Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 04/04/1992

1992; Gale Group;

Autores

McColl, Mary E. Jelley, Marion Hume and Belinda Morris, Stephen Fry, Lynne Greenwood, Bob Ross, Paul Heiney, Clifford Longley, Nick Nuttall, John White, Nicholas Wood, Political Correspondent, Louise Roddon, John Vincent, Tim Judah and Dessa Trevisan, Barry Trowbridge, Jane MacQuitty, Simon Barnes, Richard Ford, Home Correspondent, Paul Bompard, Bill Frost, Sheila Gunn, Political Correspondent, Ronald Faux, Stephen Bayley, Martin Waller, Gerald Ronson, Karen Woolfson, Norman Howell, Gareth Parry, Robin Oakley, Philip Howard, Melinda Wittstock, Media Correspondent, Prue Leith, Carol Sarler, Wolfgang Münchau, European Business Correspondent, Roger Jones, Lynne Truss, Nicholas Wood and Jill Sherman, Peter Mandler, Tony Patrick, Nick Herbert, Colin Narbrough Economics Correspondent, Philip Webster and Arthur Leathley, Ray Clancy, Joe Joseph, Martin Jarvis, Brian James, Francesca Greenoak, Martin Fletcher, Brenda Parry, Ralph Harris, Bruce Clark, K. M. Stanley, Richard Wilson, Frances Hill, Ivor Crewe, Rachel Kelly, Ruth Gledhill Religion Correspondent, Michael Rooney, Richard Ford Home Correspondent, Lulu Yu and Philip Robinson, Alan Hamilton, D. J. Wilson, Henry Stanhope, Michael Clark, Victoria Mather, Frances Bissell, Lesley Abdela, David Hands, Peter Barnard, Elizabeth Walker, Michael Binyon Diplomatic Editor, L. T., J. M., Paul Wheeler, Alison Johnson, Jack Waterman, Michael Woodhead, Lindsay Cook, Douglas Broom Local Government Correspondent, Sydney Friskin, Martin Hoyle, Margaret E. Brown, Lindsay Cook Money Editor, David Miller, Gabriella Gamini, Jill Insley, Gillian Bowditch, Mitchell Platts Golf Correspondent, Barry Millington, Alison Roberts, Richard Hough, John Higgins, Michael Watkins, Robin Oakley, Political Editor, Catherine Sampson, Marcus Binney, Raymond Keene, Jonathan Prynn, Dennis Shaw, John Russell Taylor, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, Cheryl Taylor, Peter Stothard, Paul Wilkinson, June Ducas, David Chappell, Dillwyn Williams, Antonia Bremner, Richard Evans, Craig Seton, David Powell, Athletics Correspondent, Damian Whitworth, Belle Grey, Matthew D'Ancona, Education Reporter, Brian Beel, Keith MacKlin, Glendevon, Adam Fresco, Joanna Pitman, David Young, Mary Ann Sieghart, Ross Tieman Industrial Correspondent, Philip Webster Chief Political Correspondent, John Cunningham (Chief Executive), J. Allan Denholm, Christopher Walker, Marcus Armytage, Alistair McAlpine, Graham Searjeant, Financial Editor, Clive White, Matthew Parris, David Gullick, Richard Evans Racing Correspondent, Alexander Stille Jonathan, Liz Smith, Alan Franks, Michael Seely, Craig Cockburn, Owen Jenkins, Walter Gammie, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Michael Phillips, Ben Macintyre, Melinda Wittstock, Philip Pangalos, Tim Jones, Lindsay Cook Weekend Money Editor, Martin Waller, James Fenton, F. B., Bruce Arnold, Benedict Nightingale, Jonathan Meades, Bea Cowan, Jonathan Futrell, Valerie Grove, Anne McElvoy, Patrick Duffy, John Phillips, Alan Jackson, Sarah Newton, Matthew Bond, John Morrill, John Goodbody, Sports News Correspondent, Lindsay Cook and Sara McConnell, Philip Jacobson, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Ray Whitney, Mike Rosewell, Rowing Correspondent, Peter O'Hare, Tania Glyde, Lisanne Radice and Philippa Ingram, Mary Dejevsky,

Resumo

Ashdown would veto Labour's top tax plans Doctors back trusts Bafta enquiry Maxwell order Index Weekend Times Pay rises in advance to beat the shadow budget Jason Donovan awarded £200,000 Bookies forecast bumper weekend Yeltsin warns Ukraine over Black Sea fleet Breaking the Chains The Times: Breaking the News Breaking the Rule Breaking the Bank Breaking the News Leica Camera Ltd Weekend Money Judges say voting for TV award was rigged Legal row worsens on Jersey Voyages Jules Verne Picture Gallery Gunman flees after clerk locks him in bank Court outlaws rent increases Joyce file saved from Paris to go on view Bank offers to save unloved landmark Queen Elizabeth2 £10m for boy who survived car crash Howerd fears Head barred Killing acquittal Baby abducted Donovan wins damages of £200,000 for gay slur Screaming teenagers cheer High Court verdict against style magazine that questioned star's sexuality Losing face over libel bill By a Staff Reporter: Surveyor robbed building society Dedicated follower of fascism Heading for immortality Nick Nuttall reports on a group of people all hoping to be the everlasting life and soul of a very peculiar party Home head jailed for abusing boys Record Libel Payouts Virgin Daughter 'was killed for living with lover' Churchill sale Trespass threat Grant at risk New jail will give inmates keys to cells Paul Wilkinson reports from the first private prison, which opens its doors to "consumers" from next week WH Smith Ordination of women spreading Scientists aid plants that are feeling blue Cunard Countess Oil men's helicopter forced to land Hoaxer traced Bail penalty M3 protest Port extended Keats theft Beefeater Labour Explosives case man is granted new appeal TV Licensing Picture Gallery Rover Metro Bouncing cheques fraud is increasing Nalgo Index Hustings jokes wear a bit thin No, Cyril is not in the least confused Campaign Sketch Kinnock unveils programme for first 100 days Labour plans for power Phone number stunt attacked Halifax International Heseltine warns of rioting and interest rate rises For a Firm Favourite SNP forces Fairbairnto try harder Constituency profiles: rural Scotland, urban England and the Welsh valleys Enthusiastic Boateng preaches the party line Street campaigner shrugs off loony left image Socialist free spirit enjoys the battle Blaenau Gwent Lancashire struggles with Welsh question Ribble Valley Mr Bean eats chips and utters 'Good-oh!' Bristol West Powell relives ancient battles in his old stamping ground An independent old man gives the kind of warning on sovereignty that once disturbed party leaders and excited his supporters, Craig Seton writes Picture Gallery Voters in South drift to Labour Regional patterns Neck and neck race in London Campaign Quotes Hung parliament heads for home The bookies have Labour a head but expect a photo finish, Alan Hamilton writes Barclays Party of yogic flying takes to the airwaves The Natural Law Party's campaign broadcast brings light for Melinda Wittstock Religious decline lamented Heath reforms Housing threat Poll of pints Back Barclays Multiyork Furniture Handmade by Craftsmen Commander Paddy ready to advance Robin Oakley, The Times political editor, interviews the leader of the Liberal Democrats Parties to review soccer safety law £6bn package could create 6,000 jobs Lunn Poly Unlikely star steps into PR limelight A shy professor with a daunting brief on reform talks to Mary Ann Sieghart Peugeot 205 Tripoli imam says lives of diplomats are at risk Pressure on Gadaffi increases New York rallies to Clinton after a bitter campaign The Clinton camp is closely watching the Uk election, hoping a Labour win would bury the Reagan-Bush-Thatcher era, Peter Stothard in New York writes Li Peng smiles serenely through public humiliation Islanders spurn hand of peace An argentine boat that sailed to the Falklands got a hostile reception, Gabriella Gamini writes from Buenos Aires Noriega remains a danger to Bush Mandela asks West to patrol townships (Reuter): Nurses walk out (Reuter): Support wanes (AP): Roh opposed (AFP): Coup marked (Reuter): Arabs killed (Reuter): Delhi accused (Reuter): Penalty levied (Reuter): Cold front Our Foreign Staff: Russia threatens to seize Black Sea fleet Yeltsin prepares for congress West uses temple of socialism to sell weapons Moscow Notebook by Bruce Clark Rites of passage for Marcos People Serb assaults push Bosnia to edge of war Italian voters swayed by fears of political chaos Audiences hooked by sex queen's campaign 'Red Goebbels' upsets Germans In a surprise comeback, a BBC Irained German aristocrat has provided an unwelcome reminder of the bad old days, Anne McElvoy writes from Berlin Bérégovoy wins quick approval Albanian president resigns Clifford Longley Uncovering the secrets of the KGB prelates ... and moreover Swiging to the centre Riddell on the Election After all the campaigning the most likely election result is a hung parliment, says Peter Riddell The triumph of the footnote Ben MacIntyre celebrates the minutiae of social history while reading a study of fish and chips Shady business The Times Diary Peace platform The Times Diary God bless laryngitis The Times Diary Drudgery divine The Times Diary Whig Restoration? Crowning Mercy Ashdown claims Giving health service reforms a fair chance to work Defence strategy Women's votes Labour and hunting Too much faith in opinion polls Outsize elephant Saving graces Court Circular Anniversaries Memorial service Tunnel trip for Duke Announcements Church services tomorrow Word-Watching The Times Forthcoming marriages Dinners Harry Orlinsky Sir Raghavan Pillai Sir Raghavan Pillai, KCIE, CBE, governor of the Reserve Bank of India and secretary general of external affairs in New Delhi from 1952 to 1955, died on March 31 aged 93. He was born on July 24, 1898 Latest wills Weekend birthdays Rear-Admiral Garth Watson Rear-Admiral John Garth Watson, CB, admiral superintendent of Rosyth dockyard, 1963-6, and later secretary of the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE), died on March 31 aged 78. He was born on February 20, 1914 Althorp closed Paul Henreid Paul von Henreid, Austrian-born stage and screen actor who worked for many years in Hollywood, died in Santa Monica on March 29 in his eighties. He was born in Trieste, probably on January 10, 1908 Weekend royal engagements Service dinners Framework Knitters' Company Furniture Makers' Company Rafael Valls Rafael Valls, barrister and diplomat, died on March 30 aged 80. He was born on January 19, 1912 Roger Chapelain-Midy On This Day Cholera Careers fair cancelled as firms find little to offer The Times Crossword Puzzle No 18,884 Punch digests its last laugh Word-Watching AA Roadwatch Times Weathercall Weather National Telelink Index Weekend Money Profile Election worries take toll on pound The Pound Stock Market Interest Rates Currencies Gold North Sea Oil Retail Prices Heron pledge to sell £1bn in property assets Ronson pleads with banks for more time to repay his company's debts Tokyo bosses tighten their belts Survival guide Share service By our City Staff: Former Maxwell executive is ordered to pay £7m Auction lines Fidelity Investments Share Service Big brother True value No surrender Caution advised on Lloyd's action Li Ka-shing opens talks ottlnxying O&Y assets Write-off shrinks Invesco profits Scottish Television is poised to fulfil a 30-year-old prophecy Tempus Rumbelows comes back Picture Gallery Bérégovoy prepares to lose financial virtue Dalgety appoints a new chairman Worries at Atlas hit shares Isosceles director Liffe trade hits peak Japanese car curb likely Usher lifts its final Hartstone debt moves Petrocon bid ruling Brabant writedown Johnston Group blow Steetley spent £8.9m on its bid defence Business Roundup The fatal flaw - a love of making deals Martin Waller assesses the life of Gerald Ronson, brought down by a deal that was pocket money to him Business Profile: Gerald Ronson The music is still playing but the party looks over Week Ending Young Group shares hit 4p The Sunday Times John Charcol Investors remain nervous New York Major Changes Poll worries push shares lower Stock Market The Times Unit Trust Information Service Recent Issues Rawlins snubbed by SIB over rule on 'softing' Indian firms prepare for listing Index Survival guide for savers if Labour wins on Thursday Utilities Tax Allowances National Insurance National Savings Unit Trusts Credit where credit is due Comment Value gap Framlington Unit Trust PEP PEPS and BES M&G Financial Services Limited Independent Financial Adviser Briefings Save & Prosper Surrender's poor yield Paid up V Surrender Offer for Times readers The Times Portfolio Dealing Service Societies concede defeat Portfolio Platinum Bankruptcy bargains prove elusive Revenue to be told all Perpetual Portfolio Management Limited Prudential Fund The Equitable Life Before you look to your future,… Leeds Permanent Overseas Limited Save & Prosper the Investment House The account lingers on Entitled to exercise 'name only' option Action group aims to recover deposits lost in bank failure Prudential Investment Products Limited Cross to bear Debit entry Interest Rates Roundup Larger Lenders British Funds Nervous end to account Bath will have an extra incentive to win at Kingsholm Cup history unlikely to repeat itself Old Boys suffer identity crisis One final repeat is enough Wells to inspire the will to shock The next World Cup is casting a shadow Guide to the Weekend Fixtures Tomorrow Big-race protest rejected by jury Yachting Murray's fitness in doubt Hockey Liverpool Lingfield Park Murphy makes his protest over fences The Times guide to the Grand National: controversy on eve of the race Jack Sound ready to defy penalty Hereford Uttoxeter Results from Yesterday's Three Meetings The Times guide to the Grand National: the course and the runners Facts and figures from races past and present Colours Check and a to Z Analysis of the 40 Big-Race Contenders Cool Ground weighed to complete big double The Times guide to the Grand National: Mandarin previews the big race Mandarin Money Street can land hurdle treble Ladbrokes Racing Service Rapid Raceline Comprehensive form guide for all the Grand National contestants Case for Brown Windsor Grand National Runners and Riders BBC1 William Hill Longmuir and Harvey defeat the elements Oxford have the edge in a conflict of styles The Times guide to the 138th University Boat Race Faldo and Lyle frustrated by series of squandered putts Golf A course of twists and turns Nicklaus overhauled after sluggish start O'Reilly tumbles again but stays in the reckoning Today's Boat Race Crews Mansell humbles the opposition in practice session Motor Racing Brazilian Gp Suddenly Souness is spoilt for choice FA Cup Football Match that cries out for a goal Marine's omen may be a final beckoner Non-League Football Left back who is seldom left out Match-By-Match Guide to the Weekend's Matches For the Record Only Featherstone stand in way of rampant Wigan Rugby League Wimbledon ready for its last relay Athletics Law makes late entry into Olympic stakes Yachting Misses put out Davis Sport in Brief Cook knocked out Sports Service Fast freestyle Borg beaten Index Scudamore relishes his chance of a lifetime Lynch steps up to challenge on Cool Ground Docklands Express new Aintree favourite Lifeboat Close of play at the Oval Picture Gallery Wales to reject S Africa One-year deal for Tendulkar Spellbound Mercy plea Birmingham get £50,000 warning What a drag The Gleneagles Hotel Has the Grand National gone soft? The Grand National used to be the toughest steeplechase in the world. But since it was made safer, has it lost its appeal as a test of horse and rider? Former winner Marcus Armytage reports The toughest challenge of all is picking a winner 1642 and All that Half-Price Hotels Film Van Gogh in England Theatre Music Marie Helvin Model and Fashion Designer Evenings out Dance Art Salerooms Videos Bookings Love reborn in a warm climate Four women leading quietly desprate lives find enchantment in a medieval castle in a delicate romantic comedy being screened tomorrow Devilry over a liquid lunch Lynne Truss analyses Kingsley Amis's pickled taffies to find out what makes their ingredients so enjoyable yet so jarring Is there anybody there? A new BBC1 series looks at children's imaginary friends Guilty Secrets: Martin Jarvis Preview Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Pope and the Witch Natural Law Party NEC Multiple Classified Advertising Items Fresh as paint after 1,900 years under the ash Exhibition John Russell Taylor on a London show of art and artefacts from the roman city of Pompeii Let's not pretend Theatre Manslaughter BAC, Battersea The Sunday Times Wicked ways sound best Opera Les countes d'Hoffmann Covent Garden Snap, crackle but all too pop Theatre The Winter's Tale Lyric, Hammersmith Picture Gallery Audience with the bishop of bounce Pop Neil Sedaka Albert Hall Qualified rapture Concert LPO/Masur Festival Hall Jonathan Meades's Restaurant Guide Child-Friendly Jonathan Meades's Restaurant Guide Scenic Jonathan Meades's Restaurant Guide Wilkin & Sons Ltd Tiptree-Essex-England Run, rabbit, run Byways of the new Italy Jonathan Medas comes under double assault from Italian herbs and design Anyone for chocolate pasta? A Humberside company is aiming to convert Britons to the delights of fresh - and sweet - pasta dishes Delicate flavour of water Add flowers to water for a taste sensation, says Frances Bissell, The Times cook April bargain showers Jane MacQuitty offers some tasty recommendations for the new season to put you ahead of the value seekers Cordula Sharpen up with tots of balsamico Fast Food Flymo Events Glory to a manor reborn The National Trust plans to spend about £7.5 million on restoring a moated Tudor manor in Kent. Bea Cowan explains why Ill blows through my new lambing hut Farmer's Diary: Paul Heiney A turtledove by any other name Feather report How to beat the ballot box blues If you don't want to catch election fever, check in to some special hotel hospitality Nationwide guide to the war zones Roundheads and Cavaliers, Marston Moor and Naseby ... people and battlegrounds that Civil war Euro Break Hear the call to arms Hayter Multiple Display Advertising Items Shaikh & Son (Oriental Rugs) Ltd Multiple Display Advertising Items Craftsman carved Memorials Multiple Display Advertising Items Langley House Ltd Multiple Display Advertising Items The Mcgregor Group Factory Shop Medivac Plc Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Scotcade Sleep Mask Carnell Ltd Word Processing on the Amstrad Pcw Home & Garden Thompson & Morgon Countax Diary of Times Classified Flowers to greet a cuckoo Cardamine is worth a National Collection, Francesca Greenoak reports Multiple Display Advertising Items Roofshield UK Bramley's Nurseries Restaurateur and writer My Perfect Weekend We ask people in the public eye to reveal the private fantasies that would turn a weekend into 48 hours of pure magic Soft Soap The Best Selling Lawn Tractor in the Country Picture Gallery Active loving and caring, free professional man (60)… The Times PPP Beaumont Property CALA Martin Grant Homes (UK) Ltd Multiple Classified Advertising Items Taking French leave turns sour The recession means there are property bargains in France, Rachel Kelly writes - but beware the three candles Poetic justice done Home from home?: Mary Henderson Too many slates short of a decent roof Heap of the week: Stinsford, Dorset Where salmon leap House Hunter The Store House Snowdonia Getting a Grip on the Gavel How to Book Concise Crossword No 2757 The Times Winning Move Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Enjoy the good life at half the price Times readers can save up to 50 percent on a Hilton weekend break in Britain - and get two nights for the price of one on the Continent Weekend breaks in Britain and on the Continent Student Announcements Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items Legal Notices Multiple Classified Advertising Items BBC1 Satellite Fly a Ferrari Kite Variations Radio 1 BBC1 Satellite Healthcare Variations Radio 1 Bloody Civil War that Shaped Britain Men's Fashion Noble Caledonia Limited Opening Shots Lonely hearts and spare parts Down and best out Opening Shots A no-sell policy Opening Shots Contents Waite's Home Service Terry Waite is too big a man to lead an inconspicuous life, even if he wanted to. His 1,763 days as a hostage ensured his celebrity, but they cost him his job and tested him to the limit. Valerie Grove meets a man looking uneasily for the way forward. Photograph by Graham Wood Picture Gallery Desperately seeking Do people really want to turn newspaper into logs or listen to strangers' conversations? From the number of small ads, Joe Joseph writes, it seems they do Jameson I'm Going to Genoa Swingin party With one community becoming déclassé and the other gentrified, Streatham and Tooting will be under the political microscope this week. Alan Franks examines the changing face of two key constituencies-and the mood of their voters. Photographs by Matt Ford Dealing out a royal flush Fact took its cue from fiction when Michael Dobbs's thriller, House of Cards, was televised. Now he is taking on the Palace, Carol Sarler writes Garden Machinery Association Symbol of Service Second that emotion The Sound of Young America is back, with a new generation singing and marketing music alongside the original Motown stars. And while the rhythms may be more modern, writes Alan Jackson, they have their roots firmly in Hitsville, USA How much legroom do you need in business class? Air Canada Can Cambridge ever win the boat race? Winning is a way of life for the Oxford crew, defeat is ingrained in their opponents. Micheal Woodhead met eight men who think they can turn the tide on the Thames today. Photographs by Mitch Jenkins Alfred Dunhill Wanted Raise a glass to the English revolution The civil war that broke out in England 350 years ago is to be marked by a travelling exhibition sponsored by The Times. John Morrill assesses the influence on our national character of ten years of bitter fighting The freedom of thought - and publication - that followed the war bequeathed a folk memory of 'teeming liberty' Who said size doesn't matter? The days of chaps bragging about the enormity of their cars are over: in the sensitive, sensible Nineties, it's what you do with it that counts, and in the latest small motors you can take your pleasure from breaking the gridlock rather than the speed limit The Smallest Cars You Can Buy No Title A vintage year for a safe investment A taste of life's trial and error Gut Feelings Clement Freud prepares a dish for Stephen Fry Wharfside Danish Furniture Magic by Mail A heavenly host of buddhas The spiritual and cultural riches of Sri Lanka, not to mention the more earthly pleasures, help Michael Watkins to forget there is a war. Photographs by Bruno Barbey Travel notes Rocky: the greatest moving picture show The drama of the scenery and the re-created sets take your breath away: Brian James catches a train on the Canadian Pacific railway route Noble Caledonia Limited Rohan Travel notes Overseas Travel Round the World Special Interests Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items UK Holidays Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Twickers World Multiple Display Advertising Items The Times Multiple Display Advertising Items Cornwall & Devon Overseas Travel Czechoslovakia Multiple Classified Advertising Items Crystal Daniels in the lion's den The story of Jewish Italians under fascism is one of bitter contradictions. Fernanda eberstadt on a fearful account of sympathy and persecution, told through the lives of five families Benevolence and Betrayal Five Italian Jewish Families Under Fascism By Alexander Stille Jonathan Cape. £20 Books Drowning in a sea of anthologies The Oxford Book of the Sea Edited by Jonathan Raban Oup. £17.95 War from BC to BBC Command on the Western Front By Robin prior and Trevor Wilson Blackwell £40 White Heat The New Warfare, 1914-18 By John Terraine Leo Cooper, £22.50 the Mamoth Book of True War Stories Raising wedded blisters The Republic of Love Carol Shields Fourth Estate, £14.99 The Last Honeymoon Constable, £13.99 Where have all the critics gone? Georgian London/architecture in Britain 1530-1830 Pimlico, £15 paperback/Penguin, £25 Poetry How to ape the heights of bard manners Shakespeare's Insults Educating Your Wit mainsail Press, Queens' College, Cambridge, £6.95 Green, but not naïve Cruise to fine cuisine Bridge by Listener Crossword No. 3144: Pillars of State by Mass The Games Page The Times 'Mother taught me to be proud' A Childhood: Frances Barber Lands' End Russell & Bromley Picture Gallery The Ultimate Riding Machine Cuts above the rest Double-breasted power suits and mean-business braces are out. Today's working wardrobe is flexible and singularly understated, says Elizabeth Walker. Photographs by Mike Owen Picture Gallery Seiko Alfred Dunhill Wanted Love me, love A saggy sweater, much-loved tie, worn-in jacker... woe betide any woman who tries to part a chap from his sartorial old faithful. says Victoria Mather. photographs by Justin Pumfrey Alfred Dunhill Wanted Selfridges Free & Easy Alfred Dunhill Wanted Tailor-made to suit yourself Alistair McAlpine has overcome his youthful aversion to fittings to become a staunch defender of all things bespoke. Photograph by Paul Massey Personal services Marion Hume and Belinda Morris advise the elegant man on how to keep himself dapper DAKS Simpson Smoking CA Health Departments' Nicotine Uses Cancer Little things that count Whether in your city slicker stripes or off-duty crumpled best, it's the details that make the difference. A pair of cufflinks, a waistcoat, a scarf or even a carefully chosen pen can add a touch of wit and the stamp of individuality to any outfit. Sarah Newton takes her pick of the best. Photographs by Victor Watts Erruti 1881 "Our New Bottle, because You Can't Always… Picture Gallery Cream crackers How far is a chap prepared to go in order to look his best? jonathan Futrell faces facts Sisley The Times Style Secrets Four gurus of men's fashion reveal all to Liz smith, who discovers that, despire their disparate designs, they all support the theory that you can judge a gentleman by the shine on his shoes. Illustrations by David Downton Picture Gallery Breitling

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