News from 18/05/1989
1989; Gale Group;
Autores
John Chapman, Mike Theodoulou, Ivor H. Mills, Nick Nuttall, Sirkumar Sen, Boxing Correspondent, Richards-Carpenter, Peter Browne, Hazhir Teimourian, Giles Hunt, F. C. Mather, Mark Souster, David Lee, Cliff Feltham, Ivo Tennant, Douglas Broom, Education Reporter, Michael Seely, Racing Correspondent, Philip Howard, John Bell, City Editor, Richard Ford Legal Affairs Reporter, Lawrence Fisher, Ian Murray, Michael Binyon, George Sivell, L. R. Lewis, Richard Evans, Media Editor, Carol Leonard, Mandarin (Michael Phillips), Richard Streeton, Stuart Jones Football Correspondent, Colin Narbrough, Geoff Brown, Margareta Pagano, Michael Seely Racing Correspondent, Bernard Levin, David Tweed, Alan Robinson, Henry Gee, Mitchell Platts, Golf Correspondent, Peter Davenport, Brian Robins, Sam Gorvy, Nicholas Wood Political Correspondent, Alan Lorimer, Ruth Gledhill, Jill Sherman, Social Services Correspondent, Louise Taylor, Roland Rudd Employment Affairs Reporter, Matthew May, Thomson Prentice Science Correspondent, Peter Waymark, Alan Hamilton, Alan Burrough, Michael McCarthy, Environment Correspondent, Thomson Prentice, Science Correspondent, Michael Clark, Martin Fletcher, Political Reporter, Sabine Durrant, Robin Oakley, Nicholas Wood and John Lewis, Rex Bellamy, Tennis Correspondent, Peter De Ionno, Martin Fletcher Political Reporter, Leslie Tilley, Gavin Bell, John Woodcock, Rex Bellamy Tennis Correspondent, Wolfgang Munchau, Tim Jones Employment Affairs Correspondent, Andrew Selkirk, Philip Webster, Chief Political Correspondent, Geoffrey Wheeler, S. M. J. Sniationvski, Christopher Goulding, Robin Oakley, Political Editor, Catherine Sampson, William Holmes, Simon Tait Arts Correspondent, David Robinson, Dennis Shaw, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, Liz Gill, Hilary Newman, H.w.r. Wade, Richard Evans, Heather Kirby, Robert Matthews, Craig Seton, Richard Owen, David Young, Energy Correspondent, John Holland, Martin Searby, Barry Pickthall, Peter Guilford, Irving Wardle, Ian Ross, Bryan Appleyard, Stewart Tendler, Derek Harris, Industrial Editor, David Brewerton, John Goodbody, A. J. Bennett, Andrew Sinclair, Philip Webster Chief Political Correspondent, Neil Lyndon, Mandarin, Matthew Parris, I. W, Mel Webb Monticello, Sarah Jane Checkland Art Market Correspondent, Sarah Jane Checkland, Alan Lee Cricket Correspondent, John Lewis, Andrew Buckoke, Martin Waller, B. Kelly, Lord Carrington, Kenneth Leech, Director, Bailey Morris, Dr Thomas Stuttaford, Muriel Timmins, David Tytler, Education Editor, Rodney Lord, Economics Editor, Richard Morrison, Peter J. Floyd, David Spicer (Trustee), George D. Scott-Kerr, A.j. Smith, Harvey Elliott Air Correspondent, David Young Energy Correspondent, Philip Jacobson, Clement Freud, Mary Dejevsky, David Walker, Public Administration Correspondent,
ResumoParalysis hits China as a million march Biggest protests since the revolution leave Gorbachov's programme in shreds Triumph and disaster Portfolio Bond Row over Labour candidate Dollar soars Index Semtex bombs hidden in marzipan sweets Broadcasters turned off by Commons TV rules Thatcher may set timetable for Britain joining EMS Doctors refuse to co-operate with NHS reforms Dictaphone Moves to end strikes on Tube News Roundup Broadcast ban action Women priests' vote Police officers bailed Chelsea gas alert Hurd granted appeal Moore's consumer look for benefits Security firms face controls Free River Boat Magazine with this Month's Lord Mackay hints at compromise over reforms EC revises tax harmony proposals to end deadlock Labour imposes Vauxhall candidate Doctors vote on health reforms Jenkins aims to unite centre European elections EETPU to keep hard left ban Scientists forecast 20m Aids sufferers by end of century Optimist rewarded 60 museums join gift fair Ambridge young given a voice Judge threatened as armed robbers get life for killing officer Police decision to chase car defended World Service under threat BBC cash crisis New us envoy heads for the palace Barnardos Hertz Pop blamed for killing singing Triumph Player saved lives by alerting police Hillsbrough diaster inquiry Think-tank backs state aid Muslim schools Telecom service Improved Duchess and friends celebrate Predators warned off by Carrington Saleroom Price Waterhouse Boeing in search of Dutch deal on new jets Kinnock will start arms talks as soon as he takes office Defence Fully comprehensive secondary schooling would be the rule Education/health Wealth creation and a market role on road to British revival Labour Policy Review By Our Chief Political Correspondent: Delaying powers for chamber Constitution Energy efficiency drive Environment By Our Political Editor: Effective top rate of 59% Taxation By Our Political Correspondent: Support strikes will be allowed Unions Help urged for GPs facing drug, drink and marriage crises A training programme for social services staff working with sexually abused children was announced yesterday by Mr david Mellor, Minister by for Health. The £17 million scheme is part of the Government's response to the Cleveland affiar. It will be paid for by a £7 million central fund and £10 million from local authorities. "Children at risk should be able to rely on the best possible help from a dedicated team of professionals," Mr Mellor said. The guidelines are being sent to social services dircetors and loacl authorities are asked to submit training plans to the Department of Health by the end of August By Our Science Correspondent: Doctors to be trained to use new heart drug Import licence granted for seized ivory cargo Hayward 'drugs link' Dixons A victim of the IRA goes home Rose crisis in danger of being repeated Peugeot 309 Gorbachev offers China apology for past mistakes Nicaragua arms letter revealed World Roundup (AP): Cyprus withdrawals (Reuter): Nuclear missile fears (Reuter): US hi-tech swoop PSION Prague releases Havel after half sentence Mitterrand set to enter defence debate Happiness on a troop train for Kiev Walesa plea for West to invest (Reuter): Ethiopia fighting continues after coup leaders killed Addis Ababa (Reuter)- The Government orderd people to return to work early today. Diplomants and other residents here reported that the city was quiet by nightfall and state radio and television urged people to return to work Share scandals widen in Tokyo British Midland Election strike fails to paralyse Panama Khomeini's son attacks Montazeri Trial over Cyprus treasures UN is told of thuggery Swapo supporters 'harassed' Windhoek - South Africa has suggested that it should deploy monitors in Angola in order to ensure that Swapo guerrillas are confined to their bases there, so preventig a repetition of last month's cross border incursions Philippine deaths inquiry call Hero freed (Reuter): New leader Murder gang (AP): Getting bigger (AP): Jail release PM resigns Polio hope Toyota Knesset accepts Shamir peace plan B & Q (Reuter): Hijacker gets life for role in TWA killing The Hamadei case Washington (Reuter)- a US State Department spokesmen welcomed the West Germam court's conviction of Hamadei on the charges arising from the TWA hijacking (Reuter): Lebanon mourns moderate mufti Aoun, little big man of Beirut Man is the News Agency status for most social security business MPs protest There were loud Labour protests during questions to Mr Moore when mr barry Field (Isle of Wight, C) said that newly refurbished socail security offices within a few days of respening were reduced to the standard of spit-and-sawdust pubs with claimants using the floor as an ashtray and being rude to the staff. Mr Moore said that there was an extensive programme of refurbishing social security offices which had been going on for some time Commons TV will not be allowed to show disruptions Youth protection move rejected Employment Bill: Report stage Peers sad at British absence from Cannes film festival House of Lords EC must stop meddling, says Tory EC Questions Wine drinkers are being 'swindled' Houses of Lords Labour queries figures Precedence for complaint Giro bid is criticized Nursery fire test change Electronics deficit Parliament today A rock in the storm of Anfield The Times Profile OBAS Looking back to the future of art Artfile Biography Horse and Hound Waking up to tired issues Waking up to tired issues Through the pain barrier People who suffer chronic pain may never find the miracle cure they seek. But a new clinic in London may help them live with their condition British Telecom Worth the expense Medical Briefing Safe dipping Dog dangers Times Diary Picture Gallery Nothing but a revolution Catherine Sampson reports on the day the Chinese lost their fear and took streets in millions, the leadership powerless to stop them Deathly hush or deadly rush Where the camera has to lie We Europeans Out of Ethiopia? Paying for a Dream Excessive use of judicial review Links with the past Doubts on experience of poverty 'Lost children' Anglican exodus Louder and clearer Credit fears Letters to the Editor should carry a daytime… Feelings to drive people wild Birds under pressure Fish business Doors of perception Court Circular Marriages Cardata Biological glue in cancer cells Science Report Today's royal engagements Sir Philip de Zulueta The Hon Neville and Mrs Berry much regret being… Forthcoming marriages Requiem Mass Myra Hess National Gallery Concerts Anniversaries John Green Five Academy awards for film music William Cuthbert Preserving Scotland's treasures Lt-Col Brian Montgomery Biographer brother of "Monty" Jeffrey Thomas Labour MP who defevted and returned Kingston Polytechnic Law School Birthdays today Births On This Day The Rebellion in Canada The Arthritis & Rheumatism Council for Research School news Church news Luncheons Reception Service luncheons Service dinner Middle Temple Appointment Ill matched Television Still fascinated by Nazism Cannes Film Festival Time Out national monthly publication Queen for a departed day Geoff Brown on pre-Aids transvestism, pre-war madness, a sluggish Chevy Chase and the first feature from jana Bokova Cin3ma Low humour The Double-bass man in the Moon Theatre A myth tapped The Heiress A Slavonic postman Concert Philharmonia/Neumann Festival Hall Tomorrow Spink & Son Limited The South Bank Centre Tarzan into Europe Lord Carrington joins the debate among Tories about Britain's role in the next stage of Europe Literary Editor: New Books The Governors' Guide A literary excursion of lost allusions Novel of the Week The Magic Drum By Emma Tennant Viking, £11.95 Claudie Sikirdji Walk on the sunny side Self-Consciousness By John Updike André Deutsch, £12.95 The lost young of the big city Fiction The Colour of Memory By Geoff Dyer Cape, £11.95 The Burnt Houese By Adam Lively Simon & Schuster, £12.95 Foreign Studies By Shusaku Endo Peter Owen, £12.95 Times Books Photosales This selective guide to entertainment and events… Concise Crossword No 1874 Entertainments Imprinted on the mind Word-Watching Best Selling Books Winning Move Opening heart and wallet Television Choice BBC 1 Leroco Direct Sales Limited Kinnock ensures nuclear victory The Times Crossword Puzzle No 17,985 Change of tune for the operation Word-Watching Weather A glimpse of the forbidden scenes Political sketch Business & Finance Executive Editor David Brewerton The Pound Stock Market Judgement on Lonrho appeal due £1m profit USH warning Stock Markets Main Price Changes Interest Rates Currencies Gold North Sea Oil Tourist Rates Dollar soars on us trade figures Central banks stand aside as bulls push currency towards DM2 Bass considers Mmc report Minorco studies further us action despite bid failure Barker names £622,053-a-year director Profit deal gives board member more than Grandmet chairman 'Gang of Four' back Isosceles Dan Air By our Economics Editor: Hopes of soft landing as output starts to slow Sainsbury stays in front with profits up 21% at £402m GrandMet in $100m us vineyard buy Business Roundup NMC slips as bid talks end Select rises to £5.8m Midsummer leaps 60% Diploma ahead 9% Estates & General Pan Am Inca sold to Cannon St Cookson buys in France By Our City Staff: Abbey calls on rebels to prove allegation Profits advance continues at Roche as revenues rise 21% Go-it-alone firms 'pay more' Why Sainsbury is not on City's list Tempus By Our City Staff: Macmillan to partner McGraw-Hill in us Interpublic made offer for Ogilvy NFC jumps 55% to £32m in post-flotation interims Perpetual profit is halved Gieves scrip Baggeridge up Big wicket for a big catch City Diary Racal to shed 600 jobs in shake-up B Gas pipelines open to rival Sleeping-out partners City Diary Not Wellcome City Diary Capital in £7.3m TV deal In through an outdoor By Our Financial Editor: UniChem share to scheme blocked Fidelity A quarter on the dollar as Asher makes his exit Comment Barclays New pressure on Bond over loan details Holmes goes on bid defensive as profits slump Tomkinsons setback Sun Alliance Cracks start to show at G7 Dollar rise brings calls for new exchange rate accord TWA By Our Financial Staff: Figures at J Foster leap 50% to £3.34m TMD up 84% Wall Street Banco Exterior-U. K Profit-taking cuts back Dow advance World Markets Oil refineries hoist Ultramar to £32m US figures lift share prices Stock Market British firms lead with £435m European buys Elliott doubles profits to match £4.4m target Alpha Stocks Recent Issues Traditional Options London Traded Options BRIntec up on fresh bid interest $5m bank buy Trust ahead Ocean rises Wise purchase The Times Good gains Stock Exchabge Prices The Times Unit Trust Information Service Unlisted Securities Investment Trusts Third Market Commodities Foreign Exchanges Money Markets London Financial Futures Spy box to trap river polluters British scientists are developin an electronic sensor capable of detecting exactly where harmful chemical substances, such as nitrates and pesticides, leak into the waterways, Nick Nuttall reports Flying holiday contest Boltrac 3 Time computers IBM Next Computer Ignored engineers Multiple Classified Advertising Items Robots get thumbs down Automation in the home is not as desirable as some people think Castle Bureau Beaumont Management Services How to train and keep 'em Jobscene Training may now be less painful for employers New sounds from old recordings A British company claims it can make yesterday's voices sound like today's hi-fi Briefing Tetra Unwiring the office As installation of the latest cordless telephones gets under way, Robert Matthews reports on what it means for the public New Technology Patently, a problem Companies may use law suits to protect their software programs The Design Council Aid Recruitment Ltd. 014814484 Western Trust & Savings Ltd Qantek Hi-Tech Hi-Fliers STC Tele Communications Maine - Tucker Technology Analyst Multiple Classified Advertising Items B. A. A Today Szerelmey (GB) Ltd Company Secretarial/legal Assistant 01-481-4481 Personnel touch of technology The way to solve shortage in skilled workers is through strategic planning, Colin Richards-Carpenter (left) writes Appointments Phone: 01-481 4481 - Appointments… Robert Walters Associates Egor Executive Selection Multiple Classified Advertising Items National Health Service in Scotland National Federation of Post Office and British… Link Lease (London) Ltd Marston & Langinger Ltd Sales Opportunities 01-481-4481 Unisys Sovereign Leasing plc Multiple Classified Advertising Items Programmes Recruitment Consultancy Holder Mathlas Alcock Ernst & Whinney Wacker Chemicals limited Multiple Classified Advertising Items 01-481 4481 01-481 4481 A. U. D. I. T Commission Information and Research Executive HLM Architects Multiple Classified Advertising Items Goodman Graham and Associates Thames Water Multiple Display Advertising Items Jerrard Bros Multiple Display Advertising Items 01-481 4481 01-481 4481 Sales Executive The Assocuiation of Financial Services Professionals ABM LTD General Portfolio Multiple Classified Advertising Items British Holiday & Home Parks Association Ltd. Sales People Wanted Systems Manager Multiple Classified Advertising Items Recruitment Matters Ltd Hobstones Carson Rentals Negotiator Winkworth Financial Controller/accountant Central London £20K… Multiple Classified Advertising Items Time off Ltd Box No Lettings Negotiator Alderwick Peachell and Partners Ltd MSL Crone Corkill Recruitment Consultants Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items 01-481 4481 01-481 4481 Robert Walters Associates Lex Service Accountancy Personnel KEY Accountancy Personnel IPS Morument Executive Ltd Accountancy Recruitment Afb Recruitment Limited Calling All Part Qualified Accountants Financial Selection Services Deloitte Haskins Sells Accountancy personnel Tax Planning/legal Research Multiple Classified Advertising Items 01-481 4481 Multiple Classified Advertising Items 01-481 4481 Susan Beck Charman Underwriting Agencies Ltd. Secretaries plus Mep Research Services Covent Garden Secretary Covent Garden Executive Assistant Antony Dunlop Ltd Diary of the Times Classified Meredith Scott Recruitment Admin/secretary Junior Secretary Susan Beck Astley Wharton Davis Recruitment Specialists Spectrum Fundraising Ltd The Recruitment Alliance Personal Secretary Prestigious International TV Company Kolon (UK) Ltd Susan Beck Recruitment Antony Dunlop Ltd. Multiple Classified Advertising Items Running Buffet & Banquet Co. Riverside Health Authority Charing Cross Hospital… Regus Multiple Classified Advertising Items 01-481 4481 PA to Chief Executive Multiple Classified Advertising Items Blue-chip city builds on the past York's well-preserved past and modern facilities are attracting businessmen as well as tourists A scientific learning process Education York Persimmon Homes Wimpey Welcome Home The hazards of a Disneyland Tourism Sky-high property prices Property Frenbury Properties Limited Standard Leasing Multiple Display Advertising Items The aim of the rose Jobs Garbutt & Elliott Chocolate sweetens economic prospects Confectionery and the railways are at the heart of York's recent business expansion Pilcher Homes Shepherd GA Life Nicklaus way back to old glory is via the veterans Golf:floyd Pitches in with his Experience as U. S. Brace Themselves for Ryder Cup Faldo has to wait on the rain One of the pack Service by fax can be good Ballesteros draws a crowd Seats will not solve problems Altering rules of eligibility Splendid efforts unrecognized Liverpool not alone Matter of seniority Door-to-door selling ban might be justified European PGA is a British initiative An uphill task Game Torjoun shatters several Derby dreams Brooks buys Uplands stables from Winter Changes for conditional jockeys Monsagem to uphold Guineas form York Perth The Times Racing Service Scudamore set for Sunday duel against Shoemaker Huntingdon Yesterday's results from five meetings Turfcall Rapid Raceline Multiple Display Advertising Items Erecting new shrines for the faithful In the second part of The Times's analysis of the prospects for football, we ask whether the game wants or can afford new stadiums - or if it is bound by tradition and politics. John Goodbody reports Britain's Top Cruising Magazine Benjamin bounces Derbyshire aside Cricket:deabyshire Collapse to Benjamin as Haynes Marks his Debut for Middlesex with an Unbeaten Half-Century at Lord's Haynes sounds a warning DeFreitas leads recovery The Times Trueman aids an old ally Lenham's timely century Other Scoreboards Yorkshire pay for their profligacy Fanatical tackling fails to put out Scots Rugby Union Rapid Cr Cketline Atkinson supplies the satisfaction Romanians ease home International field for Leeds event Rock Climbing For the Record Organizers fearful of corruption at Cup Final turnstiles Football Harford is out of cup squad Grant cut upsets top clubs Athletics Southgate challenge for new cup Hockey Reeson is stopped in ninth Boxing Mason £50,000 purse From Special Correspondent, Naples: Successful gamble Low morale may cause further losses at sea Yachting British hopes fail to escape from orbit of satellites Tennis Wilander through after poor start Solicitor finds £1,000 for Welsh team Bowls Mixed results for Britons in first day tasks Gliding Today's Fixtures Sport on TV Littlewoods Pools Liverpool Hern to stay at West Ilsley Help the Aged Arsenal pay price of attack (Reuter): Australians under spell of spin Sydney (Reuter)- Graeme Hick, the Worcestershir batsman, yesterday turned down an offer of a one-year package, believed to be worth Aus$100,000 (about £47,000), to play for New South Walesnext winter. Queensland, who last month withdrew a similar offer, are reportedly still interested in signing him (AFP): Sport in Brief Everton will go into final without Snodin Maradona realizes ambition Moynihan warning on South Africa Government decision disappoints council Master who cast his own mould End Column
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