WHY is it that after two weeks of a typical UK general election campaign I am renewing my Blockbuster video membership card and reading my newspapers from the back page first, not able to stand any more political coverage, and yet three months in, with eight to go, I find the US primaries strangely compelling?
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MY usual leisurely Sunday morning with the papers was a bitter-sweet affair this week. The temptation to turn straight to the sports section was understandable and the extensive and glorious coverage of Wales’ grand slam triumph took me through the coffee and toast and well beyond.
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YOU cannot have escaped the current focus on the emergency rescue of US investment bank Bear Stearns and the problems the US is encountering in its fight with recession.
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ON Tuesday, the S4C current affairs TV programme Taro Naw reported on a study carried out by the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) project into the relationship between the Welsh language and enterprise.
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THE style of Alistair Darling’s first Budget speech was very different from that of his predecessor; no great barrage of statistics, no boasting about economic performance, no big surprises to produce a cheer at the end of the speech.
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CASUAL Male Group’s Rochester Big and Tall chain has had my custom for 20 years. As my girth crept upwards, the US firm’s selection is hard to duplicate.
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Should we be doing more to encourage enterprise among young people in Wales? Here, Professor Dylan Jones-Evans, director of the National Entrepreneurship Observatory for Wales, makes the case for greater support in this area
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TRAIN companies have recently been criticised for over-running engineering works causing train delays, low performance levels and “fares rises of 145%”.
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TOMORROW is International Women’s Day, and to raise awareness of this important day, I shall be volunteering to go to jail on behalf of a very worthy cause: Cardiff Women’s Aid.
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Columnist Denis Campbell recently had problems with his telephone and internet access at his home in the Vale of Glamorgan. Here he pens his thoughts on BT’s standard of customer service in an open letter to its chief executive Ben Verwaayen
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Columnist Denis Campbell recently had problems with his telephone and internet access at his home in the Vale of Glamorgan. Here he pens his thoughts on BT’s standard of customer service in an open letter to its chief executive Ben Verwaayen
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