 A Smile As Big As The Moon
(2012) (PG) Fact-based drama, starring John Corbett.
SKY MOVIES COMEDY Sky 308
6.45am Love, Wedding, Marriage (2011) (12) With
Mandy Moore. 8.20 Bad News Bears (2005) (12)
With Billy Bob Thornton. 10.15 The Bourne Legacy
Premiere Special Report from the premiere of the spy
thriller sequel. 10.45 Dodgeball: A True Underdog
Story (2004) (12) With Ben Stiller. 12.25pm Friends
With Benefits (2011) (15) With Justin Timberlake. 2.20
Shanghai Noon (2000) (12) With Jackie Chan. 4.10
Shanghai Knights (2003) (12) With Jackie Chan. 6.05
Bad News Bears (2005) (12) With Billy Bob Thornton.
8.00 Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004)
(12) Starring Ben Stiller. 9.40 Friends With Benefits
(2011) (15) Romantic comedy, starring Justin Timberlake
and Mila Kunis. 11.30 Caddyshack (1980) (15) With
Chevy Chase. 1.10am Jay And Silent Bob Strike
Back (2001) (18) With Jason Mewes. 2.55 Women
In Trouble (2009) (18) With Carla Gugino. 4.35 That
Thing You Do! (1996) (PG) With Tom Hanks.
SKY MOVIES ACTION & ADVENTURE Sky 307
6.00am The Finest Hour (1991) (15) With Rob Lowe.
7.50 Bunraku (2010) (15) With Josh Hartnett. 10.00
The Island (2005) (12) With Ewan McGregor. 12.20pm
Contraband (2012) (15) With Mark Wahlberg. 2.20
Apollo 13 (1995) (PG) With Tom Hanks. 4.45 Justice
(2011) (15) With Nicolas Cage. 6.40 The Island (2005)
(12) With Ewan McGregor. 9.00 Contraband (2012)
(15) A reformed international smuggler must return to his old
line of work to save his family from a ruthless drug lord. Crime
thriller, with Mark Wahlberg and Kate Beckinsale. 11.00
The 13th Warrior (1999) (15) With Antonio Banderas.
12.45am Batman (1989) (15) With Michael Keaton.
2.55 Batman Returns (1992) (12) With Michael
Keaton. 5.05 Apollo 13 (1995) With Tom Hanks.
SKY MOVIES FAMILY Sky 306
6.05am The Nutcracker (2009) (PG) Fantasy, starring
Elle Fanning. 7.55 The Prince And Me (2004) (PG)
Romantic comedy, starring Julia Stiles and Luke Mably. 9.50
The Wild Thornberrys Movie (2002) (U) Animated
adventure. 11.20 Judy Moody And The Not Bummer
Summer (2011) (PG) Comedy, starring Jordana Beatty.
12.55pm Junior (1994) (PG) Comedy, starring Arnold
Schwarzenegger. 2.50 Honey 2 (2011) (PG) Dance
drama, starring Katerina Graham. 4.45 Win A Date With
Tad Hamilton! (2004) (PG) Romantic comedy, starring
Kate Bosworth and Topher Grace. 6.25 Judy Moody And
The Not Bummer Summer (2011) (PG) Comedy,
starring Jordana Beatty. 8.00 Junior (1994) (PG)
Comedy, with Arnold Schwarzenegger, Danny DeVito and
Emma Thompson. 10.00 Honey 2 (2011) (PG) Dance
drama, starring Katerina Graham. Midnight Win A Date
With Tad Hamilton! (2004) (PG) Romantic comedy.
1.40 The Prince And Me (2004) (PG) Romantic
comedy. 3.35 The Nutcracker (2009) (PG) Fantasy,
starring Elle Fanning. 5.25 The Wild Thornberrys
Movie (2002) Animated adventure.
SKY MOVIES DRAMA & ROMANCE Sky 310
6.00am City Of Angels (1998) (PG) With Nicolas
Cage. 8.00 A Little Bit Of Heaven (2011) (12) With
Kate Hudson. 10.00 The Decoy Bride (2011) (12) With
Kelly Macdonald. 11.30 The Conspirator (2010) (12)
With James McAvoy. 1.35pm The Tree Of Life (2011)
(12) With Brad Pitt. 4.00 The Vow (2012) (12) With
Rachel McAdams. 6.00 Love And Other Impossible
Pursuits (2009) (15) With Natalie Portman. 8.00 The
Vow (2012) (12) Romantic drama, with Rachel McAdams
and Channing Tatum. 10.00 Whats Your Number?
(2011) (15) With Anna Faris. 11.50 Red Riding Hood
(2011) (12) With Amanda Seyfried. 1.40am Lincoln:
Sky Movies Special Behind the scenes. 2.10 The
Chateau Meroux (2011) (12) With Marla Sokoloff.
3.55 The Top Ten Show Box ofce hits. 4.10 The 5th
Quarter (2010) (12) With Ryan Merriman.
SKY MOVIES GREATS Sky 304
6.00am Wait Until Dark (1967) (15) Psychological
thriller, with Audrey Hepburn. 8.00 Lincoln: Sky Movies
Special Behind the scenes. 8.30 Ray (2004) (15)
Biopic, starring Jamie Foxx. 11.05 Sister Act (1992)
(PG) Comedy, starring Whoopi Goldberg. 12.45pm Jane
Eyre (1943) (PG) Romantic period drama, starring Joan
Fontaine. 2.25 Prometheus Discovered The making
of Ridley Scotts sci- thriller. 2.55 Ordinary People
(1980) (15) Oscar-winning drama, starring Donald
Sutherland. 5.00 Legends Of The Fall (1994) (15)
Period drama, starring Anthony Hopkins. 7.15 Sister Act
(1992) (PG) Comedy, starring Whoopi Goldberg. 9.00 The
Last Boy Scout (1991) (18) A private detective working
as a bodyguard gets caught up in murder and corruption
in the world of American football. Action thriller, starring
Bruce Willis and Damon Wayans. 10.45 The Recruit
(2003) (12) See Todays Choice. 12.40am Gone In
60 Seconds (2000) (15) Thriller, starring Nicolas Cage.
2.40 Will Penny (1967) (12) Western, starring Charlton
Heston. 4.30 Jane Eyre (1943) (PG) Romantic period
drama, starring Joan Fontaine and Orson Welles.
TCM Sky 317
5.00am Off Set 5.15 The Redhead And The
Cowboy (1951) (PG) 6.50 The Return Of Frank
James (1940) (U) 8.35 Bite The Bullet (1975)
(PG) 11.05 The Desert Rats (1953) (U) 12.50pm
Gunsmoke 1.55 Gunsmoke 3.00 Dangerous
Money (1946) (PG) 4.15 Man With The Gun
(1955) (PG) 5.50 Ride Out For Revenge (1957)
(U) 7.15 Support Your Local Sheriff (1968) (PG)
9.00 Raising Arizona (1987) (12) Comedy, starring
Nicolas Cage, Holly Hunter, John Goodman and Frances
McDormand. 10.50 Super Troopers (2001) (15)
12.45am Raising Arizona (1987) (12) 2.35 Super
Troopers (2001) (15) 4.15 Off Set
FILM4 Freeview 15 - Sky 315
11.00am Death Drums Along The River (1963)
(PG) 12.40pm The Devil And Miss Jones (1941)
(U) 2.30 40 Guns To Apache Pass (1967) (PG)
4.25 They Who Dare (1954) (U) 6.35 The Iron
Lady Interview Special 6.40 A Good Year (2006)
(12) 9.00 GI Joe: The Rise Of Cobra (2009) (12)
Action adventure, with Channing Tatum, Sienna Miller and
Christopher Eccleston. 11.15 Buffalo 66 (1998) (15)
1.25am Heartbeats (2010) (15)
TODAYS CHOICE
THE RECRUIT
Sky Movies Greats/HD, 10.45pm
Highly intelligent computer hacker James Clayton
is persuaded to join the CIA by shady agent Walter
Burke, who lets him think there is a link between
the agency and his fathers death.
Clayton may not have the typical attitude of a CIA
man, but he soon proves he has a natural-born talent
for espionage work. With Burke showing him the ropes,
he progresses quickly through the ranks. However, when
he is given a top-secret assignment to root out a mole
within the training programme, he begins to understand
where the old CIA motto, Trust no-one comes from.
Classic thriller, starring Al Pacino and Colin Farrell.
CHRIS MCHUGH
SPORT
SKY SPORTS 1 Freeview 41 - Sky 401
6.00am Good Morning Sports Fans 7.00
Good Morning Sports Fans 8.00 Good
Morning Sports Fans 9.00 Spanish Football
10.25 Live International One-Day Cricket.
South Africa v Pakistan. Coverage of the ICC
Champions Trophy warm-up match, staged at
the Oval. 6.30pm Footballs Greatest 7.00
Football Gold. Chelsea v Manchester United
from the 1999/2000 season. 7.15 Football Gold.
Liverpool v Manchester United from the 1998/99
season. 7.30 Live Super League. Hudderseld
Giants v St Helens (kick-off 7.45pm). 10.00
Golden Moments Of European Football. Classic
moments from the archives. 11.00 Soccer AM:
The Best Bits. Highlights from the past season.
Midnight Super League 1.30 Live NBA
Basketball. Miami Heat v Indiana Pacers (tip-
off 1.30am). Coverage of game seven of the
Eastern Conference Finals, which takes place at
the American Airlines Arena in Miami, Florida.
4.00 Super League 5.30 Footballs Greatest
SKY SPORTS 2 Freeview 42 - Sky 402
6.00am Aerobics Oz Style 6.30 Thrillseekers
7.00 WWE: Bottom Line 8.00 PGA Tour Golf.
2013 Memorial Tournament: Day Four. 11.00
European Tour Golf. 2013 Nordea Masters: Day
Four. 12.30pm Ladies European Tour Golf .
2013 Ladies German Open: Day Four. 1.00 PGA
Tour Golf. 2013 Memorial Tournament: Day Four.
4.00 Super Rugby Try Time 4.30 Live Yorkshire
Bank 40 Cricket. Essex Eagles v Surrey. All the
action from the Group B xture at the County
Ground in Chelmsford. 10.00 Super Rugby Try
Time. A round-up of all the tries, highlights and
news headlines. 10.30 Elite League Speedway.
All the action from Lakeside Hammers versus
Coventry Bees. 12.30am PGA Tour Golf 1.30
European Tour Golf 3.00 PGA Tour Classic
4.00 Super Rugby Try Time 4.30 Soccer AM:
The Best Bits 5.30 Super Rugby Try Time. A
round-up of all the tries.
SKY SPORTS 3 Sky 403
6.00am Super League Full Time 7.00
International One-Day Cricket 9.00 Super
League 11.00 Racing News 11.30 Inside
Sailing Noon International Rugby Union
1.00 International Football 2.00 Thrillseekers
2.30 Inside Sailing 3.00 Super League
5.00 WWE: Raw 7.00 Great Run Series.
The Great CityGames Manchester. 7.30 Live
Elite League Speedway. Lakeside Hammers
v Coventry Bees. 9.30 Great Run Series. The
Great CityGames Manchester. 10.00 WWE:
Late Night Bottom Line. Highlights of Raw.
11.00 WWE: Late Night Afterburn. Featuring
the stars of Smackdown. Midnight WWE: NXT
1.00 Live WWE: Late Night Raw. Wrestling
coverage from the States with the over-the-top
stars, featuring the likes of John Cena and CM
Punk. 4.15 Sky Sports Classics 4.30 Great
Run Series 5.00 PGA Tour Golf
ESPN Sky 417
6.00am German Cup Final. Bayern Munich v
VfB Stuttgart. 7.30 ESPN FC Press Pass 8.30
Brazilian Football Championship 10.15 ESPN
XS 10.30 Live Australian Rules Football. West
Coast Eagles v Richmond Tigers (bounce-up
10.40am). Coverage of the AFL encounter at the
Patersons Stadium in Perth. 1.30pm ESPN FC
Press Pass 2.30 International Football 4.15
Major League Soccer 6.00 ESPN FC Press
Pass 7.00 Copa Libertadores 7.30 Serie A
9.00 NASCAR. The FedEx 400 beneting
Autism Speaks. 10.00 30 For 30. Fernando
Valenzuelas 1981 arrival at the Los Angeles
Dodgers. 11.00 ESPN FC Press Pass 11.30
Copa Libertadores. South Americas version
of the Champions League. Midnight Live
Major League Baseball. A game from North
America. 3.00 Baseball Tonight 4.00 30 For 30
5.00 NASCAR
BRITISH EUROSPORT Sky 410
7.30am Motorsports Weekend. Highlights from
the latest events in the world of international
motor racing. 7.45 Sports Excellence. Series
which takes a closer look at sport. 8.00 Game,
Set And Mats 8.30 French Open Tennis 9.30
Live French Open Tennis. The second Grand
Slam event of the year continues, with the fourth
round in the mens and womens singles draws
set to reach a conclusion at Roland Garros in
Paris. 8.30pm Game, Set And Mats. News from
the French Open. 9.00 French Open Tennis.
Highlights of day nine from Roland Garros.
11.00 Cycling. The Criterium du Dauphine.
Midnight Game, Set And Mats 12.30 Horse
Racing Time. A preview of forthcoming races.
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 45
DRASTIC measures are
needed to combat child
obesity, so I welcome the
idea of imposing a school hours
ban on takeaways serving chips to
children (Bid to ban chips in
school hours, May 30).
Its so depressing that more than
33 per cent of 11-year-olds are now
overweight or obese.
We should be doing all we can to
educate and encourage children to
eat healthily and avoid fast-food
quick xes.
As far as Im concerned, junk
food poses as big a threat to the
health of the nation as drugs and
cigarettes.
Paul Atkinson,
By email
WHAT a ridiculous
notion that a ban on
takeaways serving chips
during school hours would solve
the problem of childhood obesity.
When I was at school, we were
not allowed out of the school
premises at lunchtime and our
meals were eaten in the canteen
with no option of bringing in a
packed lunch.
We ate the healthy food provided
or went hungry.
Isnt it about time we started
reimposing some sensible school
rules? After a week of going hungry,
there wont be many children who
are turning down school dinners.
A Kendal,
Nottingham
9iljj\cj]c\o`e^`kjc\^Xc
dljZc\n`k_flidfe\p
AS we give the EU 50million a day,
it can well afford to take legal
action against us over our refusal
to pay benets to immigrants from
the EU (IDS vows to ght EU over
benet tourists , May 31)
Before the arrival of the UK
Independence Party threatening
our politicians cosy existence, a
democratic referendum on the EU
superstate wasnt an option. Thank
goodness all that has changed.
I nd it extremely worrying how
our MPs could have given away our
independence and our rights to
self-rule so cheaply.
We used to be a nation of
shopkeepers and now the shops are
closing. Im 68 and have never
voted Tory.
However, I see Ukip as our last
hope but I fear the damage to our
country has already been done.
Dick Waring,
Portsmouth
:Xd\ifedljk_fc[`efi
flkmfk\Y\]fi\\c\Zk`fe
FREDERICK Forsyth should not
be fretting about defections to
Ukip (Walking blindly into
Europe May 31).
All Cameron and his Tories have
to do is hold an in/out referendum
before the 2015 general election
and campaign for us to leave the
EU and they will have the
wholehearted backing of Ukip, the
Daily Express and, I suspect, a
great majority of the British
people. It really is as simple as that.
Ian Linney,
New Forest, Hants
C\kji\`ejkXk\k_\[\Xk_
g\eXckp]fiXccdli[\i\ij
YOUR phone debate invited
readers to vote on the death
penalty for child murderers (Daily
Express, May 31).
I suggest that our government
goes further than that and
reinstates the death penalty for all
murderers. Since the abolition of
capital punishment there have
been far more murders than before.
It would seem that nowadays it
is quite normal for criminals to
carry weapons, thus increasing the
number of murders. Before the
abolition very few criminals carried
guns or knives.
I accept that sometimes, but
only rarely, did a person innocent of
a murder get hanged.
I believe that our police force is
doing a tremendous job but it
would be made slightly easier if the
death penalty existed now. It would
discourage criminals to regard
taking a life as six years in prison.
Philip Rawlinson,
Great Yeldham, Essex
:Xj_$jkiXgg\[E?Jd`i\[
`egi\k\ek`fljknX[[c\
WITH regard to failings in the
NHS, one needs to go no further
than the article about the armed
robber appointed to a highly paid
job (NHS handed 250,000 job to
armed robber, May 31).
Not so much the fact that he was
an ex-convict but that cash-
strapped management should
create another department to full
the roles that the existing (no
doubt also highly paid) personnel
and nance directors should be
capable of performing.
Also, the fact that this
department is called the Quality,
Innovation, Productivity and
Prevention programme, whatever
that means.
The applicants CV stated that
he was an experienced turnaround
and operations director working at
both strategic and operational
levels. Really? That just shows
what meaningless and pretentious
twaddle these bureaucrats who
earn twice the Prime Ministers
salary foist upon us.
If the existing managers spent a
week in each department they
would have a better overview of
efciency savings instead of staring
at computer screens all day and
dreaming up yuk speak.
Andy Marson,
Timberland, Lincs
8l[`\eZ\jkXb\k`d`[nXp
flk`ek\c\m`j\[[\YXk\j
PEOPLE in North Korea
unanimously and understandably
applaud their leader and
government out of fear of being
seen as non-supporters.
There is now an uncanny
resemblance to the British public
on televised debates with regard to
support for EU control and mass
immigration. Either this or the
BBC hand-picks audiences.
This timid trend of being seen as
a moral liberal leftie is also out of
fear of friends and bosses seeing
them in any other light.
I believe this is mostly true with
our young brainwashed generation.
C Fitch,
Norwich
JkXic`e^kXc\jflgc`]k`e^
Xdfe^k_\[i\X[]lce\nj
I SO enjoyed reading the story
about Jack Moran and how he
nursed an injured starling back to
health last year (Jack gets ying
visits from the bird he saved, May
31). How heart-warming to hear
that the starling then repaid
Jacks kindness by returning to his
garden this year, along with its
mate and babies.
In a week when the newspapers
have been full of such dreadful
stories, including the aftermath to
the killing of Drummer Lee Rigby
and the April Jones murder trial, it
is so lovely to read this story with
such a happy ending.
L English,
By email
<og\ikjZc`dXk\Z_Xe^\
i\k_`ebdX[\d\jd`c\
I HAD a huge smile on my face
when I read the story saying the
effects of climate change may be
less severe than had been feared
(Forecasts for global warming too
high , May 30).
Of course the forecasters
research is overestimated. They
cant forecast what our British
weather is going to do tomorrow,
let alone by the year 2100.
Sharon Davies,
Tredegar, Gwent
N_p@i\Xccpcffb]finXi[
kf=fijpk_Xe[@e^_Xd
OH how I look forward to Fridays
Daily Express and the columns of
Frederick Forsyth and John
Ingham with their common-sense,
no-nonsense views and concern for
the welfare of the humans and
wildlife of this planet of ours.
I just wish the politicians would
read them and take note.
Yvonne Heyes,
Bolton
THE news that the EU now wants to cut the power of
peoples vacuum cleaners under potty new regulations
just shows what a mineeld this organisation has become
for businesses wanting to prosper in Britain (Vacuum
ban shows how EU is sucking the life out of UK, May 31).
Far from reducing energy levels, the only thing this daft
measure would reduce is power to pick up the dust.
This is yet another typical example of Brussels at its
worst, interfering in British life and business.
I really would love to see how David Cameron could
renegotiate a way out of this kind of madness.
Far from wasting his time in futile talks, what we need
from the Prime Minister as regards the EU is a straight in
or out referendum to coincide with the European
elections next May.
The British people, just like the Swiss and Norwegians,
want to be able to run their own government and make
their own laws free from this kind of petty nonsense.
Geoffrey Brooking,
Balderstone, Lancs
0-P<8IJFC;8E;JK@CC
K8B@E>KFFD8EP:8CCJ%%%
8
Y0UN ert|ear just rar ard
as|ed e |oW | Was. Ursure of
t|e purpose of ||s erqu|ry, |
to|d || t|at | Was f|ve feet ard
I0 |rc|es W|t| y soc|s or ard as|ed
W|et|er t|ere Was aryt||r e|se |
cou|d |e|p || W|t|.
"Yes," |e sa|d, ard proceeded to as|
W|et|er | Was aWare t|at 60 per cert
of peop|e serd text essaes W|||e
t|ey are or |o||day.
"| Was rot aWare of t|at," | rep||ed,
"but a ost d|stressed to |ear |t. for
as you W||| sure|y |roW |f you |ave
beer as ass|duous|y co||ect|r surveys
s|rce t|e start of t||s year as | |ave,
you W||| rea||se t|at 60 per cert of
arr|aes reac| t|e|r 20t| Wedd|r
arr|versary ard 60 per cert of er
c|a| t|at t|e|r |oes are erery
eff|c|ert. Does t||s rot pa|rt a sad
p|cture of er o|r off or |o||day or
t|e|r 20t| Wedd|r arr|versary t|er,
rea||s|r t|at t|ey |ave |eft t|e|r W|ves
at |oe, serd a |appy arr|versary
text essae, but car t||r| of rot||r
to say ot|er t|ar to te|| t|e t|at t|e
|ouse |s erery eff|c|ert?"
"| |adr't t|ou|t of |t |||e t|at," y
ca||er sa|d, "but | s|ou|d po|rt out t|at
39 per cert of peop|e or |o||day W|||
a|e p|ore ca||s to fa||y ard fr|erds
to te|| t|e a|| about |t."
"I|at or|y a|es t||rs Worse," |
sa|d, "for 39 per cert of er use
products des|red for Woer as part
of t|e|r da||y roo|r. I|at's W|y
t|ese |eart|ess, 20 yearsarr|ed
|o||daya|ers are r|r|r |oe: |t's
because |eav|r t|e|r poor W|ves |r t|e
UK ears t|ey dor't |ave access to
t|e|r favour|te to||etr|es."
"I|e f|ures |'ve beer te|||r you,"
y ca||er cort|rued, cop|ete|y
|ss|r t|e po|rt of W|at | |ad beer
say|r, "coe fro a reW survey by
02 or t|e c|ares |r ob||e p|ore
usae W|er abroad s|rce |proved
va|ue LU pac|aes cae |r. for apart
fro t|e f|ures |'ve a|ready quoted,
29 per cert serd ea||s to |eep |r
touc| W|||e or |o||day."
"We||, t|at's rot |||e|y to be uc|
use," | sa|d, "for ar ear||er survey
revea|ed t|at 29 per cert of peop|e
read text essaes W|||e |r t|e bat|.
"W|at's t|e po|rt of c|ec||r text
essaes |r t|e bat| W|er your
|usbard |s try|r to serd you ar ea||
to W|s| you a |appy arr|versary, as|
W|ere t|e to||etr|es are ard re|ay t|e
ood reWs about erery eff|c|ercy?"
"As | sa|d ear||er," |e rep||ed, "60
per cert serd text essaes, so
t|ere's a ood c|arce t|at t|e Woar
|r t|e bat| W||| |ave p|c|ed t|e up."
"But |f 60 per cert serd text
essaes," | sa|d, "t|at ears 40 per
cert dor't serd text essaes, W||c|
probab|y exp|a|rs W|y 40 per cert of
Woer are rot certa|r t|ey are or t|e
r||t erery tar|ff. | car just see t|e
roW, s|uped |r t|e bat|, covered W|t|
bubb|es, of course, or | Wou|d be forced
t|rou| s|p|e decercy to |oo| aWay,
Wa|t|r |r va|r for t|e|r erfo|| to text
t|e ard te|| t|e about t|e erery
tar|ff. W|at a sad state t||s courtry of
ours |as ot |tse|f |rto."
"So ay | ta|e |t t|at you W||| be
te|||r your readers about t|e 02
survey?" y ca||er p|eaded.
"Certa|r|y rot," | sa|d, ard We |eft |t
at t|at.
NoW We |roW
LU operates
|r a vacuu
J?FLC;K8B<8N8PJ=8:<J:?FFC?FLIJ:LI9J6
9<8:?:FD9<I
C\kk\if]k_\[Xp
K8I><K1?`^_$gfn\i\[mXZlldjXi\]XZ`e^<LYXe
P\j Ef
K\ek_`e^jpfle\m\ibe\nXYflk%%%_\Xikj Wl||lA| HAk!S!ON
This is Heart Rhythm Week when Arrhythmia Alliance
(www.aaaw.org.uk) will be promoting increased
awareness of heart rhythm disorders.
(%In an average lifetime, a human heart pumps
enough blood to fill 100 swimming pools.
)%The human heart is not heart-shaped. A cows
heart is more heart-shaped than a human one.
*%The use of a heart shape in a logo to signify love
was popularised by graphic designer Milton Glaser
in his 1977 I New York posters and T-shirts.
+%According to the two billion-word Oxford
English Corpus, the adjective most often used to
qualify the noun heart is broken.
,%In an average lifetime, a human heart will beat
almost three billion times.
-%I Left My Heart In San Francisco was the
19th most-performed song of the 20th century.
.%The King of Hearts is the only king without a
moustache in a standard pack of playing cards.
/%On the day the Netherlands lost to France in a
penalty shoot-out at Euro 1996, the death rate
from heart attacks and strokes among Dutchmen
rose by 50 per cent compared with an average day.
0%Aristotle believed that the heart was the bodys
source of heat.
('%An average mans heart weighs 10-12oz; an
average womans heart weighs 8-10oz.
C\kk\ij
!|e o||] |iress, Nur|er l0 |oWer !|ores Street, |or1or |C1k c|N. |oi. 0c0 0?8 c04
|ro||. eiress|ettersGeiress.co.u| (|rc|u1e ]our o11ress or1 te|e|ore rur|er)
46 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
9pG\k\i:lec`]]\
RICHARD HUNTER
HEAD OF EQUITIES
HARGREAVES LANSDOWN
www.hl.co.uk
Compass still pointing in the right direction
COMPASS Group is one of the unsung
heroes of the FTSE 100, but the global
food and support services company has
a market value of 16.3billion.
Founded in 1941 as Factory Canteens
Limited, it spent some time within the
former Grand Metropolitan conglomer-
ate before being listed in 1988.
Its food business provides more than
four billion meals a year in ofces, fac-
tories, hospitals, big sporting venues,
schools and universities (from kinder-
garten to college). Its support services
arm includes cleaning, building mainte-
nance and reception services.
North America accounts for 46 per
cent of revenues, Europe and Japan 35
per cent and emerging markets 19 per
cent. In order of size, its markets are
business and industry, healthcare, edu-
cation, defence, offshore and sports
and leisure.
Half-year results in May saw revenues
rise 4.1 per cent to 8.8billion, prot
before tax increase 8.1 per cent to
611million and the operating margin
up 0.15 per cent to 7.3 per cent.
An 11 per cent increase in the divi-
dend was a statement of condence
from the board, though the current div-
idend yield of 2.2 per cent is not among
the highest.
Set against these positives, Europe
and Japan saw sales fall, while costs are
under pressure from rising food prices.
The unseasonal weather has also cre-
ated volatility, while the global nature
of the companys business exposes it to
currency risk. In terms of the sectors in
which it operates, Compass is within a
crowded and highly competitive mar-
ket place.
Even so, it is working hard to counter
these threats and from 2008 to 2010
spent 550million on acquisitions.
The companys diversication, both
geographically and in the services it
provides, has resulted in a balanced
portfolio, which should protect it from
downturns in some of its regions.
Some concerns have been expressed
about the valuation of the company:
progress to date has been rewarded by
a 40 per cent increase in the share price
over the past year, as compared to a
gain of 26 per cent for the wider FTSE
100.
Even so, analysts continue to believe
in the prospects for Compass and the
general market consensus on the shares
is a buy.
""K?<J?8I<?LEK<I""I@:?8I;?LEK<I""?8I>I<8M<JC8EJ;FNE""
:Y^ iZY Wn E:I:G 8JCA>;;:
Z"bV^a/eZiZg#Xjca^[[Z5ZmegZhh#Xd#j`
K^h^i8^in7jh^cZhheV\Zhdca^cZVi
lll#ZmegZhh#Xd#j`$X^in
IZa/%'%-+&',&+'
City&Business City&Business
THE jobs market is at
its healthiest since 2008
following a record rise in
new posts, says a report
by one of the UKs larg-
est recruitment rms.
There were 8 per cent
more vacancies on offer
in May than April and 17
per cent more than a
year earlier, according
to the Reed Job Index.
The sharpest growth
was in training, educa-
t i o n, he a l t h a nd
medicine and only three
sectors, namely nanc-
ial services, accountancy
and purchasing, suffered
a fall.
Reed said the improve-
ment was spread across
the UK, with Northern
Ireland the only region
t o s ee a dr op i n
vacancies.
Official figures last
month also showed ris-
i ng vacanci es but
unemployment rose by
15,000 to 2.52 million in
the rst three months of
the year.
SALES grew at the low-
est rates for ve years as
prots plunged last year,
analysis of the largest
350 stock market listed
companies shows.
Combined revenues
rose by just 2.1 per cent
in 2012 but prots after
tax fell by 29.7 per cent.
According to the Share
Centre Prot Watch UK
study, rms failed to pass
on rising costs.
The largest 100 rms,
which are more interna-
tional, grew sales by 2.3
per cent against 0.9 per
cent for mid-sized com-
panies. But prots at big
rms dived by 30 per
cent, against a 16.5 per
cent drop for mid-tier
rms. The squeeze was
spread broadly but
nancials, oil and gas
and miners were worst
affected.
Investment analyst
Helal Miah said revenues
would remain under
pressure but protability
should improve.
Jobs market looking healthy Top rms see prots slump
King signals condence
as recovery gathers pace
individuals but we do keep cracking
on with changing the system.
He denied that the Bank had failed
to anticipate the crisis, saying its role
was to understand the system and
respond in the right way, which it
had done.
One of the positive legacies of the
countrys nancial problems was a
reformed and safer banking system.
In the Banks most recent ination
report King said growth was a little
stronger than previously hoped and
ination would be weaker than
feared.
Optimism about a recov-
ery has increased since
ofcial gures showed the
UK avoided a triple-dip
recession with 0.3 per cent
expansion in the rst
quarter.
Investec economist
Philip Shaw said any
change in policy this week
was improbable given
the lack of any major
changes in the economic
outlook.
He added: Furthermore it would
seem strange if the committee were to
embark on a radical departure from
its current course just ahead of Mark
Carney taking over the helm.
Although prospects had improved
over the past couple of months, the
risk of another false start might
prompt the new governor to push for
more quantitative easing, possibly
in August.
Howard Archer, economist at IHS
Global Insight, said additional quanti-
tative easing seems more likely to
come as a welcoming present some-
time in the third quarter for incoming
governor Mark Carney than as a part-
ing gift for Sir Mervyn.
OUTGOING Bank of England gover-
nor Sir Mervyn King has said there are
signs of a turnaround in the UK
economy, ahead of his nal interest
rates meeting this week.
You can see signs now of a recovery.
The economy is growing. Not as fast
as we would like it to grow but no one
can foretell the future and all sorts of
unexpected events will come along,
he said.
King steps down at the end of this
month when he will be
replaced by his Bank of
Canada counterpart Mark
Carney.
King is widely expected
to call for an extra 25bil-
lion of monetary stimulus
when the Banks Monetary
Policy Committee (MPC)
starts its two-day meeting
on Wednesday.
But analysts believe that
King and two other MPC
members who voted for
a cash injection last
month will be outnumbered by their
colleagues in favour of keeping inter-
est rates, currently at a historic low of
0.5 per cent, and quantitative easing
measures left unchanged.
He made his upbeat, if cautious,
assessment of the UK economy in an
appearance on BBC Radio 4s Desert
Island Discs. During the programme
he also said that the public had every
right to be angry with banks for the
nancial crisis that has gripped the
country and affected living standards.
He added: But the crisis wasnt
caused by a few individuals, it was a
crisis of the system of banking we
had allowed to grow up. It is very
important we do not demonise the
SUNDAY EXPRESS
THE Co-operative Group may
dispose of its travel arm in a re
sale and impose losses on
creditors of its beleaguered bank,
as part of a three-pronged plan to
shore up nances.
BOOKMAKER Fred Done, head
of the Betfred chain and owner of
the Tote, is expanding into
motorway services and plans to
open 50 truck stops across the
country over the next ve years.
SUNDAY TIMES
BRITAIN can hit its targets for
reducing carbon emissions and
spend 40billion less than
envisaged if it embarks on a new
dash for gas, an inuential
consultancy has claimed.
THE worlds largest airport
operator, Aena of Spain, plans to
add to its sprawling interests by
taking over London Luton.
SUNDAY TELEGRAPH
FRANCE is in a worse state than
Britain at the time of the Seventies
bailout by the International
Monetary Fund, the chief of insurer
Axa has declared.
THE independent committee of
the board of troubled FTSE 100
miner ENRC is expected to allow a
consortium led by its founder more
time to produce a rm takeover bid.
INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY
BRITAINS biggest engineering
businesses are circling a project for
protecting 1.25 million Londoners
and 200billion of property from
ooding until the end of the century.
THE OBSERVER
THE number of taxpayers earning
over 1million a year has almost
doubled in the past two years.
What the
Sunday
papers say
Hong Kong
store a rst
for Topshop
SIR Philip Greens Topshop
fashion chain will make its rst
foray into China this week when
it opens a agship store in
Hong Kong.
The new 14,000 sq ft shop
will act as a standard bearer for
British styles and trends.
Green is ying out for the
launch ceremony on Thursday
and is expected to use the visit
to hold talks about other
possible openings in China.
The Hong Kong Topshop in
bustling Queens Road Central
will be run by LAB Concept, a
subsidiary of local department
store Lane Crawford.
It will manage the shop,
provide retail space and
operational expertise such as
staff and distribution support.
A Topshop outlet will also
open later in the year at LAB
Concepts fashion centre in
Hong Kongs Queensway Plaza.
It marks the latest move in
Topshops expansion overseas
where it now has 137 franchises
in 37 countries. It also owns
three agship stores in the US in
addition to its 319 UK stores.
Listing on
the cards
GREETINGS card
retailer Card Factory
is being lined up for a
possible 700million
stock market listing.
Its owner
Charterhouse is
looking to sell or oat
the 650-strong chain.
Sir Mervyn King
Topshop
will be a
trailblazer
for British
trends
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 47
Down one for old Blighty
ITS chocks away for a new ad
campaign for Spitre Ale, made
by the Kent brewer Shepherd
Neame.
Comedy duo Ben Miller and
Alexander Armstrong will do
their RAF airmen act in the TV
and print adverts for the ISDX
listed rm, which are due to
start this summer.
The pair will also make
public appearances as Spitre
Ale ambassadors over the
next two years.
Popular characters from their
award-winning comedy series,
the pilots use modern-day
street slang but speak with
clipped 1940s accents.
Spitre brand manager Kate
Maclean said: We are very
excited to have Alexander and
Bens RAF pilots as our
ambassadors. Spitre has
always been associated with a
very British sense of humour.
Originally brewed to mark
the 50th Anniversary of the
Battle of Britain, Spitre Ale is
well known for its cheeky
humour across its marketing
and advertising.
Alexander Armstrong, left, and Ben Miller pull a pint of Spitre
I=:6>BB6G@:I6C9>H9M
;>K:96NH
Bison charges onto
Aim with 40m float
9p;Xm`[J_Xe[
CONSUMER spending power will
be in the spotlight this week with
updates from across the retail,
leisure and housing sectors.


INVESTORS will be checking
out whether Tescos refocus-
ing under chief executive Philip
Clarke is bearing fruit when it
unveils rst-quarter trading g-
ures on Wednesday.
The supermarket giant saw its
best like-for-like sales growth for
three years in its nal quarter,
with a rise of 0.5 per cent.
But progress could be tested
against a highly promotional
market and a resurgent perform-
ance from Sainsburys.
Panmure Gordons retail expert
Philip Dorgan, forecasts a fall of
about 1 per cent in Tescos like-
for-like sales over the rst three
months.
Tesco revealed a shift in strat-
egy away from increasing store
space to focus more on conven-
ience outlets and online sales
when it presented annual results
in April.
The company has also signalled
its exit from the US market.

NEW G4S boss Ashley


Almanza will face sharehold-
ers for the rst time on Thursday
after predecessor Nick Buckles
stepped down as head of the secu-
rity giant following its botched
Olympics games contract.
Almanzas rapid elevation sur-
prised some analysts, as he had
only just joined G4S as chief
nancial ofcer.
But a recent prot warning
which sent its shares tumbling by
15 per cent proved the nal straw
and Buckles, who was paid a total
of 1.2million in 2012, walked
away with a years salary of
830,000 plus a pension
allowance of 332,000.

INVESTORS will
be anxious to hear
from Hornby chair-
man Roger Canham
about plans to turn
the business around
when the toy rm
announces full-year
results on Friday.
Chief executive
Frank Martin
has announced
he will step down by the end of
June, while there will also be a
shake-up of the senior manage-
ment team following a recent dis-
astrous performance.
Hornby is trying to improve its
fortunes after suffering poor Lon-
don 2012 merchandise sales and
supply chain problems.
Broker Numis predicts annual
gures will show that prots have
been wiped out, forecasting the
company to break even compared
to a 4.5 million surplus the previ-
ous year.

LONDON Pride brewer


Fuller, Smith & Turner,
chaired by Michael Turner
(left), is expected to cheer
investors with strong
trading news when it
unveils annual gures on
Friday.
Panmure Gordon fore-
casts pre-tax prots of
32.2million as well as a
7 per cent rise in dividend.

HOUSE builder Bellway


is likely to provide more
signs that the property
market is gathering momentum
when it updates on recent trad-
ing on Friday.
The sector has been enjoying a
recovery, spurred by recent Gov-
ernment incentives.
Nationwide says prices saw
their strongest year-on-year
growth in 18 months in May.
Numis analyst Chris Millington
is predicting a strong update
from the Newcastle rm.

BUILDING materials group


Wolseley will unveil its latest
trading update tomorrow, with
problems in Europe likely to con-
tinue to offset a better perform-
ance in the US.
The group, which trades as
Plumb Center, Pipe Center and
Drain Center in the UK, is
expected to do well out of the US
housing recovery.
City analysts will also be hop-
ing to hear whether the Govern-
ments Funding for Lending and
Help to Buy schemes have helped
customer sentiment.
Davy Research expects trading
prots for the quarter of 145mil-
lion to 155million.
7G>:;>C</L::@6=:69
Tesco unveils progress on turnaround
TODAY
FINALS: GB Group.
INTERIMS: GW Pharmacueticals.
AGMs: Fairpoint.
ECONOMY: Bank of England Funding for
Lending gures, Halifax house prices,
manufacturing PMI.
TUESDAY
FINALS: Sepura, Severeld-Rowen.
TRADING UPDATES: Air Partner, Wolseley.
AGMs: Quarto, Williams Grand Prix.
ECONOMY: British Retail Consortium
retail sales monitor, construction PMI.
WEDNESDAY
FINALS: Findel, First Property, RPC,
Synergy.
INTERIMS: Alternative Networks.
TRADING UPDATES: Tesco.
AGMs: Capital & Regional, JKX Oil &
Gas, Mears, Moss Bros.
ECONOMY: Services PMI.
THURSDAY
FINALS: Johnson Matthey.
AGMs: Direct Line Insurance, Dignity,
G4S, PageGroup, Ophir Energy,
Ormonde Mining, Oxford Biomedica.
ECONOMY: Bank of England interest
rates decision.
FRIDAY
FINALS: Fuller Smith & Turner, Hornby,
KCOM.
TRADING UPDATES: Bellway, SThree.
AGMs: Premier Oil.
ECONOMY: Balance of trade gures.
City&Business
SHALE oil and gas specialist Bison
Energy Services plans to test investor
appetite for Americas fracking boom
when it oats on Aim this month.
Bison wants to raise 40million as it
prepares to become the only London-
listed company exposed to hydraulic
fracturing in the US.
The process involves injecting
water, sand and chemicals at high
pressure into rock ssures through
well bores to release oil and gas and
has aroused controversy over its envi-
ronmental impact.
But tapping into its vast shale oil
and gas resources could help the
worlds biggest economy to achieve
energy self-sufciency over the next
20 years, and ease concerns over its
reliance on imports.
Bison owns a water disposal serv-
ices business located in the Bakken
formation in the Dakotas, where it
plans to supply services to companies
involved in fracking.
The region is considered one of the
most prolic areas for recovering
unconventional oil and gas resources
in the US.
The company raised 5million on
the markets last August. According
to a statement from Patneroster
Resources, one of its investors, Bison
needed the cash to complete the
acquisition of property in Wisconsin.
The area has signicant deposits of
northern white sand, which is impor-
tant to the fracking process.
Paternoster added: These depos-
its are well located to supply the oil
shale areas in the northern USA,
including the Bakken shale area in
North Dakota, which is one of the
largest oil deposits in the US.
A spokeswoman for Bison declined
to comment on the companys plans.
Buy one pair get another pair free
All styles feature leather uppers and the soles are
hand-stitched as well as glued - a unique feature not
found in other shoes at this great price.
Available in the following UK sizes: 5, 6, 6, 7,
7, 8, 8, 9, 9, 10, 11, 12 & 13
30 day returns period
Leather Shoes
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 Daily Express Offer 31029, PO Box 87, Brecon, LD3 3BE
2 0871 911 7022*
3 shop.express.co.uk/bogofshoes

If youprefer not toreceiveinformationandoffersfromorganisationscarefullyselectedbyExpressNewspapers, pleasetickhere . Reg. London141748ExpressNewspapers, TheNorthern


&Shell Building, No. 10Lower ThamesStreet LondonEC3R6EN. PLEASEDONOTSENDCASH. Pleaseallow7workingdays for delivery. Offersaresubject toavailabilityandopentoUK
mainlandonly. Intheunlikelyevent that youarenot 100%happywithyour purchaseyoumayreturnthegoodstouswithin30daysof receipt for refundor replacement, all detailsareincluded
witheachitem. Please note we donot refundpostage onunsuitable items or cancelledorders. Your contract is withBVGAirflo. ASIGNATUREISREQUIREDUPONDELIVERY. *Calls cost
10pper minutefromaBTlandlineplusnetworkextras. Callsfromother networksandmobilesmaycost more.
only
39.95
buy one pair
get one pair
free
Code Size Qty Price P&P Total
Leather Shoes 39.95
3.95

FREE pair FREE
Total
Mr Mrs Ms First Name................................... Initials............ Surname .......................................
Address...........................................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................... Postcode ..............................................................
Daytime tel no................................................Email .......................................................................................
I enclose a cheque for made payable to Express Newspapers Offer 31029.
Please write your name and address on the back of your cheque. Or please debit my
Visa MasterCard Maestro card Card no
Iss no (if Maestro) Valid from Exp date Security code
BLACK (BOX)
BLACK (LFK)
BROWN (LFR)
Classic Oxford
A timeless classic suitable for any occasion.
Penny Loafer
A traditional casual shoe
with a classic feel.
Traditional Brogue
A superb stitched and
punched dress shoe.
BLACK (BBK)
BROWN (BBR)
BLACK (CCK)
BROWN (CCR)
Chelsea Boots
Perfect for the winter months,
featuring side stretch panels and
pull-on tab.
reader
offer
31029
/lmx
48 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
To advvertise iiin this ssectionn 0200 77098 22840
class.ffranchisssing@eexpress.co.ukk
www.ddailyexpppressfraanchise.comm
In association with
O
m c
I a I N e w s p a p
e
r
t
o
t
h
e
8
F
A

O
m c
IaI Newspap
e
r
t
o
t
h
e
8
F
A

<[`k\[Yp
8C@JFE:FC<D8E
ADVERTISING FEATURE
THE UKS booming staycation
holiday business is creating
fresh franchise opportunities.
UK Caravans Direct buys and
sells static caravans and is
looking for the right people to
join its franchise network.
Director Nathan Hodgson
said: We have been seeing a
high volume of caravans being
bought and sold in the UK as
well as many parts of Europe
and that looks set to continue.
We have a number of
franchisees up and running and
doing very well.
Candidates need to be exible
and reliable. Their role is to
source and inspect caravans,
liaise with the caravan and park
owners and arrange transport
once a sale has been agreed.
Mr Hodgson added: We offer
a full franchise training
programme, which covers sales
and marketing and business
administration, provides a
detailed overview of the
marketplace and will teach you
everything you need to know.
@E=FID8K@FE1 0845 017 6022/
www.ukcaravansdirect
franchise.com
>\k_ffb\[
fek_\kiX`c
f]ZXiXmXej
@
F YOUVE been looking to set
up and run your own franchise
business then your search could
stop at the British Franchise
Exhibition at Manchester
Central on June 21 and 22.
This exhibition promises two days
of high-quality interactive visitor
features, an informative conference
programme and a showcase of
some of the most exciting
investment opportunities in the
fast-growing franchise sector.
Starting a franchise business
with a tried and tested format and
the support of an experienced
franchisor is a safer route into
business ownership than starting
up a business on your own.
However, buying a franchise
business is not something you
should do without rst carrying out
your own detailed research.
An event like the British
Franchise Exhibition is an ideal
place to start.
Among the line-up of exhibitors
are many leading franchise brands
from business sectors such as
health and tness, care, cleaning,
automotive, retail, property, home
improvement, education and
business services.
All assembled under one roof,
they present prospective
franchisees with the opportunity to
meet their franchise teams, speak
to some of their current franchise
owners and get answers to their
many questions.
Running alongside the franchise
exhibitors are a number of visitor
features designed to provide
practical help and advice, including
the Careers Clinic, facilitated by
Personal Career Management,
which can help individuals work
out the next step of their career
and assess their potential
suitability as franchise owners.
The Finance Clinic is facilitated
by Franchise Finance, a rm of
independent nancial advisers who
will offer basic advice and
information on franchise nance
and guidance on preparing a
business plan.
A key feature of the event is the
extensive conference and seminar
programme.
New to the Manchester
exhibition are the high-investment
panel seminars, featuring a panel of
four high-investment franchises
talking in depth about this
specialist aspect of franchising.
McDonalds will be making its
return to Manchester Central,
offering prospective franchisees a
real insight into being part of one of
the worlds biggest brands through
its popular franchisee recruitment
open sessions.
Like many franchise companies,
McDonalds is keen to encourage
more women into franchising and
on Friday June 21 it will be hosting
an exclusive Women in Franchising
open session.
The bfa will be kicking off the
event with its Great Northern
Business Breakfast on the opening
morning of the exhibition at
Manchesters Midland Hotel.
You can register for the British
Franchise Exhibition by calling
0844 257 8668 or visiting www.
franchiseinfo.co.uk
=`e[Xe\n]lkli\
SHOWCASE: Last
years event was a
huge success
Gfk\ek`Xc
NAME ....................................................................................................................................
ADDRESS ..............................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................ ...............................................
EMAIL ...................................................................................................................................
POST CODE
FREEPOST RSSK-JZAC-JCJG
The Writers Bureau
DEPT AA3613
MANCHESTER M3 1LE
WHY NOT BE A
WRITER?
As a freelance writer, you can earn very good money
in your spare time, writing the stories, articles, books,
scripts etc that editors and publishers want. Millions
of pounds are paid annually in fees and royalties.
Earning your share can be fun, profitable and creatively
fulfilling.
To help you succeed, we offer you a first-class, home-study
course fromprofessional writers with individually tailored
tuition and expert personal guidance fromyour tutor. You
learn about writing articles, stories, novels, romances,
historicals, journalism, writing for children, radio, TV, the
stage etc. You are advised on style, presentation, HOW
TO SELL YOUR WRITING, copyright and much more.
In short, you learn how to be a successful writer.
If you want to be a writer, this is the way to start! Its
ideal for beginners. No previous experience or special
education required. You can earn while you learn. Details
free including EXPERT OPINIONS. Full refund if not
successful. Visit our website or call our Freephone number
NOW!
email: 13W1@writersbureau.com Please include your name and address
www.writersbureau.com
Save 30
Quote AA
0800 856 2008
FREE CALL
24 HRS
24
Years of
Success
Please send me free details of how to become a successful
freelance writer.
Members of BILD
and ABCC
www.facebook.com/writersbureau
www.twitter.com/writersbureau
TTTooo aaadddvvveeerrrttiisseee iinnnn this section
000222000 7777009999988 2229991199
ww wwww.ddaailyyexxpprresssfr rraannnchhiiseee.coomm
TRAINING AND TUITION
Learn more with a
FREE copy of the
new issue of
Franchise World,
the premier news
magazine.
Call 020 8605 2555,
or view free online at
www.franchiseworld.co.uk
Looking for
a franchise?
MAKE 150K
+ PER YEAR
RECESSION PROOF
WORK FROM HOME
0207 381 6521
BUSINESS OPPS
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 49
Book your FREE TICKETS now
at www.franchiseinfo.co.uk
using the promo code: DE1
Supported by: In association
with:
Dreaming of your
own business?
Invest in a franchise
and run your own
business with the
support and stability
of an established brand
ETHICAL
FRANCHISING
P
R
O
MOTING
P
R
O
M O T I N G
FranchiseExhibition
TheBritish
21 & 22 June 2013
|
Manchester Central
50 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013

I enclose a cheque for made payable to Express Newspapers Offer


FA3899. Please write your name and address on the back of your cheque.
Or debit my Visa MasterCard

Maestro
Card no Iss no (if Maestro)
Valid fr Exp date Security code
Mr Mrs Ms First name............................................. Initials.................................
Surname................................................................................ Address ..............................
...............................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................
Postcode......................................Daytime tel no ................................................................
Signature .............................................................................. Date...........................................................
If you prefer not to receive information and offers from organisations carefully selected by Express Newspapers, please tick here . Reg. London 141748
Express Newspapers, The Northern & Shell Building, No. 10 Lower Thames Street London EC3R 6EN. PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH. Offer subject to
availability. Please allow up to 10 days for delivery. To UK addresses only. Please return within 7 days for full refund.
* Calls cost 10ppm from a BT landline plus network extras

reader
offer
FA3899
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 Daily Express Offer FA3899, Belton
Rd West, Loughborough, LE11 5XL
2 0871 988 8400*
3 www.shop.express.co.uk
Code Price Qty Total
Collins Ultimate Desktop Library A200 99.95
Magnifying Reading Glass E985 17.95
4x AAA Energiser Batteries E946.2 2.95
Poppy Spray Cross Stitch Kit A034 22.95
Order total
FA3899
Includes Collins Desktop Plus, English Dictionary, Concise
Thesaurus, Britannica Concise Encyclopaedia, Collins Discovery
Encyclopaedia, Collins Bradford's Crossword Solvers Dictionary and
a suite of powerful writing tools.
Also features a ve-language European translator plus phrase book
(UK/French/German/Spanish and Italian) allowing you to hear full
pronunciations.
Further features include:
Large, clear screen with adjustable font size
Clear QWERTY keyboard
Speaks the word you enter
Nine crossword and anagram games
Helps to solve your crossword clues
340,000 words, denitions and examples
25,000 Encyclopaedic articles
3,500 quotations from the Collins Complete and Unabridged
Thesaurus
Collins Concise Thesaurus with 250,000 synonyms & antonyms
180,000 Word phonetic spell correction
Takes 2x AAA (included). Measures L12.7xW7.5xD1.8cm to t
neatly into your pocket.
Collins Ultimate
Desktop Library
A beautiful, easy-to-stitch floral
design from the Anchor Collection
Chunky oral cross stitch design from
Anchor
Makes a beautiful cushion
Kit is worked on a large mesh, printed
canvas with acrylic yarn
Easy to work with no counting
required
Kit contains size 16 tapestry needle,
instructions, 4.5 count full colour printed
canvas and all yarns
Ideal for reading books, maps,
newspapers and more
Use it on a table or wear it comfortably around
your neck using the cord (included) for hands
free use
Magnifying up to 2-3 times, it is ideal for
reading newspapers, magazines and books, or
even for applying nail polish for a
perfect manicure
Four LED lights provide excellent
illumination
L20cm W27.5cm H10.5cm
Takes 2 AAA batteries (not
included but available in coupon)
Large Reading
Glass with Light
only
99.95
inc p&p
only
17.95
inc p&p
Anchor Chunky Cross
Stitch Poppy Spray
only
22.95
inc p&p
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 51
K\ee`j%%%%%%%%% ,+$,,
Il^YpLe`fe,-$,.
:i`Zb\k%%%%%%%% ,/$,0
=ffkYXcc%%%%%%% ,0$-*
Sport
DAILY EXPRESS
0| 0ar||s|e
0p 0hepstow
L Le|cester
R R|adsor
kbove Jhe 5tars ........L 2.45
kce Master ................L 5.45
kct Your 5hoe 5|ze .. 0| 8.!5
kdm|ra|s Ra||...........R 6.30
k|aophoaos .............R 6.00
k|shaa fa[er ............0p 6.05
km|s keua|s ...............L 5.45
kae|s 0a|||a .......... 0| 8.45
ka[uaa 8each ............R 6.30
kaaa's Pear| ..............L 4.45
kaaa|uaa .................0p 5.00
kpr|| 0|e| .................0p 5.35
kqua krdeas ..............L 5.45
krch veat ..............0p 4.30
krch|ve ......................L 5.!5
kstra ha|| ................0p 5.35
kt|aat|c Is|e ..............L 4.45
kuss|e 8|ue................L 5.45
kuss|e ke|as ...........R 6.30
8 f|fty Jwo ...............R 1.30
8a|a's Pass ..............0p 6.05
8a[aa 8ear .................L 4.!5
8a[aa 5tory ...............L 5.45
8a|t|c Pr|ace............ 0| 8.45
8arbs Pr|acess ........0p 3.30
8araey Mc0rew ....... 0| 1.45
8as|e .........................L 5.45
8atche|ors 5tar .......0p 4.00
8ayaa kas|ra ......... 0| 8.!5
8e||e 8ayardo ..........0p 3.00
8er|e|ey 5treet .........L 4.45
8|ue Ma|sey ............. 0| 8.!5
8o|d kad free ...........R 6.30
8o|d 5a|per ................L 3.!5
8ombard|er ..............R 8.00
8oa[our 5teve ..........0p 2.30
8oo|e 0e 8|spo ......0p 6.05
8oomeraa 8ob ........R 1.00
8oy Jhe 8e|| ..............L 5.45
8ramsh||| Lass .........0p 4.30
8reccbeaaach ...........R 6.30
8urrea V|ew Lady .... 0| 8.45
0ab|e 8ay ..................L 2.!5
0aaoa Law .................L 5.!5
0hapter f|ve ............0p 5.00
0ho|s|rez .................0p 4.30
0hora| Pr|ace............R 6.30
0oasta| Passae ........L 2.45
0oafus|a ................ 0| 8.45
0ourt Pastora| ..........R 8.00
0ree| fa|coa .............L 4.!5
0r|sta||yev ...............0p 3.00
0roeso Mawr ...........0p 4.00
0tappers .................0p 4.30
0ur| ......................... 0| 8.45
0aace k|a ................L 5.!5
0aac|a Ma|te............L 5.45
0aac|a Re|come ....0p 3.00
0aady ......................0p 5.35
0ashwood ..................L 4.!5
0azeea .................... 0| 6.!5
0ee k|tch 0ove .........R 6.00
0eva V|ctr|x ..............L 5.!5
0|amoad 8|ue .......... 0| 1.45
0|amoadhead .............L 4.!5
0|m|tar ....................0p 4.00
0oacaster 8e||e ....... 0| 1.!5
0rummoad ...............0p 5.35
0ua|seo|r ..................R 8.30
0u|e of 0raae........0p 3.30
0uaaaaoa ...............R 1.30
asy 0ver ..................L 4.!5
atoa 0a| ..................L 4.45
||eaa Mor ............... 0| 6.45
|||es Imae ...............L 5.45
m|ratesdotcom ......0p 3.00
spr|t 0e M|das ........R 1.30
st|bdaad ..................L 5.!5
uroqu|p 8oy ...........0p 3.00
xceedexpectat|oas ..L 4.!5
xce||eat Jem ...........L 4.!5
xc|us|ve Raters ......R 8.00
x|t 0|ause ..............0p 3.30
xtraterrestr|a|....... 0| 6.45
fa|asteea ................0p 3.00
fa|cua .....................0p 5.00
f|ce||e .....................0p 3.00
forward March .........R 8.00
fred R|||etts .............L 4.!5
fuzzy Lo|c .............0p 5.00
0abr|a|'s 0|ft ...........0p 3.00
0eore 8a|er ..........0p 4.00
0eore 8ea[am|a .......L 5.45
0hostw|a ...............0p 3.00
0|r| 0f 0ad|z ............0p 3.30
0|aae|y .....................R 6.00
0oadby .................... 0| 1.!5
0o|d 8eau ................ 0| 8.45
0o|d ko|| .................. 0| 8.45
0o|dea 0ames..........0p 5.00
0rac|e's 0ames .......0p 3.00
0rec|aa .....................R 5.30
0reeasward ...............L 4.!5
ha|ry koc|et .............L 3.45
ha|f Jura .................0p 3.30
ha|||aham ...............R 8.00
hamoody ................. 0| 1.45
haadsome kaasom ..0p 5.35
haadwovea ................L 2.!5
harr|soa 0eore .......R 1.30
harry 8osch .............R 6.30
hatha hooh................L 2.!5
he's k 5tr||er............L 3.!5
herba||st ..................R 6.00
hoaey 0f k k|ttea ...0p 5.35
hoaeymooa xpress .R 6.00
hopes N 0reams ...... 0| 1.45
horaboy ...................R 6.00
hot kod Mamma ...... 0| 8.!5
Ice kpp|e .................0p 4.30
Icy 8|ue ................... 0| 6.!5
If I Rere k 8oy .........R 8.30
Ifaa..........................0p 4.00
Iadex Ra|ter ..............L 2.45
Iad|aa 8||||oaa|re ......R 8.00
Jaw|as|| ..................0p 6.05
Joe Pac|et ...............R 1.30
Jup|ter 5torm ..........R 8.30
Just L||e heavea ..... 0| 1.45
Juvea||e Lead ............L 2.!5
kaahea .....................R 6.00
kar| Marx ................0p 6.05
kashar ...................0p 4.30
katma| k|ver .............L 5.45
kept ........................0p 4.00
khee 5oc|ety .............L 2.!5
khuba|a ....................R 1.30
ka|ht's Parade .......0p 6.05
kozm|aa 8ay ............0p 4.30
L'km| Lou|s...............R 1.30
Lady 8eat|ac|.......... 0| 6.45
Lambert Pea .............R 6.30
Last 0est|aat|oa ...... 0| 6.!5
Latea|htrequest .... 0| 1.!5
Laura 5ecord ............R 8.00
Le J|re 0e 8roaze ...R 8.00
Leader||a ................L 2.45
Leaay 8ee................ 0| 1.45
Lhotse 5herpa ...........L 5.45
L|berty Jac| .............R 6.30
L||bourae Lass ..........R 5.30
L|a|ab|e ....................R 8.30
Luc|y 0aa ................ 0| 1.45
Luc|y 0|va ...............0p 4.30
Luc|ys 0oaao|sseur . 0| 1.!5
M'se||e ......................R 5.30
Mahadee ..................0p 4.00
Mar|tta ..................R 8.00
Master M|a ..............L 3.!5
Master 0f 0|su|se ..0p 3.00
Mex|ca|| ....................R 8.30
M|ace........................R 1.00
M|ss 8|a|eaey...........R 8.30
M|ss M|t|ate............R 8.00
M|ss J|er L||y .........0p 6.05
Mo[ave 0esert ......... 0| 8.!5
Mo[o 8ear .................R 6.30
Moss h||| ....................L 5.45
Mot|oa Lass .............0p 6.05
Movemeataever||es ..R 6.30
Mr 0aady Maa ..........0p 2.30
Mr Veadmaa ............0p 6.05
Muspe|he|m ............. 0| 1.!5
My 5ecret 0ream .....0p 2.30
Naadura ....................R 8.00
Natures Law ............ 0| 8.45
Ne|hbourhood ........0p 5.00
Ne|||e 8|y .................0p 3.30
Ne|soa 0uay ............ 0| 8.45
New k|ch .................0p 3.30
Newatoa Lode ..........L 4.!5
N||e ka|ht ................L 3.!5
N|ae 8efore Jea.........L 2.45
Nob|e 0eed ...............R 6.00
Nord|c 0uest ............R 8.30
Notaow Peaay .........0p 2.30
Nova 0hamp ..............L 2.!5
Nubar 8oy ...............0p 3.00
0ma|preseat .............R 8.00
0a R|th Jhe 0aace ...R 6.30
0ae Last 0ream .......0p 3.00
0pus Max|mus ...........L 5.45
0ratory .....................L 4.!5
Pa|ace Mooa .............R 1.00
Paadar ......................R 1.00
Paador|ca ................0p 5.35
Paramour ................ 0| 6.!5
Partaer.................... 0| 1.45
Pass Jhe J|me .........0p 4.30
Pateat|y ....................L 5.!5
Pea| 5torm .............0p 4.00
Peter||a ...................R 5.30
Pettochs|de .............0p 3.00
P|sceaa .....................R 1.30
Po||sh 0rowa ........... 0| 8.45
Po||y's Love ..............R 6.30
Poo|e harbour ..........R 1.30
Pr|ace 0f Pass|oa ......L 5.45
Proc|amat|oaofwar .. 0| 1.!5
Pu||ay ......................L 4.45
Pure M|sch|ef ...........R 8.00
0ueea's 5tar ...........0p 5.00
kasamaa .................. 0| 1.45
kawaafed ................. 0| 6.45
kea||ze .....................R 6.00
ked 8aroa ................ 0| 1.45
ked 0ape ................. 0| 1.45
ked Pa|ad|a ............. 0| 8.45
keet Jh|c|astroa ... 0| 1.!5
kea| haw| .............. 0| 8.!5
kea| Parade ............R 1.00
keae 5tar ............ 0| 8.!5
k|o 0ato ..................0p 6.05
k|vas khapsody .........L 3.45
k|ver krdeche.......... 0| 6.45
koc| Pea|................0p 5.00
kosaceous .................L 4.45
kuade|| ......................L 3.!5
kuss|aa L|a| .............R 8.00
5aayerr ....................R 5.30
5ahar|a .................... 0| 6.45
5a|at he|eaa .............R 8.30
5a|hee's k|rouad.......L 5.!5
5artor|a||st ..............0p 2.30
5car|et Rh|spers ......R 8.30
5ea 5o|d|er ..............0p 4.00
5|r|us Prospect .........R 1.00
5of|as Number 0ae ....L 4.!5
5part|c ......................L 5.45
5p|r|t 0f 5har[ah .......R 1.30
5pread 8oy .............. 0| 6.!5
5pr|ahee| Ja|e ....... 0| 6.45
5t V|aceat .................L 2.!5
5tar 0f Nam|b|a .......0p 6.05
5teps ........................R 1.30
5u|a Jwo ...................R 8.30
5u|taaah heyam .......R 8.00
5uper|or de ..........0p 3.00
5uperaova he|hts ....L 3.45
5weet Ja|||a 0uy .....L 5.!5
5weetaessaad||ht ....L 3.45
Ja|eat 5cout ............ 0| 6.!5
Jaqu|a.....................0p 2.30
Jawseef ...................0p 5.35
Jee It 0p Jommo ......R 6.00
Jha|aaa .....................L 4.45
Jhe 8|ac| Jacob|a ...0p 3.30
Jhe 0reea 0re ........R 8.00
Jhe 0uru 0f 0|oom ....L 4.!5
Jhe Moaoose .........0p 3.00
Jhecora|shcowboy ....R 8.30
Jhrtypo|atstothree .0p 2.30
Jhrust 0oatro| ......... 0| 6.!5
J|ah|r .......................L 3.!5
J|omaa Leead .........R 1.30
Joay ho|||s .............. 0| 6.45
Joo |us|ve .............. 0| 1.!5
Jrop|cs .....................R 1.30
Jrue Pr|ace ............. 0| 6.!5
Jweed|e 0ee ..............L 5.45
0ac|e 0ermot ..........0p 4.00
0amootha[ .................L 3.!5
Ve|ox .........................L 4.45
Vertueux .................0p 4.30
V|c|y Va|eat|ae ....... 0| 8.!5
V|ctr|x Ludorum .......R 1.00
V|eaaese Verse..........L 4.45
Raahe[ ......................R 8.30
Rha|ewe|h 5tat|oa ...L 2.!5
Rh|tstab|e Nat|ve ......L 5.45
R||||am hoarth .......0p 5.00
R|ater Mus|c ...........0p 6.05
Rood|aad kr|a ...........L 3.45
Roodstoc| ................R 6.30
Yeaer .......................L 5.!5
Youhavecoatro| .......0p 3.00
Zac's Pr|acess .........0p 2.30
Zamoys|| ...................L 3.!5
Z|e|haa|.....................L 4.45
IN0X
J00kY5
|ost
W|rs l4 1o]s Lsto|e
k L M00k 64 24 !6/68 5
k h00h5 62 22 !3/84 21
N 0kLLkN 36 !8 !0/6! +2!
5 0 5005k 35 !8 !6/63 +23
P hkNk0kN 33 !5 !!/65 54
J 0k0RLY 33 !9 !!/44 +4!
L M0kkI5 32 !3 9/6! 54
0 J00h0P 30 2! 5/38 +24
R 80I0k 28 !5 5/49 +!1
J fkNNIN0 28 !3 6/50 80
0 L 21 !! 4/1! 69
J P 5PN0k 26 !5 4/4! 5!
0 0I880N5 26 !8 !0/48 +24
k fkLL0N 24 !4 3/4! 4
JkkINk5
|ost
W|rs l4 1o]s LWor
k P 0'8kIN 5 26 2/!! !,323,598
k hkNN0N 8! !9 !8/!02 !,!43,926
k fkhY 65 !4 9/8! 154,28!
M J0hN5J0N 69 !5 1/8! 132,525
k 80kJJ 29 22 5/26 588,019
Mk5 k 80kk 20 !2 4/25 55!,854
M 80JJI 48 !8 4/34 418,512
k 8kL0IN0 35 !3 4/44 468,805
5Ik M 5J00J 21 23 6/36 43!,939
J 0050N 3! 20 1/28 318,511
0 0'Mkkk 56 20 9/64 315,298
k kYkN 32 !! 8/52 359,!00
k VkkIkN 21 20 8/34 344,400
0 hILL5 29 !1 !/25 332,534
P VkN5 15 !5 !/42 3!!,518
Jk8L5
INf0kM JkkINk5 (|ost l0 1o]s)
Kr|st|r Stu||s S (l W|rs or1 c
|oces fror 4 rurrers), | Vou|or
c (l/1/c), W Hoos c
(4/l0/cl), ||sWort| c0 (4/c/l0),
||ss J |e||1er c0 (l/c/S), |rs A
|errett S8 (c/l/lc), J |ors|oWe
S4 (c/S/l1), A bo|1|r S1
(1/l4/1c), |rs So]er S1
(4/4/lS), |or|or S0 (l/c/c), |
A|stor S0 (1/c/l0), | e C||es
S0 (l/l/4), J |ortror S0
(c/l/c), J Seor|r S0 (c/0/4),
Jerr|e Cor1||s| S0 (l/4/l0), |rs
K !utt] S0 (l/c/c).
INf0kM J00kY5 | Horoor
Sc (7 W|rs or1 lS |oces fror 41
rurrers), No|or S4 (1/4/l1),
SW|ft S1 (c/8/l7), k K|rscote
S0 (4/8/c4).
8est kaces for favour|tes:
WN .00. SS, ||S 1.4S. 4S,
CH| c.0S. 10, 4.00. 10, 1.lS.
10, c.4S. 10.
8est kaces for 0uts|ders: Nore.
8est kaces for Jra|aers:
WN c.10. k Horror (c |r 4).
8est kaces for Joc|eys:
WN 8.00. k | |oore (c |r c).
8|est rat|as drop:
CAk c.lS. lc] b|ue (Wor off c, roW
S4), CAk .4S. |ortrer (8c/c), CAk
c.lS. |ororour (8c/1), ||S 4.lS.
|re1 W|||etts (88/c7), ||S S.4S. bo]
!|e be|| (c/Sl), ||S S.4S. Ceore
berjor|r (1/c0).
JIM BOLGER will take his
time before deciding with
Sheikh Mohmmed where to
run Dawn Approach next.
Speaking at Chantilly,
where he saddled Loch
Garman in the Prix du
Jockey Club, Bolger said:
He got a bang leaving the
stalls and I think that set
him alight, and with the
slow pace then Kevin
wasnt able to get him
settled.
The race was set up for
him to win it, had he settled.
It didnt happen. Weve got
to get him home and see
how he is, so it will be a
couple of weeks (before we
see what happens).
JAMIE SPENCER won
the Group Two sprint at
Chantilly on Spirit Quartz
(4.1-1). Robert Cowells star
will go for the Kings Stand
at Royal Ascot next.
Elusivity, Mirza, Hamish
McGonagall and Stepper
Point were all unplaced.
THE German 1,000
Guineas was won by
Akuada (13-1). Marco
Bottis Senafe was third
(11-2). Clive Coxs
Melbourne Memories
finished ninth.
NICK WILLIAMS picked
up E9,000 for winning a
three-year-old hurdle at
Dieppe with Le Rocher
(12.7-1), ridden by James
Reveley.
Stablemate Dolores
Delightful was fourth in her
juvenile hurdle.
RICHARD HANNON
sends Fig Roll over for the
Coolmore Stud Fillies
Sprint at Naas (4.35).
She was beaten on her
debut but subsequently won
over five at Salisbury.
Sky Lantern won the
race last year, and went on
to win the Guineas, said
Hannon. The small field
will be perfect for Fig Roll,
who would prefer not to be
bumped around.
VIJkL 5JkJI5JI05
h00fPkINJ5
Lamboura: MIN0 (.00 W|r1sor)
Newmar|et: 80L0 5NIPk
(1.lS |e|cester)
North: h0J k00 MkMMk
(8.lS Cor||s|e)
Ra|es: kk5h0kk (4.10 C|estoW)
0kLL0P5 0055IP
Its Galileo again
SUPER stallion Galileo
had his second Derby
winner of the weekend
yesterday when Intello
effortlessly won the Prix
du Jockey Club at
Chantilly.
The 2001 winner of the
Derbys at Epsom and The
Curragh also sired Ruler Of
The World, hero of Saturdays
dramatic Investec Classic. And
on June 29 the three-year-old
will bid to emulate his dad in
Ireland.
On Friday, Talent (by New
Approach, a son of Galileo)
and Secret Gesture (Galileo)
were rst and second in the
Oaks. The 15-year-old stallion
is also the father of last years
retired superstar, Frankel, so
may yet become as legendary
as his grandad, Northern
Dancer, whose progeny won
six Epsom Derbys.
Tactics played a huge part
on Saturday with Joseph
OBrien setting a sedate pace
aboard Battle Of Marengo that
did not suit the hot favourite
Dawn Approach.
Jim Bolgers 2,000 Guineas
winner pulled so hard that his
jockey Kevin Manning gave up
wrestling with him at halfway,
allowed him his head coming
down the hill and let him go
the front. Within a matter of
strides Dawn Approach proved
a spent force and dropped
away to nish last of the 12
runners.
Elaine Burkes Libertarian
nished strongest of all to grab
second and 296,000 on the
line.
Exactly a century on from
suffragette Emily Davisons
death at Tattenham Corner, it
was as close as any lady trainer
has got to winning Flat racings
most prestigious prize.
Its nice to do it for the
ladies, said Burke, whose
father is trainer Alan Jarvis.
Her stable star a son of
New Approach will now have
a rest before taking on Ruler
Of The World again at the
Curragh. In September he has
been inked in for the St Leger
for which he is 6-1 favourite
with the sponsor, Ladbrokes.
Back to yesterday and Andre
Fabre has yet to decide where
Intello goes next.
As the French Derby is over
10 furlongs, he may well keep
him to that trip and take in the
Juddmonte International at
York in August.
The other alternative is to
give him a break and bring him
back for an autumn campaign
over 12 furlongs that would
include the Arc.
Intello is a best-priced 8-1
with Hills for Longchamps big
race on October 6.
DERBY HEROES:
Intello wins the Prix
du Jockey Club 24
hours after Ruler Of
The Worlds Epsom
success, right
By Patrick Weaver The Scout
52 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
RACING: CARDS AND RESULTS
Corrertor|es 070 l8l l0l1
kesu|ts 070 l8l l0cl
Co||s cost er r|rute fror o b! |or1||re
Corrertor|es 070 l8l l0l1
kesu|ts 070 l8l l0cl
Co||s cost er r|rute fror o b! |or1||re
00IN0: Coo1 to Soft, Coo1 |r |oces. k||t Hor1e1. J0P Jkk0k
J00kY5 (2008!3): k | |oore 10 Course W|rrers, 1c Str||e
rote, 4 W|rrers t||s seosor, K |o||or c0, c, 0, J | Sercer lS,
l7, 0, O'Ne||| l4, ll, l, ! Oueo||] l1, lc, l. J0P Jkk0k
JkkINk5 (2008!3): k Horror 1S Course W|rrers, c0 Str||e
rote, 4 W|rrers t||s seosor, | Jo|rstor c8, l7, l, | |vors l1, 8,
l, k bec|ett l1, c1, 0, | Curor| l1, cS, 0. fIk5J JIM J0N00
5JkkP: 4.lS NeWrtor |o1e, CreersWor1 (c|ee| |eces), S.lS
Arc||ve (|oo1), |otert|]. 8kJN fkV00kIJ5: c.lS Hot|o Hoo|.
c.4S A|ove !|e Stors. 4.lS Cree| |o|cor(|c), |re1 W|||etts(|c).
S.4S |oss H|||(|c). 0kkR 0kJk: H|| rur|ers |est or t|e
stro||t course. L0N05J JkkVLLk: 8oy Jhe 8e|| (S.4S) l4c
r||es. 5Jk8L 5RIJ0h: 1.4S k|vas khapsody fror l Woo1. S.4S
0pus Max|mus fror C ore.
00IN0: Coo1 to ||rr. k||t Hor1e1. J0P Jkk0k J00kY5
(2008!3): ! |oves lc Course W|rrers, ll Str||e rote, l W|rrers
t||s seosor, C |ee l1, l0, 0, | |coro|1 ll, ll, 0, | |o||r 7, l0,
0, C C|||ors 8, l1, 0. J0P Jkk0k JkkINk5 (2008!3): !
|oster|] c Course W|rrers, l4 Str||e rote, 4 W|rrers t||s seo
sor, k |o|e] c4, l4, l, b ||||sor l8, c0, 1, K k]or l4, l7, 0, b
Srort l0, lc, l. 8LINkk5 fIk5J JIM: c.lS lc] b|ue (c|ee|
|eces), c.4S k|ver Ar1ec|e (c|ee| |eces), .4S ke1 boror (c|ee|
|eces), 8.4S Co|1 beou (c|ee| |eces), burrer V|eW |o1] (v|sor).
8kJN fkV00kIJ5: c.lS !rue |r|rce(|c). .4S |oror1
b|ue(|c). 8.4S |o||s| CroWr(|c). 0kkR 0kJk: |oW rur|ers
|ove o s|||t o1vortoe |r roces u to o r||e. L0N05J
JkkVLLk: Ne|soa 0uay (8.4S) 10l r||es. 5Jk8L 5RIJ0h: c.lS
0azeea fror ||oo1. 8.lS V|c|y Va|eat|ae fror K k]or.
:FDGLK<ID8E
:FDGLK<ID8E
2.!5 ~
2.45 kbove Jhe 5tars
3.!5 0NM00JhkJ (ab)
3.45 ha|ry koc|et
4.!5 0ashwood
4.45 kaaa's Pear|
5.!5 Yeaer
5.45 Moss h|||
6.!5 Jrue Pr|ace
6.45 xtraterrestr|a|
1.!5 Proc|amat|oaofwar
1.45 Leaay 8ee
8.!5 kea| haw|
8.45 0o|d 8eau
Jh 5000J: 1.lS !|r||r 4.4S |u||r] S.lS \eoer S.4S
!Wee1|e ee
k0JJRILk: c.lS Juver||e |eo1 c.4S A|ove !|e Stors 1.lS
kur1e|| 1.4S Woo1|or1 Ar|o 4.lS Cree| |o|cor 4.4S !|o|oro
S.lS Arc||ve S.4S |oss H|||
50N0kY XPk55: 1.lS 80L0 5NIPk (aap)
Jh 5000J: c.4S So|or|o 8.lS V|c|] Vo|ert|re 8.4S Corfus|r
500JIk: c.lS |ororour (r|) c.4S XJkkJkk5JkIkL (aap)
k0JJ: c.lS !rue |r|rce c.4S So|or|o .lS |roc|orot|orofWor
.4S ke1 boror 8.lS keo| HoW| 8.4S Co|1 beou
:CF:BN@J<;FL9C<
M|ace (1.00 R|adsor)
aad Leaay 8ee (1.45 0ar||s|e)
2.30
MkI0N k00JI0N 5Jkk5 2Y0
3,!80 (5) 5f (8 dec|ared)
! () 1 JhkJYP0INJ5J0Jhk (3) |rs N |vors 8 l1
k Jate(5)
2 (4) S|4 Mk 0kN0Y MkN (3) k Horr|s 8 lc ................. L Morr|s
3 (S) Jk00kk (f) k bec|ett 8 lc ...........................J 0row|ey
4 (8) 5kkJ0kIkLI5J J S |oore 8 ll ..................... Joha fahy
5 (1) 1 80NJ00k 5JV (!9) J S |oore 8 l0 ....k ktzea|
6 (c) MY 50kJ 0kkM k Ho1es 8 c .............. 0 Probert
1 (l) N0JN0R PNNY J bro1|e] 8 S ................0 aa(3)
8 (c) 5 Zk0'5 PkIN055 (2!) J bro1|e] 8 S . 0athy 0aaaoa
Rfactor: 8oa[our 5teve (66), Jhrtypo|atstothree (6!),
Mr 0aady Maa (6!).
5P f0k0k5J: ll4 !ou|o, 1borjourSteve, 7c !|rt]o|rtstot|ree,
llc |r or1] |or, l0 /oc's |r|rcess, Sortor|o||st, lc Ot|ers.
3.00
8kJhRI0k JYk5 hkN0I0kP
3,!80 (5) 6f (!1)
! (ll) |SS fkLk5JN (5) (0) J bro1|e] c 7 .......0 aa(3)
2 (l) 561 0h05JRIN0 (24) (0&0) | oce c 7 S ........I Moaaa
3 (8) 4l0 PJJ00h5I0 (23) (0) S C W||||ors 4 7 S ..5 0o|am
4 (l1) S11 MIkkJ500J00M (!!) (0&0) J bro1|e] 7 S
M Lawsoa(5)
5 (lc) 210 8LL 8kYkk00 (83) (0,0) k Horr|s S 7 S .L Morr|s
6 (c) 4cc Mk5Jk 0f 0I500I5 (23) b bou| 7 4
JP 0u|||ambert
1 (lS) !43 0k8kIkL'5 0IfJ (!48) (0,f) | S|rcoc| 4 7 4
J 0row|ey
8 (c) cc0 50PkI0k 00 (!9) C |osor c 7 1 0athy 0aaaoa
9 (7) 7c N08kk 80Y (!!) (0) l W||||ors c 7 1 k Powe||(3)
!0 (l) 801 Y00hkV00NJk0L (1) (0) N Vou|or S 7 c M har|ey
!! (S) lS0 Jh M0N0005 (!8) | |vors S 7 0 ..... 0 J 8ates(5)
!2(lc) 68 0kN0IN0 RL00M (28) (0,0) J bro1|e] 8 ll
k Jate(5)
!3 (1) 107 0k000IP 80Y (213) (0&0) | Scu1orore c 8 l0
M Laae
!4 (4) 80 fI0LL (!!) (0) k Horr|s 4 8 l0 ............. J hayaes(1)
!5 () 1Sc 0N Lk5J 0kkM (!!) (0&0) k Ho1es 4 8 7 0 Probert
!6 (l4) S08 0kk0I'5 0kM5 (26) (0&0) J Seor|r 8 c
0 0at||a
!1 (l0) l40 0kI5JkLIYV (20) J |||rt S 8 1 ........... 0 Muscutt(1)
8LINkk5: !2, !5, !1 VI50k: 2, 9
J0N00 5JkkP: 2, 3, !0, !!, !2 0hk PI05: 8, !4, !6.
Rf: Nubar 8oy (64), Pettochs|de (62), Master 0f 0|su|se (62).
5P f0k0k5J: 7c Co|r|o|'s C|ft, S |r|rotes1otcor, Ore |ost
reor, 8 |oster Of |su|se, lc Ot|ers.
5.30
kJk .8.f. N0VI0 5Jkk5 2Y0
3,580 (5) 5f !0yds (5 dec|ared)
! (1) |l PJkkIN (5!) (0,J) | Jo|rstor 7 S ........... N 0a||aa
2 (l) l 5kkYkk (!!) (0,f) W Hoos 7 S ............ L Joaes
3 (c) 0k0IkN | Co|e 7 0 .......................................... L 0ettor|
4 (S) c10 M'5LL (26) (0) k Horr|s 7 0 .........................J 0oy|e
5 (4) l LIL800kN Lk55 (!9) (0,f) k Horror 8 ll . k L Moore
Rfactor: 5aayerr (89), L||bourae Lass (14), M'se||e (61).
5P f0k0k5J: |vers Soo]err, lS8 ||||ourre |oss, 8 |eter||r,
l0 |'se||e, l4 Crec|or.
6.00
kJk MkI0N 5Jkk5
3,350 (5) 6f (!0)
! (7) 4 J IJ 0P J0MM0 (!2) | W||or 4 7 lc ..... 0 8a|er
2 (c) 52 k0Lk0Ph0N05 (42) k Vor|or 1 7 4 ............. N 0a||aa
3 (8) c 0LkNLY (!6) J |ors|oWe 1 7 4 ......................J 0oy|e
4 (l) c8 hk8kLI5J (232) (f) A J ||11er1o|e 1 7 4
kmy 5cott(5)
5 () 122 h0kN80Y (58) J Nose1o 1 7 4 ................... k L Moore
6 (S) |4 kkkhN (!3) |ot |11er] 1 7 4 .......................... k k|rby
1 (l0) 146 N08L 00 (229)(f) W Hoos 1 7 4.. L Joaes
8 (4) 31 kkLIZ (24) H |orr|sor 1 7 4 .......... hay|ey Juraer
9 (c) 6 0 kIJ0h 00V (24) C bo|er 1 8 l1......... k 0'Ne|||
!0 (1) | h0NYM00N XPk55 (255) ||ss J |e||1er 1 8 l1
kaae||e ho||stea|us
8LINkk5: No. 4 0hk PI05: No. 5.
Rfactor: 0|aae|y (6!), Nob|e 0eed (60), k|aophoaos (54).
5P f0k0k5J: 1 C|ore|], 7c Horr|o], A|oo|oros, llc No||e
ee1, c keo||e, Her|o||st, lc !ee lt U !orro, cS Ot|ers.
:?<GJKFN8KI
N@E;JFI8KI
JACK|O! |||!lNC
Corrertor|es 070 l8l l0l1
kesu|ts 070 l8l l0cl
Co||s cost er r|rute fror o b! |or1||re
Corrertor|es 070 l8l l0l1
kesu|ts 070 l8l l0cl
Co||s cost er r|rute fror o b! |or1||re
00IN0: Coo1. |eft Hor1e1. J0P Jkk0k J00kY5 (2008
!3): |ro|ert c1 Course W|rrers, lS Str||e rote, l W|rrers
t||s seosor, Cot|] Corror cl, l4, l, J CroW|e] l4, l8, l, C
Cot||r ll, ll, l, | |orr|s l0, 8, l. J0P Jkk0k JkkINk5
(2008!3): k Horror c0 Course W|rrers, l Str||e rote, c
W|rrers t||s seosor, b J ||eWe||]r l7, lc, l, Abo|1|r lc, cS,
0, kHorr|slS, 7, l, kbec|ett lS, cc, l. 8kJN fkV00kIJ5:
1.00 |r|rotes1otcor(|c). S.00 Arro|uro(|c |1|). c.0S
Kr||t's |oro1e(|c), W|rter |us|c(|c). 0kkR 0kJk: H||
rur|ers |ove o s|||t o1vortoe |r roces u to o r||e. Sto||s
!o1o]. Stro||t Certre, lrcf, lr4f & cr lrs|1e.
fIk5J JIM: 1.00 ||ce||e (c|ee| |eces), Croc|e's Cores
(c|ee| |eces), |o|osteer (|oo1), orc|r We|core (torue
stro), 1.10 Ho|f !urr (torue stro), u|e of Orore (v|sor),
4.00 Ket (c|ee| |eces), Seo So|1|er (c|ee| |eces), 4.10
Kor|ro bo] (|||r|ers), c.0S k|o Coto (|oo1, torue stro),
Stor Of Nor|||o (|||r|ers), bo|r's |oss (c|ee| |eces).
L0N05J JkkVLLk: 8a|a's Pass (c.0S) cccr||es. 5Jk8L
5RIJ0h: 1.00 0abr|a|'s 0|ft frorl W||||ors. 1.10 x|t 0|ause
fror A Corro||, New k|ch fror | o1s. S.00 fa|cua fror |
Horror1. c.0S k|o 0ato fror | ur|o.
J0P Jkk0k J00kY5 (2008!3): k | |oore c0 Course
W|rrers, cl Str||e rote, l W|rrers t||s seosor, J |orture
1l, lc, c, O'Ne||| l7, 8, l, ! urcor l, lc, l, A K|r|] lc,
ll, c. J0P Jkk0k JkkINk5 (2008!3): k Horror l0l
Course W|rrers, l8 Str||e rote, ll W|rrers t||s seosor, S|r
| Stoute cc, c1, 0, J Nose1o cc, c, c, A bo|1|r c0, l8,
c, b |ee|or l1, ll, c.
00IN0: Coo1, Coo1 to Soft |r |oces. 8LINkk5 fIk5J
JIM: c.00 Her|o||st, Horr|o] (c|ee| |eces), c.10 C|oro|
|r|rce, .10 |sr|t e ||1os (|oo1), 8.00 kuss|or ||r|
(|oo1). 8kJN fkV00kIJ5: S.10 |'se||e. c.00 !ee lt U
!orro. c.10 |||ert] Joc|. .00 booreror bo|. .10
urorror(|c). 8.10 Woo|ej(|c). 0kkR 0kJk: |oW
rur|ers |o|1 o s|||t o1vortoe |r sr|rts. L0N05J
JkkVLLk: Peter||a (S.10) c18 r||es. 5Jk8L 5RIJ0h:
c.00 herba||st fror H Cor1]. 8.00 forward March fror k
C|or|tor.
:FDGLK<ID8E
:FDGLK<ID8E
2.30 8oa[our 5teve
3.00 Nubar 8oy
3.30 New k|ch
4.00 Ifaa
4.30 Luc|y 0|va
5.00 0hapter f|ve
5.35 kpr|| 0|e|
6.05 8a|a's Pass
5.30 5kkYkk
6.00 0|aae|y
6.30 harry 8osch
1.00 M|ace
1.30 Jk0PI05 (aap)
8.00 ~
8.30 5car|et
Rh|spers
Jh 5000J: c.10 !ou|o 4.00 Ceore bo|er (eW) S.00
Co|1er Cores (eW)
500JIk: c.0S bo|r's |oss (]or|ee)
k0JJRILk: c.10 borjour Steve 1.00 Co|r|o|'s C|ft 1.10
NeW k|c| 4.00 Ceore bo|er 4.10 |oss !|e !|re S.00
C|oter ||ve S.1S Astro Ho|| c.0S W|rter |us|c
Jh 5000J: S.10 5kkYkk (aap) .00 ||rce .10
|oo|e Hor|our
500JIk: .00 ||rce (tre||e)
k0JJRILk: S.10 Soo]err c.00 keo||e c.10 Or
W|t| !|e orce .00 ||rce .10 !ro|cs 8.00
Orr|resert 8.10 Ju|ter Storr
3.30
0Lk55IfI0 5Jkk5 3Y0
2,390 (6) 6f (8)
! (8) l67 8kk85 PkIN055 (31) (0) C H|||s 7 0 .......5 0rowae
2 (S) Sc 00k 0f 0kkN0 (21) (f) | C|orror 7 0....M har|ey
3 (l) L18 XIJ 0Lk05 (28) | C|||or1 7 0 ............0 Murphy(1)
4 (4) 3!| 0IkL 0f 0k0IZ (!8) k Horror 7 0
R Jw|stoa0av|es(5)
5 (1) L41 hkLf J0kN (21) | oce 7 0 ...........................I Moaaa
6 (c) |5L NLLI 8LY (2!) (0,J) | Jo|rstor 7 0
JP 0u|||ambert
1 (c) 14 NR kI0h (218) S K|r| 7 0 ........................ L Morr|s
8 () !30 Jh 8Lk0k Jk008IN (!8) (0) J S |oore 7 0
k ktzea|
8LINkk5: No. 8 VI50k: No. 2 J0N00 5JkkP: Nos. 3, 5
0hk PI05: No. 3.
Rf: New k|ch (68), 8arbs Pr|acess (6!), 0|r| 0f 0ad|z (60).
5P f0k0k5J: l01 NeW k|c|, c C|r| Of Co1|, 4 bor|s |r|rcess,
S Ne|||e b|], l1c u|e of Orore, !|e b|oc| Joco||r, lc Ot|ers.
4.00
8kJhRI0k JYk5 hkN0I0kP
3,!80 (5) !m (!0)
! (l0) 4L1 00k0 8kkk (23) (0,f) C bo|er c 7
R Jw|stoa0av|es(5)
2 (c) 010 0N0L 0kM0J (24) (0) b |oWe|| S 7 ..... 0 0at||a
3 (l) 080 5k 50L0Ik (!6) A bo|1|r S 7 4 ............. 0 Probert
4 (7) 084 Mkhk0 (!2) (0) | e C||es 8 7 1.....M 0oumbe(3)
5 (c) lll 0k050 MkRk (269) (0&0) J Seor|r 7 c
0athy 0aaaoa
6 (1) 788 8kJ0hL0k5 5Jkk (!2) S uroc| S 7 c . Joha fahy
1 (8) 551 0IMIJkk (!2) (0) b |oWe|| 4 7 c ......... 8 J Powe||(3)
8 (S) 2!c IfkN (!8) ! Vou|or S 8 lc .............. 0 Muscutt(1)
9 () 80 kPJ (1) k Horr|s 4 8 7 .....................................k ktzea|
!0 (4) 64l Pkk 5J0kM (20) (0) J C O'S|eo 4 8 S ..... L Morr|s
8LINkk5: No. 4 J0N00 5JkkP: No. 6
0hk PI05: Nos. 3, 9.
Rfactor: Ifaa (69), 0eore 8a|er (68), 5ea 5o|d|er (68).
5P f0k0k5J: ll4 Croeso |oWr, 1 lfor, 7c Ceore bo|er, S |eo|
Storr, l4 |r|tor, Urc|e errot, lc |o|o1ee, Seo So|1|er, c0 Ot|ers.
4.30
8kJhRI0k JYk5 hkN0I0kP (0IV !)
2,390 (6) 2m 49yds (!0)
! (c) 6cl kk5h0kk (3) b J ||eWe||]r 4 7 lc(cei)
k R||||ams(5)
2 (4) 7S L00kY 0IVk (3!) W C | !urrer c 7 J Payae(5)
3 (l0) SSc 8kkM5hILL Lk55 (!2) |rs A |errett 4 7 S . J 0row|ey
4 (S) c34 0JkPPk5 (!2) (0,f) | C|orror 4 7 S ...... M har|ey
5 (1) 6c VkJ00X (!2) (0&0) A Corro|| 8 7 c ......... L Morr|s
6 () 11S kk0h VNJ (3) b J ||eWe||]r 8 7 0 .. 0 Muscutt(1)
1 (8) 100 k0ZMINk 8kY (3) b J ||eWe||]r 4 8 l1...........M Laae
8 (l) 81l Pk55 Jh JIM (J!1) N |u||o||or1 4 8 l0 .. 0 0at||a
9 (7) 562 I0 kPPL (!2) J |or S 8 l0 ......... k|rsty M||czare|
!0 (c) ||0 0h0I5IkZ (!8) J |orvert 4 8 c ......... 0athy 0aaaoa
8LINkk5: Nos. 3, 1 VI50k: No. 4 0hk PI05: Nos. 2, 6, 8.
Rf: Luc|y 0|va (54), 0tappers (53), 8ramsh||| Lass (52).
5P f0k0k5J: lS8 Kos|or, c brors|||| |oss, Ctoers, 8 lce
A|e, l0 |oss !|e !|re, Vertueui, Arc| |vert, lc Ot|ers.
6.30
kJ Jh kk05 hkN0I0kP 3Y0
3,!80 (5) !m 61yds (!4)
! (l4) 3cl k055I kI0N5 (1) (0&0) W Kr||t 7 7 (cei)
J 8rowa(5)
2 (l0) 42c 8k008NNk0h (28) S uroc| 7 ............ M featoa
3 (1) 2!4 M0VMNJNVkLI5 (!6) C H|||s 7 ..... L 0ettor|
4 (ll) 031 LI8kJY Jk0k (20) k C|or|tor 7 S ................J 0oy|e
5 (8) 52| kNJ0Nk 8k0h (1) C | |oore 7 1 ................ 0 8a|er
6 (c) !|c R0005J00k (2!) k Horror 7 c ................. k L Moore
1 (c) 0S1 hkkkY 8050h (2!) b |ee|or 7 c ..hay|ey Juraer
8 (4) 10| P0LLY'5 L0V (!8) C Coi 7 l ............................ k k|rby
9 (7) 460 0h0kkL PkIN0 (42) |||e |ur|] 7 l ....... N 0a||aa
!0 (lc) 33! 0N RIJh Jh 0kN0 (68) | Vou|or 7 l 5 5aaders
!! (l) 0S5 80L0 kN0 fk (!94) ||sWort| 8 l1...... k Jart(5)
!2 () 104 k0MIkkL5 RkLk (2!0) S K|r| 8 lc ....J 8auda|as(1)
!3 (S) 463 M0J0 8kk (2!) S K|r| 8 ll .............................. L Joaes
!4 (l1) 12L LkM8kJ PN (!13) | C|orror 8 7 .... 0 0rem|a(1)
8LINkk5: Nos. 1, 9 VI50k: No. !.
Rfactor: harry 8osch (63), kuss|e ke|as (6!),
Movemeataever||es (6!).
5P f0k0k5J: 7c |||ert] Joc|, S |overertrever||es, l1c Horr]
bosc|, 8 Auss|e ke|rs, Woo1stoc|, l0 Ot|ers.
1.00
00kkL.00.0k 5Jkk5 (LI5J0)
25,8!0 (!) 6f (1)
! (S) ll0 MIN0 (!9) (0,f) k C|or|tor 4 7 c .............J 0oy|e
2 (l) 111 800MkkN0 808 (23) J H|||s 4 7 0 .........5 5aaders
3 (1) 80L PkLk0 M00N (235) (0) W Kr||t 8 7 0 .....J 0u|aa
4 (c) LS4 PkN0kk (23) (0,f) k CoWe|| 4 7 0 ............... N 0a||aa
5 (c) ccl k0kL Pkkk0 (23) (0) J bro1|e] 7 7 0 M Lawsoa
6 (4) 430 5IkI05 Pk05P0J (!9) (0&0) lvor] S 7 0 .. k R|astoa
1 () cc4 VI0JkIX L000k0M (!6) (0) k Horror 1 8 l ..k 0'Ne|||
J0N00 5JkkP: No. 5.
Rfactor: M|ace (!09), 8oomeraa 8ob (!06),
V|ctr|x Ludorum (!04).
5P f0k0k5J: ll8 ||rce, 7c V|ctr|i |u1orur, l1c S|r|us |rosect,
keo| |oro1e, lSc booreror bo|, 8 |or1or, l4 |o|oce |oor.
1.30
00kkL M08IL hkN0I0kP
9,!50 (3) 6f (!3)
! (4) cS0 J0 Pk0kJ (!6) (0&0) J |ortror c 7 .. N 0a||aa
2 (S) c1c P00L hkk800k (!6) (0,f) k Horror 4 7
k L Moore
3 (l) 8Sl 5JP5 (!6) (0) k Vor|or S 7 ................... J 8rowa(5)
4 (7) c0c kh08kLk (!6) (0) H |o|rer 4 7 S.................. 0 8a|er
5 (1) 008 JI0MkN L0N0 (24) k C|or|tor 4 7 4 ........J 0oy|e
6 (c) 05 00N0kNN0N (!8) (0) A bo|1|r c 7 1......J fortuae
1 (ll) |00 8 fIfJY JR0 (24) (0) J H|||s 4 7 1............5 5aaders
8 (l1) 5!0 5PkIJ 0 MI0k5 (241) (0) lvor] 7 c .P 8ooth(1)
9 (lc) 3l Jk0PI05 (1) (0&0) lvor] S 7 c (cei) ...k fa||oa
!0 (c) cS0 L'kMI L00I5 (24) (0) H Cor1] S 7 0 .......... 0 0'Ne|||
!! () 00l PI50kN (!0) (0) ! Ke11] 8 7 0 ......................J 0u|aa
!2 (8) 577 5PIkIJ 0f 5hkkJkh (!1) ||ss J |e||1er 8 8 lc
k R|astoa
!3 (l0) cS4 hkkkI50N 00k0 (!0) (0) | O'Corror 8 8 l0
k Jart(5)
8LINkk5: 3, 4 J0N00 5JkkP: !3 0hk PI05: !2.
Rfactor: Jrop|cs (93), Joe Pac|et (89), 0uaaaaoa (89).
5P f0k0k5J: 1 !ro|cs, S |oo|e Hor|our, c Stes, 8 !|oror |eer1,
l0 urorror, Horr|sor Ceore, ||sceor, K|u|o|o, lc Ot|ers.
5.00
8kJhRI0k JYk5 hkN0I0kP (0IV 2)
2,390 (6) 2m (9)
! (7) cc8 00N'5 5Jkk (!3) (f) A bo|1|r 4 7 c ... 0 Probert
2 (S) 49|/ 00L0N 0kM5 (J38) C O'br|er 7 S ...I Moaaa
3 (c) 21! NI0h800kh000 (26) H |vors S 7 4 .......k Jate(5)
4 (l) 441 0hkPJk fIV (!3) l W||||ors c 7 c . k Powe||(3)
5 (1) c14 kNNkL0Nk (J!06) | |vors 4 8 l1........ 0 J 8ates(5)
6 (c) 0|| fkL00N (26) |rs N |vors c 8 l1 ............ J Mc0oaa|d
1 (4) 8/8L RILLIkM h00kkJh (2!) W Co|1sWort|] 8 8 ll
0athy 0aaaoa
8 () 4l1/ k00k Pkk (J564) (0) b J ||eWe||]r 8 8 7
0 Muscutt(1)
9 (8) cc4 f0ZZY L00I0 (J9) b J ||eWe||]r 4 8 ...........M Laae
8LINkk5: Nos. 3, 8 VI50k: No. 6 0hk PI05: No. 1.
Rfactor: 0hapter f|ve (51), fa|cua (56), kaaa|uaa (55).
5P f0k0k5J: 74 Ne|||our|oo1, 1 |u] |o|c, 4 C|oter ||ve,
8 Oueer's Stor, l0 Arro|uro, Co|1er Cores, lc Ot|ers.
5.35
8kJhRI0k JYk5 hkN0I0kP
3,!80 (5) !m 2f (8)
! (8) c77 hkN050M kkN50M (4!) (0) |or|or 4 7
5 0rowae
2 () !! h0NY 0f k kIJJN (9) (0) | |vors S 7 S
J Ra|sh(1)
3 (c) L0l 0kN0Y (!4) (0,f) A bo|1|r 4 7 4 .............. 0 Probert
4 (l) 1cl k5Jkk hkLL (20) (0) k bec|ett 4 7 1......J 0row|ey
5 (1) c8l JkR5f (20) (0&0) k brot|ertor S 7 c
M 0oumbe(3)
6 (4) 4cc PkN00kI0k (3) (0&0) b J ||eWe||]r S 8 l1
0 Muscutt(1)
1 (c) lc4 kPkIL 0IL (3) (0&0,f) k Horr|s 4 8 l1. L Morr|s
8 (S) 894 0k0MM0N0 (20) b J ||eWe||]r 4 8 1..............M Laae
VI50k: No. 2 0hk PI05: Nos. !, 3, 6.
Rfactor: kpr|| 0|e| (69), hoaey 0f k k|ttea (68),
haadsome kaasom (61).
5P f0k0k5J: 1 Astro Ho||, 4 or1], S !oWseef, c |or1or|co, lSc
Ar|| C|e|, 8 Hore] Of A K|tter, l0 rurror1, Hor1sore korsor.
6.05
8kJhRI0k JYk5 hkN0I0kP 3Y0
2,390 (6) !m 4f 23yds (!2)
! (8) 42! MI55 JI0k LILY (21) (0) H ur|o 7 .. 0 Probert
2 (lc) 77S M0JI0N Lk55 (!8) k bec|ett 7 c ................J 0row|ey
3 (ll) 23c kL5hkN fkJk (!!) k lrror 7 c ................I Moaaa
4 () c41 kNI0hJ'5 Pkkk0 (!!) (0,f) |rs A |errett 7 1
L Morr|s
5 (l) S48 5Jkk 0f NkMI8Ik (!!) J S |oore 7 1....... J 0 5m|th
6 (c) |21 8kIN'5 Pk55 (28)(f,J) K k]or 7 c Ju||e 8ur|e(3)
1 (l0) 12c RINJk M05I0 (34) A bo|1|r 7 c ...... 0 Muscutt(1)
8 (S) 4c| JkRIN5kI (2!) | |vors 8 7 ..............................k ktzea|
9 (7) L1c kkkL MkkX (!!) | C|||or1 8 1.................0 Murphy(1)
!0 (1) 88 Mk VN0MkN (!!) l W||||ors 8 1............. k Powe||(3)
!! (c) |0 kI0 0kJ0 (265) A Ho|es 8 2...................0 aa(3)
!2 (4) S07 8000I 0 8I5P0 (!9) W K|ttoW 8 2 . 0athy 0aaaoa
8LINkk5: No. 5 VI50k: No. 1 J0N00 5JkkP: No. !!
0hk PI05: No. 6.
Rfactor: 8a|a's Pass (54), k|shaa fa[er (53), Jaw|as|| (52).
5P f0k0k5J: 4 A|s|or |ojer, 7c W|rter |us|c, ||ss !|er |||],
llc Kr||t's |oro1e, 8 bo|r's |oss, l0 |ot|or |oss, l4 Ot|ers.
8.00
M0IkN k00JI0N MkI0N 5Jk5 3Y0
3,!80 (5) !m 2f 1yds (!6)
! (4) 7 80M8kk0Ik (2!) J |ors|oWe 7 S ..................M Laae
2 (l1) 65 X0L05IV RkJk5 (!15) W Kr||t 7 S ....... k k|rby
3 (l0) 76 f0kRkk0 Mkk0h (230) W C Horr|sor 7 S ...5 R ke||y
4 (lS) hkLLIN0hkM J |ortror 7 S .................. M Lawsoa(5)
5 (c) IN0IkN 8ILLI0NkIk | ||ts|rors 7 S .....J M|tche||
6 (l4) L JI0k 0 8k0NZ H |orr|sor 7 S ....hay|ey Juraer
1 (S) MkkkJJk0 | Curor| 7 S ...................................k fa||oa
8 (l) 3 0MNIPk5NJ (269) S|r | Stoute 7 S .... k L Moore
9 (lc) 0 Jh 0kN 00k (!!) C | |oore 7 S ............ 0 8a|er
!0 (8) 000kJ Pk5J0kkL S|r H Cec|| 7 0 ................ J 0uea||y
!! (lc) 1 Lk0kk 500k0 (53) |rs H |o|r 7 0 ........... N 0a||aa
!2 (c) 4 MI55 MIJI0kJ (20) A bo|1|r 7 0 ...........J fortuae
!3 (ll) 0 NkN00kk (243) H ur|o 7 0....................... 0 0'Ne|||
!4 () 0 P0k MI50hIf (!8)(f) |or|or 7 0 .......J 0urcaa
!5 (7) 7 k055IkN LINk (!8) k C|or|tor 7 0..................J 0oy|e
!6 (1) 4 50LJkNkh hYkM (35)(f) W Hoos 7 0 .. L Joaes
Rfactor: xc|us|ve Raters (48), forward March (41),
0ma|preseat (46).
5P f0k0k5J: c Court |ostoro|, 4 Su|toro| He]or,
7c Orr|resert, l1c |or|tto, l0 kuss|or ||r|, l4 Ot|ers.
8.30
kJJhkk05.00M hkN0I0kP
5,910 (4) !m 3f !35yds (!2)
! (c) 01| 50Lk JR0 (!4) (0) k Ho1es c 7 .........P Pr|ace(5)
2 (8) c/lc MXI0kLI (23) (0) lvor] S 7 ..................J 0urcaa
3 (1) 2!! MI55 8LkkNY (!55) (0) | !reor|r 4 7
0 8a|er
4 (l) 1l3 5kINJ hLNk (6) (0&0) H ur|o S 7 c ....J 0oy|e
5 () L|S N0k0I0 005J (!!) (0&0) C but|er 4 7 1... N 0a||aa
6 (7) 0S7 50kkLJ RhI5Pk5 (23) (0&0) |rs | S|] 4 7 1
M featoa
1 (S) 1l J0PIJk 5J0kM (3!) (0) C | |oore 4 7 1 k L Moore
8 (4) 8c/c 00kI50Ik (28) ||ss V W||||ors 7 l .hay|ey Juraer
9 (ll) !32/ RkkhJ (559) (0&0) | H|ott 8 lc .............. 0 0at||a
!0 (l0) !!0 LINkk8L (55) b |oWe|| 4 8 l0....................5 5aaders
!! (c) 440 Jh00kNI5h00R80Y (!8) (0) J k]or 4 8 7
k|rsty M||czare|
!2 (lc) 3!3 If I Rk k 80Y (32) (0,f) | ov|s c 8 M Laae
8LINkk5: !2 J0N00 5JkkP: !0, !! 0hk PI05: !!.
Rf: 5car|et Rh|spers (15), 5a|at he|eaa (14), Nord|c 0uest (14).
5P f0k0k5J: 1 Ju|ter Storr, 7c ||ss b|o|ere], l1c |ei|co||,
So|rt He|ero, 8 uo|seo|r, l0 lf l Were A bo], lc Ot|ers.
fkkNhkM: 0ood
2.00~LY55I0 (A | |cCo], ll4 fov) l,
|t||cs C|r| (1l cr1 fov) c, Arre||o (lcl) 1. lc
ror. 8|,
1
/4|. (J|r best). !ote. L1.c0, | Ll.40,
Ll.0, L4.10. eiocto. Ll1.l0. tr|fecto. Lll8.80.
CS|. Lll.c. Norrurrers. S|u| S|u| Co|,
Westerr |r|e.
2.30~kIkN'5 0LI0hJ (! J O'br|er, cS
fov) l, Sort|r bo] (8l) c, Urc|e |e|1er
(c0l) 1. ror. l|, l8|. (| boWer). !ote. Lc.10,
| Ll.c0, L1.80. eiocto. Lll.l0. tr|fecto. L4.c0.
CS|. Lll.c8.
3.00~80LLIN JkhINI (A |err|or, 74
cr1 fov) l, C|ou1s Of ||st (cl fov) c, |est|vo|
bour1 (8l) 1. H'co ror. 1
l
/c|, 11|. (N K|r).
!ote. Lc.40, | Lc.c0, Lc.00. eiocto. Lc.00.
tr|cost. Lc.4c. tr|fecto. Lcc.00. CS|. L.l8.
Norrurrers. burrt Ao|r, Crero||.
3.30~JhkJ'5 Jh 0kL (J CorrWo||, Sl)
l, !|e b|oc| boror (l01 cr1 fov) c, C|t] |ress
(1l fov) 1. H'co 8 ror.
1
/4|, 7|. (J CorrWo||).
!ote. L.80, | Ll.80, Ll.70, Ll.10. eiocto.
Lc8.c0. tr|cost. LS8.18. tr|fecto. L8c.10. CS|.
Lc1.00.
4.00~PkIk0 Nk 00kPkLL (||ss b
Ar1reWs, 7l) l, |||o1es kur (l01 fov) c,
Hurr|core Corter (c8l) 1. H'co 7 ror. 1
1
/4|,
l
l
/4|. (N K|r). !ote. Ll0.40, | Lc.c0, Ll.0,
L.S0. eiocto. L48.S0. tr|cost. L8l8.78. tr|
fecto. LllS0.00. CS|. L40.cS.
4.30~5J0kM J0 Pk55 (||ss b Ar1reWs,
4 fov) l, Art||ero (cSl) c, |ors|oor (4l) 1.
H'co ror. |1, l1|. (C |r]er). !ote. Lc.80, |
Lc.l0, L8.l0. eiocto. L18.70. tr|fecto. Lc01.80.
CS|. L1S.c7.
5.00~kJJLRLL (N |e|||], lll) l,
!o|erte1 K|1 (ll8 fov) c, S|ore] Stor (cSl) 1.
ror. 4
l
/c|, l
l
/c|. (W Creotrei). !ote. Llc.40, |
Lc.S0, Ll.S0. eiocto. Lc8.0. tr|fecto.
Lc70.80. CS|. Lc.cl. Norrurrer. u|o|
Sorret.
P|acepot: 39.40
(kace !) 5, !3, !, (2) 3, 4, (3) 5, 2,
(4) 1, 2, 5, (5) 5, 9, 2, (6) !, 6,
0uadpot: !4.80
500JhRLL: 0ood
2.!5~0kkN0 00JkN (K |1or, lcl) l,
C|rer's |o1 (lSc) c, ArroW borroW (cl fov)
1. H'co 7 ror. r|,
1
/4|. (||ss | Hur|e]). !ote.
Llc.70, | L1.10, Ll.70, Ll.10. eiocto. L7c.l0.
tr|cost. L14.c0. tr|fecto. L148. CS|. Llc.l7.
2.45~80k0L (! Ke||], 4l cr1 fov) l,
||rsto|o1 (Sc fov) c, S]c|o |re1 (40l) 1.
H'co lc ror. c
l
/4|, c0|. (| |ur|]). !ote.
L4.70, | Ll.70, Ll.S0, L7.c0. eiocto. LlS.S0.
tr|cost. L141.88. tr|fecto. Lcc8.00. CS|.
Ll4.1c. Norrurrer. Co !eescororerts.
3.!5~0kkN80k000h (| 1e C||es, Sc
cr1 fov) l, brorroc (4l) c, Strot|o|r1 (l4l) 1.
H'co ror. l0|, ll|. (! S]ror1s, lS8 fov !urf
!r|v|o). !ote. L4.00, | Lc.00, Lc.l0. eiocto.
Ll1.c0. tr|cost. Llll.10. tr|fecto. L77.c0. CS|.
Llc.84. Norrurrer. !|e b|oc| ||or.
3.45~M0L000N'5 PI0NI0 (N Sc|o|f|e|1,
evers fov) l, bro1] (ll4) c, Horr] Hurt (74
cr1 fov) 1. 1 ror. ll|, c|. (K bo||e]). !ote. Ll.80,
eiocto. L1.l0. tr|fecto. L8.S0. CS|. L1.80. Nor
rurrers. ||rc| ||]er, |otest !rer1.
4.!5~JkI0kN ( |r|or1, 74 fov) l,
|urcor (8l) c, Joc|s Cre] (c jt cr1 fov) 1.
H'co 8 ror. c|, c
l
/4|. (C Sr]|]). !ote. Lc.0, |
Ll.l0, Lc.S0, Ll.c0. eiocto. Lc4.c0. tr|cost.
Lc0.ll. tr|fecto. L8S.10. CS|. Ll7.7S. Nor
rurrers. Cr]sto| SW|r, |ur1] S|].
4.45~JIN5LJ0RN (|uc] A|eior1er,
lSc) l, |ro| (4 fov) c, H| !|1e (l) 1. H'co
8 ror. c
1
/4|, lc|. (b kot|We||). !ote. Llc.80, |
Lc.c0, Ll.l0, Lc.40. eiocto. Lc4.40. tr|cost.
L7c.7l. tr|fecto. Ll1S.c0. CS|. Lc0.S4. Nrs.
bocco|oureote, ||tor1roerjo|, !r|
Not|ors.
5.!5~8Lk0kRLL 5YNk0Y (k
|c|error, lcl) l, |ot|er S||re (l4l) c,
|rort|er orcer (cSl) 1. H'co l0 ror. 10|,
l
1
/4|. (Jorjo O'Ne|||, 1l fov U |or Ar Oscor).
!ote. Ll4.00, | Lc.70, L4.0, L.S0. eiocto.
LlSc.c0. tr|cost. LS470.c7. tr|fecto. Ll0cc.10.
CS|. Lcl8.8c.
Jac|pot: 14,143.50
P|acepot: !28.!0
0uadpot: 30.80
k50LJ5
2.!5
PYJ0hLY MkI0N 5Jkk5 2Y0
4,110 (0|ass 4) 6f (8 dec|ared)
! (S) 4 0k8L 8kY (!3) C H|||s 7 S ....................James Mc0oaa|d
2 (c) hkN0R0VN (9) | Jo|rstor 7 S............................ J faaa|a
3 (c) c hkJhk h00h (25) k Horror 7 S ............................ J fortuae
4 (1) J0VNIL Lk0 (f) S|r | Stoute 7 S .....................k L Moore
5 (8) kh 500IJY | |vors 7 S ........................................ J 0uea||y
6 () N0Vk 0hkMP S C W||||ors 7 S .............................J P 5peacer
1 (4) 5J VIN0NJ |or|or 7 S ........................................... J 0urcaa
8 (l) RhkLRI0h 5JkJI0N ! oscor|e 7 S ..........k k|ascote
Rfactor: 0ab|e 8ay (51), hatha hooh (56), haadwovea (48).
5P f0k0k5J: l18 Juver||e |eo1, 4 Hot|o Hoo|, 7c Co||e bo], 8 Novo
C|or, l0 St V|rcert, Hor1Wover, lc K|ee Soc|et], cS W|o|eWe|| Stot|or.
2.45
hI0kLIN0 5LLIN0 5Jkk5
2,520 (6) 6f (5)
! (4) 001 00k5JkL Pk55k0 (26) C Sr|t| S 7 l0 ........... P Pr|ace(5)
2 (S) ll1 k80V Jh 5Jkk5 (4) (0,f) J Os|orre S 7 S
kachea| kae||er(5)
3 (c) LN0kkIN0 (J9) | C|oror S 7 S .. 0aa|e||e Mooaey(1)
4 (1) S80 NIN 8f0k JN (!0) (0) C Sr|t| S 7 0 ........ P 0osrave
5 (l) 68| IN0X RkIJk (!8) b |ee|or 1 8 ll ...................... J faaa|a
8LINkk5: No. 5 J0N00 5JkkP: No. 4.
Rf: kbove Jhe 5tars (61), N|ae 8efore Jea (5!), Iadex Ra|ter (46).
5P f0k0k5J: 4ll A|ove !|e Stors, lr1ei Wo|ter, lSc N|re before !er,
l0 Coosto| |ossoe, cS |er1er||r.
3.!5
N0kMkN L0V hkN0I0kP 3Y0
5,110 (4) !m 2f (8)
! (c) 2Sl JIN0hIk (!5) |or|or 7 ......................................... J 0urcaa
2 () 41c ZkM0Y5kI (!!) J Nose1o 7 S ......................................... R 8u|c|
3 (1) l 80L0 5NIPk (!6)(f) S|r | Stoute 7 S ..................k L Moore
4 (8) |4S Mk5Jk MIN0 (9) b |ee|or 7 S .................................k fa||oa
5 (4) 0lc k0N0LL (!1) (0,f) k Horror 7 4 ...............................5 Levey
6 (c) S4l 0NM00JhkJ (31) (0&0) C H|||s 7 4 ................P haaaaa
1 (S) SlS NIL kNI0hJ (26!) | !reor|r 7 0 ............ hay|ey Juraer
8 (l) 31l h'5 k 5JkIkk (2!) (0) | b|o|e 8 l1................. k 0|ar|(3)
8LINkk5: No. 4.
Rfactor: 0amootha[ (14), kuade|| (10), Zamoys|| (68).
5P f0k0k5J: 1 bo|1 Sr|er, 4 kur1e||, 7c Urroot|oj, S !|r||r,
llc /oro]s||, lc He's A Str||er, N||e Kr||t, l4 |oster ||r.
3.45
0hkkNR000 f0k5J fILLI5' 5Jkk5
9,510 (3) 1f (5)
! (c) 2cl kIVk5 khkP500Y (299) (0) k Cuest S 8 l1........ J 0uea||y
2 (1) l48 5RJN55kN0LI0hJ (251) (0) J Wor1 4 8 l1.. J 0urcaa
3 (4) !7c hkIkY k00kJ (29) W Hoos 1 8 ..............P haaaaa
4 (l) l4| 50PkN0Vk hI0hJ5 (!6) b |ee|or 1 8 ............k fa||oa
5 (S) !1 R000LkN0 kkIk (!9) J Cos1er 1 8 ....................... R 8u|c|
Rf: ha|ry koc|et (99), 5weetaessaad||ht (91), 5uperaova he|hts (88).
5P f0k0k5J: 4 Woo1|or1 Ar|o, S SWeetressor1|||t, c Ho|r] koc|et,
8 Suerrovo He||ts, lc k|vos k|oso1].
4.!5
hkN0I0kP
3,!80 (5) 1f 9yds (!3)
! (l0) L|0 0kN5Rkk0 (!6) (0) |||e |ur|] 7 ..........P haaaaa
2 (4) Ll0 0kk fkL00N (23) (0) O'|eoro 4 7 S ..........0 Judhope
3 () 80 NRNJ0N L000 (!6) (0) l W||||ors 4 7 4 ........5 0oaohoe
4 (c) L48 0IkM0N0hk0 (23) | e C||es 4 7 1 ....................... L kea|ry
5 (8) 5lc 0k5hR000 (!6) (0,f) A Corsor c 7 c .............. R 0arsoa
6 (c) cc7 fk0 RILLJJ5 (24) (0) | |vors S 7 l ................. J 0uea||y
1 (S) 41 X00XP0JkJI0N5 (23) C ore 4 7 l .......J P 5peacer
8 (7) 501 8kJkN 8kk (!92) (0) | b|ors|or1 S 7 0 ..............k fa||oa
9 (l) 0L 0kkJ0kY (44) (0) N Ou|r|or 7 0 ...........................0 0'Ne|||
!0 (lc) 35 Jh 00k0 0f 0L00M (23) (0) W |u|r S 8 l1.......M 0wyer
!! (ll) 52| X0LLNJ JM (23) J C|o|eH]or 4 8 lc ...... J 0urcaa
!2 (l1) 810 k5Y 0Vk (23) (0) | |c|o|or S 8 8 ......................5 Levey
!3 (1) !!! 50fIk5 N0M8k 0N (!4) (0) S boWr|r S 8 8 ... P Pr|ace(5)
8LINkk5: No. !3 J0N00 5JkkP: Nos. 3, 5 0hk PI05: No. !.
Rfactor: 0ashwood (10), Newatoa Lode (69), 0reeasward (68).
5P f0k0k5J: 1 Sof|os Nur|er Ore, S Cree| |o|cor,
llc |icee1eiectot|ors, os|Woo1, 8 |re1 W|||etts, lc Ot|ers.
6.!5
32k0P0kk.00M kPPkNJI0 hkN0I0kP
3,!80 (0|ass 5) 1f 200yds (8 dec|ared)
! (l) 43|/ 0kZN (6!!) (0) k |or1 c 7 ..................... Lucy k|exaader
2 (4) 443 PkkkM00k (!4) (0) O'|eoro c 7 ..................0 8er|a(3)
3 (c) 0c| JkLNJ 5000J (33) (0&0) |rs K !utt] 7 4
0emma Jutty(3)
4 (1) l1| Jhk05J 00NJk0L (!3) (0) ||ss ! Woott c 8 7
0 0ha|oaer(3)
5 (8) L52 Jk0 PkIN0 (21) (0) b ||||sor 4 8 1................ N far|ey
6 (S) 480 Lk5J 05JINkJI0N (38) (0,f) N !|r||er S 8 1... 0 0aaaoa
1 () 7L| I0Y 8L0 (39) k | W||to|er 5 8 2..................N 0arbutt(3)
8 (c) 14c 5Pkk0 80Y (!0) (0) A berr] 6 8 2............... J h|bberd(5)
8LINkk5: No. 5 0hk PI05: Nos. 3, 4, 1.
Rfactor: Jrue Pr|ace (68), Paramour (66), Icy 8|ue (64).
5P f0k0k5J: S4 !rue |r|rce, c |ororour, 7c !|rust Cortro|, lc !o|ert
Scout, |ost est|rot|or, l4 oeer, c0 lc] b|ue, Sreo1 bo].
6.45
MkJJhR LLI0JJ 0LkIMIN0 5Jkk5
3,!80 (5) 1f 200yds (8)
! (c) 806 5PkIN0hL Jkk (48) |rs A uff|e|1 4 7 l0.. P Mc0oaa|d
2 (4) 1S1 XJkkJkk5JkIkL (1) (0,f) k |o|e] 7 7 c
0 0ha|oaer(5)
3 (c) 4l kkRkkf0 (4) K o||e|s| 4 7 c.............................0 0|bboas
4 (8) !!6 5khkkIk (!2) (0,f) |ou|rore c 7 c ......................... 0 Lee
5 (1) 8S0 ILkN M0k (220) k | Sr|t| S 7 1 ................ N 0arbutt(1)
6 (S) 447 kIVk kk00h (58) (0) ||ss ! Woott 8 7 1 k ffreach
1 () 04S J0NY h0LLI5 (6) (0) |rs K !utt] S 7 1.. 0emma Jutty(1)
8 (l) 7cc Lk0Y 8NJIN0k (!0) A berr] 4 8 l1..........................P kspe||
8LINkk5: No. 4 0hk PI05: No. 6 Y 00Vk5: No. 4.
Rfactor: xtraterrestr|a| (13), 5ahar|a (68), 5pr|ahee| Ja|e (63).
5P f0k0k5J: 4 |itroterrestr|o|, Sc So|or|o, 7c koWoofe1, S Sr|r|ee|
Jo|e, l4 k|ver Ar1ec|e, cS |o1] bert|rc|, 11 !or] Ho|||s, |||eor |or.
1.!5
M0IkN k00JI0N MkI0N 5Jkk5 2Y0
3,!80 (5) 5f (8)
! () 4S L00kY5 00NN0I550k (1) | Jo|rstor 7 S ......... f Nortoa
2 (1) cS M05PLhIM (3!) |rs A uff|e|1 7 S ..................P Mc0oaa|d
3 (c) 4 Pk00LkMkJI0N0fRkk (!!) K k]or 7 S ................... P Ma||a
4 (8) J00 L05IV Kr|st|r Stu||s 7 S ...................................0 No|aa
5 (l) |4 00N0k5Jk 8LL (4) C Sr|t| 7 0.......................k N|cho||s
6 (c) 00k08Y(J) J Ho|t 7 0 .................................................0 0|bboas
1 (S) LkJNI0hJk005J k |o|e] 7 0 ...................0 0ha|oaer(5)
8 (4) 1 kJ JhI0kN5Jk0N0 (!0) (f) b Srort 7 0 .. k ffreach
Rfactor: Proc|amat|oaofwar (61), Muspe|he|m (6!),
keet Jh|c|astroa (60).
5P f0k0k5J: ll4 |oter||treuest, 1 |roc|orot|orofWor, S |use||e|r,
llc keet !||c|rstror, c |uc|]s Corro|sseur, lc !oo ||us|ve, l4 Ot|ers.
C<@:<JK<I8KI
:8IC@JC<ILB
4.45
00PL0R .8.f. MkI0N 5Jkk5 (0IV !) 3Y0
5,510 (5) !m 60yds (!0)
! (1) 4c| kNNk'5 PkkL (41) k bec|ett 7 S................J P 5peacer
2 (l) 1 8kkLY 5JkJ (236) S|r | Stoute 7 S ......... J fortuae
3 (c) kJ0N 0kk |rs | W||||orsor 7 S ..................................0 5w|ft
4 (7) S VL0X (28) | Curor| 7 S ..............................................k fa||oa
5 () 4 VINN5 Vk5 (28) H Cor1] 7 S ..........................0 0'Ne|||
6 (8) 4 ZIkhkNI (!3) H |orr|sor 7 S ......................................k hav||a
1 (c) 60 kJLkNJI0 I5L (28) S|r H Cec|| 7 0 ..........kme||a 0reea(1)
8 (l0) S6c P0LI0NY (!4) C H|||s 7 0 ...............................James Mc0oaa|d
9 (S) 9 k05k0005 (!82) Ku||er 7 0.......................... M 8arza|oaa
!0 (4) 92c JhkkkNk (!6) J H|||s 7 0 ..........................................P haaaaa
8LINkk5: No. !.
Rfactor: kaaa's Pear| (91), Jha|aaa (61), Pu||ay (51).
5P f0k0k5J: l0ll Arro's |eor|, S ber|e|e] Street, !|o|oro, lSc Ve|oi,
l0 |u||r], l4 /|e||or|, lc V|errese Verse, cS At|ort|c ls|e, cc Ot|ers.
5.!5
00PL0R .8.f. MkI0N 5Jkk5 (0IV 2) 3Y0
5,510 (5) !m 60yds (9)
! (l) 8 0kN0N LkR (2!) | Curor| 7 S ....................................k fa||oa
2 (c) SS 0kN0 kIN0 (!8) |or|or 7 S ................................ J 0urcaa
3 (8) | 0Vk VI0JkIX (9) |rs | W||||orsor 7 S .....................0 5w|ft
4 (1) 0 5JI80kk0 (222) C H|||s 7 S...................................P haaaaa
5 (7) 8S PkJNJLY (!6) b |ee|or 7 S .................................... J Mac|ay
6 (4) | 5RJ JkLkIN0 00Y (!6) |rs | |eorce 7 S... 5 Pearce(3)
1 (c) 8c Yk0k (35) (f) J Nose1o 7 S .............................. R 8u|c|
8 (S) kk0hIV S|r H Cec|| 7 0 ............................................... J 0uea||y
9 () 08| 5kkh'5 kLk00N0 (!8) K C|utter|uc| 7 0 ............5 Levey
J0N00 5JkkP: Nos. 5, 6.
Rfactor: Yeaer (65), Pateat|y (63), 0aace k|a (60).
5P f0k0k5J: 1 Arc||ve, l01 \eoer, c orce K|r, 7c |otert|],
c Coror |oW, 8 |st||1oo1, 11 SWeet !o|||r Cu], cc Ot|ers.
5.45
5RkNNIN0J0N hkN0I0kP
2,390 (6) 1f (!8)
! (l) 4c 00k0 8NJkMIN (!8) (0) C Ke||ett c 7
kachea| kae||er(5)
2 (ll) 30! PkIN0 0f Pk55I0N (!2) (0&0) S|oW S 7
k McLeaa(1)
3 (c) 18c k055I 8L0 (293) C |osor 7 7 ..................... M 5ta|atoa
4 (S) 021 8kJkN 5J0kY (!2) | b|ors|or1 4 7 ................ 0 5weeaey
5 (l) 1cS 8k5L (!!) (0,0) | b|o|e c 7 c ............................J P 5peacer
6 (8) 3|0 k00k kk0N5 (44) C bo|er S 7 c....................... P 0osrave
1 (lS) 534 kMI5 k0NI5 (39) (0) A Corsor 4 7 c ......... P Pr|ace(5)
8 (l4) lL4 RhIJ5Jk8L NkJIV (21) (0) J !u|te S 7 S ......... L kea|ry
9 (c) !!S k0 Mk5Jk (24) (0) S boWr|r S 7 S..................8 0ray(3)
!0 (l1) l/|c JR0L 0 (34) (0) N Ou|r|or 4 7 l ...............5 0oaohoe
!! (l0) 422 M055 hILL (35) C H|||s 4 7 0 .................................J Mc0oaa|d
!2 (1) 36| Lh0J5 5hkPk (58) J Ho|t 4 8 l1.................M M|mmocch|
!3 (lc) 14c 0kN0IN0 MkIJ (5) (0&0) S boWr|r 8 8 l1. M 8arza|oaa
!4 (7) 05 80Y Jh 8LL (!2) (0, f) O |eors c 8 lc ...........P haaaaa
!5 () L57 5PkkJI0 (44) (0) A |cCo|e S 8 ll ...............................5 Levey
!6 (l8) 964 0P05 MkXIM05 (25!) (0) Jerr|e Cor1||s| 8 8 ll
5 h|tchcott
!1 (lc) 700 LLI5 IMk0 (238) (0) b bou| c 8 l0 .............. R 0arsoa
!8 (4) 830 kkJMkI kIVk (!2) (0&0) | Us|er c 8 l0
m||y Me|boura(1)
8LINkk5: Nos. 9, !3, !4 VI50k: No. !8 J0N00 5JkkP: Nos. !, 5, 6
0hk PI05: Nos. !, 1, !6 Y 00Vk5: No. !4.
Rfactor: Moss h||| (58), kuss|e 8|ue (51), |||es Imae (51).
5P f0k0k5J: c |oss H|||, l1c |r|rce Of |oss|or, 8 bos|e, Ar|s keur|s,
l0 Ace |oster, lc Auss|e b|ue, l4 Ot|ers.
1.45
32k0.00M hkN0I0kP
1,960 (4) 5f (!!)
! () !!4 hkM000Y (32) (0) N|c|o||s 7 7 ......................k N|cho||s
2 (S) !40 L00kY 0kN (6) (0,0) | Creer 7 ........................ f Nortoa
3 (c) 5cc LNNY 8 (!6) (0) C |oss 7 ..............0 0ha|oaer(5)
4 (4) 084 8kkNY M00kR (!6) (0,f) | o1s l0 7 S .............J aves
5 (1) 00| PkkJNk (!4) (0) N W||sor 7 1.......................0 0aaaoa(3)
6 (8) cc h0P5 N 0kkM5 (!5) K k]or S 7 c.......................... P Ma||a
1 (7) 2cc kk5kMkN (31) (0) J Co|1|e 7 7 c .................................... 0 Lee
8 (ll) 8S1 k0 0kP (1) (0) |rs k Corr l0 8 l0.................. J P 5u|||vaa
9 (l) 71c 0IkM0N0 8L0 (1) (0) k | W||to|er S 8 7 ........ kmy kyaa
!0 (l0) ccc k0 8kk0N (6) | A|stor 4 8 S ..............................N far|ey(3)
!! (c) ccS J05J LIk hkVN (21) (0) ! |oster|] 4 8 4 0 feat|maa
J0N00 5JkkP: No. 3 0hk PI05: Nos. 5, 9, !0.
Rfactor: Leaay 8ee (19), ked 8aroa (18), hamoody (16).
5P f0k0k5J: 7c |err] bee, S |oror1 b|ue, c borre] |cCreW, ke1 boror,
l1c Horoo1], Hoes N reors, 8 ke1 Coe, l4 kosoror, lc Ot|ers.
8.!5
32k0 R5JM0kLkN0 fILLI5' hkN0I0kP
5,110 (4) !m !f 6!yds (8)
! (1) 8c4 k0J Y00k 5h0 5IZ (1) (0&0,f) K o||e|s| 4 l0 0
J aves
2 (4) |cS h0J k00 MkMMk (6) (0) |rs So]er c 7
Lucy k|exaader(3)
3 (c) cl0 k00k 5Jkk (!8) | Jo|rstor 1 7 0 ...................... f Nortoa
4 () !! k0kL hkRk (61) (0,f,J) J !ote 1 7 0 ................... 0 Lee
5 (S) c4c 8L0 MkI5Y (!3) | !uer S 8 ll ........................... J P 5u|||vaa
6 (c) Lc| M0JkV 05kJ (!1) | Jo|rstor 1 8 c .............0008Jf0L
1 (8) cc8 VI0kY VkLNJIN (220) A W||||ors 1 8 1 .......... k ffreach
8 (l) 0 8kYkN kk5Ik0k (!1) k |o|e] 1 8 0 ...................N far|ey(3)
Rf: kea| haw| (69), Mo[ave 0esert (61), V|c|y Va|eat|ae (66).
5P f0k0k5J: ll8 keo| HoW|, 7c keoe Stor, S V|c|] Vo|ert|re,
l1c Act \our S|oe S|e, l0 bo]or Kos|ro, lc b|ue |o|se], Hot ko1 |orro.
8.45
32k0 0k5IN0 hkN0I0kP 3Y0
3,!80 (5) 6f !92yds (!!)
! (c) cl1 k0 PkLk0IN (2!) (0) K k]or 7 .......................... kmy kyaa
2 (ll) 8S 00Nf05IN0 (!5) O'|eoro 7 c ...............................0 Judhope
3 (l) 020 NL50N 00kY (2!)(J) J Cos| 7 c .................................... 0 Lee
4 () 421 P0LI5h 0k0RN (!0) | Jo|rstor 7 l ........................ f Nortoa
5 (S) 93c 00L0 8k0 (1) (f) Kr|st|r Stu||s 7 0 ..................0 No|aa
6 (1) SS4 00kL (!4) | o1s 8 l1......................................................J aves
1 (8) l NkJ0k5 LkR (32) K o||e|s| 8 l1.....................0008Jf0L
8 (c) 0l5 8kLJI0 PkIN0 (2!) (0) | Creer 8 l0 .............k 0a 5||va(3)
9 (4) 4c 80kkN VIR Lk0Y (32) ! |oster|] 8 7 ......... 0 feat|maa
!0 (l0) 528 kN0L5 0kLLIN0 (!4) |rs K bur|e 8 7 ............ M 0'0oaae||
!! (7) 0S 00L0 k0LL (6) |rs k Corr 8 S ............................. J P 5u|||vaa
8LINkk5: No. 6 VI50k: No. 9 0hk PI05: No. 5.
Rfactor: 0o|d 8eau (62), 8a|t|c Pr|ace (59), ked Pa|ad|a (51).
5P f0k0k5J: c |o||s| CroWr, 7c ke1 |o|o1|r, llc burrer V|eW |o1],
l1c Co|1 beou, Cur|, l0 Ne|sor Ouo], Corfus|r, lc Ot|ers.
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 53
SAILING: BIG BEN STRIKES EMOTIONAL CHORD
Ainslie wins this
one for Simpson
Pictures: CHRIS ISON
CREWS CONTROL:
Ainslie, second
left, and his JP
Morgan BAR team
celebrate success
in the Round the
Island race a day
after the funeral of
Andrew Simpson
6666666666666
6666666666666
6666666666666
6666666666666
6666666666666
6666666666666
6666666666666
1. Who scored a hat-trick for Manchester United as they beat
Aston Villa to clinch their 20th league title?
2. Who scored a late try for Bath in a 27-26 home victory
over Leicester in the Aviva Premiership?
3. Who scored twice in Bayern Munichs 4-0 win against Barcelona in
the home leg of their Champions League semi-nal?
4. Which Spanish rider became the
youngest MotoGP winner with victory at the
2013 Grand Prix of the Americas?
5. Which boxer was voted BBC Sports
Personality of the Year in 1999?
6. Which English football team are
nicknamed the Royals?
7. Which American tennis player won the rst of
her six Wimbledon singles titles in 1966?
8. Which American golfer won the 2003
US Open at Olympia Fields?
9. Which county cricket team, formed in 1876,
have three scimitars on their badge?
10. Which American player won the womens singles title at
Wimbledon three years in a row between 1948-1950?
A N S W E R S : 1 R o b i n v a n P e r s i e . 2 F r a n c o i s L o u w . 3 T h o m a s M u l l e r .
4 M a r c M a r q u e z . 5 L e n n o x L e w i s . 6 R e a d i n g . 7 B i l l i e J e a n K i n g . 8 J i m F u r y k .
9 E s s e x . 1 0 L o u i s e B r o u g h .
(
kXZbc\
kf
RATINGS
0-3 Oh dear
4-6 Small beer
7-9 So near
10 Sporting seer
J
GFIK
NFIC;F=
Tais injury blow
Top man Dunlop
WOFFINDEN
DUNLOP
JONNY BROWNLEE claimed his second
consecutive win in this years World Series
with victory in Madrid.
The 23-year-old from Leeds, winning this race
for the second year in a row, led almost from
start to nish .
He was in the lead group out of the water, led
a breakaway group in the bike leg and never
looked back as he nished in 1:50.42.
Brownlee said: Our group was incredible
there, all the other riders did turns throughout
the race and it was a fair race. I enjoyed it but
it was tough its always tough.
TRIATHLON
SPEEDWAY
SUPERBIKES
TAI WOFFINDEN
insists a badly broken
collarbone will not end
his bid to be world
champion.
The Great Britain
star had taken over at
the top of the rankings
after his rst three
rides at the
British Grand
Prix in Cardiff
on Saturday.
But a
fourth-race
crash, in which
he shattered
his right
collarbone, allowed his
closest rival, Russian
Emil Sayfutdinov, to
open an eight-point
gap at the top with his
third GP win this
MICHAEL DUNLOP
powered his Honda TT
Legends Fireblade to a
runaway victory in the
Isle of Man Dainese
Superbike TT, 30 years
after his late uncle Joey
took the rst of his
record haul of
26 victories.
Dunlop took
the lead on the
opening lap
and eased
further clear of
rst Gary
Johnson, who
ran out of fuel,
and then John
McGuinness, the
19-time race winner
who could not match
his team-mates pace.
Dunlop took the
victory by 41 seconds
from Aussie Cameron
season. But Wofnden,
22, is not about to
concede, saying: Even
though I crashed, it
wasnt a disastrous
grand prix as I still got
seven points. Im
trying to think
positive Im
still second in
the standings.
Wofnden is
hoping to have
surgery this
morning to
have a plate
inserted and has not
given up on being
given the all-clear to
line up in the next
round in less than a
fortnight.
Donald with
McGuinness in third .
Dunlop said: This is
fantastic. I always
wanted to win the
Superbike race. Now
Ive done it it is
special, I never
had the chance
to ride with
Joey so for me
this is very
special.
Reigning
MotoGP
champion
Jorge Lorenzo
completed a hat-trick
of victories at Italys
Mugello circuit ahead
Dani Pedrosa, who
nished second.
DAVE FERN
TOO GOOD: Soi celebrates his win over Mo Farah
Farahs well up for it
MO FARAH had not lost
a race over 5,000metres
since 2010 or a nal since
2001. But the message
from Eugene, Oregon, is
clear after he was beaten
in the Diamond League:
Do not panic.
Farah, Britains double
Olympic champion,
could not match the
powerful nishing kick
of Kenyan Edwin
Cheruiyot Soi, but as he
tweeted later: Finished
second today! I will be
back for sure! Having
suffered with a stomach
virus, Farahs opted out
of the 10,000m at this
Prefontaine Classic on
Friday night.
He gave himself an
extra 24 hours rest for
the 5,000m and, in
typical fashion, he made
his move towards the
front with three laps
remaining.
But when Soi broke
clear with 200m to go,
Farah could not go with
him. The Kenyan won in
13min, 04.75secs from
Farah in 13:05.88 the
fastest by a European
this year with Yenew
Alamirew third in
13:06.45.
Farahs coach, Alberto
Salazar, said: Mos not
100 per cent. But it was
a good effort. Im really
pleased.
Farahs will run for
Britain at the European
Team Championships in
Gateshead in just over
a fortnight before the
World Championships.
WHEN he woke up the
morning after the long
day before, Sir Ben
Ainslie suspected
someone was watching
over him. As dawn broke
over the Solent revealing
perfect conditions, he
knew.
Bart was looking down
on us, said Ainslie having
smashed the JP Morgan Round
the Island Race record, only
hours after helping to carry
Andrew Simpsons cofn into
Dorsets Sherborne Abbey. He
would have loved it out there. It
was like he was with us.
Ainslie and Simpson had
grown up together through the
ranks of British sailing. They
both won gold at the Beijing
Olympics in 2008 Simpson in
the two-handed Star class with
Iain Percy; Ainslie claiming the
third of his four in the Finn.
On Friday, Ainslie and a huge
congregation had gathered to
say farewell to Bart, one of the
most popular sailors on the
circuit. He lost his life on May 9,
trapped under the capsized hull
of a catamaran in San Francisco
Bay. The father of two young
boys, Freddie and Hamish, he
had been training for the
Americas Cup.
It was a tough day, but it was
also beautiful, said Ainslie.
The service was so moving, and
I think his family were really
blown away by the support.
It was clear how popular he
was. People came from all over
the world to be there. I dont
think his parents realised the
effect he had on people. That
was really good for them. It was
a real celebration of his life.
Ainslie had been in San
Francisco too, helping Oracle to
prepare for its Americas Cup
defence. He ew home to
England as soon as he could to
support Simpsons family. It
has been a really tough three
weeks. My feelings have swung
between shock, anger that it
should have happened, concern
for the family. I wanted to do all
I could to support them.
He is also playing a part in the
redrawing of Americas Cup
rules in a bid to ensure such a
tragedy will not occur again.
Oracle and the three teams
aiming to challenge them for
the trophy this summer
Emirates Team New Zealand,
Artemis and Luna Rossa have
all been consulted following the
Simpson tragedy.
As the defender of the cup,
Oracle choose the venue and set
the rules for the next edition.
Software mogul Larry Ellison,
the teams owner, decided on
72ft carbon-bre catamarans
with hard wing sails in a bid to
boost interest in the event.
However, the cost of the boats
around 5million each and
the technology involved has
kept many teams away. In the
wake of the Artemis accident,
all sailors must now wear
protective clothing and carry
knives and small air cans. The
wind strength for safe racing
has also been reduced.
Its rather like Formula One
in the Sixties and Seventies,
said Ainslie. There are so many
unknowns. We dont know where
the limit is, and we have to be
careful not to push too hard.
Nobody wants this to happen
again. Everyone has safety at
the heart of their campaign .
Ainslie set the Round the
Island Race record in a 45ft
version of the boat, shaving
more than 16 minutes off the old
mark to get back to Cowes in
two hours and 52 minutes .
He is now in San Francisco for
James Spithills bid to retain
the cup. But they are far from
ready to go full throttle.
Its obvious how extreme
these boats are, said Ainslie.
There is a lot of work to do and
we will not be aggressive. This is
now about ne-tuning the boat
and the sailors for the rst
time.
gZedgih
TIM
GOW
ATHLETICS
By Richard Lewis
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 55
TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN
are real deal
Serena ready
for revenge
over Svetlana
THE last time Serena
Williams looked
destined to win the
French Open she was
derailed in the
quarter-nals by
Russian Svetlana
Kuznetsova, who went
on to win the title.
Kuznetsova will meet
Williams again at the
same stage tomorrow
and the American
showed few signs that
she has any fear of a
repeat.
Williams, above, is on
the back of a 28-match
winning streak and has
dropped only 10 games
in smashing her way to
the last eight.
The last time we
played here she won, so
that will probably get
her pumped up and
shes on a comeback,
said Williams, who won
the French title in 2002.
She has nothing to
lose, but everything to
gain, added Williams
after brushing aside the
15th seed, Roberta
Vinci 6-1, 6-3 in a little
over an hour. Business
as usual.
Williams looks tter
than she has done for a
while, is injury free and
relaxed, which may all
stem from her
relationship with coach,
Patrick Mouratoglou,
which seems to be
working on and off
court. She is now
speaking French and
enjoying life in Paris.
Since losing in the
rst round a year ago at
Roland Garros, she has
turned her game
around, losing only
three of 74 matches, and
claimed the Wimbledon,
US Open, London
Olympics and
season-ending WTA
Championships titles.
She was 19 when she
made her rst quarter-
nal appearance in
France. Now she is 31
and the oldest player in
the top 10.
Two-time Grand
Slam winner
Kuznetsova, 27, has
also staged a revival
after she slumped to
39th in the rankings.
She is now back to
No16.
She defeated
Germanys Angelique
Kerber, the eighth seed,
in three sets to set up a
box-ofce match.
Serena is the best in
the world so far, playing
unbelievable tennis, but
I believe I have the
game on my good days
so I will cross ngers
that this is one of
them, she said.
British juniors were
in action yesterday with
Katy Dunne and Kyle
Edmund winning their
rst-round matches,
but Luke Bambridge
was an early loser.
From Bob McKenzie
Simons not
so simple
for Roger
AS a legend who has just
sacriced his 900th victim,
it is perhaps surprising
Roger Federer is not the
man they are all talking
about as he continues
to crunch numbers and
opponents in Paris.
And the fact is that after this
match there will be even more
doubters, as Federer teetered
and would surely have fallen to a
man with more self-belief than
Frances Gilles Simon .
Even the home crowd, who
roared on Simon and barely
cheered a Federer shot when he
dominated the rst set before
going into reverse, had changed
their tune long before the end.
Tennis talk in any language at
the French Open is about Rafael
Nadals bid to be the rst man to
win a Grand Slam eight times or
Novak Djokovic becoming only
the eighth man to win all four
Grand Slam singles titles.
Not too many believe the
Swiss master has another French
title in him with those two
around but, in a tournament
minus Andy Murray and Juan
Martin del Potro, and with
Djokovic and Nadal set for a
semi-nal clash, Federer is
moving nicely.
Simon, the No15 seed, had
moments when he believed but,
once the doubts invaded his
head when broken at 4-2 in the
fourth set, the Federer stats
machine started cranking again.
This was his 253rd Grand Slam
victory in his 54th consecutive
major tournament and he now
moves into a 36th straight
quarter-nal. For the record, it
was 6-1, 4-6, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3 as he
reduced the starting eld of 18
Frenchmen to two.
One of those is the formidable
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, who will give
Federer his biggest test
tomorrow after he swept past
Viktor Troicki in straight sets.
Tsonga has yet to drop a set,
something Federer could boast
until last night. If the 31-year-old
suffers another dip in shot-
making and returning against
Tsonga, it would surely be fatal,
as his next opponent has more
talent than Simon.
Federer, who is yet to win a
tournament this year, has lost
only 204 matches in his glorious
career and shows no sign of
planning a retirement party.
This is a record I will look
back on when I have stopped
playing, it is such a long period
of time , said Federer of his
quarter-nals feat. I would have
been happy with one at one
point in my career.
It is good preparation for
Tsonga. I know where I stand,
how I am playing. Jo-Wilfried will
be totally different.
He has a big serve, I think
hes best on hard court but he
has improved on clay. He feeds
off the fans as well and he is
moving better than he has in his
life on clay. It will be very tough.
Another competitor displaying
incredible ghting spirit at
Roland Garros this year is
Tommy Robredo. The Spaniard
carved out a handsome statistic
of his own as he became the rst
player since 1927 to win three
consecutive Grand Slam
matches from two sets down.
The latest escape was against
another Spaniard, Nicolas
Almagro, who seemed to be
cruising when Robredo launched
a dramatic comeback and
eventually triumphed 6-7, 3-6,
6-4, 6-4, 6-4.
Robredo slumped as low as
470 in the world a year ago as
injuries took their toll with a leg
problem requiring a major
operation that at one stage
threatened his career.
At 31, the door seemed open
to retirement but now he is back
up to world No34 and ew the
ag for the over 30s just as
Tommy Haas, 35, had done in a
four-hour 38-minute win over
Americas John Isner.
Robredo had already fought
the odds in matches against Igor
Sijsling of Holland and another
French favourite, Gael Monls
and was delighted with his win.
We had to cut one hamstring
and put it in another way. After
that, there was no pain at all,
said Robredo, recalling his injury
nightmare. Now, Im OK and
enjoying it here in Paris . This
match shows you must never
give up, you must always ght.
That attitude has always been
a Federer feature over a stunning
career which began some 900
victories ago on September 30,
1998 as a 17-year-old. That was a
remarkable 17 Grand Slam
trophies ago. An 18th may still
be added. But not many believe
it will be here.
^cEVg^h
BOB
McKENZIE
who played a delightful
one-two with Keith Lulia
to put Bradford ahead in
the 10th minute.
Sandercocks men
replied through second-
rower Rhys Lovegrove
before Lulias 53rd-minute
score put the visitors 12-4
in front.
From there, however,
Rovers took control, with
Lovegrove soon claiming
his second from a pass by
the impressive Michael
Dobson. Lincoln Withers
then scored twice either
side of a breakaway effort
from Craig Hall, as
Bradfords errors were
ruthlessly punished.
Sandercocks assistant,
Chris Chester, highlighted
the belief coursing through
Rovers, insisting: Its not
if we make the play-offs
its when because we
will.
Were level on points
with Bradford now and full
of condence. Six weeks
ago we would have
probably lost that game.
Bradfords rookie coach
Francis Cummins, who
was left with a fth defeat
in six Super League
outings, said: We were in
some good positions today
but weve thrown it away.
Bradford were further
hit by minor injuries to
John Bateman, Chev
Walker and Sammut.
HULL KR Tries: Lovegrove 2,
Withers 2, Hall. Goals: Dobson 4.
BRADFORD Tries: Sammut, Lulia,
Platt. Goals: Sammut 2, Gale.
Dureau in
new scare
over health
SCOTT DUREAU
suffered another
major scare yesterday
during Catalans
Dragons 32-32 draw
at Widnes.
The Australian
scrum-half was taken
to hospital after
complaining of double
vision while lining up
a 60th-minute
conversion.
Dureau, above, last
week returned after a
nine-month lay-off
because of a brain
tumour. But he later
tweeted: Had a full
check-up and looks to
be nothing too
serious. Hopefully I
will be sweet in a
week or two.
Josh Charnley
grabbed a hat-trick as
Wigan beat Wakeeld
36-23 to move 10
points clear at the top
of the table.
Stefan Ratchford
and Richie Myler
tormented their old
club Salford in a 68-10
win for Warrington .
CHRIS HAMILTON
ROUND-UP
130
,
000
WITH
WIN
OVER
New online customers aged 18+ only. *200% bonus on rst deposit. Bonus must be wagered 10-20 times for withdrawal.

Jackpot prize in Chain Reactor slot. See www.dailyexpressgames.co.uk for full Terms and Conditions. Gamble responsibly.

Deposit 10
Get 30
*
to play with
GO ONLINE TO REGISTER AND PLAY BINGO
DAILYEXPRESSGAMES.CO.UK
***
56 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
RUGBY UNION: DEBUTANT LEADS ENGLAND CHARGE
Billys quick
off the mark
Picture: STEPHEN McCARTHY
FINDING HIS TOUCH: Foden scores one of his two tries for England in their opening tour match ahead of the Test series against Argentina
Dragons must
fight for caps
McBRYDE: Tough
jersey. He said: I know
there will be difcult
conversations and we
will take each case
individually. But a cap
is still something that
should be earned, its
not a given.
Wales have 10
uncapped players
within their 27-strong
squad and a further
regarded as a
development
tour. But even
against a team
10 places
below them in
the IRB world
rankings,
McBryde is
determined to
protect the
value of the
Three
Feathers
their Wales
debuts on the
last tour
during a Lions
summer.
He said:
Were asking
the young
players to step
up and show
what they can
do on the
international
stage. We have
highlighted three
individuals who were
given a similar chance
four years ago in North
America and are now
on the Lions tour.
So this could be the
rst step on the ladder
for many of this squad
if they can emulate
what those three have
done.
WALES caretaker
coach Robin McBryde
insists he will not dish
out caps lightly, despite
the absence from his
squad of so many Lions.
Wales arrived for two
Tests in Japan with
their most
inexperienced squad in
history for what is
nine who have
appeared in fewer than
four internationals.
And McBryde has
challenged his players
to be inspired by Sam
Warburton, Jonathan
Davies and Richard
Hibbard, who made
BILLY VUNIPOLA capped
his rst senior start for
England with a quick-re
hat-trick as the tourists
bounced back from a slow
start to beat a South
American XV here last
night.
And head coach Stuart
Lancaster admitted the hard-
fought seven-try victory had given
him plenty to think about ahead of
two Tests against Argentina.
No 8 Vunipola, who is joining
Saracens later this summer, scored
three tries in six minutes.
Full-back Ben Foden crossed twice
along with skipper Tom Wood and
replacement Paul Doran-Jones,
but England did not have things
all their own way with two players
being sent to the sin bin.
The South Americans scored
three tries of their own, including
the games opening score, and
posed signicant problems at the
breakdown, which Lancaster says
will need to be addressed before
their Tests against Argentina.
In terms of preparation this
game has been ideal, Lancaster
said.
They were difcult opposition
and we struggled in the rst
quarter and the last quarter to get
the continuity we wanted.
We were pleased to be 31-7
ahead at half-time after a slow
start. In the second half our
set-piece ball dried up a bit.
The most important thing for
me is that it is now crystal clear
exactly how difcult it will be next
Saturday. The breakdown was
ercely contested and at times we
delightful line to score Englands
rst try on 20 minutes.
Vunipola then helped himself to
his hat-trick. The rst two tries
were both from driving mauls on
the left before he opped over on
the right to end Consurs brave
resistance. Before the half was out,
Wood was on hand to capitalise on
a classy break from scrum-half
Richard Wigglesworth to cross for
the fth try.
To their credit, the South
Americans did not back down
after the break and scored the rst
try of the half through their captain
Tomas Cubelli, after a well-worked
team move that was the pick of
the 10 tries scored.
Englands response was instant.
The impressive second-row
Kearnan Myall charged to the line
and was just halted, but Foden
was on hand to dive over.
Although Doran-Jones scored
Englands seventh and nal try
soon after, it was the South
Americans who nished stronger.
Replacement Diego Magno
barged his way over for the games
nal score and prop Alex
Corbisiero became the second
England player to be sent to the
sin bin as they struggled to get out
of their half.
Certainly, they will need to raise
the game when they face Argentina
in what will be a far more
intimidating atmosphere in Salta.
But for the second successive
week they got the job done with
the minimum of fuss now the real
work begins.
CONSUR Tries: Penalty try, Cubelli, Mango.
Cons: Madero 3.
ENGLAND Tries: Foden 2, Vunipola 3, Wood,
Doran-Jones. Cons: Myler 3.
CONSUR 21
ENGLAND 41
From James Houghton
in Montevideo
didnt deliver as good ball as we
had wanted. I have some decisions
to make as to how we go about the
game.
Lancaster will also have to
decide whether Vunipola and
Fodens performances merit a
place in the Test team ahead of
Ben Morgan and Mike Brown.
Billy had good game in terms of
try-scoring, said Lancaster.
I need to look at his contribution
and those of all the others in back
row, because there are lots of
decisions to be made.
After thrashing the Barbarians
last week, another comfortable
win was expected against a South
American team containing 11
Argentinians, three Uruguayans
and a single Chilean.
But even though just 2,000
people turned out to witness
Englands rst match in Uruguay,
the home team made an inspired
start.
Fly-half Benjamin Madero twice
pulled penalties wide of the posts
before they broke downeld to
the edge of Englands try-line, to
the delight of the home crowd.
Gloucester wing Jonny May
opted to take one for the team by
knocking on, but it proved a
temporary reprieve as he was
yellow carded and a penalty try
was awarded.
But the giant-killing narrative
proved short-lived. Foden cut a
From Matt Lloyd in Osaka
Honeycomb top
Non
elastic
Easy fit
Soft cotton
reader
offer
FDE8433
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 Daily Express Offer FDE8433 , Euro House,
Cremers Road, Sittingbourne, Kent, ME10 3US
2 0871 988 8305*
3 www.shop.express.co.uk/i-gg-4975

I enclose a cheque for made payable to Express Newspapers Offer FDE8433


Please write your name and address on the back of your cheque.
Or please debit myVisa MasterCard Maestro card
Card no Iss no (if Maestro)
Valid from Exp date Security code
Mr Mrs Ms First name.... ........................................................................... Initials .................................
Surname . ............................................................... Address .....................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Postcode.................................................................. Daytime tel no ......................................................................................
Signature........................................................................................................................... Date ...................................................
Please allow 21 days for delivery. If not fully satised, please return within 14 days for a refund/replacement. Offer subject to availability. Reg. London 141748 Express
Newspapers, The Northern & Shell Building, No. 10 Lower Thames Street, London, EC3R 6EN. PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH. Offer subject to availability. Please note we
do not refund postage on unsuitable items or cancelled orders. If not happy for any reason we will accept faulty/unused goods in sealed original packaging for refund or
replacement within 10 days.*Calls cost 10ppm from a BT landline plus network extras
Happy Feet Socks
Hold with a gentle grip- Supplied as a set of 9
Ideal for everyone who values all-day
foot comfort, these gentle grip socks use
a natural honeycomb mould; meaning
theres no pinching around the calves or
nasty constriction rings. Knitted from 76%
cotton, 19% polyester, 3% nylon and
2% elastin to let
your feet breathe
naturally. Available
in packs of nine: 3x
Classic, 3x Smart
and 3x Casual
styles. Machine-
washable in Ladies
sizes 3-7 and
Gents 6-11.
only
24.99
plus FREE
p&p
3 pairs of: 3Classic 3Smart 3Casual
Gents
Ladies
Price P&P Qty Total
24.99 FREE
24.99 FREE
GrandTotal
Happy Feet Socks - Ladies- Set of 9 pairs
Happy Feet Socks - Gents'- Set of 9 pairs
***/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 57
RUGBY UNION: LIONS MUST LET COOLER HEADS PREVAIL
Gatland not
slap-happy
with Farrell
Picture: STEPHEN McCARTHY
OUCH: Owen Farrell strikes out at Schalk Brits after the Barbarians player had punched him
LIONS 59
BARBARIANS 8
KNOW-HOW: Coach Henry was a delight to work with
THE HYPE has been
going on for three years
and at last they have
played some rugby. It
has begun.
The Lions have played
a game, not talked about
one. The wheels have
started to roll.
It is hard to say what
they will have got out of
the game in Hong Kong,
apart from getting some
rust out of the system.
It was a cricket score.
My sadness is that as
much as I love the
Barbarians, do they
actually mean anything
in the modern age?
But the conditions
and the heat will have
been a great test, both
mentally and physically,
and the players will nd
Australia much easier by
comparison. You can
not agree with in other
circumstances, to take
one for the team.
My rst tour, of
Australia in 2001, was a
great experience. I know
others have criticised
the tour and coach
Graham Henry, but I
found him a delight. He
was not my best friend,
he did not talk to me a
lot, but from a coaching
point of view we were
very well organised and
we understood how he
wanted us to play.
Having Andy
Robinson and Phil
Larder there from the
England set-up helped
in my transition there
is a lot to take on. There
are a lot of meetings, a
lot of talking, a lot of
knowing what they want
and giving everyone a
chance.
You have to get your
combinations together
quickly, so you have to
have an idea of your team
before you even leave.
In the rst Test
against South Africa I
struggled up front, but
some of that was down
to us not playing
together much. So you
have to give your
combinations a chance
to work together.
People say this
Wallaby side are not so
strong but they will be
ready.
These guys play New
Zealand and South
Africa every year , so they
will not fear the Lions.
never be
ready for
your rst
Lions tour as
a young
man . You
have to learn
very quickly,
and accept
things that
you might
weeks . The
reality is you
cannot play
every player
in a Test
match and
the coaches
have to get
the balance
right
between
people to keep happy
you can almost forget it
is all about rugby. But
once you get there, once
you land in Australia, its
all about the rugby.
And it is not just the
Tests. Every game is like
a cup nal. I tried to
think what it would be
like for me, playing for a
regional side who were
taking on the Lions.
It would be the
biggest game of your
career and at the end of
it, you might be able to
say, I have beaten the
Lions. Every pass, every
scrum, every tackle, kick
and carry will mean
something.
The Lions have to
have the same mentality.
Warren Gatland will
have a lot to decide
upon in the coming
Efn`kjXi\Xc
YXcXeZ`e^XZk
<m\ip^Xd\
n`ccY\c`b\
XZlgeXc

G_`c

M`Zb\ip
K?<I8>@E>9LCCFEK?<C@FEJ
OWEN FARRELL fell
somewhere short of his
greatest game on his
debut as Lion No 780 at
Hong Kong Stadium,
but his temperamental
conduct has done the
tourists as useful a favour
as coach Warren Gatland
wished before they even
reach Australia.
A handsome, if stop-start,
victory in more gruelling
conditions than any of the
Lions had ever experienced
would have sufced for
Gatland, even without the
dust-up between Farrell and
his fellow Saracen Schalk Brits.
This was not Barbarian
rugby. Brits was sin-binned for
punching Farrell and, as he
had been told by referee Steve
Walsh, the card was yellow only
because of the match. It was
scarcely a surprise when he
was then cited. Yesterday he
was suspended for three
weeks.
As Gatland observed, Farrell
was the instigator by grabbing
Brits jersey off the ball. He
also nished it by slapping
Brits in retaliation.
If this was incitement by the
opposition, it will for sure be a
whole lot worse for the Lions in
Perth and onwards.
Things happen in rugby,
said Farrell last night. I was
trying to hold him back into a
ruck and he reacted to that.
There are no dramas. When
someone reacts to you, you try
not to take a backward step,
not just on this occasion but
every occasion.
Gatland saw it differently.
Before his next Lions
appearance, Farrell can expect
a management mention of the
Christian need for turning the
other cheek.
This is a reminder of how
important it is to keep cool and
not respond to provocation,
said Farrell.
These are big games. Every
game for the Lions is massive.
To lose someone to the bin
would be massive. You cant
afford it. Everyone has to be
disciplined. Thats how we
want to play the game. You
dont want to be throwing
punches.
The days of all-in 99 brawls
are long gone when any
indiscretion is subject to action
after the fact as well as at the
time as Brits has found.
Gatland plainly expects the
Aussie prodding of the Lions
to start soon enough. From
our point of view, its a good
job Owen wasnt injured or
knocked out, said the coach.
Im also pleased Brits wasnt
sent off, because if theyd had
to play with 14 men it would
have been far less of a hit-out
for us. When someone throws a
punch squarely on the side of
the jaw, it can be pretty hard
not to react to it. But one of
the things we are going to be
very strong on is making sure
we keep our discipline.
This is a nice reminder that
sometimes when these things
happen you need to take one
for the team.
When you get whacked, you
need to avoid retaliating
because the consequences of
your retaliation can be severe.
Thats what we will stress
to the players. We might nd a
similar situation in Australia
and have to make sure we dont
react to it.
Hit-out was not the most
felicitous expression in this
analysis. But Gatland knows
that on another occasion,
though the player insisted he
never feared such a punishment,
Farrell may have joined Brits
in the cooler. The effect in a
Test against the Wallabies is
awful to contemplate.
Otherwise, Gatland was well
satised. Beyond the bother,
this was comfortably the best
start of the past three Lions
tours, even if it did come
against opposition high on
quality but, being on vacation,
low on motivation.
Barbarians captain Sergio
Parisse described his team as
lazy.
And even he was caught up
in the non-tackling malaise
explained, but not excused, by
the heat and humidity, making
it more akin to the Baa-Baas
drubbing by England than the
stern test promised.
Still, in creating their eight
tries, including two each by
Mike Phillips and Alex
Cuthbert, the Lions wielded
both rapier and bludgeon and
as they learnt to deal with the
tropical sauna to which they
were inexcusably subjected,
they got better and better.
Farrell, occasionally fumbling,
experienced most difculty in
dealing with a ball made
impossibly slippery by the
gallons of sweat infusing each
players jersey and lathering
each players hands in
91-degree temperatures and
humidity touching 90 per cent.
With Jonathan Sexton
replacing him during the
second half, Farrell had another
reminder that there are only
two y-halves on this tour and
Sexton is the one who gets a
backline moving even if his
goal-kicking here was inferior
to Farrells.
I made too many mistakes
at times and felt I could have
done better, but overall I was
pretty pleased, said Farrell.
This was both candid and
omitted the reasonable
mitigation of the conditions.
But when Sexton faces Western
Force on Wednesday, the No 10
jersey will be his to claim.
LIONS Tries: Phillips (2), Cuthbert (2),
OConnell, Davies, Lydiate, AW Jones. Cons:
Farrell (3), Sexton (2). Pens: Farrell (3).
BARBARIANS Try: Fotualii. Pen: Daly.
WARBURTON: Boost
Sam is raring to go
SAM WARBURTON could be t
for the Lions rst game on
Australian soil, against Western
Force in Perth on Wednesday.
Lions doctor James Robson
said the tour skipper could have
played when the tour opened in
Hong Kong, following a knee
injury, but they decided to be on
the safe side.
Robson said: Sams doing
really well and could have
played against the Barbarians,
but he had a previous injury and
we are always ultra-cautious.
AUSTRALIA coach Robbie
Deans has been forced to make
three changes to his 25-man
training squad .
Half-back Nick Phipps, lock
Kane Douglas and loose-forward
Ben McCalman were called up
after Sitaleki Timani, Scott
Higginbotham and Digby Ioane
dropped out through injury.
STEVE BALE
^c=dc\@dc\
STEVE
BALE
***
58 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
CRICKET: SECOND ONE-DAY INTERNATIONAL
England in
turmoil as
Kiwis blast
them again
COSTLY: Trott drops
Guptill on just 13
Cook sweats
on Broad and
Finn f itness
FROM BACK PAGE
games but clearly when
you lose players of the
quality of Stuart and
Finny, it does leave a
hole.
When you are
missing players like
that it gives an
opportunity for other
guys to step up and
show us what they
can do and we have
learnt a lot about these
players and about us
as a side.
And the standards
we have played to here
havent been good
enough.
Broad, above, who
has a knee problem,
and Finn (shins) will be
assessed by Englands
medical staff today and
have not ofcially been
ruled out of
Wednesdays match.
Cook said: We will
know more tomorrow
when they will have
tness tests. They are
both concerns but ve
days, six days, is still
quite a long way away
and hopefully they can
pull through.
The England skipper
indicated that he has
seen enough both
here and in the rst
match at Lords to
make some changes to
personnel.
Jonny Bairstow
could come in for Jos
Buttler and Boyd
Rankin may replace
Jade Dernbach for the
dead-rubber.
On a good pitch for
batting, Englands
attack let New Zealand
pull away, conceding
79 runs in the last ve
overs, with Tim
Bresnans and
Dernbachs last two
overs going for 31 each.
According to the
captain, Wednesdays
match will give him
chance to look at his
options, but he insisted
that the Champions
Trophy preparations
could yet get back on
track.
It is frustrating
because you want to
build momentum and
condence and New
Zealand have that now
going into the
Champions Trophy,
said Cook.
If we had wanted
to get our preparation
right, in an ideal world
we would have wanted
to win these games
but we havent.
Sometimes when
you lose, good things
can come of it.
It would make
sense to have a look at
our options at Trent
Bridge.
We stuck with the
same XI here from
Lords, so maybe its a
time to have a look at
others and see what
they can do.
ENGLANDS plans for the
Champions Trophy, which
starts this week, were in
disarray last night after a
second thrashing in three
days at the hands New
Zealand cost them the
NatWest Series.
For the pre-tournament
Champions Trophy favourites, to
be defeated so convincingly at
Lords they lost by ve wickets
and here they were embarrassed
by a massive losing margin of 86
runs against the outsiders for the
tournament was a deating body
blow.
And while New Zealand almost
certainly do not deserve their tag
from bookies as the least likely
winners of the ICC bash, the
evidence is stacking up that
equally England do not deserve
theirs at the head of the market
either.
Alastair Cook is hoping his side
will be strengthened by Stuart
Broad and Steve Finn, who will
undergo tness tests today to
see if they can return from
what were termed niggles for
the nal match of the series at
Trent Bridge on Wednesday.
Yet Englands poor current
form is more serious than a niggle.
Without Broad and Finn, the
bowling just did not look up to it.
Aside from Jimmy Anderson,
who was not at his best on a
batsmens pitch here on the
south coast but took two of
the three Kiwi wickets to
fall, there was just no
threat.
Jade Dernbach once
again looked out of his
depth a death bowler
who seems to be
perfecting the art of
killing off his own
sides chances Chris
Woakes and Tim
Bresnan looked
toothless, and all
three went at more
than seven an over.
Even Graeme
Swann, who took
the other wicket
as New Zealand
racked up a
huge total of
359-3, offered
little threat.
It was a poor day all round
with England second best
in every department. They
were out-elded, out-bowled
and out-batted, with the
honourable exception of
Jonathan Trott, who reached his
fourth ODI century with an
unbeaten 109.
Trott did not emerge blameless
on a day when Kiwi opener Martin
Guptill followed up his own Lords
century by equalling Sir Viv
Richards memorable Old Trafford
1984 masterclass of 189 not out,
which is the joint fth highest
one-day international score.
But Trott blotted his copybook
after he spilled a simple chance at
midwicket when Guptill was on
only 13. The maths said Trott
owed the team upwards of 176
runs, though, leaving him still in
the red despite his unbeaten
contribution with the bat which
was largely faultless.
No, the faults lay with those who
failed to bat around him. England
were up against it chasing
360 (it would have been
the third highest run
chase in history had
they succeeded) but
Cook and Ian Bell
gave some hope,
getting them off to a ier and
reaching 50 before the end of the
eighth over.
Just as at Lords in the rst ODI,
both fell after getting set.
Joe Root and Eoin Morgan
followed suit while the rest never
even got set.
A brief urry with the bat from
Anderson near the end might
have been a demonstration of his
frustration at the better-equipped
men who had failed on such a good
deck.
But the nger of blame should
point to bowlers, who allowed New
Zealand to smash 132 runs from
the nal 10 overs of their innings.
Ashley Giles has now presided
over three series as the limited-
overs coach since taking over from
Andy Flower and has lost two of
them .
Having lost narrowly (3-2) in
India and won narrowly (2-1) in
New Zealand, this one will hurt
and not only because of the signals
it sends out ahead of next week.
Giles will rightly point to the
fact he has not been able to pick
his strongest side, given Kevin
Pietersens injury and those
niggles that have so far ruled out
Broad (knee) and Finn (shins).
But given we are forever being
told of the depth of the talent pool
available to England, it is a worry
that on this evidence the selectors
are struggling to get the tops of
their feet wet.
Trent Bridge this Wednesday
may be a dead rubber but it will be
a big test now for several players,
as well as both Giles and Cook.
Jos Buttler now averages nine in
eight ODIs for England but is
keeping Jonny Bairstow (and Matt
Prior for that matter) out of the
side; Morgan has under-performed
this year given his talent in the
format; and Bresnan just seems to
have lost the ability to contribute
a quick 20 or 30 runs despite being
called an all-rounder.
The latter, who was run out for
nought in slipshod style after a
failed lbw appeal, has more reason
than most to lack concentration
at the moment given that his rst-
born is due today.
The rest need to pull their
ngers out quickly or risk an
embarrassing exit in a tournament
the ECB top brass have identied
as a strategic priority.
With two teams to qualify from a
four-team group, Australia rst up
then Sri Lanka, England will not
want to go into their nal game
needing a result. Their opponents
will be New Zealand and they
simply look a better side.
ViI]Z6\ZVh7dla
GIDEON
BROOKS
THERE ARE 3 WAYS YOU CAN ORDER
1 CALL 0871 988 8400*
2 www.shop.express.co.uk/FA3901
3 Post to: Belton Road West, Loughborough, Leics LE11 5XL

reader
offer
FA3901
I enclose a cheque for made payable to Express Newspapers Offer FA3901.
Please write your name and address on the back of your cheque.
Or please debit my Visa
i
MasterCard
#i #i
Maestro card
Card no Iss no (if Maestro)
Valid from Exp date Security code
Mr Mrs Ms First name.... ........................................................................... Initials .................................
Surname . ............................................................... Address .....................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Postcode.................................................................. Daytime tel no ......................................................................................
Signature........................................................................................................................... Date ...................................................
Please allow 14 days for delivery. If not fully satised, please return within 14 days for a refund/replacement. Offer
subject to availability. Reg. London 141748 Express Newspapers, The Northern & Shell Building, No. 10 Lower Thames
Street, London, EC3R 6EN. * Calls cost 10p per minute from a BT landline plus network extras. If you prefer not to
receive information and offers from organisations carefully selected by Express Newspapers, please tick here . FA3901
Jet Water Cannon
Code Price Qty Total
19.95 E993
Jet Water Cannon
Turns your normal garden hose into a
powerful jet washer in an instant
Combines the power of a pressure
washer with the convenience of a hose
Eight settings give it the power to
reach high second-storey windows,
but ensure its gentle enough for
watering fragile plants
Simply attach to your garden hose
to blast away dirt and grime from
patios, driveways and more
Integral detergent chamber
automatically mixes liquid soaps,
cleaners or waxes
Can be used for dispensing fertiliser
H14cmW40.5cm D5.5cm
only
19.95
inc p&p
HIGH REACH
IDEAL FOR GARDENING CLEANS PATHS
CLEANS CARS, TYRES ETC
/lmx
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 59
CRICKET: SECOND ONE-DAY INTERNATIONAL
COUNTY SCOREBOARD
Picture: PHILIP BROWN
=ffkYXcc<OKI8
Mourinho out
to strike deal
Blades blasted
as prehistoric
JOSE MOURINHO
has told Roman
Abramovich he only
needs one big signing
to make Chelsea great
again.
Mourinho is set to be
announced today as
Chelseas new manager,
nine years and one day
after he rst arrived at
the club labelling
himself the Special
One, before taking
them to back-to-back
league titles.
He ew into London
yesterday afternoon
after his last game in
charge of Real Madrid
on Saturday night with
a 4-2 win over Osasuna.
Chelsea have already
signed Andre Schurrle
for 30 million from
Bayer Leverkusen.
Now Mourinho wants
a striker. Fernando
Torres or Demba Ba
may well be sold to
make room, with
Romelu Lukaku
returning from his
successful loan spell
with West Brom.
The top target is
Fiorentinas Stevan
Jovetic, who would
cost around 25m. But
Chelsea face stiff
GRAHAM ARNOLD,
an A-League winning
coach in Australia,
claims he has turned
down an approach
from Shefeld United,
calling the League One
club prehistoric.
The 49-year-old
former Australia boss,
who won the A-League
with the Central Coast
Mariners last season,
claims that the Blades
had interviewed him for
their vacant position.
But, after a video call
which included Blades
director and former
manager Dave Bassett,
Arnold said he had no
hesitation in turning
the job down.
He said: In all
honesty, I didnt have
to think too long or too
hard about it. It just
wasnt for me.
Forget that the
nancial offer in itself
competition for the
23-year-old from
Arsenal and Juventus.
Abramovich has
already seen one big
target in Radamel
Falcao slip through his
ngers this summer,
the Atletico Madrid
striker joining Monaco.
Edinson Cavani, the
Napoli striker, is rated
too expensive at 52m,
but Chelsea are still
monitoring as he
nears a move to
Manchester City.
Chelsea have also
spoken to Galatasaray
about Turkish striker
Burak Yilmaz.
Mourinho wants
talks with Lukaku and
another loanee,
goalkeeper Thibaut
Courtois, when he
begins work with the
squad next month,
before deciding
whether to allow them
to go out on loan again.
He was last night
nalising his four-year,
12m-a-year deal with
Abramovich, which
should be signed today.
was quite poor, I would
have been taking three
steps backwards in my
development as a
professional coach if I
had gone.
Being one of the
bigger lower league
clubs, I was expecting a
lot more in terms of
how they wanted to
develop on the eld.
But they just didnt
seem interested when I
was talking about
playing a short passing
game and taking the
football to another
level. It was about
smashing the ball long
and set-pieces it was
prehistoric stuff.
The Yorkshire club,
who were play-off
semi-nal losers to
Yeovil, sacked Danny
Wilson with ve games
of last season to go and
have since been
searching for a full-time
replacement.
ON HIS WAY: Mourinho bids farewell to Real Madrid
By Tony Banks
LV County Championship
Division One
Sussex v Nottinghamshire
(Day 3 of 4)
HOVE: Notts lead Sussex by 354 runs
with one second-innings wicket in hand
NOTTS: First Innings 356 (Patel
157, Shahzad 56, Jordan 6-97)
SUSSEX: First Innings
(Overnight 290-6)
B Brown c Patel b Gurney ............... 35
C Jordan run out ............................. 22
S Magoffin not out ............................. 7
J Anyon c Mullaney b Gurney ........... 0
M Panesar c Patel b Gurney ............. 0
B5 lb13 w2 nb12 ...................... 32
Total (82.5 overs) .................. 306
Fall: 72, 118, 176, 118, 223, 249,
291, 206, 306.
Bowling: Fletcher 20-6-59-0, Gurney
17.5-2-69-4, Shahzad 16-1-57-3, Patel
18-2-62-2, Franks 11-3-40-0.
NOTTINGHAMSHIRE: Second Inns
E Cowan b Nash ............................. 81
A Hales c Wright b Magoffin ............. 0
M Lumb c Brown b Magoffin ............. 8
J Taylor c Brown b Jordan .............. 97
S Patel c Brown b Jordan ............... 18
S Mullaney c Wells b Jordan ............. 5
C Read lbw Panesar ....................... 10
P Franks not out .............................. 56
A Shahzad b Magoffin ....................... 3
L Fletcher c Joyce b Magoffin ........... 0
H Gurney not out ............................... 4
B1 lb8 w3 nb10 ........................ 22
Total (9 wkts., 90 overs) ...... 304
Fall: 4, 24, 175, 205, 218, 233, 239,
288, 289.
Bowling: Anyon 8-2-39-0, Magoffin 17-5-
60-4, Panesar 24-7-59-1, Jordan 16-2-
58-3, Wright 8-1-26-0, Nash 17-3-53-1.
Umpires: D Millns & P Willey.
LV County Championship
Division Two (Saturday)
Leicestershire v Kent (Tunbridge
Wells): Leicestershire 186 (62.3
overs; D I Stevens 5-39) and 139-1
(54.4 overs; E J Eckersley 65no, G P
Smith 65no). Kent 353-3dec. (78.3
overs; B P Nash 128no, R W T Key
106, D I Stevens 97). Kent (10pts)
drew with Leicestershire (4pts).
Lancashire v Gloucestershire
(Liverpool): Lancashire 310 (84.2
overs; S M Katich 96, S J Croft 62;
C M Miles 6-88) and 270 (72.3
overs; G D Cross 64, A G Prince 64,
W A White 61; G J McCarter 4-95).
Gloucestershire 222 (77.2 overs;
A P R Gidman 110; S C Kerrigan
5-68) and 173-9 (99 overs). Lancs
(9pts) drew with Gloucs (7pts).
Hampshire v Northamptonshire
(Northampton): Hampshire 206
(88.0 overs; L A Dawson 76; T A
Copeland 4-56). Northamptonshire
425-9 (144.3 overs; A J Hall
130no, D Murphy 81, T A Copeland
63, K J Coetzer 59). Northants
(9pts) drew with Hampshire (6pts).
P W L D Bt Bl Pts
Northants ......... 6 3 0 3 21 18 96
Lancashire ....... 6 2 0 4 11 17 71
Worcestershire.. 7 2 2 3 14 16 71
Essex ............... 7 2 2 3 12 18 68
Hampshire ....... 6 1 1 4 15 15 58
Gloucestershire . 6 1 2 3 13 16 54
Glamorgan ....... 5 1 2 2 8 15 45
Leicestershire ... 7 0 1 6 9 16 43
Kent ................ 6 0 2 4 14 14 40
Derbyshire v Surrey
DERBY: Derbyshire (8pts) drew with
Surrey (9pts)
DERBYSHIRE: First Innings 452
(Madsen 152, Chanderpaul 129,
Johnson 72, Tremlett 5-95)
SURREY: First Innings
(Overnight 362-4)
R Ponting run out .......................... 192
S Davies c Godleman b Wainwright 59
G Wilson c Footitt b Durston ........... 45
G Batty not out ................................ 15
C Tremlett run out ............................. 0
S Meaker not out ............................... 3
B10 lb11 w2 nb12 .................... 35
Total (8 wkts., dec 146 overs) 553
Fall: 4, 137, 317, 352, 457, 514, 546,
546. Bowling: Groenewald 24-4-75-0,
Footitt 27-5-106-0, Turner 21-3-91-0,
Wainwright 45-9-164-3, Durston 29-3-96-2.
DERBYSHIRE: Second Inns
B Godleman lbw Tremlett ................ 28
C Hughes b Tremlett ....................... 68
W Madsen b Tremlett ........................ 8
S Chanderpaul not out .................... 24
W Durston not out ........................... 29
Lb5 nb2 ...................................... 7
Total (3 wkts., 39 overs) ...... 164
Fall: 76, 104, 105. Bowling: Tremlett
12-2-38-3, Linley 8-2-27-0, Batty 8-1-32-0,
Meaker 8-2-44-0, de Bruyn 3-0-18-0.
Umpires: N Cowley & N Bainton.
P W L D Bt Bl Pts
Yorkshire .......... 6 3 1 2 17 16 87
Sussex ............. 5 3 0 2 18 14 86
Middlesex ........ 6 3 0 3 13 15 85
Durham ........... 6 3 2 1 12 18 78.5
Notts ............... 4 2 2 0 10 11 53
Warwickshire .... 6 1 1 4 11 14 53
Somerset ......... 7 0 3 4 14 17 43
Surrey.............. 6 0 2 4 15 15 42
Derbyshire ........ 6 0 4 2 13 10 29
Yorkshire Bank 40
GROUP ANorthamptonshire v
Kent (Tunbridge Wells): Northants
263-4 (40.0 overs; A G Wakely
102, R I Newton 88). Kent 234
(39.4 overs; S W Billings 57; T A
Copeland 4-46). Northamptonshire
(2pts) beat Kent by 29 runs.
Worcestershire v Warwickshire
(New Road; Saturday): Worcs 210-9
(40.0 overs; D K H Mitchell 71,
M M Ali 56). Warwickshire 201
(38.3 overs). Worcestershire (2pts)
beat Warwickshire by 9 runs.
GROUP BDurham v Lancashire
(Emirates Durham ICG): Durham
297-9 (40.0 overs; M D Stoneman
85, P Mustard 65). Lancashire 258
(36.1 overs; J Clark 72, Kabir Ali 59;
G Onions 4-45). Durham (2pts) beat
Lancashire by 39 runs.
Essex v Scotland (Chelmsford):
Essex 368-7 (40.0 overs; R N ten
Doeschate 180, H D Rutherford
110). Scotland 243-8 (40.0 overs;
M H Cross 54no). Essex (2pts) beat
Scotland by 125 runs.
GROUP CLeics v Middlesex
(Grace Road): Leics 220 (39.5
overs). Middlesex 221-0 (30.2
overs; P R Stirling 132no, D J Malan
80no). Middlesex (2pts) beat Leics
by 10 wickets. Glamorgan v
Somerset (Taunton): Glamorgan
245-9 (40.0 overs; B J Wright
75no). Somerset 246-7 (38.2
overs; P D Trego 72, D Elgar 51).
Somerset (2pts) beat Glamorgan
by 3 wickets.
Yorkshire v Gloucs (Headingley
Carnegie): Yorkshire 240-6 (40.0
overs; P A Jaques 70). Glous 243-5
(38.1 overs; M Klinger 96, G H
Roderick 63). Gloucs (2pts) beat
Yorkshire by 5 wickets.
GROUP A P W L T NR Pts RR
Notts ............... 5 5 0 0 0 10 1.55
Kent ................ 7 4 3 0 0 8 0.29
Northants ......... 6 3 2 0 1 7 -0.20
Sussex ............. 6 2 2 0 2 6 -0.14
Worcestershire.. 5 2 3 0 0 4 0.26
Warwickshire .... 6 1 4 0 1 3 -0.30
Holland ............ 5 0 3 0 2 2 -1.84
GROUP B
Hampshire ....... 5 4 1 0 0 8 0.43
Durham ........... 6 3 2 0 1 6.75 0.60
Essex ............... 4 3 1 0 0 6 0.87
Surrey.............. 5 2 1 0 2 6 0.48
Derbyshire ........ 4 1 1 0 2 4 -0.50
Lancashire ....... 5 1 3 0 1 3 -0.69
Scotland .......... 5 0 5 0 0 0 -1.25
GROUP C
Gloucs ............. 6 4 1 0 1 9 0.21
Somerset ......... 5 4 1 0 0 8 1.85
Leicestershire ... 4 3 1 0 0 6 0.44
Middlesex ........ 5 2 2 0 1 5 0.23
Glamorgan ....... 5 2 2 0 1 5 0.22
Yorkshire .......... 5 1 4 0 0 2 -0.98
Unicorns .......... 6 0 5 0 1 1 -1.64
TODAYS FIXTURES
LV County Championship - Division
Oneday 4 of 4: Sussex v Notts
(Hove, 11am).
Yorkshire Bank 40 - Group A:
Holland v Worcestershire (Rotterdam,
11am). Group B: Essex v Surrey
(Chelmsford, 4.40).
NO ANSWER:
England
bowler Jade
Dernbach is
perplexed as
New Zealand
pile on the
runs at The
Ageas Bowl
SCOREBOARD
THE AGEAS BOWL: New Zealand beat
England by 86 runs
NEW ZEALAND
M Guptill not out ............................ 189
L Ronchi b Anderson ......................... 2
K Williamson b Swann .................... 55
L Taylor c Woakes b Anderson ....... 60
B McCullum not out ......................... 40
B4 lb4 w5 ................................. 13
Total (3 wkts., 50 overs) ...... 359
Fall: 12, 132, 241.
Bowling: Anderson 10-0-65-2, Bresnan
10-1-73-0, Woakes 7-0-49-0, Dernbach
10-0-87-0, Root 3-0-16-0, Swann 10-0-
61-1.
ENGLAND
A Cook b Mills ................................. 34
I Bell c Franklin b Bracewell ............ 25
I Trott not out ................................. 109
J Root c Bracewell b N L McCullum .. 28
E Morgan c Ronchi b Elliott ............. 21
J Buttler c Guptill b McClenaghan ..... 2
C Woakes c Ronchi b Williamson ... 13
T Bresnan run out ............................. 0
G Swann b Williamson ...................... 1
J Anderson b McClenaghan ............ 28
J Dernbach c Mills b McClenaghan .. 2
Lb3 w6 nb1 ............................... 10
Total (44.1 overs) .................. 273
Fall: 50, 64, 122, 166, 169, 212, 213,
218, 265.
Bowling: McClenaghan 8.1-0-35-3, Mills
9-0-55-1, Bracewell 8-1-55-1, McCullum
8-0-47-1, Franklin 5-0-40-0, Elliott 2-0-
13-1, Williamson 4-0-25-2.
Umpires: R Bailey & S Davis.
EXCLUSIVE
60 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
FOOTBALL: INTERNATIONAL SPECIAL
Picture: OWEN HUMPHREYS
Keanes
at the
double
for Irish
By Chris McKenna
ROBBIE KEANE
celebrated his
record-equalling
125th cap with
two goals as
Giovanni
Trapattonis
Republic of
Ireland side
eased past
Georgia .
The win in
Dublin rounded
off Irelands
preparations for
Fridays World Cup
qualier against Faroe
Islands.
Trapattoni made
nine changes from
Wednesdays clash
against England.
Georgia were reduced
to 10 men in the 21st
minute when goalkeeper
Giorgi Loria was sent off
for bringing down Shane
Long .
Ireland did not break
the deadlock until just
before the break, when
Richard Keogh headed
James McCleans
free-kick past substitute
goalkeeper Omar
Migineishvili.
Simon Cox doubled
the advantage soon after
the restart with a low
strike. McClean provided
the assist again, but it
was Wes Hoolahans
eye-catching pass at the
start of the move that
created the chance.
Trapattoni said: Wes
played well. He made
two or three important
passes. We can think
about playing him
against the Faroes.
Keane had come off
the bench at the break
to equal Shay Givens
caps record . He got his
55th international goal
by turning home Conor
Sammons cross, then
red in his 56th in the
nal minutes.
He said: If you asked
me 10 years ago would I
get this many caps, Id
say you were crazy. Im
obviously delighted and
its something I can look
back on in years to
come, but at the
moment I just hope to
get a few more.
KEANE: Equalled record
REAL SUPPORT LASTS A LIFETIME
PAIN GAME: Sturridge faces long lay-off
Sturridge fears the worst
Can Roy handle
excess baggage?
From John Dillon in Rio de Janeiro
EYE ON
THE BALL:
Roy
Hodgson
turns on
the style
in Rio
By Paul Joyce
THE photographs
have looked great. The
setting has been exotic.
The sun obligingly shone,
eventually. The palm
trees swayed and Sugar
Loaf mountain looked
resplendent above the sea
the backdrop for one of the
more glamorous training sessions
ever put on by the England team.
This has been public relations heaven
for the FA. Every football team who visit
Brazil must have the same kind of
harmless fun.
So, against such a backdrop, why
does Roy Hodgsons trip here have the
feel of the end of a honeymoon?
As usual with England, it is
because of the baggage they brought
with them.
A heavy load of worry,
disappointment and weary
resignation accompanied them
after their mundane and limited
performance in the friendly
against the Republic of Ireland at
Wembley, which preceded last nights
appearance at the fabled Maracana.
Last Wednesday was an evening which
made it feel like Hodgson has advanced
call upon the major strengths of English
football, of pace and commitment, rened
and tuned up this season in the manner of
the energetic approach of the Germans.
But it has not been seen often enough.
His players nearly always look sluggish.
They do not possess the technical
DANIEL STURRIDGE fears
he could miss the start of next
season, which will intensify
Liverpools striking problems
as the Luis Suarez furore
rumbles on.
Sturridge limped out of
Englands draw with the
Republic of Ireland last
Wednesday with ankle ligament
damage and, in the worst-case
scenario, he could be out for
three to four months.
That would be a huge blow
to Liverpool given Suarez is
keen on a move to the
Continent, with Real
Madrid potential suitors and
neighbours Atletico also
showing interest following the
50million sale of Radamel
Falcao to Monaco.
Manager Brendan Rodgers
has already set up a deal for
Celta Vigo striker Iago Aspas,
25, which is due to be
completed this week, with the
Spaniard expected to arrive on
Merseyside for a medical.
But the downbeat medical
bulletin on Sturridge is not
only untimely for Liverpool but
also England. He would be an
early doubt for the friendly
with Scotland but, more
importantly, he could also miss
the World Cup qualiers in
September against Moldova
and Ukraine, when Englands
hope of reaching Brazil 2014
will be on the line.
Liverpool are keeping the
exact diagnosis under wraps.
Rodgers, meanwhile, is
waiting for Barcelona to rm
up their interest in Pepe Reina
and will pursue a deal for
Sunderland goalkeeper Simon
Mignolet as his replacement.
?`jgcXp\ij
e\XicpXcnXpj
cffbjcl^^`j_
so many others are now beginning to close
in around him. He seems hemmed in.
Who can argue, for example, with his
claim that he simply has no depth of
striking talent to call upon?
He has a Plan A, so to speak, which
centres on Wayne Rooney and playing
quick, high-intensity, well-
organised and mobile
football around him.
At its best, it would
nowhere in his year in
command unable to
overcome the patent lack of
talent at his disposal,
or the almost laughable
susceptibility of English
footballers to injury.
The honeymoon he enjoyed
was a long one. Lately, it has
felt that the familiar traps of
his job which have ensnared
capability to pull it off
properly. It requires
possession skills as well as
tness.
Plan B, on the latest
evidence, seems to be to
revert to the 4-4-2 which so
incensed Gary Lineker when
he attacked the performance
against the Irish. But
perhaps Hodgson always
knew what kind of game to expect and
opted for the horses-for-courses approach.
Even then, the central-defensive pairing
of Gary Cahill and Phil Jagielka looked
uncertain. And that simply prompted
worry that the coach may miss Rio
Ferdinand and John Terry more than we
would like to care. And that he is still
unsure of the answer to the questions at
the back.
There will have to be much more
inventiveness and exibility on show in
the three qualiers at Wembley next
autumn if Moldova, Poland and,
critically, Montenegro, are not to be
invited to do the same containment job
that the Irish pulled off.
Last February at Wembley, there was a
glimpse of something else. There was a
mideld performance against these same
Brazilian opponents which brimmed with
ideas, vision and capability. It revolved
around Jack Wilshere. He is missing here
and there is no guarantee he will be t in
the autumn.
Hodgson must devise a fall-back plan
which offers England the same level of
thought in mideld without Wilsheres
presence.
Michael Carrick, for all the range of his
passing, needs to radiate more urgency,
because this qualication campaign is
bordering on urgent for England now.
It is more likely, however, that if England
are to be back here in Brazil next summer,
they will have simply muddled their way
through the autumn.
There is a backdrop here much more
bleak than Rios golden waterfront. It is
simply that England are not very good.
And Hodgson, for all his organisational
capabilities, cannot alter that.
REP OF IRE 4
GEORGIA 0
***
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 61
FOOTBALL: INTERNATIONAL SPECIAL
Our glimpse of
promised land
Picture: CARL RECINE
REAL SUPPORT LASTS A LIFETIME
SPORT IN BRIEF
International Matches
YESTERDAY
BRAZIL (0) ............ 2 ENGLAND (0) ...... 2
Fred 57 Ox-Chamberlain 67
Paulinho 82 Rooney 79
Att: 66,015
REP OF IRE (1) ...... 4 GEORGIA (0) ....... 0
R Keogh 42 Att: 20,100
Cox 48
Keane 77, 88
USA (2) ................. 4 GERMANY (0) ..... 3
Altidore 13 Westermann 51
Howedes 17 (og) Kruse 79, Draxler 82
Dempsey 60, 64 Att: 40,000
UKRAINE (0) ......... 0 CAMEROON (0) ... 0
LESOTHO (0) ......... 0 S AFRICA (1) ...... 2
Segolela 45, 60
RUGBY UNION
British & Irish Lions Tour
BARBARIANS ........ 8 LIONS ................. 59
BarbariansT: Fotualii. P: Daly.
British & Irish LionsT: OConnell,
Phillips (2), Davies, Cuthbert (2), Lydiate,
A. Jones. C: Farrell (3), Sexton (2). P:
Farrell (3). Att: 28,643
YESTERDAY
International Match
S AMERICAN XV .. 21 ENGLAND ............ 41
Consur XVT: Penalty, Cubelli, Mango. C:
Madero (3). EnglandT: Foden (2),
Vunipola (3), Wood, D-Jones. C: Myler (3).
RUGBY LEAGUE
Super League
LONDON B ......... 30 CASTLEFORD ...... 30
London BroncosT: Mendeika,
Wheeldon, Melling, Bailey, Gower. G: Witt
(5). CastlefordT: Clark, Chase,
Millington, Carney, Massey. G: Ellis (5).
Att: 1,810
YESTERDAY
HULL K R ........... 28 BRADFORD ......... 18
Hull K RT: Lovegrove (2), Withers (2),
Hall. G: Dobson (4). BradfordT:
Sammut, Lulia, Platt. G: Sammut (2), Gale.
Att: 7,259
WAKEFIELD ........ 23 WIGAN ................ 36
WakeeldT: Collis, Kirmond (2), Wood.
G: L. Smith (2), Cockayne. DG: L. Smith.
WiganT: Charnley (3), Hansen, Mossop,
Goulding. G: Richards (6). Att: 8,459
WARRINGTON ..... 68 SALFORD ............ 10
WarringtonT: Westwood (3), J.
Monaghan (2), Currie (2), Ratchford, Myler,
C. Riley, M. Monaghan, Higham. G:
Ratchford (10). SalfordT: Broughton,
Gaskell. G: Sneyd. Att: 9,560
WIDNES ............. 32 CATALAN DS ...... 32
WidnesT: Flynn, Owens (2), Phelps,
Winterstein (2). G: Owens (4). Catalan
T: Escare (3), Duport, Taia, Larroyer. G:
Dureau (2), Mounis (2). Att: 4,560
P W D L F A Pts
Wigan ............ 17 14 1 2 645 224 29
Hudderseld .. 16 12 0 4 480 288 24
Warrington .... 17 11 1 5 538 315 23
Hull ............... 17 9 2 6 392 321 20
Catalan Ds .... 17 9 2 6 431 384 20
Leeds ............ 15 9 1 5 369 250 19
Bradford ........ 17 7 2 8 393 413 16
Hull K R ......... 17 8 0 9 431 506 16
St Helens ....... 16 7 1 8 362 350 15
Widnes .......... 16 5 2 9 391 508 12
Wakeeld ...... 16 5 1 10 389 484 11
Castleford ..... 17 4 2 11 380 541 10
Salford .......... 17 4 1 12 271 611 9
London B ....... 17 3 2 12 299 576 8
KINGSTONE PRESS CHSHIP: Leigh 8
Featherstone 23. Yesterday: Barrow
18 Shefeld 20, Batley 22 Dewsbury
10, Swinton 18 Halifax 76, Whitehaven
22 Hunslet 14, York 42 Doncaster 10.
CYCLING
CRITERIUM DU DAUPHINEStage
1: 1 D Veilleux (Can) T 3hrs 17mins
35secs, 5 C Froome (Gbr) same time.
GOLF
MEMORIAL TOURNAMENT (Dublin,
Ohio)Final rnd (USA unless stated):
276 M Kuchar 68, 278 Kevin
Chappell 68, 281 Kyle Stanley 71,
282 B Haas 71, S Stallings 67.
Also: 284 J Rose (Eng) 73
NORDEA MASTERS (Stockholm)
Final rnd (Gbr & Irl unless stated):
267 M Ilonen (Fin) 69, 270 J Blixt
(Swe) 68, 271 B Wiesberger (Aut) 66,
272 A Noren (Swe) 72, T Bjorn (Den)
67, M Manassero (Ita) 70, R Karlberg
(Swe) 68, 273 R Fisher 64.
MOTORCYCLING
ITALIAN GRAND PRIX (Mugello)
MotoGP: 1 J Lorenzo (Spa) Yamaha
41mins 39.733secs, 2 D Pedrosa
(Spa) Honda 41:45.133, 3 C
Crutchlow (Gbr) Yamaha 41:46.145.
Standings: 1 Pedrosa 103pts, 2
Lorenzo 91, 3 M Marquez (Spa)
Honda 77, 4 Crutchlow 71.
TENNIS
FRENCH OPEN (Roland Garros)
4th rnd, Men: (32) T Robredo (Spa)
bt (11) N Almagro (Spa) 6-7 (5-7) 3-6
6-4 6-4 6-4, (4) D Ferrer (Spa) bt
(23) K Anderson (Rsa) 6-3 6-1 6-1,
(6) J-W Tsonga (Fra) bt V Troicki (Ser)
6-3 6-3 6-3, (2) R Federer (Swi) bt
(15) G Simon (Fra) 6-1 4-6 2-6 6-2
6-3. Women: (1) S Williams (USA) bt
(15) R Vinci (Ita) 6-1 6-3, S
Kuznetsova (Rus) bt (8) A Kerber (Ger)
6-4 4-6 6-3, (4) A Radwanska (Pol) bt
(14) A Ivanovic (Ser) 6-2 6-4, (5) S
Errani (Ita) bt (20) C Suarez-Navarro
(Spa) 5-7 6-4 6-3.
TODAYS DIARY
RUGBY LEAGUE
Super League: Hudderseld v St
Helens (7.45).
SPEEDWAY
Elite League: Belle Vue v Eastbourne,
Peterborough v Wolverhampton.
TENNIS
French Open (Roland Garros, Paris).
SO now you know what
makes them different.
What makes some of
them special.
In Wayne Rooneys case,
everyone had almost forgotten.
He needed to make a
statement. He needed to lift a
load off his mind at the end of
a troubling season. He needed
to remind the world and
himself that he was born to do
special things with a football,
not to mope and worry.
So he did it by scoring for
England from 25 yards on the
night they re-opened the
stadium where the Brazilians
had just spent the rst half of
this extraordinary match
teaching the English why the
Maracana requires a much
bigger trophy room than
Wembley.
Out of a night which looked
like it was going to conrm so
many depressing realities for
Roy Hodgsons schizophrenic
team, Rooney summoned up a
moment betting the grand
stage here.
It was a reminder that the
unique and gifted sportsmen
can do the unexpected at the
most critical moments. It will,
it is to be hoped, inspire the
men around him who looked
so sluggish for so long last
night that there may be similar
glories and grandeur on offer
to them in this land of football
passion and romance if they
sort out their haphazard World
Cup qualifying campaign.
With any luck and still we
will need it Rooney is now
going to charge through
Englands Autumn of qualiers
fuelled by the dazzling memory
of what he did. In fact, if he
wants to come back here and
do the same thing all over
again at the tournament next
summer, then his mission is
already clear. He may, indeed,
be surplus to requirements
at Manchester United but
England simply cannot do
without him.
How infuriating can this
England team be? Forty-seven
years of hurt. And counting.
Then a polite, but damning,
observation in the Maracanas
match programme that they
have not been much of a
threat since 1996. Last nights
rst-half performance looked
half. It was also due to the fact
that the Brazilians who had
looked so much more
dangerous began piling on
substitutes and lost their way.
But perhaps the dazzle with
which Neymar threatened Joe
Harts goal in the rst half is
little more than that mere
glitter. Certainly, the Brazilians
are worried they are not as
good as they should be.
That impression was
conrmed once Hodgson sent
on Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain
and shifted Phil Jones out of
mideld to right back. Then,
his side nally looked like they
could make a game of this
celebratory occasion.
Throughout the rst half,
this had been another of those
increasingly regular matches
when our national side puts on
a display of its new, but not
very inspiring or interesting
way of playing .
Bereft of creative talent and
shredded of so many key
players by injury, they seemed
incapable of offering anything
more than the damage-
limitation exercise which they
got away with for nearly an
hour. Hodgson had set up a
4-5-1 formation and it looked
like the idea was simply to get
back on the night ight
across the Atlantic relatively
unscathed.
In truth, that idea only
remained intact by half-time
because of the excellence of
Englands goalkeeper, Hart.
At that point, you wondered
if anyone would really miss
England if they do not make it
back here next summer.
After Oxlade-Chamberlains
equaliser and then Rooneys
instant of inspiration, though,
England got their glimpse of
Brazils footballing Promised
Land. Now they know precisely
what they will miss if they fail
in the Autumn.
8]^Z[HedgihLg^iZg
JOHN
DILLON
RIGHT
ON: Fred
puts
Brazil
ahead
after
Hernanes
had hit
the bar
with Joe
Hart well
beaten
like England had come to
Brazil to do nothing but hope
to escape without too many
wounds. Now, though, we have
not one, but two wonder goals,
scored in the stadium which is
the spiritual home of the
greatest football nation the
world has known.
And the equally paradoxical
fact was that Rooneys goal
helped Hodgsons side secure
a draw which looks impressive
because of its setting when, in
fact, they had been played off
the park throughout the rst
Wayne boost for Hodgson
FROM BACK PAGE
like to think so. After the win at Wembley we
got a lot of praise and that sent us away on a
high so we have to be careful and mindful that
the next performance wasnt that good.
But I think there are a lot of positives to
take out of this, not least that lots of players
we will be counting on in the autumn were not
available for us.
Im delighted with how we kept ourselves in
the game and didnt capitulate, despite them
being clearly better than us in the rst half.
In the second half we were every bit as good
and we can take lot of credit for that.
Oxlade-Chamberlain whose father Mark
played in the Maracana success here 29 years
ago, admitted he could recall little of his
contribution after coming on as a substitute
and said I cant really remember it to be
honest. I think I played it to Lamps, he played
it round the corner to Wazza, he set it up and I
just hit it. But the fact we did go 2-1 up, you
always want to close out the game, so in that
sense were disappointed.
Bu at home, dad Mark missed the highlight
of son Alexs career because he fell asleep.
He said: I was a bit gutted. I actually didnt
see it. I was dropping off his mother at the
airport at 6am this morning and I dozed off.
Oxlade-Chamberlain said: It doesnt
surprise me that he fell asleep. Hell probably
also be the last person to get in touch!
***
62 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
FOOTBALL: INTERNATIONAL SPECIAL
Pictures: LAURENCE GRIFFITHS and RICARDO MORAES
Rooney the
REAL SUPPORT LASTS A LIFETIME
Steele: We
must stop
the excuses
BRAVE HART:
Joe Hart
saves at the
feet of Filipe
but, inset, he
is beaten by
Paulinho
KEEPING
FAITH:
England
Under-21
keeper
Jason
Steele
ENGLAND Under-21
goalkeeper Jason
Steele says the time
for excuses is over as
they prepare for this
weeks European
Championships.
We are a nation full
of excuses at times
and we have to do our
utmost not to give
ourselves any. We have
to go there and win it,
said Middlesbroughs
Steele.
Our record shows
that we can go close.
Four years ago,
Stuart Pearces side
reached the nal,
where they were swept
aside by Germany.
But their astonishing
recent run of form
suggests they should
Wednesday, before
tackling Norway, who
they beat twice in
qualifying, then Israel.
Doubts remain
about Pearces future,
as his contract expires
at the end of the nals,
and he has been linked
with the vacant
managers post at
Wigan.
So far, he has
resisted any attempt
to shed any light on his
future, saying: In all
honesty my ego
doesnt stretch to that.
My main proviso is for
the players to enjoy
the environment they
are working in.
I hope they can look
back at the end and
say what a great
tournament it was. In
at least get
through
their group
and into the
knockout
stages.
England
start their
campaign
against
Italy on
edition.
Pearce
said: As
team ethic
goes and a
willingness
to want to
achieve, this
group is as
strong a
group as
Ive worked with in the
four championships I
have reached. The
camaraderie is as good
as I have worked with.
Before we left the
hotel, I sat back and
let the players do the
team talk. It was a
case of empowering
them and giving them
real responsibility. Ive
never done it before,
but I felt they were
ready for it.
Pearce has led this
team into the nals on
the back of a
nine-game winning
streak without
conceding a goal.
But the last time
England were crowned
Under-21 kings of the
Continent was in 1984
under Dave Sexton.
this profession I am in
a vulnerable position.
My job can go at the
drop of a hat. That is
the way it works.
England landed in
Israel yesterday as one
of the pre-tournament
favourites for the Euro
nals, but with Pearce
convinced he had a
superior squad two
years ago.
That team, which
included players such
as Danny Welbeck, Phil
Jones, Chris Smalling,
Daniel Sturridge, Tom
Cleverley and Kyle
Walker, failed to get
through the group
stages, a minimum
ambition for this
N\_Xm\kf
^fk_\i\
Xe[n`e`k
From Niall Hickman
in Tel Aviv
***
Daily Express Monday June 3 2013 63
FOOTBALL: INTERNATIONAL SPECIAL
Picture: LAURENCE GRIFFITHS
Rio-deemer
NICE ONE SON: Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain res Englands equaliser 29 years after his father played in the stadium
Roys boys
so close to
victory in
Maracana
BRAZIL 2
ENGLAND 2
REAL SUPPORT LASTS A LIFETIME
IT may not have come from
the same dazzling slalom
run past a posse of gold-
shirted defenders that lit up
English football 29 years ago,
but in its own way it will be
remembered as being just as
iconic.
For John Barnes in 1984, read
Wayne Rooney in 2013.
A match England had spent
chasing shadows, the aws in their
technique brutally exposed for an
hour by Brazilian brilliance, was
transformed inside 10 minutes to
offer a timely reminder that the
nation can still conjure bolts of
lightning when the accusation is
that it has returned to the
Dark Ages.
Football bloody hell as someone
once said.
Before Rooney sashayed on to
centre stage, the script was set to
be written by substitute Alex
Oxlade-Chamberlain, who thrashed
home an outstanding equalising
goal out of nothing to draw his side
back into a game that should have
been pushed beyond them.
The Arsenal youngster spent his
childhood hearing tales of how his
father, Mark, had played in
Englands landmark success in the
Maracana all those years ago and
proceeded to pen a story of his own
to underline why he represents the
future for a team that must cherish
such up-and-coming talents.
That Rooney then stepped
forward to hog the limelight should
be of little surprise given his recent
form for his country.
Picking the ball up from James
Milner, Rooney drove ineld before
aiming a brilliant shot from 30 yards
that arced and curled and dipped
beyond Julio Cesar, taking a slight
deection en route and into the top
corner of the net.
It was his eighth goal in his last
nine international appearances and
one that will live long in the
memory.
As well as being a moment of
genius that took the breath away, it
pushed England to within seven
minutes of beating Luiz Felipe
Scolaris side for the second time in
three months. That they were
pegged back by Brazil Paulinho
scoring to add to Freds opener in
the 57th minute felt right given
the gulf that had existed before
England dipped into the reserves
that coach Roy Hodgson will have
recognised.
The ashes of quality his attackers
produced were out of keeping with
a display that, in the rst half
especially, heightened the doubts
that swirl around the prospect of
returning to these football-mad
parts next year.
The season has been one of
slumber rather than samba for
Hodgson and his quest for solutions
continues unabated. Whether he
found any grand conclusions is
doubtful.
Here he had Phil Jones,
right back for the second
half against the Republic
of Ireland last week, in
the No7 shirt in
mideld and
hoping to hit
upon a
E u r e k a
moment that
might offer a
signpost to the
future.
Jones is the
40th player
Hodgson has
picked since the
friendly win over
Italy in August
(Jack Rodwells
late cameo made
him the 41st)
and while there
was a time when the clamour was
for fresh faces, now a team and,
importantly, an identity needs to
emerge before those crucial autumn
qualiers when England could still
drop as quickly as the leaves if they
harbour delusions of grandeur.
He brought energy to a formation
that was supposed to be 4-3-3, but
which quickly became 4-5-1 such
was Brazils dominance.
England reached the interval
intact only by virtue of Joe Harts
alertness and a sprinkling of good
luck as wave after wave of Brazilian
raids poured forward.
Leighton Baines, replaced by
Ashley Cole in the opening half due
to injury, blocked an early scissors-
ki ck from Barcelona new
boy Neymar and
the tone was set.
Dani Alves
crashed a long-
range shot wide,
H a r t
denied Neymar from close range,
Glen Johnson expertly smuggled a
tantalising cross from Oscar from
off his own line and Hulks backheel
drifted narrowly wide.
In contrast, England were
impotent and insipid. On the rare
occasion they did before the break,
Theo Walcotts radar, as against the
Republic, was scrambled and he
shot straight at Cesar.
Yet if England feel the glare of the
spotlight is too intense on them at
times, they should consider the
demands placed on Brazil.
All it took was one over-hit cross
to prompt groans to ripple around a
stage that still resonates, though it
is difcult to imagine how 199,854
once crammed into this arena for
the 1950 World Cup deciding match
between Brazil and Uruguay such is
the standardisation that has
gripped stadiums the world over.
The weight of expectation on
Scolari is huge, the stellar World
Cup success of 2002 counting for
little amid a run which has now seen
Brazil win just one of eight games.
Belatedly their reward arrived.
Anderson Hernanes was given time
and space to shoot and an arcing
attempt struck the angle of Harts
crossbar and post before rebounding
back to Fred to condently tuck
home.
Credit England then for their
response. Oxlade-Chamberlain, on
for Johnson, struck after Frank
Lampards pass had been teed up
by Rooney and then came the strike
that will be remembered down the
years.
^cG^dYZ?VcZ^gd
PAUL
JOYCE
Af\?8IK
a|ead's best p|eyer eer|y oa ead hed to
be. kssured head||a ead mede p|eaty of
deceat seves. hed ao cheace of stopp|a
e|ther of 8rez||'s oe|s.
/
G_`cA8>@<CB8
Not e|ert whea fred put 8rez|| eheed.
8e|| bouaced bec| off the ber ead he ead
ksh|ey 0o|e were stet|c e||ow|a the
str||er to pouace. 0therw|se p|eyed we||.
-
C\`^_kfe98@E<J
5urpr|s|a|y poor show|a from ea
|aform p|eyer. 0eve the be|| ewey uader
ao pressure ead offered aoth|a o|a
forwerd. Ia[ured efter he|f ea hour.
,
G_`cAFE<J
kaother recru|t to bo|ster the m|de|d
es meaeer koy hodsoa weat oa the
bec| foot. 0|da't do bed|y es e sh|e|d for
the defeace ead try|a to teme hu||.
.
K_\fN8C:FKK
h|s pece hed 8rez|| oa the bec| foot, h|s
pess|a d|d aot, thouh. fe||ed to ||a| up
we|| w|th Reyae kooaey. h|t oae st|a|a
shot thet Ju||o 0eser d|d we|| to b|oc|.
.
>c\eAF?EJFE
kept h|s coo| to me|e e oe|sev|a
c|eereace from 0scer's cross. Not so
c|ever whea e||ow|a Neymer |a oa oe|
fo||ow|a e poor touch.
-
D`Z_X\c:8II@:B
hed e reet bett|e w|th Neymer wh|ch
the 8rez|||ea sheded. Ror|ed t|re|ess|y
but, |||e most of h|s teemmetes, eve
the be|| ewey too cheep|y.
-
AXd\jD@CE<I
Needs to stey oa h|s feet more ead cut
out resh tec||es es que||ty oppoaeats
w||| exp|o|t th|s wee|aess. fe||ed to c|ose
dowa 0ea| k|ves ead d|d ||tt|e |a ettec|.
,
>Xip:8?@CC
Jouh a|ht try|a to c|ose dowa hu||,
Neymer, fred ead 0scer but d|d aot do
too bed|y. L||e other defeaders, he wes
|et dowa by overe|| |ec| of possess|oa.
-
=iXebC8DG8I;
L|tt|e |a0ueace oa the eme es he wes
forced |ato e deeper ro|e thea he |s
su|ted to. few cheaces to et forwerd
ead edd to h|s |mpress|ve oe| te||y.
-
NXpe\IFFE<P
frustret|a rst he|f, whea he fed oa
screps, turaed to de||ht |a the secoad
efter h|s woaderfu| cur|ed shot |ato the
top coraer put a|ead eheed.
/
JL9JK@KLK<J
k 0o|e (for 8e|aes, 3!, 1)
k 0x|ede0hember|e|a (for Johasoa, 6!, 8)
J kodwe|| (for Re|cott, 84, 6)
9I8Q@C+$)$*$(
0eser 1, k|ves 8, J 5||ve 1, Lu|z 1, f|||pe 1
(Merce|o 46), 0|es 6 (heraeaes 46),
Peu||aho 6 (8eraerd 83), 0scer 8 (Moure 56),
hu|| 8 (feraeado 12), Neymer 8, fred 1
(Leeadro 0em|eo 80)
YpJ`dfeP\\e[
GC8P<I
8E8CPJ@J
WAYNE DANCE:
Rooney celebrates
his goal with
Alex Oxlade-
Chamberlain
***
64 Daily Express Monday June 3 2013
ROONEY
DOES THE
MARACANA
COOK: Disappointed
Cook serves up tripe
By Gideon Brooks ALASTAIR COOK admitted his
England side were simply not
good enough as they were sent
crashing to another one-day
defeat by New Zealand.
And they are now sweating on
the tness of Stuart Broad and
Steve Finn as they try to get their
Champions Trophy preparations
back on course.
The England captain watched a
patched-up side missing his two
strike bowlers thrashed for the
second time in three days. The
Black Caps won by 86 runs at
Southampton to wrap up the
series with a match to spare.
And while Cook said he would
shake things up for the third
match at Trent Bridge on
Wednesday, he admitted England
need the two front-line bowlers
back if they are to have an impact
in the ICC tournament. He said:
This has been a tough couple of
TURN TO PAGE 58, COLUMN 1
Austria 3.50, Belgium 3, Bulgaria BGN 4.60, Canary Islands 2.10, Cyprus 2.30, Denmark 24 DKr, Finland 5.80, France 2.70, Germany 2.50, Gibraltar Gib 0.80, Greece
2.50, Italy 2.15, Luxembourg 3.00, Malta 2.20, Netherlands 3, Norway 28 Nkr, Portugal [Cont] 2.10, Spain 2.10, Switzerland SF 4.50, Turkey TL 6.00, USA $2.00
9 770307 017315
THE EXPRESS 3 JUN 2013. No 35674
23
The recycled content of UK
Newspapers in 2009 was 76.2%
D;MIF7F;HIIKFFEHJH;9O9B?D=
Published by Express Newspapers, The Northern & Shell Building, Number 10 Lower Thames Street,
London, EC3R 6EN. Printed by West Ferry Printers Ltd.,Unit A & B , Kimpton Road , Luton LU2 OTA;
Broughton Printers Ltd., D C Thomson, 80 Kingsway East, Dundee DD4 8SL, Olivers Place, Fulwood,
Preston, Lancs, PR2 4WT; Independent News & Media, 124-144 Royal Avenue, Belfast BT1 1EB. ;
Bermont Impresion S.L Avenida de Alemania 12, 28821 Coslada, Madrid Spain. Deposito Legal no.
TO-394/96; T.F. Print SA, Tenerife; EUROPRINTER SA Zone Aropole avenue Jean Mermoz B 6041
GOSSELIES. The Daily Express adheres to the ethical and professional standards of the publishing
industry as set out in the Editors Code of Practice.
Tel. 0208 612 7000. Outside UK +44(0) 208 612 7000
2013
ABCDEFGHI J KLPQRS *TUW1234 WBDS
9I8Q@C <E>C8E; ) )
ROY HODGSON
claimed England came
of age after Wayne
Rooneys wonder goal
helped secure a morale-
boosting draw at the
Maracana last night.
England were within seven
minutes of beating Brazil for
the second time in three
months as strikes from Alex
Oxlade-Chamberlain and then
Rooney, with a 30-yard effort
that found the top corner after
a slight deection, transformed
a friendly in which they had
barely threatened for an hour.
Paulinhos late strike
ultimately denied Hodgson a
historic win on their rst visit
to this iconic arena since John
Barnes inspired a 2-0 success
in 1984, but the England coach
emerged buoyed by the result.
Asked if it was a night in
which his injury-ravaged side
came of age, he said: I would
TURN TO PAGE 61, COLUMN 2
From Paul Joyce
GET IN:
Rooneys
spectacular
strike puts
England in
the lead
Picture:
FRIEDEMANN VOGEL
Ifp_X`cjX
e\n[Xne
X]k\iNXpe\
jklee\i
***/lmx

You might also like