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08:01:57 11/30/12
Andrew Flintoff: 'boxing gets the beans going'
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 08:01:57 11/30/12
Andrew Flintoff: 'boxing gets the beans going'
Former England cricketer Andrew Flintoff weighs in for his first professional boxing fight. The 34-year-old former all rounder will take on American Richard Dawson at the MEN Arena in Manchester after exchanging his cricketing whites for a pair of boxing gloves in a bid to prove himself in the ring. Flintoff, who was part of England's Ashes winning teams in 2005 and 2009, tipped the scales at 216lbs (97.98kg), 25lbs (11.34kg) lighter than his 23-year-old opponent who already has two professional victories. After a 14-year career as a cricketer Flintoff could be forgiven for putting his feet up in retirement. Instead he is attempting to reinvent himself as a professional heavyweight boxer. "I wanted a real challenge while I'm still young enough and while I'm able. There will be a point when I can't do that sort of stuff when I get older but while I still can you know this is the one thing which you know got the beans going and the juices going and wanted to do," said Flintoff at a news conference in Manchester. Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 20826 13 ratings Time: 00:53 More in Sports
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07:47:18 11/30/12
Palestine celebrates UN vote recognition
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 07:47:18 11/30/12
Palestine celebrates UN vote recognition
The United Nations last night recognised a sovereign state of Palestine for the first time, sparking jubilation in the General Assembly and celebrations long into the night in Jerusalem. The UN overwhelmingly ignored dire warnings from the United States and Israel that the decision would wreck peace talks and lead to the severance of badly needed aid funding. An historic resolution that enhanced the Palestinians' position at the UN from "permanent observer" to "non-member observer state", a status also held by the Vatican, passed the General Assembly by a resounding 138 votes to 9, with 41 countries abstaining, including Britain. Five nations did not register a vote. The no votes were US, Israel, Canada, Czech Republic, Palau, Panama, Nauru, Mirconesia and Marshall Islands. Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 2163 46 ratings Time: 01:53 More in News & Politics
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20:59:26 11/29/12
PM's Leveson response 'surprises' Alistair Campbell
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:59:26 11/29/12
PM's Leveson response 'surprises' Alistair Campbell
Alistair Campbell, Tony Blair's former No 10 communications director says he is surprised David Cameron has rejected "an important part" of Lord Leveson's recommendations. Alistair Campbell described Lord Leveson's proposals for press regulation as "clever, sensible, proportionate", and expressed astonishment that David Cameron appeared to have rejected the concept of a state regulator. "I'm really surprised that David Cameron has seen fit to essentially reject a very, very important part of it. He's said that he would implement the report if the proposals weren't bonkers. Well, these are not bonkers proposals," he said. Mr Campbell, a former Daily Mirror journalist, also urged Labour MPs to join forces with the Liberal Democrats, as well as Tory rebels, in backing the Leveson proposals in the House of Commons. Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 191 1 ratings Time: 00:52 More in News & Politics
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20:51:05 11/29/12
Leveson report: Video highlights
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Leveson report: Video highlights
The key moments in video as Lord Justice Leveson delivers his report into the ethics of the press. Read the key points here: www.telegraph.co.uk Read about the report as it happened: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 146 0 ratings Time: 02:17 More in News & Politics
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19:10:47 11/29/12
SAS sniper Danny Nightingale walks free from court
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SAS sniper Danny Nightingale walks free from court
SAS sniper Danny Nightingale, who was jailed for illegally possessing a pistol, has walked free after having his 18 month sentence reduced to 12 months and suspended at the Court of Appeal. An SAS sniper, jailed for illegally possessing a pistol brought back from Iraq, thanked the kindness of the "Great British public" as he was dramatically freed from custody. Sergeant Danny Nightingale, 37, wiped away tears as he was reunited with his wife Sally, following a decision by the Court of Appeal to reduce his sentence. The father of two, who was described in court as one of the elite regiment's most exemplary soldiers, had been sentenced to 18 months military detention after pleading guilty to unlawfully possessing a Glock 9mm pistol and a large amount of ammunition. But in emotional scenes at the Royal Courts of Justice, three judges -- Lord Chief Justice Lord Judge, Mr Justice Fulford and Mr Justice Bean -- ruled that the sentence had been too harsh and reduced it to 12-months. Suspending the sentence for 12-months, Sgt Nightingale was told he would be freed immediately and was also granted leave to appeal against his conviction on the grounds that his guilty plea had been made on the basis of unsound advice. Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV ... From: telegraphtv Views: 483 7 ratings Time: 01:58 More in News & Politics
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18:40:18 11/29/12
Concorde verdict: Continental Airline's lawyer comments
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 18:40:18 11/29/12
Concorde verdict: Continental Airline's lawyer comments
The lawyers representing Continental Airlines as well as the victims of the crash both criticise France's air safety regime. Continental Airlines was cleared of any criminal responsibility for the Concorde crash that killed 113 people in 2000, but was still held liable for damages over an accident that hastened the demise of the supersonic jet. The US airline and one of its engineers had been convicted of involuntary manslaughter over the crash, which happened after a metal strip fell off one of its planes and on to the runway of Charles de Gaulle airport shortly before a Concorde aircraft took off. The strip punctured the supersonic airliner's tyre, propelling debris through a fuel tank under the wing, sparking a catastrophic fire. But after a lengthy legal battle, a Versailles appeals court yesterday quashed the convictions, with judge Michele Luga ruling that there was no proven "cause and effect" between the strip's presence and the accident. Still, the court ruled that Continental bore some civil responsibility and would still have to pay %euro1 million (%pound810000) to Air France, the owner of the Concorde, in damages to its "brand image". Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality ... From: telegraphtv Views: 671 1 ratings Time: 01:29 More in News & Politics
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18:00:04 11/29/12
Mosley welcomes Leveson findings
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 18:00:04 11/29/12
Mosley welcomes Leveson findings
The former Formula One chief Max Mosley says Lord Leveson's recommendations would make the "situation much better than it is now". Max Mosley welcomed the recommendation by Lord Leveson for the press to be regulated by an independent body backed up by statute, saying it would "make the situation much better than it is now" and urged the Government to act on the proposals outlined in the report. "I don't think any responsible politician could fail to implement the legislation which he's calling for," he said. But the multi-millionaire former Formula One supremo, who won a privacy case against the News of The World expressed concerns that the regulatory system proposed by Lord Leveson would not protect poorer people from having their privacy invaded by a newspaper. "If you want to stop something being published, if you find out that they're going to breach your privacy, you've still got to go to court to do that. That means that it's still only for the rich, and that's completely unfair," said Mr Mosley. Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Read the Leveson Live page: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport ... From: telegraphtv Views: 87 2 ratings Time: 01:19 More in News & Politics
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17:31:45 11/29/12
Nick Clegg: worst outcome would be to do nothing
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 17:31:45 11/29/12
Nick Clegg: worst outcome would be to do nothing
The Prime Minister said he has "serious misgivings and concerns" about state regulation of the press, after the judge today said there should be new laws creating a newspaper watchdog. In a major divergence of views, Mr Clegg, the deputy Prime Minister, said he believes changing the law is "the only way to guarantee" that the press is kept in check after the phone-hacking scandal. Their disagreement raises the possibility that the Liberal Democrats could team up with Labour to bring in a new press watchdog backed by statute. Read more: blogs.telegraph.co.uk Read the reaction to the Leveson Report live: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 345 1 ratings Time: 01:01 More in News & Politics
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16:15:57 11/29/12
Miliband endorses Leveson proposals 'in their entirety'
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 16:15:57 11/29/12
Miliband endorses Leveson proposals 'in their entirety'
Labour leader Ed Miliband says MPs "should put their trust in Lord Justice Leveson's recommendations" and that the proposals should be accepted in full. Labour leader Ed Miliband said Labour endorsed the whole of the "measured, reasonable and proportionate" report and called for legislation to be on the stature book by 2015. "We on this side unequivocally endorse both the principles set out and the central recommendations," he said - vowing to fight for them to be adopted. Without statutory underpinning "there cannot be the change we need", he added, calling it the "crucial new guarantee we have never had before", he said. "I welcome the offer of immediate cross-party talks," he said. "But these talks must be about implementing these recommendations, not whether we implement them. Read more of this article: www.telegraph.co.uk Read more from the aftermath of the report on our Leveson Live page: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 466 13 ratings Time: 02:28 More in News & Politics
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15:56:28 11/29/12
Leveson report: David Cameron statement in full
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 15:56:28 11/29/12
Leveson report: David Cameron statement in full
The Prime Minister delivers his reaction to the Leveson report into press ethics to the House of Commons. Phone-hacking was supposedly Ed Miliband's signature issue, but today David Cameron outflanked him. Labour's leader wasn't helped by Lord Justice Leveson, who pulled the rug from him by rejecting claims of an inappropriate relationship between the Government and News International over the BSkyB takeover, and giving Jeremy Hunt and George Osborne a clean bill of health. It also allowed the Prime Minister to deliver a brisk slap-down to the Labour leader's old boss Gordon Brown, who had wrongly claimed he had been the subject of a great News International conspiracy. That gave the Prime Minister the opportunity to seize the high moral ground, and he never relinquished it. He agreed with Leveson that the regulatory framework for the press had to be changed, but he saw dangers in crossing the "Rubicon" of statutory legislation. He asked Ed Miliband to join with him in finding a common position on the issue, and called on the press to come forward with their own proposals on how the principles outlined in Leveson could be implemented. Cameron has, not for the first time, secured clever triangulation. He has acknowledged there needs to be change, but is offering the press the chance to sign up to it voluntarily. In other words, he has rung the bell for last orders in the last-chance saloon, but is giving journalists the chance to drink up and leave, rather than send in the ... From: telegraphtv Views: 1166 13 ratings Time: 12:55 More in News & Politics
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15:01:17 11/29/12
Sherborne: regulator must be set up sooner rather than later
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 15:01:17 11/29/12
Sherborne: regulator must be set up sooner rather than later
David Sherborne, counsel for victims of phone hacking and press intrusion, reacts to the findings of the Leveson report. David Sherborne, the lawyer representing victims at the Leveson Inquiry, called the report "a weighty and impressive document" and welcomed Lord Leveson's recommendation for an independent regulator of the press, backed up by statute. "In the face of compelling and often disturbing evidence, which my clients gave to the Inquiry, about their experiences at the hands of the press over the years, the need for a strong and independent regulator is frankly unarguable," he said. "Today it seems we have finally learned from the failings of the past, and it is time now to implement these judicial recommendations within a timeframe so that if the press fails to create this independent regulator, it must be this parliament which imposes a statutory system upon them." Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Read more on our Leveson Live page: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 91 0 ratings Time: 03:10 More in News & Politics
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14:37:05 11/29/12
Lord Leveson's speech in full
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Lord Leveson's speech in full
Lord Justice Leveson delivers the findings of his report into press standards. Read more on our Leveson Live page: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 976 5 ratings Time: 22:30 More in News & Politics
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14:27:41 11/29/12
Leveson report reaction: 'Press must not waste this opportunity'
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 14:27:41 11/29/12
Leveson report reaction: 'Press must not waste this opportunity'
PCC Chairman Lord Hunt and Labour MP Chris Bryant reacts to Lord Justice Leveson's recommendations. Lord Hunt, the chairman of the Press Complaints Commission, who drew up a new proposal to avoid statutory regulation with Lord Black, executive director of Telegraph Media Group, has given his response to the report. He says a press law would be a "regressive step". "I don't want the message to go out from this country that the UK is bringing in a press law." "I did sense that Brian Leveson wants the press now to get on with it. He embraced a free press ... we have to make sure the press don't let him down but seize the baton he has given them." Read more from our Leveson Live page: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 83 0 ratings Time: 00:55 More in News & Politics
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14:03:57 11/29/12
Leveson: Press 'needs truly independent' regulation
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Leveson: Press 'needs truly independent' regulation
Lord Leveson delivers the findings of his report into press ethics. Read the latest Leveson news on our Live page: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 905 3 ratings Time: 01:21 More in Entertainment
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12:14:00 11/29/12
Stevie Parle's zabaglione sauce recipe
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 12:14:00 11/29/12
Stevie Parle's zabaglione sauce recipe
This is a great sauce for a Christmas pudding, or a good dessert in its own right if you want to steer clear of heavy pudding. Try this flexible recipe in the Christmas period that can be a sauce or a pudding. Serves 10 Ingredients 8 egg yolks 150g sugar 100ml sweet sherry 100ml dark rum Directions Find a metal or glass bowl that will stand over a medium bowl of boiling water. Put the egg yolks and sugar in the bowl with half the alcohol. Whisk well with an electric whisk or a strong arm over the pan of boiling water for about five minutes until the mixture is warm and thick. Then add the remaining sherry and rum and whisk more for a further five minutes while it continues to cook over the pan. If the mixture starts to stick, take it off the heat. You can tell it's ready once the mixture comes off the whisk in thick ribbons and it is just about too hot to hold your finger in. Serve while still warm. Read more: www.telegraph.co.uk Get the latest headlines www.telegraph.co.uk Subscribe to The Telegraph www.youtube.com Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com Follow us on Google+ plus.google.com Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture. From: telegraphtv Views: 76 1 ratings Time: 02:10 More in Howto & Style
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12:12:25 11/29/12
Recipe: Creamed rice with lingonberries
[LESS INFO] 11 VIEWS | ADDED 12:12:25 11/29/12
Recipe: Creamed rice with lingonberries
With foodies talking of little but Nordic cuisine, its time to take a masterclass from Denmarks queen of cooking. Rice pudding with warm cherry sauce (Serves 6) Rice Pudding 4 litres organic whole milk 2 vanilla pods 250g short grain pudding rice 1 tsp salt 2 tbsp caster sugar 150g blanched almonds 200ml double cream Cherry Sauce 700g pitted cherries, fresh, frozen or in brine 200g caster sugar 1 vanilla pod 500ml water 3 tbsp cornflour This is my favourite pudding for Christmas Eve. When serving it, you also play a little Christmas game. The rice pudding is served in a large bowl. Just before you take it to the table, add one whole almond and stir so nobody knows where it is. Everybody eats until someone finds the almond. You are allowed to cheat and hide the almond from the others if you find it, because the point of the game is to make the others keep eating while trying to find the almond. In the end, when a person can no longer hide that he or she has the almond, the person receives a present. Make the rice pudding and the cherry sauce the day before serving gently heat 1.3 litres of the milk in a large saucepan. Slit one of the vanilla pods lengthways, without cutting it all the way through. Just before the milk starts to boil, add the rice and the slit vanilla pod. Cook gently for 30 minutes, stirring slowly and frequently so that it doesn't burn. Remove the pan from the heat and add the salt. Cover and leave for 10 minutes. Remove the lid, stir in the sugar and ... From: telegraphtv Views: 86 1 ratings Time: 02:31 More in Howto & Style
08/10/12
















