News from 29/09/1992
1992; Gale Group;
Autores
Srikumar Sen, Boxing Correspondent, Victoria McKee, Julia Llewellyn Smith, Christopher Boulter, Jon Ashworth, Sean Hand, Mark Newman, Barry Supple, Sir Ronald Melville, Sheila Gunn, Political Correspondent, Peter Riddell, Political Editor, Norman Howell, Isabel Mant, Philip Howard, Alan Fersht, James Waghorn, Ian Murray, Jeremy Kingston, Barry Turner, James Bone, Sally Hughes, Melinda Wittstock, Media Correspondent, Jane Killick, Colin Colebrook, Debra Isaac, Stuart Jones Football Correspondent, Ray Clancy, Joe Joseph, Peter Brown, Jeremy Laurance, Health Services Correspondent, Mitchell Platts, Lin Jenkins and Ray Clancy, Mitchell Platts, Golf Correspondent, Andrew Ashworth, John Davis, Alan Lorimer, Patricia Tehan, Ruth Gledhill, Caroline Sullivan, George Gair, Roger Graef, Robert Leslie, Robert Seely, David Matthews, Douglas Broom, Libby Purves, Michael Evans, Defence Correspondent, Richard Ford Home Correspondent, Alan Hamilton, Robin Young, Philip Goldenberg, Nicholas Buser, Michael Clark, John O'Leary, Philip Robinson, Michael Hamlyn, Charles Bremner, Khalid M. Shafi, John Bain, John Percival, Peter Barnard, Derwent May, Ann Lloyd, John Phillips and Bill Frost, Lin Jenkins and Helen Johnstone, Harvey Elliott, Air Correspondent, Angelos Angelides, Edward Fennell, Richard Cork, Adam Lebor, Jill Sherman and Robert Morgan, George Brock, Robert Kirley, Janet Daley, Nicholas Harling, Lindsay Cook Money Editor, Winifred Tumim, David Miller, Philip Webster and Peter Riddell, John Mendes, John O'leary and Matthew D'ancona, A. Toleafoa, Catherine Sampson, Marcus Binney, Kerry Gill, Jonathan Prynn, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, Paul Evans, Louise Taylor and Ian Ross, Craig Brown, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Alix Ramsay, Jonathan Prynn and Douglas Broom, Davina Lloyd, Beryl Dixon, Nicholas Wood and Arthur Leathley, David Powell, Athletics Correspondent, Barry Pickthall, Shirley Porter, Jamie Dettmer, Robin Stacey, Joanna Pitman, David Young, John Goodbody, Neil Lyndon, William Pools, Christopher Walker, Colin Narbrough, Economics Correspondent, Mel Webb, George Hill, Matthew Parris, George Kirya, Michael Seely, Scrivenor, Ridley, Sarah Jane Checkland, Richard Beeston, Philip Webster, David Sinclair, Michael J. Hendrie, Astronomy Correspondent, S. Gratwick, Glenwyn Benson, Sam Kiley, Nicky Willmore, Anne McElvoy, Mildred Bateman, Alan Jackson, Ian Murray and Charles Bremner, Colin Campbell, Mac Margolis, Peter Robinson, William Brent, A. B. Ducker, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Andrew Longmore, Tennis Correspondent, Christopher Irvine, William Conner, Joanna Tudor,
ResumoLamont cools war of words with Germany Ministers snub 2-speed Europe Labour backs Smith all the way Index Life & Times Freshers Week Irish interest rates up Outrage halts celebration to honour 50th birthday of Hitler's V2 rocket 35 Britoiis killed in Himalayan air crash Missionaries and children among Airbus dead Churchill-Coleman to take over fraud squad What Hope for the Poor? Drugs ring smashed Killers freed Paras charged Iliescu wins Asprey 'Mystery of History Palace and Treasury discuss cutting royal payments £7m cocaine haul as police smash ring in five countries Barclays How drug barons carved up the world James Bone reports on the unholy aliance between Italy and the Colombian drug cartels BBC Tv faces £2 0m cuts to avert deficit The Times expands in new format Sheffield 'misled' on £10m games bill News in Brief Councils miss the mark Breakfast show debut Malaria death ruling 3 . 9m jobless claim Riverbus rescue hope NHS trust fined £7,500 Zoo chiefs to resign 70 opera jobs to go Russians sail on Family dies on return mercy flight 'It is the most terribly sad thing, Travel is always something dangerous for our workers' Fear grips pilots on Kathmandu descent Lorry driver, 83, jailed for killing two in Crach Pitchford ghosts go under the hammer Wilding Adventure playground on FO's warning list Blacks and Asians worst hit by heart disease deaths BT Picture Gallery Charity trustees 'in dark' Radio 4 fans threaten long wave of protest Brothers Roux in the soup! The Casual Observer May Not See why, when the 7… Lord Taylor warns new jailing rules may backfire National Westminster Bank Pets find themselves on the psychologist 's couch Patten claims support as union attacks white paper Commission blames ministers for delays in council reform Government timetable for change is unrealistic, Douglas Broom reports 'Sexist farmers dig in 1992 Goldsmiths' Fair Woman in wheelchair murdered News in Brief Sex calls denied Case settled Juice cleared 1,000 helpers Rider fined Trout taken Hunger strike Knife rape Toy siege The Casual Observer May Not Understand why, Having… The New 8 Cylinder 7 Series …But Then, the Driver of the New 8 Cylinder Bmw 7… Gould's decline and fall removes a dissenting voice from the shadow cabinet Bryan Gould's disageeement with officialLabour policy finally gave him the choice of jumping- or being pushed. philp webster and peter Riddell writte Victory for Smith as delegates reject vote on Maastricht Tory-bashing fills conference vacuum Picture Gallery Election favours new generation Brown calls for tough curbs on currency speculators Parly agenda Japan party baron gets token fine in cash scandal Chinese back boy Buddha Comforts of Tokyo go abroad with troops TEEStSIDE Peking to help end hostility Rabin calls for summit with Assad Killers remain unrepentant as Pretoria grants amnesty Heroes and villains walk free after de Klerk and Mandela reach talks accord President de klerk is steering a precarioud path as he attempts to accommodate both the Anc and Chief Buthelezi, the zulu leader, writted Kuwait stock market reopens after war Brazil awaits Collor's fate as congress prepares for showdown vote Perot keeps US waiting President reassures Buthelezi Free Angola election tests UN role in fostering democracy Saddam opponents seek help from UN News in Brief Bodies found Flood toll rises (AFP): Border fence (Reuter): Guzman trial (Reuter): Sure faith (AP): Onassis claim (AP): Humble order Bonn and Paris prepare for day Britain backs out Germany and France plan mini Europe-on-the-Rhine amid denials of two-speed strategy Ian Murray in Bonn and charles Bremner in paris report on Franco German German Coniugency plans for a Minimonetary union in Europe Ministers jostle for place in Europe 's financial fast track Former communists hold sway Romanian elections Franco-German TV provides dead parrot's perch Russia reinforces army as Tajik unrest grows Our Foreign Staff: Serbs prevent British troops from reaching battle zones When marriage turns bloody Should the law punish wives who are driven too far, asks janet Daley …and moreover What shall we do about the poor? Both Labour and Tories ignore the underelass, the moral failure of our time Matthew parris on how pocerty became a dirty world And then there's wealth creation The Times Diary Teachers' favourite The Times Diary Out of sight The Times Diary Ending the Euro-Schism Nouvelle Cuisine Angiaise Beyond Opting out London clean-up Control of squirrels Letters to the editor that are intended for… Commonwealth library threat Issues of judgment and ethics raised by Mellor case Coming to the defence of scientific research councils Court independence Judges' pensions Boarding schools Court Circular Today 's royal engagements Announcements Memorial services Picture Gallery Anniversaries Clockmakers ' Company Constructors ' Company Latest wills Judge retires Birthdays today Luncheons Service dinner Meeting Forthcoming marriages Personal Appeass in Life & Times Section-Page WORD-WATCHiNG Marriages Dinner Andrew Breach Sir Francis Watson Sir Francis Watson, KCVO, FBA, FSA, director of the Wallace Collection from 1963 until his retirement in 1974, died in Wiltshire on September 27 aged 85. He was born in Worcestershire on August 24,1907 Edward Warburg Edward Mortimer Morris Warburg American philanthropist and benefactor of the arts, died of heart failure in Norwalk, Connecticut, on September 21 aged 84. He was born in White Plains, New York, on June 5,1908 Ralph Manheim Ralph Frederick Manheim, linguist and translator, died at his home in Cambridge on September 26 aged 85. He was born in New York City on April 4,1907 The sky at night in October Astronomy Sir Robert Micklethwait Appreciations Adel Rootstein Colin Humphreys Woking Crematorium The woking crematorium first opened in 1879 but was closed by the local authorities. It was used sporadically thereafter until 1890 when the movement was given an additional boost by the holding of an international conference in Berlin Six Paras face dashes charges The Times Crossword Picture Gallery Remember Brer Rabbit Tebbit advises Major Word-Watching Aa Roadwatch Times Weathercall Weather Minus a seal, the circus carries on Political sketch Phone Wars Talk Talk Bumpy Ride Law Times Portfolio The Pound Stock Market Interest Rates Currencies Gold North Sea Oil Retail Prices Dublin raises interest rates to defend punt EC ministers oppose two-speed Europe ICI shares slide as forecasts are cut SFO confirms Bank enquiry Nuclear urged to make way for coal Picture Gallery Halifax and the Woolwich cut rates Hopes rise for £30 million deal to keep Dan-Air flying Fimbra NEC MMI claims rescue talks with French are still on Standard Chartered wins third big payoff SEC casts its net beyond Wall Street Linread in profit at half-time Shares in Merrydown Wine fell from 298p to 255p… GPA joins Ukrainian venture to set up international airline NEC lifts spending at Scottish plant Continental Airlines Aberdeen Trust in funds deal Enterprise Oil lines up issue in New York Business Roundup HSBC's $75m provision Greenacre flourishes How cuts dividend Johnson Matthey buys TNT's Abeles resigns Hoskins pubs go to clear debt Major Changes Recent Issues The Times Pharmaceutical sector suffers Reserve Bank paints gloomy picture of S African economy By a Correspondent: Bosses feel the pinch of recession British Funds AFP: Date set for N American trade pact Kwik-Fit Profit downgrade helps ICI share composition Computer buying lifts Dow Wall Street Resort Hotels Dan-Air needs a confidence trick Comment Punt pressure Not 'resigning' but 'consulting' The Times City Diary Short break The Times City Diary Scissors at dawn The Times City Diary CNW rings The Times City Diary Mercury prepares to tap into the private telephone sector Mark Newman examines how BT's main competitor is planning to extend its business with a national advertising campaign Removing occupational pensions from the control of employers Finding it hard to keep a straight face Be magnanimous and forget the trials of Taurus Villa Dei Cesari Restaurant The Times Unit Trust Information Service Ft-Se Volumes Liffe Options Major Indices Traditional Options Commodities London Financial Futures Money Markets Portfolio Plus Sharp reaction C E Heath Portfolio Plus ZMB Zarak MacRae Brenner QD Quarry Dougall Simon's ZMB Zarak MacRae Brenner QD Quarry Dougall Daniels Bates Partnership Royal College of Nursing Fighting the polluters Sally Hughes looks at the unfamiliar area of mass enviromental litigation Green court Pricey London Inns and Outs On the attack Stars of the Bar Picture this Swift justice QD Quarry Dougall Multinational Law Firm - Brussels Office An Act of faith in the wisdom of the courts • Directors' Pitfalls Dangers lurk for directors Members of a company board are not automatically exempt from blame and personal responsibility for their actions. Philip Goldenberg explains the pitfalls QD Quarry Dougall CNN International QD Quarry Dougall Lyon Clark Solicitors Firms proceed to the East with caution Setting up in the former Soviet bloc is slowly paying Pump 4 Court Ison Harrison & Co QD Quarry Dougall Hunter & Hunter Chambers Lipson Lloyd Jones Cairo Multiple Classified Advertising Items QD Quarry Dougall Chambers Parliamentary Counsel Christie declares intention to keep on running Britons back athletics World Cup Durham sign Fowler Cricket Pools Forecast Swiss celebrations contrast with British cup disarray Tennis Barcelona boost their morale Overseas Football Scotland thrive on dead ends Bowls Confidence grows in User Friendly for Arc showdown Racing Tigers look best bet to challenge Kings Basketball Today's Fixtures Mandarin: Antiguan Flyer to relish this going Mandarin, Thunderer: Newcastle Results from Yesterday's Five Meetings Rapid Raceline Mandarin, Thunderer: Brighton Blinkered first time Browne faces enquiry Mandarin: Exeter Prize-money protest causes confusion Jiménez dispels his Critics Multiple Display Advertising Items Patient Singh Swings to his own tune Fijian golfer earns first chance to play in World Match Play Championship McMillan camp calls for return of title Boxing Swinton play for time Swede injects confidence Australia name strong squad Rugby Leagul Smith on song for Beavers Ice Hockey Rugby Union South Africans must adapt to changing game Party and Itinerary English hopes raised by good sevens draw Barbarians benefit Wright stays behind as Liverpool go to Cyprus Football Wimbledon success for Britain Corporate Games Rallying to the cause of commercialism Paul Evans on the controversy which marred the Paris-Moscow-Peking Rally, billed as the last great motor sport adventure Pirates are home and dry Baseball Foulds records first win for four years Snooker White signs £1 million product deal In Brief Schools go live Wayne Garratt For the Record Overseas Football Results Tudor's crew move into second place Yachting Patriots' game is disrupted by Kelly American Football • Athletics Wright uses his head to raise Arsenal's spirits Manchester City succumb at Highbury Knighton's crusade claims first victim Charles Tyrwhitt Brooke must seize chance to provide needed leadership United relying upon Schmeichel Denison throws in towel Senna likely to stay with McLaren By our Sports Staff: Lazio allay injury fears Brains behind the bricks Anthony hunt is the engineer behind many a great vision Square Rounds Modern Times P5 Carry On into a new world A fresh outlook on a well-loved routine brings some familiar characters back to the silver screen. Barry Turner on a renovated British institution Take it as read that I wrote it Mid Life: Neil Lyndon on the joining up of letters Focus p7,8, 9 Entertainments Today's Events A daily guide to arts and entertainment compiled by Kari Knight Theatre Guide Cinema Guide Enjoyable humbug with all the festive trimmings Dance A Christmas Carol Royal Bath Brief encounters Dance David Massingham Bloomsbury It's tough at the top Rock Chris de Burgh Earls Court Werewolf bites back Rock Warren Zevon Town and Country The Times Colour lights up the life of Riley Richard Cork on an artist who combines rigour with warmth Progress under pressure Having launched a successful new solo carrer, Queen's guitarist Brian May talks to David Sinclair about trying to come to terms with the death of Freddie Mercury Television Review: Peter Bernard is dismayed by the… No appetite for a breakfast with Bob Fair is not foul enough Theatre: MacBeth at the Watermill, newbury Difficult family outings Radio Review Save and prosper Arts Brief Fresh start Arts Brief Last chance... Art Brief Criterion Theatre Mysteries cut to the bones George Hill on how the new Dna tests have re-opened several ancient cases and could solve long-standing mysteries Has feminism failed? The Times Etiquette on a plate Joe Joseph's canapes have been more imaginative, his cutlery co-ordinated, since he went on the Lucic Clayton Entertaining course The family secret is out Should children conceived by donor insemination be told the truth about their birth, at the risk of exposing them to pain and prejudice? Ann Lloyd reports Parental rights, and wrongs The Kingsley "child divorce" in Florida poses some awkward questions for British parents Ashes to ashes, privet to privet Playgirl in pink And Briefly Blast off Child's play Inimitable Putting the case for current affairs Factual programming could soon lose its peak-time position on ITV Roger Graef says advertisers and viewers will be up in arms about it Creative, Media & Marketing BBC Diary of Times Classified Lorraine Campbell Property Services FGTO Use your Languages in Sales Putting the case for current affairs Glenwyn Benson, editor of Panorama, feaars the end to competition that ITV's action might bring First among Equals Multiple Classified Advertising Items A Career in Sales The Economist Television Presenters Course Times Newspapers What price further education? As the polytechnies become accustomed to their new status, John O' Leary forecasts new pressures in the academic world Managing time is a key skill Halifax Bank on having to borrow Even the most prudent student will find the grant is not enough Odeon Cannon Cinemas Beryl Dixon offers those about to go to college some… No need to starve if you watch the pennies Students soon learn to economise by buying second-hand books and clothes and making use of student discounts Eat cheaply but eat well Learning to cook even simple meals is a vital skill when money is tight Picture Gallery Views beyond the ivory tower New students should not forget to explore the region beyond the campus, writes Colin Colebrook Help is at hand if you need it Starting out at university is a chance to find yourself and make friends National Westminster Bank The forgotten children Special funds care for young refugees are lacking, writes Nicky Willmore Public Appointments Northern Regional Health Authority Brumby Hospital Carroll Foundation Professional Benevolent Association The Times Don't tell the town hall Councils must not use the new local tax to pry into personal affairs or to ask for irrelevant information Good charities begin with training Charity trustees know too little about their job, says Winifred Tumim Who will the journalists blame now? Peter Brown reflects on the end of one era and the start of another at The Times Personal Column The Times Announcements & Personal Notices Concise Crossword No 2905 Winning Move BBC 1 Satellite Clarehill Publishing plc Variations Radio 1
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