SPORT
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SPORT
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THE QUEENS DIAMOND JUBILEE
UK NEWS
THE QUEENS DIAMOND JUBILEE The Queen has visited a school in Norfolk as she marks the 60th anniversary of her accession to the throne.Earlier she said she was dedicating herself “anew to your service” and that she was “deeply moved” by support for the Diamond Jubilee. The Queen was met by crowds at King’s Lynn Town Hall before going to Dersingham Infant and Nursery School. Gun salutes were held around the UK, including in London and Edinburgh. The main celebrations for her anniversary will be in June. The Queen, 85, usually spends Accession Day - the day her father, George VI, died in 1952 - privately but this year has the two engagements in Norfolk. Two official photographs were released and a 41-gun salute was held in Hyde Park, London, followed by a 62-gun salute at the Tower of London. For the Queen, this is a day of celebration - her great-great grandmother Victoria was the only other British monarch to achieve this milestone and commemoration, marking as it does the anniversary of the death of her beloved father, George VI. So, a significant moment will pass in a deliberately low-key manner with a visit to a town hall and a primary school in Norfolk. As the weather improves and the months go by, there will be nothing subdued about the events which will be staged for a reign which is the second longest in British history. In her Diamond Jubilee message, with the words “I dedicate myself anew to your service”, the Queen is repeating a pledge she first made at the age of 21. This is a royal octogenarian who intends to remain as Sovereign for as long as she lives. Reported by Peter Hunt
Queen Elizabeth II in her coronation crown, 1953. 01
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HARRY REDNAPP TAX EVASION
SPORT
LONGEST-REIGNING BRITISH MONARCHS
LONGEST REIGNING KINGS & QUEENS (UK)
If the Queen is still in reign by 26 May 2024, she would surpass Louis XIV of France as the longest reigning monarch in European history. At this point the Queen would be 98 years and 35 days old. Louis XIV of France reigned for 72 years and 101 days.
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REIGN
DURATION
FROM
TO
DAYS
YEARS / DAYS
20 June 1837
20 June 1837
22,226
63 Years, 216 Days
Elizabeth II
6 February 1952
Present
21,925
60 Years, 10 Days
George III
25 October 1760
29 January 1820
21,664
59 Years, 96 Days
James VI of Scotland
24 July 1567
27 March 1625
21,066
57 Years, 246 Days
Henry III of England
18 October 1216
16 November 1272
20,483
56 Years, 29 Days
Edward III of England
25 January 1327
21 June 1377
18,410
50 Years, 147 Days
William I of Scotland
9 December 1165
4 December 1214
17,892
48 Years, 360 Days
Llywelyn of Gwynedd
1195
11 April 1240
unknown
c. 45 Years
Elizabeth I of England
17 November 1558
24 March 1603
16,198
44 Years, 127 Days
7 June 1329
22 February 1371
15,235
41 Years, 260 Days
10 June 1553
19 June 1553
9 Days
-
25 December 1013
3 February 1014
40 Days
-
15 October 1066
17 December 1066
63 Days
-
Edward V
9 April 1483
26 June 1483
78 Days
-
Matilda
7 April 1141
1 November 1141
208 Days
-
Edmund II
23 April 1016
30 November 1016
221 Days
-
Harold II
5 January 1066
14 October 1066
282 Days
-
Dafydd III
12 December 1282
3 October 1283
295 Days
-
NAME
Victoria
David II of Scotland
AND THE NOT SO LUCKY Jane Sweyn Forkbeard Edgar II
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Curae; Aenean sagittis dignissim sagittis. Morbi et massa id odio pharetra porta sit amet eget nisl. Sed neque purus, condimentum eu volutpat quis, tincidunt at risus. Nullam suscipit massa ac tellus viverra vulputate. Maecenas dignissim sodales tincidunt. Sed bibendum placerat vulputate. Sed sagittis volutpat blandit. Nam bibendum consequat ante at pharetra. Vestibulum vel lacus dolor. Integer vitae semper ligula. Vestibulum pellentesque pulvinar dapibus. Pellentesque sed nunc massa, scelerisque eleifend erat. Duis eget blandit est. Praesent at tortor lorem, quis scelerisque nunc. Etiam facilisis, magna id vehicula vestibulum, nibh nisi ullamcorper risus, ac sodales erat metus varius lorem. Nulla euismod, lectus eu aliquet auctor, orci eros auctor lacus, eget mattis arcu mi non magna. Fusce a justo odio, facilisis hendrerit ipsum. Suspendisse rhoncus viverra enim, non dignissim urna placerat nec. Cras quis risus ut lacus egestas fermentum eget id erat. Pellentesque rhoncus malesuada dolor non pretium. Cras dignissim arcu orci. Curabitur pellentesque interdum aliquet. Donec feugiat commodo leo, id tempus quam ultricies ac. Fusce sed mi lectus, in fermentum neque. Aenean sed nisi felis, pulvinar egestas justo. Donec ipsum nisi, laoreet nec eleifend ut, lacinia eget tortor. Curabitur placerat hendrerit scelerisque.
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RARITY MAKES THE HEART BEAT FASTER
CULTURE
RARITY MAKES THE HEART BEAT FASTER LONDON — Big money flowed Wednesday evening for the second day running as Sotheby’s sold 41 works of Impressionist and Modern art for £78.9 million. Monet’s ‘‘L’Entrée de Giverny en hiver,” an 1885 view of the road leading to Giverny under snow, sold for £8.2 million. It had never been offered at auction. Giorgio de Chirico painted “Hector and Andromache” in the late 1920s. That success, equivalent to about $125 million, came with an unexpected message. Impressionism is making a comeback thanks to paintings that have been out of the market for decades.
worth every penny of the seemingly large amount. Impressionism enjoyed other good scores. Monet’s 1881 view of the wild growth covering the banks of the Seine near Vétheuil last came on the block at Sotheby’s London sale of Oct. 23, 1963. It too was exhibited in a museum only once — in New York in 1962 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The landscape doubled its high estimate at £2.5 million. Even Sisley, whose works often sell with difficulty, was well received. An 1877 view of the Seine flowing under the “Pont de Saint Cloud” near Paris exceeded the upper end of the estimate at £937,250.
For the first time in years the highest price in a sale of Modern and Impressionist art greeted an Impressionist landscape rather than some 20thcentury avant-garde picture. Monet’s 1885 view of the road leading to Giverny under snow sold for £8.2 million, well above the estimate set at £4.5 million to £6.5 million plus a sale charge in excess of 12 percent.
German Expressionists and Surrealists were the other big winners, as has been the case for some years.
“L’Entrée de Giverny en hiver,” which had never been offered at auction, had been out of the market since 1924. It appeared in a museum show only once — the “Claude Monet” retrospective in 1930 at the Musée de l’Orangerie in Paris.
“The Electric Tram,” a small composition in oil and collage on board executed by Otto Dix in 1919 at the tail end of Expressionism — when the movement was veering toward a humoristic style with a cartoon-like touch — went up to £2.95 million, more than two and a half times the high estimate.
The picture has been spared the multiple cleanings and varnishings suffered by works that are often moved around and is in a superb state of preservation. The delicate shades of salmon pink, grayish blue and deep maroon or blackish purple are intact. Not least, the landscape is charged with the new energy that Monet infused into his brushwork in the 1880s. This made the picture 01
At £7.3 million, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s “The Bosquet: Albertplatz in Dresden” dating from 1911, became the second most expensive picture in Sotheby’s sale.
But pictures that were too blatantly overestimated ran into difficulties. Reported by Souren Melikian
Claude Monet’s L’Entree de Giverny en Hiver sold last week for £8.2m at Sotherby’s London
ART & ANTIQUES AUCTION HOUSES WITHIN LONDON BONHAMS The world’s oldest British-owned auction house provides an eclectic mix of auctions from decorative art to antiquities and vintage cars. Bonhams, 101 New Bond St, W1
ROSEBERY’S A wide range of decorative arts, ceramics, glass, jewellery, paintings, maps and rugs go under the hammer, plus a monthly picture auction. Rosebery’s, 74-76 Knights Hill, SE27 0JD
CHISWICK AUCTIONS Art and antiques with a bi-monthly ‘fine’ sale for higher value stock. Chiswick Auctions, 1 Colville Rd, W3 8BL
SOTHEBY’S A wide-ranging collection of art and antiques is sold by this 260-year-old auction house. Sotheby’s, 34-35 New Bond St, W1
CHRISTIE’S Founded in London in 1766, Christie’s is a leader in art auctions worldwide. Christie’s, 8 King St, SW1
SOUTHGATE AUCTION ROOMS A good range of antique furniture and household goods. Southgate Auction Rooms, 55 High St, N14 6LD 01
RARITY MAKES THE HEART BEAT FASTER
40 %
CULTURE
19 5%
TOP 10 AUCTION LOTS THAT HAVE EXCEEDED EXPECTIONS Below is a list of the work in the London Evening Impressionist and Modern sales that exceeded their estimate range. There were many more works especially by Jean Arp in the day sales that also showed strong demand. But here we confine ourselves to the top 10 lots over £1m that exceeded expectations.
%
Vincent Van Gogh Chapelle de Saint-Remy (£6m) £10.9m
75
81
%
Marc Chagall St. Jeannet (£2.1m) £2.95m
London Imp-Mod Evening Sales Above Estimates
% 65
Paul Delvaux Le nu et le mannequin (£2.5m) £3.3m
Otto Dix The Electric Tram (£1m) £2.95m
Camille Pissaro Pommiers a Eragny (£1m) £2.95
Geroges Braque L’Oliveraie (£2.5m) £5.8m
Claude Monet L’Entree de Giverny en Hiver (£5.5m) £8.2m
Robert Delauney Tour Eiffel (£2m) £3.3m
12 4%
19
5%
49 %
32
%
10
3%
Paul Signac La Corne d’Or (£5m) £8.77m
Joan Miro Painting Poem (£7.5m) £16.8m
*Percentage increase from the estimated price to the price the piece was sold for 01
01
HARRY REDNAPP TAX EVASION
SPORT
HARRY REDNAPP TAX EVASION Harry Redknapp said his “nightmare” was over after being cleared of tax evasion. The Tottenham boss had denied accepting secret untaxed bonus payments from former Portsmouth chairman Milan Mandaric, while he was club manager. Mr Mandaric was also cleared of two charges of cheating the public revenue over the £189,000 payments. Mr Redknapp, who was close to tears, said the case “should never have come to court”. Speaking on the steps of Southwark Crown Court, he thanked his family, the fans at Tottenham and his legal team after coming through the fiveyear investigation, which is believed to have cost about £8m. He said: “The Wigan game [on 31 January] was the most moving I’ve ever felt, for me personally to have them singing my name throughout the game while all this was going on, that will always be special to me. Peter Crouch was sold by Portsmouth to Aston Villa in 2002 “It’s been a nightmare, it’s been five years, it’s a case that should never have come to court. “I’m looking forward to going home and getting on with my life.” Former England boss Graham Taylor said the verdict now opens the way for Redknapp to take charge of the national team in the future. Sven-Goran Eriksson, another former England manager, said he thought Mr Redknapp would be a “very, very good choice” as Fabio Capello’s successor. Bookmakers have now stopped taking bets on Mr Redknapp becoming the next England boss. Mr Redknapp and Mr Mandaric embraced in the dock as the verdicts were read after five hours of deliberations. Mr Mandaric, who is currently chairman of Sheffield Wednesday, walked up to Det Insp Dave Manley to shake his hand and said: “Thank you”. ‘Egg on face’ Afterwards, Mr Mandaric said: “I have to try and pinch myself and wake up from 01
the horrible dream. During Mr Redknapp’s and Mr Mandaric’s trial, jurors heard the Spurs boss received two payments totalling £189,000, into his “Rosie 47” account in Monaco - named after his pet dog. The defence said the money was an investment made by Mr Mandaric while Mr Redknapp said he forgot about the account and had very little to do with it. The prosecution claimed the first payment of £93,100 was a bonus for selling striker Crouch for £3.25m profit in 2002. The court heard Mr Redknapp’s cut of transfer profits was reduced from 10% to 5% when he moved from being Portsmouth’s director of football to manager in March 2002 but Mr Redknapp told jurors he felt he was was “morally” due the full 10%. Mr Mandaric said he “wanted to do something special for Harry” but he denied it was compensation for his Crouch bonus and said it was an investment for a “friend”. During the trial, Mr Redknapp admitted lying to News of the World reporter Rob Beasley about the alleged Crouch payment because he did not want negative stories ahead of a cup final.
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SPORT
HARRY REDNAPP TAX EVASION
REDNAPP & MANDARIC TRIAL IN FACTS
FAMOUS TAX EVADERS
£1.3MILLION
£189,000
ROSIE 47
HM Revenue & Customs announced the Harry Rednapp Trial costs £1.3 Million
The amount Rednapp held within his Monaco Bank account, which he was accused for avoiding tax
Rednapp named the offshore bank account after his dog named Rosie, and 47 was the year he was born
5 YEARS
£8MILLION
363 POLICE CARS
The City of London Police spent 5 years investigating the case against Harry Rednapp & Milan Mandaric
It cost the City of London Police £8M to investigate the case against Harry Rednapp & Milan Mandaric
£8M could cover the cost of 363 Police cars including the travel costs and maintenance (£22,000 p.car)
RICHEST MANAGERS
£10 MILLION
The richest football coaches in the UK 2011
Including Harry’s current contract and previous contracts he is estimated to be worth £10M.
1. Fabio Capello England
£37M
2. Sir Alex Ferguson £27M Manchester United
3. Carlo Ancelotti
£25M
4. Arsene Wenger
£19M
Chelsea
Arsenal
5. Roberto Mancini £16M
At £30 billion per year, fraud in the UK is more than twice as high as thought, with tax evasion costing the public purse over £15 billion per year and benefit fraud just over £1 billion. TAX EVADER
SENTENCE
TAXES PAID BACK (£)
Walter Anderson Anderson a former Telecommunications Executive hid his earnings in a web of Aliases and offshore bank accounts.
9 Years
400M
Wesley Snipes
Snipes excuse for not filing tax returns from 1999 to 2004 was because he was a “Nonresident Alien”
3 Years
17M
Willie Nelson
Nelson recorded an album, The IRS Tapes: Who’ll Buy My Memories? To help pay back his taxes
-
16.7M
Nicolas Cage
Cage blamed the negligence on his former financial manager and said that he was just a victim
-
6.6M
Judy Garland
During 2004 the State of New York struck The Wizard of Oz actress with a £4M tax bill for a failure to pay taxes during 1951 - 9152
-
4M
Marc Anthony
Singer and husband of Jennifer Lopez, had to pay back £2.5M for a failure to pay taxes during 2000 2004
-
2.5M
Annie Leibovitz
To repay the tax liens, Leibovitz pledged four of her homes and the copyright to every photograph she has ever taken, or ever will.
-
2.1M
Al Capone
Legend has it the gangster called tax laws a joke because “the government can’t collect legal taxes on illegal money.” But the government had the last laugh: Capone spent seven and a half years in prison, and never recovered his crime empire.
11 Years
£215,000
Richard Hatch
In 2005 it was reported that Richard Hatch, a.k.a. “the fat naked guy” and first winner of Survivor, never paid any taxes on his $1 million prize.
3 Years
£200,000
Sophia Loren
The Man of La Mancha star was not living la dolce vita in 1982, when she served 18 days of a 30-day sentence in an Italian prison for tax evasion.
30 Days
£7,000
The Football Rich List 2011/12
Manchester City
6. Steve Bruce
£11M
7. Mark Hughes
£11M
Sunderland Fulham
REASON FOR TAX EVADING
The Football Rich List 2011/12 01
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