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Updated Sat, February 4, 2012.
51.www.newsnow.co.uk324000
52.www.ukdata.com314000
53.www.hse.gov.uk313000
54.www.mirror.co.uk311000
55.www.ireland.com307000
56.www.hmrc.gov.uk305000
57.www.edirectory.co.uk304000
58.www.mirago.co.uk293000
59.www.sendit.com290000
60.observer.guardian.co.uk287000
61.www.fhm.com286000
62.www.bt.com283000
63.www.nhm.ac.uk283000
64.www.kelkoo.co.uk270000
65.www.bp.com268000
66.www.screwfix.com262000
67.www.sanger.ac.uk255000
68.www.viewlondon.co.uk250000
69.www.carphonewarehouse.com248000
70.www.defra.gov.uk245000
71.www.thisislondon.co.uk243000
72.www.hpl.hp.com237000
73.www.amazon.co.uk235000
74.www.pcpro.co.uk234000
75.www.guardian.co.uk233000
76.www.iii.co.uk232000
77.www.rightmove.co.uk225000
78.www.advfn.com222000
79.www.london.gov.uk221000
80.www.tate.org.uk216000
81.www.telegraph.co.uk214000
82.www.jobcentreplus.gov.uk211000
83.www.femalefirst.co.uk210000
84.www.hants.gov.uk207000
85.www.dixons.co.uk206000
86.www.boots.com206000
87.www.figleaves.com204000
88.www.artscouncil.org.uk202000
89.www.timesonline.co.uk198000
90.www.nme.com198000
91.www.jobserve.com197000
92.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk197000
93.www.sportinglife.com194000
94.uk2.net193000
95.www.moneysupermarket.com192000
96.www.viking-direct.co.uk191000
97.www.skysports.com189000
98.www.jobsite.co.uk188000
99.www.t-mobile.co.uk187000
100.www.bl.uk186000
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98. www.jobsite.co.uk

Rating: 188000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.jobsite.co.uk' on the other websites

www.jobsite.co.uk

Jobsite UK - 1000s UK Jobs, Start your Recruitment Job Search Now

Description: Jobsite: The award winning UK job search and jobs by email service. Send your CV to top recruitment agencies & employers. The latest UK recruitment & career advice and jobs in 35 industries. Start your job search now...

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Britain Is Cautious About Cutting Government Benefits
British politicians are moving very cautiously in limiting benefits like child subsidies or a winter heating allowance.
nytimes.com
Petraeus 'committed to investigation'
The commander of international forces in Afghanistan has said finding out how kidnapped British aid worker Linda Norgrove died is his "priority".
bbc.co.uk
Grounded nuclear sub dragged free
A nuclear-powered submarine which ran aground in shallow waters off the Isle of Skye has been towed free, the Royal Navy says.
bbc.co.uk
WikiLeaks cables: Prince Andrew bats for Britain - at taxpayers' expense
As special trade representative, the Duke of York trots the globe seeking business for British companiesFew of even his closest friends would ever describe the Queen's second son as Prince Charming. Prince Andrew does brusque, blunt and boorish, but very rarely charming, especially to those in inferior social positions to himself and to journalists – even those who go to interview him about his mission as Britain's special representative for international trade.It is an occupation that takes the Duke of York around the world at taxpayers' expense and often by the most expensive form of transport. Not that public criticism, or the nickname Airmiles Andy, ever deters him from taking the next privately chartered jet, or helicopter to lift him over the traffic to a golf club."It's not the quickest way – it's the most cost-effective and sensible way to use the time I have available. I probably use the helicopter less than other members of the royal family," he told the Daily Telegraph last year after taking a £2,000 helicopter flight from Windsor to Deal and back so he could spend an hour at a golf club party.Not that such jaunts are the most expensive. Last year, according to the royal public finances annual report, which details the costs of official journeys costing £10,000 or more, there was the chartered jet for the four-day trade visit to Algeria and Tunisia that cost £54,869, and the seven-day round trip that took in Canada and Baku for £94,500, or the return trip to Jeddah costing £28,767, or the Singapore-Hanoi-Bangkok charter for £46,264, or the trip to Moscow for £20,083, or the £62,092 for a four-day charter flight to Mexico and Panama, not to mention the £43,989 it cost to get him from Mumbai to Delhi and Kolkata. Or for that matter, the £11,148 to whisk him from Prestwick airport to Inverness and then down to the golf links at Dundonald in Ayrshire to attend the Duke of York's Young Champions trophy.He was batting for Britain again last week, accompanying his parents on their official visit to the Gulf. In September he was in China, and he has also been to Australia, central Asia, Malaysia, South America, the US and Italy this year."If you are a public figure you have to accept the rough with the smooth. The trouble with that particular tag [Airmiles Andy] is that, personally, I would not choose to do as many of these [foreign visits] but I am doing them because over the nine years in the job, the number of people who wish to be helped has increased, almost exponentially, through the recognition by businesses of where I can deliver," he said. "It's not only about increasing the opportunities for British businesses overseas. It is also about [supporting] business generally within the UK."The prince, fourth in line to the throne, who passed his 50th birthday in February and spent 22 years in the Royal Navy, some of that time as a helicopter pilot, has been dogged by controversy and scathing headlines from a media which clearly does not appreciate his worth. Once he was known as Randy Andy ("the press want something that rhymes … if you are in a public position, as I am, you are going to get stones thrown"); then there was the short-lived but ill-starred marriage to Sarah Ferguson. She at least remains loyal: "Andrew is a great man and a thoroughly good person ... he's a model boy. He doesn't drink, he goes to bed early," she told the Belfast Telegraph in December 2008.Business organisations like him too. His official website bears testimony to their encomiums. They say he is diligent and well-briefed, although – more privately – some speak of a tendency to harangue them about things he has only just found out, but which they have known for years. Andy Scott, the CBI's director of international and UK operations, said: "He is a good ambassador representing the UK. The royal family connection is very helpful. In a market such as China the presence of someone of his stature really counts."And yet, in recent years, the repeated, graceless remarks. He probably thinks of them as an attempt to emulate his father, although he lacks the Duke of Edinburgh's frustrated intelligence, wit or strange ethereal charm. Thus, there was the attempt to lecture America on its imperial shortcomings – "those in responsible positions in the US should have listened to the British and learned from our experiences as a colonial power", he said in 2008, shortly before embarking on a trade tour (by private jet) to woo Republican businessmen in the deep south. And then there was his assertion last year that bankers should not be demonised because "bonuses in the scheme of things are minute". Or, just a few weeks ago, castigating the Ministry of Defence for "sitting on their fat backsides" by insisting on additional safety checks on the armoured vehicles made by a Dorset firm he was visiting. So his remarks in Kyrgyzstan are just par for the course. "You have to take the bashes with the good bits and I've got a thick skin," he told CNN.Palace observers believe that the duke may be embarrassed by his lack of wealth compared with those he visits in the Middle East and former Soviet republics in the hope of boosting trade with Britain.Andrew receives an annuity of about £250,000 a year from the Queen and the cost of his official trips is borne by the taxpayer. There were more than 600 trade-related engagements in Britain and abroad in 2008 and he visited more than 20 countries. Expenses averaged £4,000 a week."I'd love to be able to say I've been responsible for £10bn of business or for another 250 jobs coming to the UK [but sometimes] the companies themselves don't know," he told the Financial Times last year. "I get paid nothing ... That's my life. That's what I expect, right? That is because of who I am ..."So to me this state of affairs is not extraordinary. To anybody else who looks in, they think I'm bloody mad. But that's what we do."Prince AndrewMonarchyThe US embassy cablesStephen Batesguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Cancun climate change summit: consequences of global warming for Britain
Global warming is a serious threat to the world, climate change scientists have said at the summit in Cancun. So what would the consequences for Britain be?
telegraph.co.uk