News from 25/04/1992
1992; Gale Group;
Autores
Srikumar Sen, Boxing Correspondent, Tim Judah and James Bone, David Dale, Sara McConnell Personal Finance Writer, Conor D. Burns Chairman, Phil Yates, David Marsland, Liz Dolan, Lynne Greenwood, Iris Murdoch, Paul Channon, Paul Heiney, Clifford Longley, Colin Haycraft Chairman, Patricia Davies, Zahid Hussain, John Peter, John Vincent, Jane MacQuitty, Simon Barnes, J. N. P. Watson, Neil Bennett, Ross Tieman, Industrial Correspondent, Philip Howard, Hilary Finch, F. M. Pert, Ian Murray, James Bone, Melinda Wittstock, Media Correspondent, Carol Leonard, Lynne Truss, C. A. Clark, Richard Streeton, John Best, Stuart Jones Football Correspondent, Tom Walker, Jemima Harrison, Gerald Davies, Ray Clancy, Joe Joseph, Francesca Greenoak, Martin Fletcher, Phyllis James, Marsha Dunstan, Brenda Parry, Stuart Jones, Bruce Clark, Gordon Bowyer, Robert Heeson, Ruth Gledhill, Louise Taylor, Kenneth Grange, Michael Hofmann, Richard Evans, Racing Correspondent, Nick Nuttall Technology Correspondent, Candida Crewe, Robin Young, Alan Hamilton, Nicholas Watt, Jenny MacArthur, Lord Rees-Mogg, Michael Clark, Philip Robinson, Michael Thompson Chairman, Frances Bissell, David Hands, Holme, Joanna Gibbon, Maggie Gee, Richard Hanford, Peter Barnard, Edward Celiz, J. M., L. T., Alison Johnson, Jack Waterman, Alex McWhirter, Robert Blake, Nicole Swengley, Rachel Kelly Property Correspondent, Robert Runcie, Arnold Wolfendale, David Miller, Rupert Bruce, C. Veronica Wedgwood, Alison Roberts, Robin Oakley, Political Editor, Kerry Gill, Raymond Keene, Jonathan Prynn, Alan Lee, Cricket Correspondent, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, John Grigg, Jonathan Braude, Richard Evans, Monique S. Viner, Hugh Casson, Jill Sherman, Richard Owen, John Bell, Sue Mayo, Roger Boyes, Ian Ross, Mike Brayshaw, Alastair Robertson, David Lane, Brian Beel, Keith MacKlin, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Leslie Gooday, Clare Wentworth-Stanley, Jamie Dettmer, Adam Fresco, Christopher Thomas, David Young, J. R. Batty, Sara McConnell, Kendall S. Harmon, Christopher Walker, Jonathon Porritt, Colin Narbrough, Economics Correspondent, James Wolfensohn, R. D. Hearn, Sir Giles Shaw, Peter Brooke, Ted Hughes, Mr Lemon, Patrick Robertson Secretary, Peter Victor, Michael Phillips, Michael Cain, David Sinclair, Nigel Hawkes Science Editor, Benedict Nightingale, Jonathan Meades, Jill Sherman, Political Correspondent, Simon Rose, Wolfgang MüNCHAU, European Business Correspondent, Anne McElvoy, John Phillips, Owen Silver, Roy Foster, Judy Froshaug, William Golding, Andrew Longmore, Tennis Correspondent, Clement Freud, Mary Dejevsky, Christopher Irvine,
ResumoPatten risks political career on Hong Kong Tory chairman looks forward to challenge as colony's last ruler Gould still seeking backers as leadership deadline nears Index Women welcomed to join masons' open house Hunt on for dark secret of universe 500 feared lost in ruins of city Explosions that zig-zagged through the streets of Guadalajara left a devastation reminiscent of the Somme, reports Martin Fletcher How Green was my Valour? Unicef UK By a Staff Reporter: Woman sacked for affair with boss wins job fight Burghley snuff bottles stolen The Sunday Times Walking tall to a record Cook urges review of leader contest Hughes finds fault with book on Plath Sister on hunger strike Workshop sale Souness setback Charity choice Times winner High-rise colony looks out over an uncertain future Chris Patten faces a momentous task as governor of Hong, Kong, Britain's last significant colony, as it nears a turning point in its history, Ray Clancy writes East beckons man who shunned life on fringe of politics Profile: Chris Patten Bradford & Bingley's Rates of Interest Rolls-Royce lifestyle for a Morris Minor driver Pay and Duties Outpost welcomes Major's choice Reaction Europ assistance Nissan Dillons takes sales lead in book price war Hint of recovery as house sales increase An affair of state The Sunday Times Octopus proves it is no sucker Picture Gallery Halifax BA sued by crew who saved pilot By a Staff Reporter: Gun victim s organs given for transplant Avis features Valuxhall cars Picture Gallery Hospital charities shunned Short edges towards place in chess final Travellers pay cost of holiday credit £2.3 m book Obscene discs Iraqis poisoned VC auctioned Body found Freddie safe Tories scramble to retain Speakers robes Betty Boothroyd leads the field, but the Conservatives will spend the weekend searching frantically for a single challenger. Jill Sherman reports on the battle and profiles the contenders The five candidates vying for chair Betty Boothroyd Terence Higgins Paul Channon is seen by his campaign team as the most likely compromise candidate should Tories fail to rally round Sir Giles Shaw or Terence Higgins. Mir Channon Sir Gilles Shaw is expected to recieve the widest bacing from Tory MPs, althought he still may not get sufficient support to be an effective challenger Britannia Building Society Rhondda digs for gold in history Walkouts end Bonn's strike-free decades Germany's 5% pay-rise ceiling crumbles Austria seeks a new image of acceptability With the embarrassing Waldheim era drawing to a close, the race is on the elect a replacement in the Hofburg, Anne McElvoy writes from Vienna Worldwide Express Italian deputies elect speakers Protest shows frailty of Walesa's power Economic reforms in Warsaw and Prague are being hampered by their presidents' lack of clout, Roger Boyes, East Europe Correspondent, writes No Title Romanov burial approved Soviet Mata Han falls on hard times UN rules out peace force for Bosnia Mujahidin agree on power-sharing deal in interim council Bradford & Bingley Building Society Kabul's political prisoners set free Christopher Thomas sees the gate swing open at Afghanistan's notorious Pulechacki jail Gaddafi spurns Arab calls to quit Libyans enjoying economic perestroika are critical of the handling of the Lockerbie affair, Christopher Walker writes US court rejects Tyson bail plea People Lunn Poly Rangoon purges moderates (Reuter): Briton hanged (AFP): War costed (Reuter): Village raided (Reuter): Dealers fought (Reuter): Enquiry sought (AFP): Heavy penalty (Reuter): Age brushoff Separatists rally over Quebec poll Rushdie fatwa remains Israelis protest (Reuter): Judges sacked Victim buried (Reuter): Tarnished gold (Reuter): Jailers tricked 'Prince' Elvis triumphs Picture Gallery Qantas Barry welcomed as prodigal son Clifford Longley A marriage of true minds has little to do with law Philip Howard …and moreover Fitting the cosmic jigsaw Arnold Wolfendale, Astronomer Royal, assesses the new evidence on the universe's origins Reputation's flighty bubble John Grigg on the changes in popular taste which consign famous writers to obscurity Grace preserve us Diary Nor iron bars a cage Diary Elegant farewell Diary No fun, minister Dairy Serious Governing Splitting Asunder Fun with Planning Thatcher legacy in perspective Wary walking in the countryside Tyndale anniversary` Expo 1970 recalled Serbian campaign Rights of audience Independent voters Minister's views on fear of hell Contract bridge Eastern promise Court Circular Weekend birthdays St Francis' College Letchworth Service dinners Dinners Edinburgh medal Announcements Multiple Classified Advertising Items Picture Gallery Weekend royal engagements Banquet Service reception Multiple Classified Advertising Items Church news Appointments Multiple Classified Advertising Items University news Multiple Classified Advertising Items Memorial service Memorial concert Multiple Classified Advertising Items Forthcoming marriages Anniversaries The Times Guide to the Single European Market Christening Personal Appears in Weekend Times Section Page Word-Watching Wycliffe College, Gloucestershire St David's College, Llandudno Michael Green Michael Green, former executive editor of The Banker, died on April 19 aged 77. He was born in Manchester on November 28,1914 Charles Ginsburg Charles P. Ginsburg, whose development of the first practical video recorder revolutionised the television industry, died in hospital in Eugene, Oregon, On April 9 aged 71 Church services tomorrow First Sunday after Easter Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Constantine Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh (Alex) Constantine, KBE, CB, DSO, a former Commander-in-Cheif of Flying Training Command, died on April 16 aged 83. He was born on May 23,1908 Ian Dow Ian Dow, theatre production manager, died on April, aged 76, in Norwich and Norfolk Hospital. He was born on January 3,1916 Martin Williams Martin Williams, American jazz critic and cultural historian, has died in Washington aged 67. He was born on Auguest 9,1924 Appreciation Col Maurice Buckmaster Play about Churchill Rejected Aids virus carried in mother's milk The Times Crossword No 18,902 Picture Gallery Weather Burberrys Profile Times writer wins award Bank denies Lloyds talks The Pound Stock Market Interest Rates Currencies Gold North Sea Oil Retail Prices Line of action Bonus misery Morton offers shares to ease tunnel dispute Eurotunnel rights issue before passenger trains run would be 'last resort' Trade deficit and retail sales offer little cheer O'Reilly tops pay list in America High technology Barclays chief to 'step down' Knight Williams Direct saving Health hazard Cost factor Trustees try to save Maxwell pensions IMF plans entity of ex-Soviet republics The Merchants Trust PLC GM plans $2bn share offering Western German economy rebounds with 4% growth Names form new action group New-look McKechnie waits for upturn Tempus Broadside by Dowty Ifico deeper in red Acorn back in profit Jourdan pegs payout Reed chief's salary cut Five Oaks cuts losses Forte adds Balmoral to upmarket range Business Roundup Industry marches on to the good old days Week Ending The fix-it king everyone wants by his side Business Profile: James Wolfensohn The international corporate financier tells Carol Leonard that being an immigrant is the key to his success EC motor 'pact' with Japan is in doubt The Sunday Times Northern Rock Fimbra Unit-Linked Insurance Investments Bid talk sends Lasmo climbing Stock Market Save & Prosper Major Changes Recent Issues Inflation edges up in EC Starquest win Holt advances Clayton's loss Ramco dives Downiebrae cut Wall Street Investors face burden of funding financial shield Who should pay the price of failure? Sara McConnell reports No net under unauthorised company All quiet on the housing front Comment Prudential Personal Equity Plans Scheme gives protection to individuals The Equitable Life The M&G Group Halifax insurance move criticised Barclaycard fee rises Health plan to increase charges Hambro Clearing Limited Dealing offer for readers Save & Prosper The Equitable Life Technology back on high Save & Prosper Fidelity Investments GA sells direct on house insurance Survey points to lower bonuses Perpetual Portman Building Society Cheltenham & Gloucester Building Society Gartmore Interest Rates Roundup CGT Allowance, March 1992 Portfolio Save & Prosper Commission rates are too high Quiet member of hole in wall gang Debit's delight Buoyant end to account The Times Unit Trust Information Service FT-SE 100 Volumes London Traded Options Major Indices Commodities London Financial Futures Money Markets Other Sterling Rates Money Rates (%) Dollar Spot Rates Guide to the Weekend Fixtures Bath remain on track to take title for third time Rugby union officials try to avoid embarrassment by covering all angles on deciding day of championship Match-By-Match Guide Tomorrow Adams and Trick set the pace Saracens intend to set a stiff final examination Saracens, the north London club led by John Buckton, who meet Bath today, are talented but have rarely received due recognition, David Hands reports Swansea prefer to settle it swiftly The Times Sports Service Cauthen's plea to owners of Arazi Cool Relation for second qualifier Clarke has last trials before Badminton Equestrianism Mandarin: Worcester Mandarin: Hexham Echoes of Pas Seul in Sandown tribute Mandarin: Market Rasen Results from Yesterday's Four Meetings Rapid Raceline Mandarin: Topsham Bay to give Marsh his third Whitbread Rodrigo De Triano pleases Piggott in Manton workout Mandarin: Ripon Mandarin, Thunderer: Sandown Park Mandarin, Thunderer: Leicester Irish Memory to frank Craven form Essex favoured to flourish before changes are rung Cricket West Indies wavering in the search for a united stand The Wigan brothers who are a code apart Pieterse wins at sluggish pace South Africa's integration looks on track for success Frustrated Stich fails to find his elusive touch Tennis Widnes in danger of an early exit Rugby League Landslide victory Student Sport Ambassador seeks the grand exit Stuart Jones, football correspondent, pays tribute to the goal-scoring talents of Gary Lineker, who today plays his last home match for Tottenham Little's efforts loom large The Race for Promotion Marathon selectors keep policy In Brief Bottled pride Hill wins award Butler hits form Cullen on target Mayock selected Panthers pounce For the Record Match-By-Match Guide Miller escapes a lost weekend by sharing the lead Golf Eubank can cash in against Jarvis Boxing Conner left adrift Yachting Lineker laments football's falling standards Ferguson needs next twist to go United's way Leeds can settle title race if rivals lose Top of Table Action Trousers Warriors of the fancy art Old guard wilt in Crucible heat Mickey taker Downs and out Was joined when the Count said amusingly:'You ugly imbecile. Why don't you get tough with me? Candid camera Nothing upsets Ebdon's course Just the ticket The Miaoucallan? Picture Gallery The green guerrillas Jonathan Porritt salutes the 'ordinary people' who spend their lives protecting our future Inside Film The Complete Aviation Service Theatre Dance Music Exhibitions Maggie Gee, Author of "where are the Snows" Evenings out Salerooms Videos Bookings Lawrence after the Lean times Lynne Truss on the usual mixture of ham and beefcake that mostly makes up the traditional Easter hero sandwich Review A question of whose land is it anyway? Channel 4 tackles the growing battle between walkers and landowners Tuscany Preview Page&moy Holidays La Scala Philharmonic Orchestra Ashkenazy Marcus Evans for the Hospitality Group Dionne Warwick Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Reflected Glory Charley's Aunt Denton & Warner's Multiple Classified Advertising Items Seattle takes the grunge Is it heavy metal? Is is thrash? No, it's grunge rock. David Sinclair reports the dernier cri in loud music Rock Funkily far-flung flings Folk/rock Capercaillie Mean Fiddler Slip of the Tongue Authors? The Sunday Times The Original mile-high club Ambling nostalgia with no bite Theatre White Woman Street Bush Doyly Carte Opportunities are missed and a pretender unmasked Opera Don Giovanni Theatre Royal, Glasgow Good pickings along the Bush trail Jonathan Meades explores a promising suburb that's ripe for restauration Saturday Rendezvous Multiple Classified Advertising Items All Box No Replies Should Be Sent to: Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Country Partners Bureau Drawing down the Moon Multiple Classified Advertising Items Video Encounters Invitation only Jonathan Meades's Restaurant Guide Fine Wines Multiple Classified Advertising Items Yucky 401sh lady with 2 revolting daughters and… Why Wait The Times Fine Puddings Fax 071-782 7828 Abia Dinnermates All in for a spicy celebration Frances Bissell, The Times cook, suggests a cross-cultural weekend with the vibrant flavours of the Mediterranean Rhônes score a hat-trick Drought produces another great vintage, Jane Best Buys Haute cuisine flies higher Virgin Atlantic has asked a leading chef to Check that label before you eat tuna Kind Food: Alison Johnson See the light with rustic revival Candian folk furniture is inspiring a 1990s look. Nichole Swengley reports Saleroom Antique Engagement Rings of Distinction, Quality &… Stamps Wanted S&H Jewell Ltd Butterfly Museum Closed down Bliithners Young & Stephens Selling Antiques? Multiple Display Advertising Items Blond Fine Art British Antique Furnitures Rastorers Association British Antique Furnitures Restorers Association The British Antique Furniture Restorers Association A. E. Booth and Son 9 High Street Ewell C. T. Bristow Neil Trinder Furniture Conservation Victorian Watercolours Hettich Restoration of Fine Furniture Multiple Display Advertising Items Philip Hawkins Simon Marsh Restoration Furnace Mill Lamberhurst Sewills Lots Road Galleries Westminster Antiques Fair Toll rings for Welsh gold The metal chosen for generations of royal wedding bands has run out Diary Auctions Berkeley Square Gallery The Times Why the green grass of home turns me pale Farmer's Diary Belles of the ball More women than ever are donning their football boots, Lynne Greenwood reports Tuning the reeds Feather report Hayter Events Picture Gallery Where to Walk Bradford The prosperous wool era has passed, but Alan Hamilton finds a wealth of museums and culture - mostly for free Best of Britain No tast beyound the table The French are the undoubted experts when it comes to food, but may English find their hotel décor unpalatable The Field Where to Eat Where to Stay Golfers - Fed up with Muddy Trousers? Medivac Pioneer The Classical Keyboard Collection The London Wall Bed Company A Real 1.5 Carat Sapphire Seymour Shirts Multiple Display Advertising Items The McGregor Group Foamplan Rubber & Plastics Ltd Allergy Relief Products Ltd Pearl Spectacle Chain Factory Shop The Stockbag Company The Government Auction Handbook Multiple Display Advertising Items BMS Ltd., Woods of Morecambe Ltd Stylus Furniture Made for You The 'Sheila Maid' Cosyfeet Multiple Display Advertising Items A dose of ocean goodness Francesca Greenoak considers the merits of seaweed and other fertilisers - but do we give our plants more than they need? Home & Garden The Times Best Buy Link Stakes Solaris Toro Weekend Tips Cowslip's Fiesta Chairman, Broadcasting Standard Council 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 Bedding Mums Multiple Display Advertising Items Original Box-Sash Windows Roofshield UK Overseas Property De Particulier a Particulier Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items Arthur Rathbone Kitchens Limited The Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items France Multiple Classified Advertising Items London Property Multiple Classified Advertising Items Kent Abbotts Country Houses Multiple Classified Advertising Items Living up to a legacy Picture Gallery Listed labour of love Des res if a little derelict Dreams made to measure Heap of the week: Ruperra, Gwent A noble survivor Flay school for grown-ups Joanna Gibbon visits the college where adult and children learn together The Times Announcements Multiple Display Advertising Items The Samaritans Multiple Display Advertising Items Diary of Times Classified Multiple Display Advertising Items The Royal Air Force Benevolent Fund Announcements Multiple Classified Advertising Items Times Newspapers Ltd. Holiday events Multiple Classified Advertising Items Picture Gallery Multiple Classified Advertising Items BBC 1 Satellite Multiyork Furniture Variations Radio 1 BBC 1 Satellite BBC World Service Radio 1 Variations Saturday Review William drops by and you instinctively loosen up Opening Shots Three into four: won't go Opening Shots Tickets for the council? Opening Shots Just one of the commons Opening Shots Contents The all-rounder takes a new guard Away from world sporting areans and the covers of glossy magazines, the elegant Imran Khan has ambitious plans to help the underprivileged people of Pakistan. Kate Muir talks to the cricketing warrior on his home ground. Photographs by Paul Massey Canon (U. K.) Ltd Picture Gallery Kenwood Voyages Jules Verne Lawn Flite A pitch for the victims Pakistan's first cancer appeal is Imran Khan's response ot the death of his mother Science and spirit The spectacular successes of the modern scientific method have made it the final arbiter of truth in our age. But Bryan Appleyard asks, what of human values? Are we in danger of losing our souls? Illustration by Robert Heesom Picture Gallery Halfords First we protect the car from the environment Audi Drop the dead Dylan Dylan Thomas wrote Rebecca's Daughters in 1948. In 1991 the film was finally made, somewhat updated and rather less wordy, Simon Rose reports Wrinkles that hold the secret of eternal youth The woman who wants to stay young, sane and happy should turn her back on the boyish New Man, and fall into the arms of experience. Sally Brampton discovers Martyr for the common tongue Philip I Ioward pays tribute to William Tyndale, the forgotten ghost in the English language The Tea Council Tuning in to rural citizens' band Alastair Robertson looks at the hard facts of country life, as exposed on the airwaves by the Village, Photographs by Mark Harrison Polo Mint Fashion The strength of Ralph Lauren's empire is his single-minded vision of classic design, he tells Liz Smith, Photographs by Tim Bret-Day Neff (UK) Ltd. To Test the Perfomance of our Oven, we Bake 61 Trays… Backing an old favourite The regal hoppegarten racecourse is being revived with fresh blood and corporate sponsorship, and its previously divided German supporters brought together. But will east enjoy racing with west? Report by Anne McElovy. Photographs by Tom Stoddart Penfolds Checking into check up To improve standars, hotels are using a mystery guest's investigative skills, John Vincent writes Economical with the tooth Gut Feelings Clement Freud Squelching to Tibet in muddy exile In the foothills of the Himalayas in northern India, Rohinton Mistry fulfils a dream of visiting his aunt and uncle in the remote village where the Dalai Lama and his followers have established an expartriate colony. Unfortunately, it was the rainy season. Illustration by Paul Hogarth Varig Houses of the Lord Working holidays offer a new way of participating in the of Britain's cathedrals, Carol Wright discovers Travel EuroSites Special Interests Twickers World Journey Latin America Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items North Cyprus UK Holidays Multiple Classified Advertising Items Springfield Country Hotel English Country Cottages Palace Court Take a Break in Unspoilt Dorset! Norfolk Country Cottages Country House Hotel Havana great time A chapter of hidden risks Alex McWhirter on booking with American airlines which have failed Harvey Elliott looks at post-election travel Itineraries Monster yachting Bohemian rhapsody* Itineraries Early sunshine Itineraries Rohan Winter Sports Crystal Holidays Highbullen Hotel The Royal York & Faulkner Hotel Bovey House Hotel Multiple Classified Advertising Items Sweetcombe Cottage Holidays Multiple Classified Advertising Items Self Catering Gites, Villas, Cottages in France Multiple Classified Advertising Items Catch a Breath of Spring at Lea Hill Multiple Classified Advertising Items Overseas Travel Trailfinders Multiple Classified Advertising Items Atol IATA/ABTA Overseas Travel Rockford Travels Barwell Travel The Heart of Classical India Vacances en Campagne The Magic of Italy Ilios Island Holidays Ltd Boating Holidays in France & Holland Netherlands Railways India Columbus Travel Insurance Czechoslovakia Skyways South Africa Longwood holidays Viva air Spain - Seville Expo '92 Austravel NewHorizons Dragging Supermac through the wind The MacMillans By Richard Davenport-Hines Heinemann, £18.50 Thrillers The Empress File By John Camp HarperCollins, £14.99 Freedom to talk Yours till the End By Jackie and Sunnie Mann Heineman No picture postcard Sydney By Jan Morris Viking, £16.99 The origin of the spirits` Who's who of World Religion Edited by John Hinnells MacMillan, £39.50 Maud , bad, and dangerous to ignore The Gonne-Yeats Letters 1893-1938 Always Your Friend Edited by Anna MacBride White and A. Norman Jeffares Hutchinson. £25 Sponsored by computer manufactures NCR Limited Gloom with a view Storey's Lives Poems 1951-1991 Picture Gallery Paperbacks City of the Mind By Penelope Lively Penguin, £5.99 A question of soul Has science, the great force of the century, robbed us of our spirituality or is it our best hope of salvation? Bridge by Listener Crossword No 3147: A Six Decker for the Admiralty? Chess by Raymond Keene 'I Ionged to be at home with my books 'I longed to be at home with my books' A Childhood: Michael Holroyd Mountfield FIAT Tempra
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