Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 31/03/1986

1986; Gale Group;

Autores

Colin Hughes, Lucy Hodges, Education Correspondent, Frances Gibb, Legal Affairs Correspondent, Clifford Longley, Christopher Walker and Christopher Thomas Washington, David Arthur, Simon Barnes, J. M. Coetzee, Michael Stevenson, Sally Brompton, David Lovibond, Mandarin (Michael Phillips), Richard Eaton, Mario Modiano, Michael Young, Gerald Davies, Mitchell Platts, Jim Railton, Anne Sofer, F. A. Falk (Chairman), Ahmed Fazl, Clifford Longley, Religious Affairs Correspondent, Charlotte Mosley, V. E. Cook, Alan Webster, Tom Aitken, Martin Cropper, Ponte Vedra, Norman Bilton, Managing Director, John Earle, Jenny MacArthur, Henry G. Button, Peter Nichols, Michael Hamlyn, Andrew Wiseman, John Young, Agriculture Correspondent, Ian Murray, Majdel Chams, Gerard Hogan, Malcolm Hayes, Richard North, Michael Baily Transport Editor, Richard Evans, Lobby Reporter, Nicholas Harling, Susan Cornish, Chris Thau, David Miller, Celia Brayfield, H. H. Huxley, David Watts, Peter Davalle, Zoriana Pysariwsky, Charles Harrison, Patricia Clough, Nicholas Ashford, Diplomatic Correspondent, Craig Seton, John Phipps, Nicholas Ashford Diplomatic Correspondent, G. Godfrey-Isaacs, Chairman, Charles Knevitt, Architecture Correspondent, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Christopher Thomas, Christopher Walker, Michael Ogden, Chairman, Alan Franks, Michael Hornsby, Peter Dear, Suresh Karadia, (By Anglo-American Cables), David Walker, David Sinclair, John Woodcock, Cricket Correspondent, Robert Fisk, Richard Morrison, Keith Macklin, Hugh Taylor, Vince Wright, Susan MacDonald, Paul Griffiths and Richard Morrison, Penny Perrick, J. Steven Watson, Principal, Richard Ford, Ivor Davis, M. G. G. Pillai, Stuart Jones, Football Correspondent,

Resumo

War of words threatens summit hopes Streetwise to violence Portfolio Double op Chepstow off Waldheim role Index 'Honest broker' plea to Thatcher Parade off as search for girl continues Accused Briton awaits Libyan spy charge fate Gooch threat to pull out of final Test Family focuses on a future princess Runcie applauds forgiving vicar Archbishop's Easter message (AP): James Cagney dead Nine die in holiday freeze Protestant march is banned Police hunt death squad Libyans UfK Former Army officer to rule Belfast in emergency Hanson Trust Shipyard warning over Navy orders Discovery hitches final ride Scott's Antarctic explorer sets sall for new home Militant MPs defy banning Seven in ten think that Sellafield is unsafe Alliance exploits Militant division Fulham by-election Maxwell accuses unions of conspiracy Mp urges loyalty tests for jurors Test-tube quins stable Invitation for the Prince Narrow house goes on sale Puppet leader Death remand Mail remand Scruton sues Joy of 'Jim'll Fix It' boy after first heart and kidney transplant Pupil means-test hint '£5. lm less' spent on schoolbooks Tougher eggs hope in shells breakthrough Teachers back wages talks Schools controversy Ghost tenants face Giro cheque purge Privatization 'could double water rates' Uniqueair Reprieve for Easter Parade Bishop pulls out of Iran charity 'Ghost town' danger for Handsworth after riots TA Man stabbed as soccer fans rampage in pub Heritage groups seek to save church's glory Falkland penguins 'in danger' Outlook poor on talks to cut food mountain EEC Farm surplus By a Staff Reporter: Praise for journalism standards in schools Courts hoping lawyers will restore faith in justice system A team of public prosecutors will take over from the police the job of prosecuting criminals when the new Crown prosecution service comes into force in all metropolitan areas outside London tomorrow. In a two-part series, Frances Gibb, Legal Af-faris Correspondent, looks at the background to the service and how it is organized Crown prosecution service: 1 Vandals 'threat to firemen' Steam engine scheme for rail repair yard Bids in for naval base takeover Picture Gallery Pope plot 'not proven' (Reuter): Clashes at Bavarian atom site Corsicans end poll truce with bombings Radicals claim Japanese attacks (AFP): Poison found in chocolate (AP): Fatal flight (AFP): Berlin blast (AP): Snow deaths Disco brawl (AFP): Caine escape Scania Rome at odds with Shultz on Gadaffi Druze await their day of liberation on Hill of Shouts ETA free industrialist Reagan sends Stinger missiles to Angolan and Afghanistan rebels Ortega blackmail claim British Gas Picture Gallery (Reuter): Iranian missile hits tanker Svetlana maybe trying to return Japanese experts tour secret US laboratories (AP): Russians cancel top chess match in US Moscow winning the war of words Blacks opt for schools takeover in place of boycott strategy Scholar king finds politics a problem Lesoth's rocky path From Our Correspondent, Johannesburg: Row in Pretoria over ministers' shares National Savings Picture Gallery (Reuter): Machel gives three aides wide powers Museveni forces wind up campaign Police capture Sikhs suspected of random Punjab killings From Our Own Correspondent, Delhi: Howe faces Indian concern on Sikhs FIAT Sudan poll bypasses rebel South Aegean quake was predicted Rules ignored to win woman top food post Sony's girls join in video battle 11,000 pinning their hopes on British honour (Reuter): Police fire tear gas at anti-Chun students US mission to East Dhaka march leads to campus battle Mahathir to take gamble of snap poll Groundless writ is abuse of process Abbey National Sheriffs duty to evict Applying for stay after case starts Are we losing the war on violence? Everybody knows that society is getting more and more violent-or is it? In the first of a three-part series, Alan Franks looks back to the 'good old days' and finds large-scale riots and vicious street attacks The games's fair in Country Life NatWest Tomorrow Pop television and la dolce vita With missionary zeal Italian TV mogul Silvio Berlusconi preaches the value of commercial stations Concise Crossword (No 912) A priceless pearl among the plain set In the world of knitting, Patricia Roberts is regarded with awe. Her design books sell out in days, her high-fashion creations are sold by the world's exclusive boutiques. Sally Brompton talked to the woman who turned plain-one, purl-one into an art form NSPCC Winter of discontent First Person Who has time for office romance? Penny Perrick Why the bride needn't blush 3M World v World 11 Boules anglais Sex appeal Having a fling Pounds in Pastures green Stroke play Holy in one Stamping out Slipway slip Rhyme time Waldheim: the hunt starts for witnesses A view from the scaffold Pope shooting: was Sofia really involved? The Fulham Blues Mr Tracey and the Tobacco Men Victims of crime Facts on Irish extradition law Rents reform Water for sale Children in care Of shoes and ships Radio stations under pressure US and the Contras Budget reflection On this Day Tailpiece Court Circular Forthcoming marriages Birthdays today Marriage Lord Buxton of Alsa, chairman of Independent… Anti-asthma drug may aid lean meat Science report Births , Deaths and In Memoriam Picture Gallery Church news Christianity's struggle to find a place for the Promised Land Marriage Dinner Latest wills By Our Astronomy Correspondent: The Night Sky in April Help the Aged University News Appointments in the Forces Bridge Dr Denis Brinton Distinguished neurologist Bishop Yennadios Miss Eve Saville Mr Julian Roosevelt Television Sadistic laughs Competitive spirit Opera: Paul Griffiths reflects on the lessons of recent failures in Wagnerian production, and Richard Morrison introduces BBc2's Cost fan tutte, to be shown tonight Country music Silk Cut Festival Wembley Arena Ought the nation to contribute to our dreams and desires? Jack Lang (right) became the most visible, popular and sometimes abrasive French Minister of Culture since Malraux, bringing the whole question of government and the arts to the forefront of public consciousness. But now the government has changed, and his successor, Francois Leotard (Left), finds himself with hugely controversisal projects already in hand. Charlotte Mosley reports Intonation matters Barók Quarter Wigmore Hall Endless miracles London Choral Society/Glover Festival Hall But oh for Sullivan's music Small Expectations Elizabeth Hall Theatre Yorkshire Building Society The changing faces of James Cagney The Times Crossword Puzzle No 17,007 The Times Information Services Today's events The headman who refuses to give up his fight Continuing his series from a village in the Himalayas, Victor Zorza tells how the headman stood up to a drunken bureaucrat from the state capital and lied to regret it Weather forecast On the lip of a volcano Are Afrikaners incapable of change? In the Western Cape, many are confounding the sterotype. More flexible than their fathers, not notably intolerant in attitude, they do not envisage an eruption sweeping them away Railway line that ran out of steam As a large-scale inquiry into British Rail's threat to close the Settle-Carlise line gets under way, Richard North reports on the battle The Battle Lines The Salesman The Timetable Guinness PLC Apricot XEN A paradise that may be lost Why a little-known Victorian fantasy garden is in danger disappearing for good Rock s tomboy turns cowgirl Suzi Quatro talks about her first major acting role, as Annie Oakley Everest All hands to the trowel Britain's archaeological sites are threatened. David Lovibond explains how the gifted amateur can help Normond Cardy An Oxbridge dream works for the future Kent is one of Britian, s younger universities, set above the nation's most ancident cathedral city. Its inspiration was the collegiate model of Oxford. Now it is reaching into space Canterbury Dusty encounters of the Halley's Comet kind Kent ZES Specialists in Cogent Ltd LGC The old fire still burns Hints of the old in the modern halls Keeping the colleges separate over the years has been hard A new branch of electronics that benefits hospitals British Aerospace Costs are low, but the quality stays high Pride in its work on biochemistry and microbiology Town and gown make it a chaste affair Orion Tallis Consultancy Thanet Press The down-to-earth approach opens up a hotline to Whitehall HGF Farrer & Co Illons Blowing bubbles is a serious business MSC Prep & Public Schools Kuwait La Creme De La Creme P. A. Secretary Required in W1 Diary of the Times Classified Multiple Classified Advertising Items Kuwait The Hampshire School IFL Chiropody as a Profession Multiple Classified Advertising Items Teaching Posts Wycliffe College Multiple Classified Advertising Items Student Adviser Multiple Display Advertising Items Scholarships Kuwait University Appointments The Sunday Times Announcements Morale high for Grey Desire Racing: Brittain's Tough Customer Set to Repeat Kempton Triumph From Our Irish Correspondent, Dublin: Omerta can repel Righthand Man Kempton C4 Today s course specialists Kempton Park Fakenham Newcastle Saturday's results Kempton Park Newcomer Tisn't powers into Derby picture Racing: Stable Jockey Quinn Chooses Wrong Colt as Cole Saddles First Winner since Moving to Whatcombe Nottingham Huntingdon Newton Abbot Towcester Warwick Market Rasen Carlisle Hereford Today's point-to-points Wetherby Wincanton Uttoxeter Plumpton Bath count the cost of victory Davies inspires Barbarians to stay true to principles Rugby Union: Cardiff Lose to Rivals for First Time since 1980 Stylish revenge for Scots Rugby Union Results Today's Football, Rugby and Other Fixtures Swansea come in from cold 16-group win Academicals make it safe Important win for Waterloo Spurs capitalize on two mistakes Weekend Football Results and Tables By a Correspondent: Spirit of the Cup moves at Hillsborough Football: Stalemate as Sheffield Wednesday and Liverpool Cance Each Other out Atkinson a study in frustration Fashanu is a law unto himself Rivals hope Hearts will miss a beat Enfield's double still possible Entertainments Property for Sale Cambridge show their faith in steady state Rowing For the Record Road Running Today's television and radio programmes Entertainments Choice Gooch facing the politicians again (Reuter): Pakistan make a sound opening Dangerous Welshmen Badminton Veterans' domination leaves schoolboys with the blues Mize establishes a suitable lead Golf Hammers knock on the door Football: Uncrowned Kings of the South Stride out of the Shadows Swede leads Becker wins Budd loses in Italy Third success Hope of Snow Grubb fillip Belgians lose Britain lead Stars in the wars Horse Trials Dramatic turnabout produces classic

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