News from 07/01/1989
1989; Gale Group;
Autores
Paul Vallely and Rosemary Righter, Clifford Longley, Louise Vidaud de Plaud, P. Graystone, Peter Fearon, R. J. Wilcock, Jane MacQuitty, Simon Barnes, Peter Philp, Jim Howard, Andrew Longmore, Rhonda Smith, Walter Harris, Ronald Faux, Iain Macleod, Sheridan Morley, Michael Meyer, Philip Howard, Andrei Navrozov, Elizabeth Parsons, James Bone, Russell Taylor, Clive Davis, Noel Goodwin, Anatel Lieven, D. H. Walker, Jeremy Flint, Mary Welsh, Peter Carey, Clifford Longley, Religious Affairs Editor, Gerald Davies, Joe Joseph, Vivien Goldsmith, Brian James, Francesca Greenoak, George Packard, Peter Davenport, Barry Winkleman Managing Director, Alan Lorimer, Jill Sherman, Social Services Correspondent, Jamie Dettmer, Irish Affairs Correspondent, Pearce Wright Science Editor, John Ballantine, Louise Taylor, Pearson Phillips, Brian WALKER(President), Robin Young, John Hewish, Martin Cropper, Robert Nye, Cornelius O'Leary, Michael Clark, Andrew McEwen and Richard Bassett, Sabine Durrant, Frances Bissell, Charles Bremner, Betty Finer, Richard Thomson, Banking Correspondent, Rex Bellamy, Tennis Correspondent, John Hennessy, Kojo Boakye Djan (Group Publisher), Simon Tait, Hugh Cortazzi, Steven Downes, Colin Campbell and Richard Ford, Neil Kelly, Robert Kirley, Sydney Friskin, Shona Crawford Poole Travel Editor, David Smith, Economics Correspondent, Carol Ezzell, William Jackson, David Miller, Tim Jones Employment Affairs Correspondent, Robert Matthews Technology Correspondent, Nigel Andrew, Raymond Keene and Harry Golombek, David Toop, Wolfgang Münchau, Christopher Goulding, Raymond Keene, Edward F. Northcote, Nicholas Beeston, Peter Dear and Jane Rackham, Paul Griffiths, Patrick Trevor-Roper, Steve Acteson, W. J. Burroughs, G. B. Hey, Martin Trew, Coomi Kapoor, Michael Harris Chairman, Richard Owen, Ruth Gledhill and Harvey Elliot, David Young, Energy Correspondent, John Blunsden, Simon Tait, Arts Correspondent, John Young and Pearce Wright, Deyan Sudjic, Diane Hill, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, V. G., Pat Butcher, Athletics Correspondent, John Goodbody, Anthea Masey, Guy Yeoman, J. Tulloch, P. Crump, Mel Webb, Sam Kiley, Higher Education Reporter, Graham Searjeant, Financial Editor, Clive White, Paul Newman, Kofi Akainyah, Alan Lee, Jenny Gilbert, Norman Cattanach, Director, Jeremy Hart, John Julius Norwich, Brian Sharp Secretary, Graham Searjeant, David Sinclair, Martin Waller, Jean Goodman, Evan Luard, Peter Hankey, Jonathan Meades, Hugh Thompson, David Tytler, Education Editor, Keith Macklin, Maria Scott, Karl Gamma, Richard Ford, Political Correspondent, Greenhill of Harrow, S. C. P., Nicholas Cole, Colin Campbell, Rosemary Clunie, Jill Sherman and Martin Fletcher, Judy Froshaug, Philip Jacobson, Colin McQuillan, Graham Campbell-Smith, Richard Williams,
ResumoInside The truth about Gadaffi's desert factory Japan mourns the death of its Emperor Hirohito dies aged 87 after a long illness In today's 52-page Times NI wins control of William Collins Review Czechs fly in to help with 747 bomb tests Sport & Leisure Lawson plans Budget amid mortgage row Domesday County Folios Solicitors form Clapham group News Roundup Extradition moves Shopkeeper is jailed £1.46m drugs haul Wapping summonses Organic farms backed A Member of the P&O Group Arms flights anger Irish MPs US aircraft touch down at Shannon to refuel Frightened witnesses at terrorist trials in Northern Ireland may be allowed to give evidence by a live video link-up. Senior court service officials in Belfast said yesterday that they were studying the scheme introduced in England and Wales which allows alleged child sexual abuse victims to give evidence by video from a separate room. A number of terrorist-related trial and police investigations have collapsed because of intimidation against key witnesses by republican and "loyalist" paramilitaries Police cell prisoners back again Ambassador's farewell to Scots Polgar wins in brilliant fashion '£250m saved' in catching benefit cheats One in four girls abused before they go to homes Britain and US press for safety action Aftermath of the Lockerbie air disaster Healthrow was at the centre of claims last night about where the bomb was smuggled on board Pan Am Flight 103. According to unconfirmed reports, West German intelligence officers said that British investigators believed a Heathrow worker planted the device under the flight deck in a passage to the forward baggage hold. The Department of Transport said ti knew nothing to substantiate the report Le Gavroche kitchen 'was disgusting', court told No more money available, Jaguar tells workers New car sales in Britain last year reached more than 2.2 million - 10 per cent more than the previous record in 1987. In spite of a rise in importers' share of the market, no overseas car featured in the 1988 top 10 list. Figures released by the Society of Motor Maunfacturers and Traders yesterday showed that 2,215,574 cars were sold last year, compared with 2,013,693 in 1987. December 1988 sales, also released yesterday, totalled 91,626 - 0.37 per cent above sales in December 1987. The importers' market share for the whole of last year was up from 51.69 per cent to 56.40 per cent but Ford, Rover and Vauxhall took all the first 10 places in the best-sellers list for the year. Ford again dominated the market with the top three sellers - Escort, Sierra and Fiesta. Although the company sold more than 583,000 cars, fractionally up on 1987, its market share fell from 28.81 per cent in 1987 to 26.35 per cent in 1988. Vauxhall and Rover Group slightly increased their market share and also sold more cars than in 1987. The best selling foreign car was the Peugeot 205 followed by the Nissan Micra and the Volkswagen Golf Picture Gallery Girl died after 'sniffing lighter fuel' By Our Social Services Correspondent: Colds may trigger infant cot deaths Highlife Breaks University challenge In the Times next Week Portfolio Student teachers urged to do more classroom work Dons' 3% pay rise ruled out By Our Higher Education Reporter: Nautical school opt-out vote Division of Starting Resources plc Actress highlights threat to Cambodia By Our Science Editor: Aids campaign 'not aimed at the right targets' Motorist denies 'car race' death Leukaemia link in 1960s A-tests Institute of British Geographers at Coventry The Ministry of Agriculture yesterday strongly… Putting TV into sterner focus Man in the news Accountant says fluids 'misused' Doctors and Labour step up campaign on hospital hours Rees rallies party to Kinnock's side Fewer candidates for ordination London Life Soviet lift-off for UK balloons Fewest strikes since the war Postal action Citroën UK Ltd Shultz resumes bid to convince Moscow of plant's function Lord Avebury, the Democrat peer, said he had evidence that Colonel Gadaffi has already shipped nerve gas received from the Soviet Union (Anthony Hodges writes). Lord Avebury said he, and other members of the British Parliamentary Human Rights Group, had received eyewitness reports from Mogadishu Airport that on October 7, containers marked "sarin" and "somun", both nerve gases destined for Somalia, were taken from a Libyan airforce plane to a warehouse Israel cuts defence budget Nederlands Credit Bank From a Correspondent Dubai: Howe defends Britain's support for US on chemicals factory Clash in the Mediterranean (AP): Tapes capture aerial encounter Record cash haul from drugs raid World Roundup (Reuter): Guilty plea in US Jet recorder found (Reuter): Falklands sea link The Times UN sees picture of MiG missiles Akihito will base reign on openness Japan's new modernist Emperor Halifax Building Society From Our Own Correspondent, Tokyo: Tokyo markets face restraint and uncertainty Kremlin to keep pledge on troops Talks on Afghanistan Bush presidency will foster 'a kinder, gentler snobbery' By Our Foreign Staff: Stalin victims to get mass pardon Sikh violence after Gandhi plotters are hanged in Delhi Pleas by family go unheeded as threatened Sikh reprisals begin Three rivals vie for leadership Changing face of Khmer Rouge Cyril Kaye & Company (Reuter): Envoys fly to troubled Nanking Base attacked Bus stormed (AFP): Finnish crash (AFP): Killer spill (AFP): Drugs toll (Reuter): Bhopal move Burma inquiry (Reuter): British plea Times Diary The misunderstood mikado Hirohito reigned almost as long as Queen Victoria. Hugh Cortazzi considers Japan's veneration of its monarchy and its links with Britain; George Packard charts the change in US attitudes Deadly foe to respected friend Lady Peake, whose husband, a diplomat, was British… When Japan Last Mourned its Emperor Poverty in Africa End of an Emperor Debate at Dorneywood Halting the pain of Cambodia Israel and Arabs Stuck at the station African view of unrest in China Overseas English Note of uplift Christian names, 1988 Collins and the media Off the hook Peerage package Letters to the Editor should carry a daytime… Coping with the colour-blind Service to remember Young at heart Court Circular Schools news Dinner Osborne & Little Anniversaries today The rift between Jew and Christian Forthcoming marriages Birthdays Marriages Anniversaries tomorrow Emperor Hirohito Spiritual symbol who presided over aggression, defeat and recovery Now the God pf hope fill with all boy and peace in… Church services tomorrow Picture Gallery In pursuit of the mysterious 'yuppie' bug Science Report Church news Word-Watching MOPS Multiple Display Advertising Items Dunlopillo Latex and Carefoam DX Multiple Display Advertising Items Seymour Shirts For the Home Multiple Display Advertising Items Parker Knoll at Peter Adams Sofa's Sofa Beds Multiple Display Advertising Items Plane man's guide to spending Getwick's iunew terminal has finally Gatwick's new terminal has finally given up the pretence that airports are concerned with anything other than taking money from a captive audience, Deyan Sudjic reports JVC The Times Crossword Puzzle No 17,873 The Pound Word-Watching The winners of last Saturday's competition are:… Weather Civilians moved in as a 'human shield' Libyan chemical plant dispute Topaz Properties Tenerite Ltd. Index Executive Editor David Brewerton Laundering agreement The Pound Stock Market Stock Markets Main Price Changes Interest Rates Currencies Gold North Sea Oil Stock Watch NI succeeds in bid battle for Collins Pound drops against dollar as unemployment falls again SE rules to curb trading warfare Reforms planned as another blow hits market-markers Jobs go as Chase pulls out of equities By Our City Staff: Plessey scorns 'pantomime' bid Maxwell sells subsidiary of Macmillan Non-Opec producers seek new agreement on output Homeowners Friendly Society Section 2 High-tech metals exchange launched Alpha Stocks Plessey could be the first as Siemens switches on to UK Despite coming from a country where hostile bids do not happen, the electronics group involved in the takeover fight would consider such tactics in Britain again. Wolfgang Münchau reports S&N options chased by brokers Stock Market Christmas was not a merry time for Sears which is believed to have fallen short of budgeted sales, But that has not discouraged James Capel, the broker, which remains a buyer because of asset backing. A line of 1.2 million shares was snapped up as the price rose 2½ to 112p The retail team to Morgan Stanley, the broker, now say that its research into Lowndes Queensway was too optimistic and that Lowndes clearly paid Sir Phill Harris too much for the business. Morgan says the shares, unchanged at 38p, will continue to drift on a sea of troubles Recent Issues Traditional Options AP-Dow Jones: Market hit by profit-taking Hong Kong AP-Dow Jones: Caution still rules buyers Sydney Black Monday leads to US share inquiry (Reuter): Prices turn mixed as rally fades Tokyo Wall Street Dow advance hit by late slowdown New York Travis Perkins jumps to £8.6m Chairman gives warning of interest rate threat rate threat to demand Beazer in fresh sales at Koppers Inquiry off Savage buy Cifer halt Honey deal Pubs sold Little respite in prospect from takeover mania Comment Berry prepared to sue County Drexel deal calls for Milken removal Canning expands through $9m deal Offer rise by Wardle 'unlikely' Davenports Brewery to close with job losses Business Roundup Lopex buys publicity firm £9.3m buy for Zurich J Jarvis sale nets £3.3m Ibstock expands in US London Traded Options Johnstone's shares rise £3.3m deal for Coalite Unlisted Securities The Times Unit Trust Information Service Investment Trusts Third Market Commodities Foreign Exchanges Money Markets London Financial Futures • Ex dividend. c Cum dividend. k Cum stock split. S… Strong demand Interest Rates Round-Up Larger Lenders Unit-Linked Insurance Investments Innovation the key in 1989 Anthen Masey reviews a year many investment trust managers will be glad to forget Looking behind the Capital Bond gloss Top/bottom Investment Trusts High noon in the high street Vivien Goldsmith runs the rule over the rule new breed of interest-bearing bank accounts New code of practice for insurance agents Walker Crips Weddle Beck Plc Harrods sets store by new account MIM Limited Halifax raises mortgage rate Portfolio plus Accumulator All Box No. Replies Should Be Sent to Box No…… Britannia Building Society The high cost of losing a partner Many wives are wage earners as well as home manager. But their financial contribution is often overlooked when it comes to life insurance-and that can prove to be an expensive omission Sun, sea, sand and misery Save & Prosper the Investment House Limited New way to right wrongs over debt Calculating interest rates on store accounts Family Money Letters Making claims on life policies The difference a day can make to exchange rates… Family Assurance Society Naming lords and ladies of the manor Paying the cost of covenant delays Fleming Investment Trust Management Limited M&G Securities Limited SKY Television Index The clowning of Venice Travel World Festival Guide Part 1 Not so much a party, more a vast, impromptu ballet, where every masked citizen becomes a performing artist on an exquisitely lit stage-John Julius Norwich introduces our four-part guide with a visit to the Venice Carnival Majestic Wine Warehouses Section 3 Bermuda Travel: World Festival Guide Approach on bended knee Karl Gamma is the man who instructs the ski instructors. Brian James joins his class and finds new teaching methods could be on the way Travel Hunt for shaded slopes Skiing Diary Britannia WH Smith Travel Travel Notes Holidays & Villas Swissair Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Thailand Alternative Travel Group (ST) AITO Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Jasmin tours Salih Marine plc Hoseasons Abroad Multiple Display Advertising Items Headwater Holidays Exodus Travelbag Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items SKI Beach Villas Sportsworld Travel Multiple Classified Advertising Items Self-Catering Hoseasons Abroad Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items UK Holidays Multiple Classified Advertising Items AITO Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Self-Catering Malta & Gozo Multiple Classified Advertising Items Phantom, Clapton and Sinatra Multiple Display Advertising Items West Algarve Unique Country House Self-Catering Spain Multiple Classified Advertising Items CIT England Ltd SNCF Falcon Sailing Travel Notes Mosaic elite Deep in the heart of Texas Travel News Peddling in search of the tiger Pearson Phillips finds himself in a coracle in southern India with Virginia McKenna They are on the trail of wild tigers, but the fiercest animals they encounter all come from Maidstone Martin Rooks Backgammon in Timbuktu Travel Books Portrait of Self-made City Peter Newbold Waymark Holidays Haven France & Spain Inter-Continental Hotels Surprising rise of ethereal pop By ignoring fashion and following her Celtic inclinations, Enya wafted to the top of the charts with 'Orinoco Flow'. She talks so David Toop about success The Arts Romance of realism Theatre in Paris Tête d'Or Odéon D' Artagnan Théâtrc National de Chaillot The men for Miss Saigon The Arts After Les Misérables, will the writing/production team triumph again? Sheridan Morley asks their opinion Marking time in Catalan Television Puccini in an intimate light Opera La Bohéme Coliseum Punk with brains Rock Fishbone Town & Country Finishing flourish Jazz George Coleman Ronnie Scott's Practical taster Concert The Mozart Experience Queen Elizabeth Hall Parsons Green Reproductions Ltd Leeds Playhouse Friend Getty The Times Arts Diary The South Bank Centre Wigmore Hall City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Opera & Ballet 01-481 1920 Multiple Display Advertising Items Boulez at the Barbican Multiple Classified Advertising Items Barbican Hall Handel Messiah Raymond Gubbay Times Classified 01-481 1920 Victor Hochhauser Pictet Asset Management UK Ltd Rodier Harp Beat Master class in maturity Jazz Dancing at the bleach party Rock Endless fascination in the score Classical Records Giorgio Armani An early end to order Poetry The Collected Poems of Sidney Keyes Edited by Michael Meyer Routledge, £5.95 Hodder & Stoughton Publishers Christian right or wrong? Andrei Navrozov reflects on the social and political forces in America today that can mobilize a 'moral majority' The Rise and Fall of the New Christian Right By Steve Bruce Oup, £19.50 Paperbacks From Rockway By Jill Eisenstadt Penguin, £3.99 Sing, dance, star Josephine Baker By Bryan Hammond & Patrick O'Connor Cape, £28 Literary Editor: Quick Guide How the war was lost Vietnam at War, 1946-1975 By Lieutenant-General Philip B. Davidson Sidgwick & Jackson, £16.95 Cell of the century Animation The art of the animator is starting to attract attention. Peter Fearon traces the rise of Mickey-makers Unfashionably perfect The Week Ahead New Woman Restaurant Guide Fleet Tandoori Indian Restaurant Multiple Classified Advertising Items Hilton International Regents Park Multiple Display Advertising Items Frying to the Orient Jonathan Meades attempts to discover a Chinese dumpling with a difference Eating out Presidential rockers Collecting Sales Guide Directory The Times Tournament of the Mind Stuffy, sore nose? Fast 2-way relief with Nostroline Clears nasal passages & soothes inflamed skin Tang of the South The Times Cook Frances Bissell suggests how to make the most of the oranges and lemons now coming into the shops Power to the potato Food Suitable cases for cut-price treatment Drink January sales fever is attlicting the traditional wine traders J. Mail Co. Ltd Concise Crossword No 1764 Rugged rock, castle keep Charles Dickens chose Rochester for the setting of his unfinished Edwin Drood. Nigel Andrew explored the tourist spots and seedier side of the city Out and about Pick out the best bunch Gardening Francesca Greenoak reviews the best of the new year's seed catalogues Marshall & Co. Ltd Here for the bear Outings Address Book Agriframes Ltd Weekend Tips Expense accounts Bridge Strategy triumphs Chess Winning Move Saturday World Service Sunday Italian art On an operatic scale An encyclopaedic exhibition of modern Italian work opens at the Royal Academy next week. John Russell Taylor looks at the delights and the dangers of such a major exercise Ultratone Ltd Television and Radio Sunday Index Cup stylists in a league of their own The FA Cup is an escape from reality. Nowhere in this weekend's third round will the dreams be more vivid than at West Ham and Sutton, two clubs which have always believed in putting style first SANROC seeks voice in cricket's big debate Index England agree to go to Netherlands Warrington rebuffed Continuity is Sutton secret Cordula Section 4 Britain's newest indoor games The Opening of the London Arena in Docklands next month signals the birth of a new breed of indoor sports and entertainment venues planned for cities across the country. John Goodbody reports MOPS Six Blueprints for the Shape of Things to Come Outside, it's looking gloomier Taylor returns to play key role on favourite stage Football: Norwich and West Bromwich Albion are Prepared to Pin Faith on the Old Brigade Weekend Team News MP confident card Bill will have easy passage For the Record Derby's defectors Gillingham vote for an increased share issue Vatanen recovers to close gap on leader Motor Rallying That glint is again in the eye of the holders O'Leary likely to be preferred Dexter ousted by relieved traveller Results from Rye Snow Reports Lyle is four shots behind after a round of contrasts Golf Graham asks for help Boxing (Reuter): Run-out by Dyer is disputed In Brief Back trouble Welsh sponsor Morris honoured Rackets win Rose's successor Laing contest (Reuter): Qadir to play Salonen closing Tunstall finds races a respite from media's questions Athletics Foulds joins the scattered seeds Snooker German is too strong for Spacey Squash Rackets Guide to the Weekend Fixtures Sport on TV Young quartet fills age gap Tennis Tomorrow Selectors choose a new policy Swimming Stock ends a long wait on Austria's day of domination Sking Boom time for grand prix tracks Motor Racing Questions and answers on the players' picket line Caught in the strike zone Sports Book of the Week When the players of the National Fooball League decided to strike in 1987, they were replaced by unknowns. As Rhonda Smith explains, the coaches were caught between loyalties to their players and obligations to the owners • Extracted from Strikes, Lockouts and Super Bowl by… Trophy final will show Davies what is expected Rugby League Frosty reception awaits the 49ers American Football Jennings inspires St Albans Hockey Line-up of Soviets is daunting Ice Skating Stragglers rile the champion Cyclo-Cross Rimell retiring with reluctance Alan Lee visits Kinnersley where the curtain is about to fall on a racing dynasty Cowley takes up training again Excitement compensates for the crush The Good Racecourse Quide World's richest race planned for Brisbane Ladbrokes buy US racecourse All the Details Avec Coeur adds to Curley misfortune Gold Cup may tempt Slalom Scallan banned Irish award for Piggott Racecall Mandarin: Talented Kildimo to triumph Mandarin: Sandown Park Selections Mandarin: Haydock Park Selections The Times Racing Service Mandarin: Market Rasen Selections Mandarin: Warwick Selections Garritty operation Results from yesterday's three meetings Multiple Display Advertising Items Life without Davies will be a test of Llanelli's character Rugby Union: Stephens Takes on Stand-Off Half Berth and Responsibilities beyond his Tender Years while James Assumes Development Role Bath have arranged the match which could prove to be the best of the Anglo-Welsh club fixtures this season (Peter Bills writes). They will meet Neath at the Recreation Ground on March 1. The game had been put off in November because Bath wanted to entertain Toulouse. Initial attempts to rearrange the fixture failed, leading Neath to allege that Bath were trying to avoid them. This should add piquancy to the fixture Third match in six days for Ringland Outdoor Leisure Multiple Display Advertising Items Boating and Watersports Multiple Display Advertising Items Today's Team News Multiple Display Advertising Items From a Correspondent Albufeira, Portugal: England's approach has French approval Welsh trial itself is on trial Whisky on the ice Robin Young looks at the very social sport of curling Where sandpipers whistle across the dale Weekend Walk New Zealander's chance to earn his Scotland cap Saracens and L Scottish agree on time Airborne mystery Weather Eye Easy on the eye, kind to the purse Ronald Faux reports on how low tax rates and beautiful countryside are attracting more buyers to the Isle of Man Property Telecom Security Limited Advanced Diesel
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