last week | Mon | Tues | Wed | Thurs | Fri | Sat | Sun | next week
Highlights
Weather: Sunny for much of the day, cloudy when it's not. Duh! 13. Tonight's telly:
Friends (1995, 4) Repeat of the one where Monica shags a 17 year old. This is humour from the heart. **** The grand day out, planning and plotting. We get the department's dirty laundry out in the open, declare a (draft) Vision, and start work on some Strategies. Hard work, *very* hard work, but worth it in the long run. The world's first paying space tourist, American businessman Dennis Tito, begins his holiday aboard the international space station. "I don't know about this adaptation that they're talking about. I'm already adapted. I love space!" The former Nasa engineer is paying $20m (£14m) for his six-day holiday. Nasa opposed it until the last moment because it did not want a novice in the space station. Indonesia's President Abdurrahman Wahid is facing growing calls to give up power as angry lawmakers today demanded that parliament censure him for a second time, setting the scene for possible impeachment over alleged corruption and mismanagement. Mr Wahid has one month to respond to the reprimand. If the parliament rejects his reply, it can ask the people's consultative assembly, Indonesia's highest legislative body, to start impeachment proceedings. Northern Ireland education minister Martin McGuinness tells the Bloody Sunday inquiry that he was a Provisional IRA commander in Londonderry at the time of the shootings in 1972. The formal revelation shocks no one, but is nonetheless significant as an implicit indication by the IRA that it now regards its terrorist war as being over and on the point of being consigned to history.
|
last week | Mon | Tues | Wed | Thurs | Fri | Sat | Sun | next week
2001-05-01 (Tu)
Weather: A gloriously sunny day, clouding over slightly around 6. +14. Ouch of the day: only time Tonight's telly: The government declares a "state of rebellion" in the Philippines and ordered the arrest of key opposition figures after clashes between police and backers of the ousted president, Joseph Estrada, killed at least four people. It was the second time in as many nights that President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo has survived an attempt to force her from office and reinstall Mr Estrada. She claimed that he and his allies incited supporters in an effort to seize power for their own benefit. Police in riot gear penned several thousand anti-capitalism protesters into Oxford Circus in central London as several further groups of May Day protesters attempted to break through police lines in the area. The capital's May Day protests became tense as police formed human barricades to prevent groups of demonstraters from converging on Oxford Street. Surrounding side streets were cordoned off. In Holles Street, beside the John Lewis department store, protesters broke through police lines several times to join up with another group of demonstrators. Demonstraters complained that there is no water and no toilets inside the cordon, with some protesters pointing to police and saying, "They're the urinals." Earlier in the afternoon, demonstrators in Oxford Circus chanted and sang in front of front of shops such as Niketown that were closed and protected by wooden hoardings. The protestors threw Monopoly money into the air.
The demonstrators have accused the police of fuelling tension by surrounding groups of anti-capitalism protesters at various locations in central London. While the main body of the protest converged on Oxford Circus, at the Elephant and Castle roundabout in south-east London, two groups of demonstrators - one cyclists and the other an environmental group with a pedal-powered sound system - met. The atmosphere was carnival-like and there were many different groups. Demonstrations in the capital began early today with a mass cycle ride through the City to King's Cross station. Following the two Critical Mass bike rides, hundreds of protesters gathered in Euston station plaza were corralled by police and searched before they were allowed to leave. One of the marchers, Mick Gordon, from Cambridge, said he believed the police actions had led to an escalating feeling of tension among the crowd. The West End today suffered the effects of the dreaded neutron bomb - the device that leaves buildings intact but wipes out people. Rarely, in modern times, can central London have been so depopulated, and probably never on a working weekday. It was an eerie experience to walk streets dotted with vehicles, rather than crammed with them. Even in Piccadilly Circus, where London's pulse is always strongly felt, movement was feeble. A handful of demonstrators gathered miserably in the rain around a boarded-up Eros, but just about everyone else appeared to be a diehard tourist. So where was everybody? According to a forlorn traffic warden on Haymarket they had used the anti-capitalist protest as an excuse to take a day off. "I've usually done a dozen tickets by now," he lamented. "So far I haven't done any." It was hardly surprising. In St James's Square scores of parking spaces stood empty. It was the same at Waterloo Place, and Berkeley Square was a veritable parker's paradise with almost every bay vacant. "I've never seen anything like it," despatch rider John Walker said. "It's like a ghost town." Mr Walker, 23, was taking a day off to peruse his A-Z in an effort to gain the taxi drivers' Knowledge. Police outnumbered shoppers. On Oxford Street, Regent Street and Bond Street many stores either closed up or boarded their windows. An enduring image for many in the West End today will be the sad faces peering out of the doorways of deserted shops. |
last week | Mon | Tues | Wed | Thurs | Fri | Sat | Sun | next week
2001-05-02 (We)
Weather: Cloudy for most of the day, a heavy shower just after 3. 12. Tonight's Telly: Birmingham Council is to open talks with the Football Association and the Government about an alternative venue for the new national stadium to replace Wembley. The move comes after the Government said it would not cover a £150million shortfall in funding for the scheme. The NEC Group, which was involved in a rival national stadium bid in 1995, said it was watching developments. We said at the time that Birmingham was an infinitely better choice. It's near the centre of the country, the site is just off a main road with ample parking, and there are no residents to be annoyed. Football: Liverpool downs Bradford 2-0 to go third in the league. Southampton draw 1-1 at Newcastle. In Europe, Bayern Munich wins 1-0 at Real Madrid; Leeds draws 0-0 with Valencia.
|
last week | Mon | Tues | Wed | Thurs | Fri | Sat | Sun | next week
2001-05-03 (Th)
Weather: Cloudy for much of the day, though some sun peeks through in the evening. 13. Tonight's Telly Tony Blair fires the unofficial starting gun for the general election. Blair claimed victory over foot-and-mouth and William Hague rallied his Tory troops for the battle ahead. Great train robber Ronnie Biggs has told police he plans to return to Britain after 35 years on the run, Scotland Yard revealed today. Biggs is prepared to face arrest when he flies into the country from his home in Rio de Janeiro. The 71-year old claimed he is in failing health after recently suffering his third stroke. Explaining his reasons for giving himself up, Mr Biggs said: "I am a sick man. My last wish is to walk into a Margate pub as an Englishman and buy a pint of bitter. I hope I live long enough to do that." An all-party committee of MPs finds that former paymaster general Geoffrey Robinson deceived parliament over his dealings with Robert Maxwell. The Guardian reports a payment of £200,000, which may or may not have been received by Robinson, but which MPs have concluded should have been declared to the Commons. Mr Robinson, MP for Coventry North West, has had his business affairs investigated four times since the 1997 election. The latest report is to be published on what is almost certainly parliament's last working day before Tony Blair calls the general election.
|
last week | Mon | Tues | Wed | Thurs | Fri | Sat | Sun | next week
2001-05-04 (Fr)
Weather: Gloriously sunny, until it clouds over early evening. 15. Tonight's telly: Two computers bug my day. One is running Win98, and suffering a lock-up at the network log-on screen. Total lock up - nothing on the screen changes, but any keystrokes are carried forward to when the system returns. And because it's at the network logon, we can't use Ctrl-Alt-Del to bring up the task list. Eventually figure that it's running two power management settings, and three instances of the anti-virus program's network side. Neither performs a useful function, but the manager doesn't understand that. The problem is less, but not removed. T'other one is running our bespoke local database software, and isn't seeing the correct folder on the server to collect the changes. It's something to do with the account settings for that chap. Unfortunately, they're hard-coded into the program, so there ain't a thing I can do to resolve. Curses. Richard & Judy Quit Undisputed ruling couple of cheesy daytime television Richard Madeley and Judy Finnigan are to leave ITV's "This Morning" after 13 years. The married couple will take up a fresh challenge at rival network Channel 4, hosting a daily talk show "Richard And Judy."
|
last week | Mon | Tues | Wed | Thurs | Fri | Sat | Sun | next week
2001-05-05 (Sa)
Weather: Sunny spells, the odd light shower. 14. Today's telly: Back with the parents this weekend, and suffer the sister's manic driving. Into town, get a new shaver, on the grounds that the old one is not keeping its power lead as well as it might. Put any pressure and it drops out. Not good. Also some blank video tapes (Eurosong is coming, Wogan's frequent flier account is getting fat...) and the Reloaded 2 CD. Yay for alt.rock. Then spot that a photo store is having a 1/3 off sale on digital cameras. So get a swanky little number, about the size of my fist, and in blueberry purple. No LCD screen, but that's not really necessary. Add in some rechargable batteries, and still change from a hundred. Football:
Arsenal will play in the European League after beating Leeds 2-1, through Freddie Ljungberg and Sylvain Wiltord.
|
last week | Mon | Tues | Wed | Thurs | Fri | Sat | Sun | next week
2001-05-06 (Su)
Weather: Sunny spells, cloud. 13. Chart NewsThe British invasion of the US continues apace, as S Club 7 take a 13 place leap to #10 on the Hot 100. They join Dido in the top end of the lists, the first time there has been two British acts in the upper echelon since Elton and the Spices in early 98.
|