News from 21/03/1989
1989; Gale Group;
Autores
Robert Philip, Ian McGeoch, William Kay, Peter Dear and Stephanie Billen, Martin Edwards, Christopher Warman, Property Correspondent, Rita Gulliver, Richard Gaskell, Mike Lamb, Stephen Hugh-Jones, Mark Souster, Cliff Feltham, Philip Howard, David Maxwell, Tom Gibb, Steven Runciman, Carol Leonard, Ronald J. MacDonald, Richard Streeton, John Evenett, Stuart Jones Football Correspondent, Kevin Eason, David Winfield, Colin Narbrough, Margareta Pagano, Gerald Davies, Joe Joseph, Henry Gee, Jim Railton, Mitchell Platts, Golf Correspondent, Nicholas Wood Political Correspondent, John Lewis, Political Staff, Norman Hammond, Archaeology Correspondent, Peter Ball, Mark Jones, Louise Taylor, David Tytler Education Editor, Gennady Sokolov (Defence Correspondent), Peter Waymark, Robin Young, Philip Webster, Michael Evans and Kerry Gill, Nick Kochan, Celia Hawkesworth, Michael Clark, Stephen Handelman, Rosemarie Hutchinson, Noel A. De Berry, David Hands, John Percival, John Hennessy, Norman de Mesquita, Michael Hornsby and Patrick O'Halon, Harvey Elliott, Air Correspondent, G. Lindner, Steven Downes, Edward Fennell, Anne Kindersley, Dimitri Obolensky, Gavin Bell, Mark Edwards, Nicholas Harling, David Miller, Simon Brett (Chairman), (Michael Phillips), Wolfgang Münchau, Christopher Goulding, Robin Oakley, Political Editor, Catherine Sampson, Margaret Llewellyn Smith, Alan Meyer, Peter Martin, William Holmes, John M. M. Banham, Director-General, Peter Davalle, John Russell Taylor, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, Rodney Cowton Transport Correspondent, Paul Griffiths, Debbie Moore, Chairman, Peter Bryan, Richard Evans, Robin Cormack, Jamie Dettmer Irish Affairs Correspondent, Craig Seton, John Blunsden, Richard Owen, Paul Charman, Lisa O'Kelly, Roger Boyes, M. M. Smilgin Humphreys, Cyril Mango, Geoffrey Foster, Sheila Gunn Political Staff, Derek Harris, Industrial Editor, Brian Beel, Simon Tait, Arts Correspondent, Rodney Hobson, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Jamie Dettmer, Tom Lester, David Brewerton, Ian Smith, Bernard Mocatta, Anders Grundberg, Jill Sherman Social Services Correspondent, Philip Kleinman, Benazir Bhutto, George Hill, Sam Kiley, Higher Education Reporter, Tim Brooks, Matthew Parris, Paul Newman, Liz Smith, Sarah Jane Checkland Art Market Correspondent, Keith Blackmore, John Pincham, Tony Dawe, Michael Dynes, David Walker, David Sinclair, Robin Wight, Noël Goodwin, Elizabeth Green, Michael Evans Defence Correspondent, Pat Butcher Athletics Correspondent, Joan Venner, Andrew McEwen Diplomatic Correspondent, Frank Field, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Richard Ford, Colin McQuillan, Ronald Rudd Employment Affairs Reporter, Peter Evans, Home Affairs Correspondent, Mary Dejevsky, Rodney Lord Economics Editor, Rod Moore (Development Director), (Sir) Henry Fisher, Stuart Jones, Football Correspondent,
ResumoChannon is accused over 'bomber leak' Commons pressure grows for Lockerbie statement Tournament of the Mind Portfolio Bond Tomorrow Steady money Index Kinnock takeover Warning Speaker attacks security services over Bordes Pilot in M1 crash tells of fight to save plane EEC agrees to allow envoys back into Iran Two top RUC officers shot dead in IRA 'bandit country' London grinds to a halt once more Arthur Price of England Big sea rescue as gales sweep South News Roundup Heath attacks Lawson Tube chiefs £30,000 Pickles writ setback £700,000 for victim Bracknell cell death Bar campaign is 'arrant nonsense' Drink-drive tests set record Consultants join protest against health reforms By Our Social Services Correspondent: 50 hospitals seen as first candidates in opt out scheme Pre-entry union closed shop may end List of hospitals Inflation 'monetary plot by ministers' Sillars kept in the cold Fishing banned in Channel New tunnel rail link proposed Solicitor who Kept clients' £4m gassed himself in his car Golfer in shared win Church 'no' to sanctuary Trains halted over ban on drivers' tea in cab Grant furthers research on street lighting and crime Student vouchers backed Shotgun 'fired at love rival' Snowdon honours brave spirit Channel 4 to use feminine persuasion Gavroche flies 'not serious' BUPA Health Screening Mappa is taken to the Tate Gallery There's More to Life with Renault Ulster alert for more shootings as revenge killings rise M1 air crash team looks at theory of dashborad confusion Loose wire find after rail crash Pilot who wants to quit RAF upset at desk job Labour proposes classroom assistant Children should leave school knowing how to behave responsibly and teachers should ensure that they have helped develop personal qualities and attitudes, says a report published by the Schools Inspectorate yesterday. The inspectors say that children should be independent; self reliant and self disciplined; enterprising and persistent; considerate and fair-minded; have respect for ways of life, opinions and ideas different from their own; be ready to act on behalf of the legitimate interests of others; be committed to promoting the wellbeing of their community through democratic means and be concerned about conservation and the environment. Parents have a big responsibility for their children's personal development but the role of teachers, the inspectors say, "is viatl because personal and social development and responsibility are intrinsic to the nature of education" Assyrian city is rediscoverd 'Bizarre' pottery fetches £240,000 Saleroom Budget 'disappointing for first-time buyers' Bamber convictions safe, say judges Creamery sold Will contest Commuter ire Poll feud Russian visit Cash raid Editor dies Otter threat Opera inquiry Benefits plea Petrol plan BBC (Reuter): Shamir under mounting pressure to talk to PLO Tel Aviv (Reuter)—The Israeli Army has relieved of his command an unnamed lieutenant in the Givati infantry brigade whose unit shot dead three Palestinian protesters and wounded 17 in a clash in the occupied Gaza Strip last Saturday. A military source described the lieutenant's actions at "improper" Europe's trade blocs back closer ties Judge halts curfew in Washington World Roundup Polar trek begins House arrest for poet (AP): Murder investigation (Reuter): Protest in Rangoon Minister replaced UK firm admits sale Pretoria looking at limited black vote Tobacco offends Italy's designer Communists Rome—President Gorbachov, in a message to the congress, supported its attempt to revamp its programmes and image, but warned against "breaking up and throwing away old machanisms and old levers without first creating and testing new ones" Victory goes to hardline right Death toll of 23 in low-turnout Salvador election Police raid 10 Italian ministries (Reuter): China facing more years of austerity in economic crisis Peking (Reuter)—Reporters from China's most liberal newspaper, the Shanghai based World Economic Herald, were barred from the annual session of Parliament which began yesterday. The paper has offended the authorities with outspoken IMI Violence as Corsican strike enters fifth week Poll results add to pressure on Takeshita to go Colony divides on democracy Hong Kong franchise row Toshiba (Reuter): Fresh poll hope for excluded Sakharov Gorbachov hails 'explosive feeling of freedom' as Yeltsin election challenge grows in Moscow Canon (Reuter): Hypocrisy and hype stir up campaign fever Tashkent protest (AP): Surviving Chernobyl (AP): Holiday strike (AP): Gang disbands Roh retreats Praise for UN (AFP): Trial begins (Reuter): Royal meeting (Reuter): Losing battle (Reuter): Indira charges Channon trying to hide truth, Labour insists Lawson does not know what to do, says Heath Row over schools trust cash Education SDP rejects Democrat plan to avoid by-election fights Tory MPs' group to fight EEC federalism Check to be kept on European documents Lords to try for public-interest secrets defence 'R & D disclosure' change to Companies Bill rejected Review for farm training board Globe Theatre scheme Coastguard plea refused Arts for the South More offices for licences Opera house Trident costs Parliament today The Times British Gas Energy is our Business Deep concerns George Hill looks at the background to today's short-list of 'graveyards' for atomic waste When ladies are gentlemen New Words for Old The Times Tribal truths Television Ethnicity gone west Rock The Asian Popular Music Awards Albert Hall Prince Edward Theatre Delta Five Doing what they do best John Russell Taylor on three London shows which can be seen as epitomizing what the public expects of art museums Galleries Dance Merce Cunningham Haymarket, Leicester Mrs KLEiN Quality return Recital Sviatoslav Richter Festival Hall Hayward Gallery Renewed respect Concert LPO/Haitink Festival Hall Queens Theatre Suzy Smith Christian Dior N Peal Swinging into the future A Sixties revival may be in the air for the Nineties. Plush Byzantine velvet and gold lace skirts are to be worn with padded parkas and pinstripes New Woman People Across the catwalk But despite all its backward loops and signposts spinning in all directions, Paris fashion stays one jump ahead of the world Habitat Designs Ltd. Times Diary Scrap relief and cut taxes Frank Field proposes a radical reform to help the low-paid Pakistan's tender democracy Al the end of her first hundred days in office, Benazir Bhutto talks to Karan Thapar about Salman Rushdie, Afghanistan and problems at home Still time to make up Commentary On This Day An "All-British" Holiday The Times Socialism and the Market Hanging on Soviet Opposition Plight of women who go to work Teenage mothers The 'locust years' Boat Race jingle Shrinking European sinews of war After the Forum Training aims Historic Balkan sites imperilled The measure of Gill Sinking feeling Court Circular Today's royal engagements Dinners Old Cliftonian Society Canford School The Corps of Commissionaires Luncheon Reception Anniversaries Appointments Forthcoming marriages Birthdays today Meeting Memorial services Cathedral schools in concert The caring ways of a reptile Science Report Blesma Bridge Church news William Kerby From reporter to president of Dow Jones Ann Duncan Studies in French symbolism Dr Alan Redpath Baptist preacher and evangelist John Hyde Life of diplomacy in Turkey Multiple Display Advertising Items Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be… Spicers Executive Selection Law Personnel Barristers Chambers Locum ASA Law Badenoch & Clark Multiple Classified Advertising Items M5 BAT Whitehead Rice Bermans Sky Television RMC A Challenging Start-Up and Development Role Legal Resources Multiple Classified Advertising Items Dynamic Planning Lawyers The Clerk Swiss Bank Corporation AIM Employment Law Conveyancer Clifford Chance PA Consulting Group Wilde Sapte This selective guide to entertainment and events… Concise Crossword No 1826 Entertainments Timeless travel troubles Word-Watching Winning Move Television and Radio What's Harry worth? Television Choice Radio Choice Thermabond Roofing Ltd The Times Crossword Puzzle No 17,935 Weather All in the game for Clamour Boy Political sketch Index Executive Editor David Brewerton The Pound Stock Market Rugby up to £72.6m CFB in talks Stock Markets Stock Watch Economy on course as money supply dips again Elders delays MB Group court hearing By our city staff: P&O in £82m Spring Grove buy as profits reach £317m Lucas jumps 34% to £72.4m Resounding victory for bust-up theory Goldsmith on form in the great takeover debate IMI leaps to record £108m ConsGoId bid extended by Minorco Shareholder Line By Our City Staff: Hope of 'limited' Clowes payment S&N advances on bid hopes Myson Group rises 10% to £22.58m Business Roundup TI pays £22m for 60% stake Evans Halshaw ahead Mowat agrees bid terms Philips Trafford up at half-time IDG up 40% to £15.4m Hochtief acquires 17.93% of Rush & Tompkins shares Lucas motors on but has yet to fly Tempus By Our City Staff: Record rise to £39m for Wilson Cambridge up to £15m Jardine rises to a record Brent Walker transfer BM in £14.5m acquisition FJC Lilley trebles profit to £7.8m Company Briefs Alpha Stocks Linfood buy helps boost Booker figures ot £79m Astra bid A&C Black up Eaux issue De La Rue sale Gas cuts price for 12,000 companies Guiding spirit of Newgate Brent Chemicals at £11.2m Piccadilly votes against Midland The Times City Diary Poor reader in the dark BSR in £86m buy as results slump Bid-busters Alex is off, too Name game EHP at £24.2m as profit doubles £13.2m for Budgens SKF Group P&O sails a high sea above the chunnel Comment No reason for a cut in rates Comment Clayform leaps to £17.4m Cornwell Parker fabrics furniture Wall Street S&N rises as bid verdict nears Stock Market Interim figures from John Maunders, the housebuilder, should make pleasant reading tomorrow with pretax profits up from £1.7 million to at least £3 million. For the fall-year, analysts are looking for £8 million against £4.7 million fast time. The shares were unchanged at 118p Odds on a full bid for Enterprise Oil by Elf Aquitaine, the French oil group, grew longer yesterday, Elf, which has a 25 per cent stake in Enterprise, has agreed a $1 billion (£583.7 million) bie for Penwalt, the besieged US chemicals group. Enterprise, in ex-rights form, finished at 550p (Reuter): Dow falls another 29 points (Reuter): Nikkei in 366-point nosedive Tokyo Chartac Moneyline London Traded Options Traditional Options Recent Issues Why London should avoid a split Business Letters More support for women in business SIB proposals go beyond spirit of the rules From the chairman of the Investment Management Regulatory Organisation The Rugby Group PLC Sexist attitudes in banking Solving problems at Lloyd's Removing tobacco from RPI Slide continues Stock Exchange Prices The Times Unit Trust Information Service Unlisted Securities Investment Trusts Third Market Commodities Foreign Exchanges Money Markets London Financial Futures Parkway Group PLC Survival of the fittest enterprises The advertising agency, Wight Collins Rutherford Scott, epitomizes the sucess of Mrs Thatcher's enterprise culture in promoting new businesses. William Kay reports on the communications boom that has paved Britain's way towards 1992 When two's a company Well not quite, but sometimes at WCRS it seems like it. Philip Kleinman on the success of an adland partnership The WCRS Group Plc How Britain's Advertising Agencies Beat Uncle Sam and Became World Leader The media revolution has only just started Stand by for spectacular changes in television, newspapers and advertising BMW Choice cuts from around the world The expansion of the agencies is leading to an increase in global campaigns A monolithic structure is the most efficient way of producing a global strategy Stoy Hayward The hardest of sells Time was when a respectable financial institution kept itself. Now, as Paul Charman reports, the power of advertising is a boardroom byword Big boys in the buying business Media shops are the key to success, Tim Brooks says Portland A contract with the customer In the US, ads bludgeon consumers with facts; in the UK, they entice them with wit. Elizabeth Green on the soft sell The nitro-glycerine, ready to detonate if the BMW could not live up to? expectations, was placed on the engine block, and the car was started...' Kevin Eason, Motoring Correspondent, looks at the prize-winning BMW ad campaign Simon Olswang & Co. Laying it on the line Direct marketing and public relations are taking an ever-increasing share of budgets LWT the Best Shows Aiming for Everest A new breed of advertising agency is aiming to combine the best qualities of the elephant and the ant. Nick Kochan reports on the nature of the beast Northwood Limited A business that ranges across the continents How did a small firm grow to a big operation in a few years? The answer, says Lisa O'Kelly, is by flair and a eagerness to expand A Decade of Achievement Badenoch & Clark Recruitment Specialists Chancery Legal Appointments Michael Page Legal Laurence Simons Associates The Times Gabriel Duffy Consultancy The HLT Group Badenoch & Clark Recruitment Specialists Crown Prosecution Service Applied management Sciences Ltd Misrepresentation action against foreign states justiciable in England Legal Appointments Lloyds Bank National Rivers Authority-Southern Region Standing up for big and small Richard Gaskell defends the Law Society's role in the current Green Paper debate Counsel declined to follow client's wishes No retrospective validation The shape of things to come Edwart Fennell reports from the floor of The Times forum on the future of the legal profession Legal Appointments Baker & McKenzie The Durnford Ford Organisation Solicitors Working towards equal rights Bass Public Limited Company Oswald Hickson, Collier & Co. Scrivener: Inns and Outs Hill Bailey Underwood and Co Commercial Partner Bahrain Greenwich Health Authority Hampshire County Council Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission Dudley Metropolitan Borough Harrow Central Catering Services Harrison & Co Hampshire Surrey County Council Avon County Council Multiple Classified Advertising Items Daresbury Science & Engineering Research Council Management University of essex Merton College East Yorkshire Borough Council Royal National Institute for the Blind Essex Magistrates Courts Committee Keeping an eye on standards From dodgy electrical products to bogus university degrees, trading standards officers ensure the public fair and safe trading practices. Joan Venner reports Public Appointments R. H. Lawrence, Solicitor Oxfordshire County Council Out and about on the job Trafford Metropolitan Borough City of Swansea The Times East hampshire district council Indcoopes Burton Ale Tumshies seasoned with ready wit Robert Philip on football's life in the shadows: Patick Thistle Chin and Cramb take honours in the foils Student Sport More honours beckon American coaches Basketball Tomorrow Seven newcomers will support Moorhouse Swimming Today's Fixtures Overseas League Results Tarnished exploits ICE Hockey Sport on TV PSV's five-year run is brought to a halt by Ajax Football Cold shouldered Williams's reward Mandarin: The Langholm Dyer for Aintree pointer Mandarin: Nottingham Selections Mandarin: Fontwell Park Selections The Times Racing Service Dwyer rides for Richards in National McLelland fined for course error Eddery on Always Valiant Yesterday's results Mandarin's 7-2 nap Mandarin napped Wide Boy (7-2) at Wolverhampton yesterday and is showing a profit of £26.12 on his naps this season. The Private Handicapper top rated For The Grain (5-4) at Newcastle Promising display by Unknown Martyr Rapid RACELiNE Ladbroke Line Leicester wings clipped in B match Rugby Union: The Selectors Have Some Difficult Choices to Make when They Meet Today to Pick the British Lions Tour Party Underwood renews partnership Snow Reports Calder favourite to lead in Australia Championship suffers from lack of quality Help from new league is welcome Squash Rackets Defenders set early pace at Roehampton Childhood key to Ngugi's success Athletics Rosslyn Park Sevens Results Death casts its shadow over Larrousse-Calmels launch Motor Racing Senna fastest in Brazil testing Rio de Janeiro (AP)-Ayrton Senna, of Brazil, the reigning Formula One world champion, set the fastest time on Sunday, the last day of track testing for the Brazilian Grand Prix, which takes place on Sunday. Senna lapped the new McLaren-Honda in 1min 26.1sec, a fraction faster than Thierry Boutsen, of Belgium, in a Williams-Renault. During private testing a few weeks ago, NigelMansell, off Britian, was also reported to have set a best lap of 1:26.1 in his Ferrari. Senna's time was set on softer, qualifying tyres but he also managed the fastest time-1:28.3-on race tyres (AP): Senna fastest in Brazil testing Crisis for Britain after Paris debacle Ice Skating Watts in line for first cap Pools Forecast For the Record Forest determined to avoid repeat defeat at Sheffield Football Graham will keep rivals guessing Talbot Invests £180,000 in promotion bid Hilly course will suit Millar Elliott home at a sprint Recurring story of one that got away Table Tennis Results from Cardiff Whetnall is lone selector Badminton Malvern hand out surprise Rackets Jacklin's son soon shows that he has natural talent Golf Results from Sunningdale Benn date may change Boxing The Times Wembley refusal angers clubs and promoters Police report on Parkhead brawl ITV resolves Everton's snag Telecom Security United could be ready to sell Strachan Sport in Brief Statistics place a burden on Oxford Boat Race preparations turn to weighty matters RFU warning on behaviour IMG takes tennis to Wentworth Lynch injures knee in charity football match Indefinite ban risk for lifters Conduct which is beyond excuses End Column
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