16th century oak coffer is home grown.

The News Review:

- 16th century oak coffer is home grown.
- Life is good, and lively, in the Missouri Valley
- Hurley does it early, marries Arun Nayar
- Junior doctors plan to mount legal challenge over job rules
- Envoys of Ivory Coast foes agree new peace plan
- In fear for the future of Britain

16th century oak coffer is home grown.
Free with registration – Europe Intelligence Wire – AccessMyLibrary.com – Mar 3, 2007
16th century oak coffer is home grown. | Europe Intelligence Wire (March, 2007). Not that they were solely engaged.

Life is good, and lively, in the Missouri Valley
USA Today – Mar 3, 2007
: A home-grown surge: Of the 50 starters for the conference tournament, 34 played high school ball in Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri or Kansas. Two were from California. None from New York.

Hurley does it early, marries Arun Nayar
Times of India – Mar 3, 2007
Till
the time of writing, it was not clear if Hurley’s former, long-term boyfriend
Hugh Grant would attend the festivities. Grant, who has just split from heiress
Jemima Khan, has already made his only public – and possibly dangerously
double-coded – contribution to the wedding of his former girlfriend of 13 years
by sponsoring a chimpanzee called ” Elizabeth” in London
Zoo. One of the wedding guests
told this paper that Nayar was very happy “finally to be married.

Junior doctors plan to mount legal challenge over job rules
Guardian Unlimited – Mar 3, 2007
A feasibility study would cost up to £10,000, and a full-scale challenge up to £250,000. They say £12,000 has already been pledged. Salima Dhalla, a psychiatric senior house officer at Homerton hospital, east London, said one challenge could be against doctors who are trained abroad getting interviews when suitable “home-grown” candidates have been refused. Modernisingmedicalcareers. com, a second website, has polled 1,200 doctors. Early findings indicate 71. 5% have considered leaving the NHS as a result of the proposed changes.

Envoys of Ivory Coast foes agree new peace plan
Reuters AlertNet – Mar 3, 2007
-backed peace plan which has so far failed to reunite the country. The international community has welcomed the talks, which began on Feb. 5 at Gbagbo’s instigation and are perceived as a home-grown effort to restore peace. Presidential spokesman Desire Tagro, representing Gbagbo at the negotiations, said the deal would be signed in the presence of Burkina Faso’s President Blaise Compaore who brokered the talks as head of the Economic Community of West African States. "The discussions involved practical and direct solutions to the problems currently facing Ivory Coast, which must remove the obstacles to resolving essential questions like identification, disarmament and the conduct of fair elections," Compaore said at a ceremony where Dacoury-Tabley and Tagro initialled the text. PREVIOUS DEALS A string of international peace deals, including the U.

In fear for the future of Britain
The Age – Mar 3, 2007
But Phillips’ idea of national identity, withits rejection of “multiculturalism” and call to re-embrace “Britishvalues”, shares an obvious affinity with the Howard Government’sown, highly contentious, agenda. Britain, Phillips writes, “is currently locked into such aspiral of decadence, self-loathing and sentimentality that it isincapable of seeing that it is setting itself up for culturalimmolation”. The nation is in denial about the threat of home-grownIslamism, she says. The British, inculcated with the idea allcultures are equal, now struggle to confront their enemy. Britainhas become not only al-Qaeda’s chief target, Phillips says, butalso the terror group’s chief recruiting ground. Before September 11 and especially the London bombings, Phillips— a former Guardian staff member before defecting towhat her colleagues regard as the dark side — had littleinfluence beyond conservative ranks. Now “Londonistan”, a termcoined by French and Algerian authorities to describe the city’sharbouring of terrorists in the 1980s and ’90s, is part of thegeneral lexicon and people such as Phillips are loud voices in thenational conversation.

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