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The text-only page for Altavista ( www.altavista /query?text) is only 2 kilobytes and loads 10 times faster than the standard page ( www.altavista ). Try using a search engine to check what is on the site. I am just looking forward to going back to the BBC Weather Centre where I manage these wonderful meteorologists, and give you the best broadcasts you can see on TV."In a statement released through his union representative, David Luxton, of the Institution of Professionals, Managers and Specialists, he said: "What we have sought to prove today is that Bill Giles is certainly not a bully, that he is not guilty of harassment and that the allegations are a farrago of unrelated personal gripes that do not amount to `serious misconduct'.He said the official Met Office investigation confirmed that "practically all the staff at the BBC Weather Centre get on well with Bill"."We hope that our appeal to the chief executive of the Met Office will exonerate Bill from the damaging and hurtful allegations he has had to suffer."A spokesman for the Met Office, which remains a part of the Ministry of Defence, said a decision on what, if any, action taken against Giles would be made following the outcome of the appeal.. My colleagues are the best in the business," he said before adding that he would consider resigning if his appeal failed."I have got every hope that the appeal will be upheld. They had complained about 59-year-old behaving like a "head prefect". Following their allegations the Met Office conducted a seven-month investigation against Giles and he was found guilty of serious misconduct. The report compiled at the end of the investigation found that Giles "let his frustrations descend into unacceptable behaviour".Ian McCaskill, another BBC forecaster, who retired 18 months ago, has said he was relieved to have escaped an intimidating environment in which Giles, who has been in charge of the 21-strong team since 1983, stalked the corridors "like a prefect at a minor public school".Giles, who has always contested the allegations, yesterday denied he was a bully but conceded he had a "big ego"."I am a big softie This is one of those things that happens. The ruling followed an internal inquiry into allegations of harassment and bullying made by two other forecasters, David Lee and Richard Edgar, who are both currently on long-term sick leave.

BILL GILES, the BBC weatherman, yesterday launched an appeal against senior executives at the Met Office after they upheld complaints about him bullying colleagues. He said they intended to present this judgment to the Lord Chancellor to pursue the matter as far as possible "until one day soon there is specific guidance or legislation in this country allowing deaf people and their interpreters into the jury room".Outside court, Mr Mc- Whinney said that although he had failed in his attempt to be allowed to sit as a juror he believed the case amounted to a "big step forward".. Mr Silas explained: "As the law stands, a `stranger' is not permitted to enter the jury room. But if the Lord Chancellor were to say that interpreters should not be considered `strangers', then they would be able to sit with the jury."Mr Silas said that this was as positive a judgment as he could have hoped for - short of the judge finding in his client's favour. But she said the experience of American courts, which found the presence of deaf people on juries "far from being a hindrance", tended to contradict arguments that such individuals would be prevented by their disability from following evidence and fulfilling their role in deliberations. In her opinion, deaf people could follow "vocal nuances" of witnesses through an interpreter's mannerisms.Judge Anwyl said she supported the Government's efforts to find a way to help deaf jurors in the jury room.

But she told Mr McWhinney, whom she praised as an "intelligent, hard-working, responsible man, who has made a great contribution to life", that until Parliament changed the law, there was nothing she or any other judge could do.Mr McWhinney's lawyer, Douglas Silas said all that was required to change the law was guidance issued by the Lord Chancellor's Department. It is the common-law rules on jury deliberation that exclude third parties, although in many American states the law has already changed to allow interpreters to enter the jury room.Judge Anwyl said: "My understanding of the law is that there is no law which permits either me or any other judge of the Crown Court to authorise the attendance of a 13th person in the jury room."She added that without the help of an interpreter Mr McWhinney was "incapable of effectively carrying out his function as a juror". The Lord Chancellor, Lord Irvine of Lairg, first committed the Government to changing the law in February, and the Home Office is researching the subject.Mr McWhinney's case first came to the courts' attention in April. He was summoned to do jury service at Woolwich Crown Court, but then the court staff informed him that he was being automatically excused.There is no statute explicitly barring interpreters or signers from the jury room: they are both used in open court to help witnesses with evidence.

A BAN on profoundly deaf people serving as jurors was upheld by the courts yesterday in a ruling that contrasts sharply with the Government's efforts to reform the law. In a landmark hearing, Jeff McWhinney, 39, chief executive of the British Deaf Association, was told that a 13th person - in this case a sign language interpreter - could not be present in a jury room during deliberations. Judge Shirley Anwyl, resident judge at Woolwich Crown Court, south London, said the presence of an interpreter would amount to an incurable irregularity, and that without such a person Mr McWhinney would not be able to contribute properly to the deliberations.But the Government is already taking steps to give interpreters and signers access to the jury room. The judges said: "Jackie Wilson offers a new approach to children's writing which is not afraid to deal with difficult issues.". Cracking book, take a look, Carol Ann Duffy, she's not stuffy."Kensuke's Kingdom, Michael MorpurgoMichael's parents sail around the world. Hel is washed overboard with his dog, Stella Artois, and reaches a Pacific island.

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