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Daily Star (Free subscription) | yesterday
Apprentice star Sir Alan Sugar has been said to be among a list of top British Jews thought to be targeted by extremists over Israel's Gaza onslaught.
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Infidel Bloggers Alliance (Free subscription) | yesterday
From Carl in Jerusalem : London's Daily Sun reports that Muslim 'fanatics' have drawn up a " hit list " of British Jews to be targeted in response to the current Israeli operation in Gaza. TV’s The Apprentice boss Sir Alan Sugar and Amy Winehouse record producer Mark Ronson are among prominent names discussed on a fanatics’ website. Labour Peer and pal of Tony Blair Lord Levy [ pictured . CiJ], Foreign...
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Explore : Amy Winehouse, Entertainment, Gaza Strip, Mark Ronson, Music, Reality TV, Rock and Pop, Showbiz, Sir Alan Sugar, Soul, The Apprentice, TV
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Bare Naked Islam (Free subscription) | yesterday
FEARS grew last night that hate-filled Islamic extremists are drawing up a “hit list” of Britain’s leading Jews — bringing the Middle East conflict terrifyingly close to home. Sir Alan Sugar … is named on website TV’s The Apprentice boss Sir Alan Sugar and Amy Winehouse record producer Mark Ronson are among prominent names discussed on a [...]
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GayandRight (Free subscription) | yesterday
Prominent Jews in the UK are being warned.... Apprentice star Sir Alan Sugar has been said to be among a list of top British Jews thought to be targeted by extremists over Israel's Gaza onslaught. According to a newspaper, the multi-millionaire businessman was named on an Islamic website along with pop producer Mark Ronson, Foreign Secretary David Miliband and Labour peer Lord Levy. One strand on the...
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Our Weblog (Free subscription) | 24/12/2008
What do Sir Richard Branson, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Sir Alan Sugar have in common? Besides being multi-millionaires, none of them have a university degree. What jobs can earn you the most money and require no degree? We reveal all! UK 20. Journalists £31,256 Journalists are the 20th highest paid workers in the [...]
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Liverpool Daily Post.co.uk (Free subscription) | 19/12/2008
MORE than 100 youngsters are celebrating landing apprenticeships in a huge project inspired by business guru Sir Alan Sugar.
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Liverpool Daily Post.co.uk (Free subscription) | 19/12/2008
MORE than 100 youngsters are celebrating landing apprenticeships in a huge project inspired by business guru Sir Alan Sugar.
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Startup Meme (Free subscription) | 14/12/2008
The Independent has dug some of the famous predictions which went wrong. Check out the some of the famous incorrect predictions below: iPod: no future: In an interview in February 2005, Amstrad chief, Sir Alan Sugar said, “Next Christmas, the iPod will be dead , finished, gone, kaput”. It proved wrong as 174 million units of the media player have been sold through out the world and it lasted for more...
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The Independent (Free subscription) | 14/12/2008
Gordon Brown addressed the dourness question last week. It was the first time I had heard anyone rude enough to put it to him. Although, as the Prime Minister's interviewer in this case was Sir Alan Sugar, it may have been part of the act. In an interview for The Sun, Sir Alan told Brown that "some people say" he has "a kind of dour way" about him.
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The Why of the World (Free subscription) | 11/12/2008
If you have missed the delights of Sir Alan Sugar interviewing Gordon Brown in the Sun this morning, make sure you take in the full horror here and even watch it if you feel brave. But a few edited highlights from the debut of Sugar as an interviewer of Prime Ministers are extracted below. It was not exactly Frost meets Nixon and Sugar is much tougher on a 22 year-old fr...
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nerdd.net (Free subscription) | 11/12/2008
‘Next Christmas the iPod will be kaput’: How Sir Alan Sugar got it wrong 174million times. Sir Alan Sugar made one of the ten worst technology predictions of all time with his claim that the iPod would never become popular. In 1977, Ken Olsen, the president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp (DEC) claimed there [...]
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News.com.au (Free subscription) | 11/12/2008
WHEN Sir Alan Sugar claimed the iPod would be dead within a year, he had no idea that he had got it wrong 174 million times.