Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 06/10/1992

1992; Gale Group;

Autores

Srikumar Sen, Boxing Correspondent, Michael Clark, Stock Market Correspondent, Paul Somerscales, Victoria McKee, Julia Llewellyn Smith, Jon Ashworth, David Adams, Edward Owen, Beloff, Patricia Davies, John Vincent, Harvey Elliott, Air Correspondent and Lin Jenkins, Richard Ford, Home Correspondent, K. C. Adamson, George Brock and Tim Judah, Caroline Davis (Executive Secretary), Stephen Bayley, Peter Fiddick, Angela MacKay, Karl Knight, Philip Howard, Lady Saltoun, Jeremy Kingston, Sally Hughes, Clive Davis, Debra Isaac, Stuart Jones Football Correspondent, Matthew D'ancona, Education Correspondent, Roddy Forsyth, Peter Riddell Political Editor, Geoff Brown, Gerald Davies, Kenneth Whiting, Martin Fletcher, Mitchell Platts, Ruth Gledhill, Religion Correspondent, Robin Hunt, Bruce Clark, Patricia Tehan, Cecil Parkinson, Rodney Schofield, Louise Taylor, Douglas Broom, Jeremy Laurance Health Services Correspondent, Nicholas Watt and Louise Carpenter, Alan Hamilton, Robin Young, Nicholas Watt, Michael Clark, Henry G. Button, Philip Robinson, John Young, D. Gleave, Michael Hamlyn, P. B., John Percival, Peter Barnard, Kate Muir, Amanda Loutfi, Harvey Elliott, Air Correspondent, Edward Fennell, Adam Lebor, George Brock, Robert Kirley, Janet Daley, Rachel Kelly Property Correspondent, Nicholas Harling, Anthony Marlow, David Luke, Gabriella Gamini, Adam Western, Norman Hammond, Roger Tomkys, Peter Martin, Jonathan Prynn, P. L. Levy, Chairman, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, Matthew D'ancona, Craig Brown, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Prof. Dr. Nurettin Sozen, Davina Lloyd, Beryl Dixon, Phil McLennan, Nigel Hawkes, Barry Pickthall, Peter W. Bennett, David Pannick QC, Alastair Robertson, Inglewood, Kate Alderson, Michael Dynes, Transport Correspondent, Winston Fletcher, Jamie Dettmer, Martin Waller, Deputy City Editor, Dr. Ergun Goknel ISKI General Director, Peter Aykroyd, Jeremy Laurance and Patricia Tehan, Colin Narbrough, Economics Correspondent, Katharine Butler, George Hill, Kenneth G. Braidwood, Scrivenor, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Peter HORDERN(Chairman, Richard Beeston, Michael Phillips, Philip Webster and Nicholas Wood, Graham Searjeant, Stephen Pettitt, Paul Woolwich, Benedict Nightingale, Mark Sanderson, Celia Green, Hugh Thompson, Stockton, Kathleen M. Slack, Peter Strafford, Valerie Grove, Vince Wright, Lee Rodwell, Andrew Finkel, Mark Fuller, Mark Fuller and Lin Jenkins, Matthew Bond, Peter Robinson, Margaret Orr Deas, David Fallows, George Carey, Archbishop of Canterbury, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Colin McQuillan, Andrew Mango, Christopher Irvine, Sam Kiley and Jan Raath,

Resumo

Shares plunge in Major's new black Monday Freefall pound hits all-time low Index Life & Times Muggers kill tourist On Other Pages Tunnel delay Moscow blamed For Australia, knights have had their day E1 A1 engines failure was carbon copy of Taiwan crash Survivors saw family die IBM Nurses seek 8.7% rise 'to uphold charter' Public sector battle begins EC warily launches sales pitch Mori shows public concern over economic state Issues in Focus Thatcher points way for Major Picture Gallery Pro-Europeans in cabinet back return to ERM Tough and inflation policics, not big interest rate cuts, find favour among some ministers, Peter Riddell reports Archbishop attacks government policy News in Brief Slander threat dropped Damages for minister Gang tortures driver Stallone buys Tardis Crowther critically ill MP fined for speeding Sex war debate sold out Correction Leukaemia Research Fund Fiancée sees Briton shot dead by mugger in Florida car park Jury told of torture threat to families Plumber sues for TV libel Krishnas mourn 'miracle' cow Soldier in bedsit siege denies killing Brother Industries Ltd Time runs out for the Bow Street tradition Blackmail letters Warn of Hiv plot Morton says rail tunnel will open six months late Minolta (UK) Ltd. Picture Gallery Crown prosecutors closer to breaching Bar's monopoly Writer took a heavy toll of EastEnders LOW-paid 'need 100,000 homes' Oxfam marks 50 years of fighting world hunger The Way Forward for Britain in Erurope Farmer 's phone calls terrified women Fire kills mother and children News in Brief Death award Pilot named Leaden egg Arson attack Rabin pledges Israeli teams will find cause Enquiry The Pocket Answer Machine Boeing investigators to focus on loss of starboard engines 'I have to come down quickly, otherwise everything will go wrong…' The Crash Queen and Pope send condolences Messages of sympathy have poured in from all over the world for relatives of victims of Sunday E1 A1 air disaster Reaction Veteran captain struggled in vain The Pilot City's contingency planning pays off Dutch disaster sets ground toll record Immigrant estate stunned by catastrophe from the sky …Then suburb's fate is sealed as the pilot says:'We are coming down' Aftermath How London might have coped Heathrow Airport baggage rules 'broken' Security National Westminster Bank British Gas Our Foreign Staff: Helicopter shot down in Georgia Shevardnadze alleges Russian conspiracy 'inflaming war' The Alfa Romeo 155 range Warship talks dear way to end Dubrovnik siege Camps 'have killed off Bosnian elite' Dominican poor bear cross of Columbus extravaganza As city lights flicker, a lighthouse commemorating "the Admiral's"arrival is being inaururated, David Adams writes from Santo Domingo Defeat by Congress undermines Bush's political standing RSPCA Loggers don't give a hoot for the spotted owl Pundits play the numbers game US analysts are now turning to children to predict the poll outcome, writes Jamie Dettmer Guyanese protests mar poll News in Brief Kuwait women demand vote (AP): Abortion toll Riots quelled (Reuter): Leader chosen (AP): US cash aid (Reuter): Airport battle (Reuter): Cost of dissent (Reuter): Savimbi concedes defeat in Angola assembly election (AP): Sultan dispenses chariot Charity National Savings (Reuter): Military ANC wing 'to stay' When tragedy engulfs us all A plane crash tests secular values to the limit, argues Janet Daley … and moreover Tories and the church An epistle to the Brighton conference from George Carey, Archbishop of Canterbury Only a tax rise can save us Cecil Parkinson on Nigel Lawson's damaging policies Ich bin kein Berliner Hot lobbyists' tips England expects The Maastricht Cabal Freeze and Cut Mother of Charities European issues that face the Tories at Brighton Political agents In other's words Economic nostrums Good cooking Future of Radio 4 Helping hand on air crash victims Women priests Enter Brer Peter Court Circular Dinners Announcements Receptions Royal Grammer School, Guildford Picture Gallery Luncheon Anniversaries Today's royal engagements Royal College of Anaesthetists Birthdays today Forthcoming marriages Appointments in the Forces Meeting Announcements & Personal Notices Word-Watching Marriages Memorial meeting Dorothy Galton Dorothy Galton, former secretary to the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London, and the author of several works on beekeeping, died on August 27 aged 90. She was born on October 14,1901 City honours naval victor University news Remains of Roman child grave found Jean Aurenche Jean Aurenche, French screenwriter, whose career in the cinema spanned five decades, died on September 29 aged 88. He was born in Pierrelatte, southern France, on September 11,1904 William Sebrell William Henry Sebrell Jr, a pioneer in vitamin research whose work led to radical improvements in American health during the 1930s, died in Pompano Beach, Florida, on September 29 aged 91. He was born in Portsmouth, Virginia, on September 11,1901 Marshall scholarships Appointments £2,000 rod Professor Ernest Stahl Colonel Fred Tilston, VC Baroness Phillips The Nile Expendition Cambridge still under sway of top ten schools Times Crossword No 19,042 Picture Gallery Word-Watching AA Roadwatch Times Weathercall Weather Whitehall ruling hits HIV patients Index Close Ranks Today in Business Coal Lesson Bed of Roses Centre Stage Law Times The Pound Stock Market Interest Rates Currencies Gold Portfolio 103-point fall wipes £19bn off shares Double blow as pound and equities plunge From our Correspondent: Bears send Dow on the big dipper Where's the beef, and where's the millions? See-saw day for the pound Eurotunnel avoids cash call but share price still slides The Open University Building job losses average 580 a day Employers say recession is deepening Trade Indemnity Rankin resigns as head of Lilley Commercial Union forges Korean link Business Roundup Kitty little in profit Mosaic chief named Microfilm lifts payout Greenall buys golf club Cooper Clarke slides Reuter: Opec exceeds oil output target Chillington reaps benefit of demand for tools RHM climbs 66p as Hanson makes hostile £780m bid Goal chiefs warned over talks delay Oriel sells division to Jardine By our Economics Correspondent: Stora closes 1,000-year-old copper mine Reuter: Sabena-Air France link backed by EC By our City Staff: Racal finally unlocks Chubb Continental Airlines Consumers opt to cut debt rather than borrow more Jobs to go at Hydro Fertilisers Bank of Scotland Eurotunnel waits to run a steady course Tempus Shares nosedive in biggest fall for five years Stock Market Storehouse, down 1p at 147p, is enjoying a faster recovery than most brokers had been led to believe. County NatWest says Storehouse is set to change from a holding company run by accountants to focused businesses with recovery and growth potential Smith New Court remains a buyer of Sears, down 1p to 96p, as a recovery play. Despite the recent cut in Sears' dividend, the securities house says recovery is in progress at the group, with retail profits rising and gearing falling along with interest rates British Funds (Reuter): Dow salvages losses to end 21 points lower World Markets Major Changes Recent Issues The Times Wall Street Magician with an empty hat Comment Anniversary blues Designs on Kuala Lumpur Happy valleys Swapping roles Hanson bid for RHM adds fresh yeast to Europe's food industry Graham Searjeant assesses the likely fall-out if Britian's second biggest bread-maker gets the Hanson treatment Liverpool echoes Tax plan would hurt small charities Business Letters Philanthropy tax Watches of Switzerland The Times Unit Trust Information Service Ft-Se Volumes Liffe Options Major Indices Traditional Options Commodities London Financial Futures Money Markets Sterling Spot and Forward Rates Other Sterling Money Rates (%) European Money Deposits (%) Gold and Precious Metals (Baird & Co) Dollar Spot Rates Sharp falls Heath Group Pamukbank Ancient capital rebuilds its strength The historic gateway to the East may soon be the centre of a Black Sea economic union, as well as retaining its trading links with the European Community, writes Peter Strafford Yapi Kredi Trading from Byzantium Turkey's largest city is the seat of industry and commerce, says Andrew Mango Into the modern world A tunnel from Europe to Asia is just one of the grand plans for Istanbul Sezai Turkes Feyzi Akkaya Construction Company New life for old Beyoglu A nostalgic return to a golden age Istanbul In Transition Europe's Oldest Metropolis Of The Future By Prof. Dr. Nurettin Sozen Mayor of Greater Istanbul Istanbul: City Of Water Revived by goodwill A Crimean memorial has been restored by a surprising alliance Alarko Istanbul for pleasure: a visitor's guide The sights, sounds and smells can bewilder tourists. Andrew Mango offers a path through the maze Peter Strafford looks back at the turbulent history of a city which is more than 2,500 years old Quarry Dougall Daniels Bates Partneship University of Hertfordshire Contract Lawyers Brian Thompson & Partners Quarry Dougall ICSA Five Essex Court In defence of the Eves Valerie Grove catches up with the fast-moving, fast-thinking helena Kennedy Is the Law Male? The Times Cameras rolling in Inns and Outs TV training Polish first Challenging Zarak MacRae Brenner Hughes-Castell Ltd When learned friends fall out in court Council No power over legal aid order Legal Appointments Quarry Dougall 6 Gray's Inn Square Litigators Disclosing wardship documents Chambers & Partners: Professional Recruitment Fast stream Calculating life sentence tariff Leicester University Times Newspaper Find answers for Europe Prizes totalling £6,000 await the winners of The Times Law Awards 1992 Legal Appointments Quarry Dougall Lipson Lloyd Jones Rules of the Competition Quarry Dougall Vallance Lickfolds Legal aid injustice is put in the dock A report calls for services to cater for the consumer Multiple Classified Advertising Items Cairo England likely to go for Hynes Doubts over three key forwards give selectors a chance to experiment Harlequins will speak up for Dear Legal Appointments Ford WRU decision-makers should dust off their thinking caps North add five to their squad Cognos Limited Folkestone Longchamp result provides puzzle for handicappers Racing Smart Ajanta to maintain Hills's end-of-term revival Mandad Redcar Berry reaches century Guide to our Racecard Warwick Selkirk will join stars in Florida Results from Yesterday's Three Meetings Newton Abbot Rapid Raceline Women's golf ready for a revival Mitchell Platts sees successful times ahead for European Tour after victory in the Solheim Cup Europeans possessed with the Solheim spirit Pools Forecast Braves push for repeat win over Pittsburgh Baseball Dolphins triumph Oliver equals touchdown record American Football Davies and Co highlight snub by broadcasters Sport on Television Wasps make advance in shoot-out Ice Hockey Roxburgh forced to play guessing game with squad McAllister uncertainty hampers Scotland Wright to consult Souness Today's Fixtures French have high hopes of Cantona For the Record Maradona bows to Bilbao Macfie impresses after training trip to Australia Squash Rackets Sunderland pay for domestic squad Baseball French boat sets world speed record In Brief Lane ahead Wattana waiting O'Connor's mission Lomas leads The Times Index Graham calls for Premier League of only 16 clubs Arsenal manager proposes reforms Cox earns £133,000 Norwich Union Uefa prepares to send Leeds to Barcelona Romanian to coach British gymnasts Bruno lined up for title attempt England a to be kept on the move Cherry's crew surge ahead Wales to play England again Sing a song of Europe Petula Clark begins her first tour of Britian for ten years Modern Times p4 Lingering death by design Stephen Bayley believes Britain is paying the price for its absurd preoccupation with the product rather than the process Buoyancy aids may well be required Mid Life: Peter Barnard is afraid that he is beginning to lose his nerve OXFAM Why Roseanne Barr turned to family therapy Entertainments Today's Events A daily guide to arts and enterainment compilecd by karl knight Theatre Guide Jeremy kingston's assessment of theatre showing in London Cinema Guide Geoff Brown's assessment of films in London and (where indicated with the symbol*) on release across the country Closeted with a mystery maniac Theatre: London The Misogynist The Bush Involved in her search Dance: Southampton My Father's Vertigo Mayflower All together now Concerts: Bromsgrove A Shostakovish Expreience Spadesbourne Hall Among the very best Opera: Leeds Rigoletto grand The Times Too much safety in these numbers Geoff Brown looks at Barry Norman's choice of 100 best films of the century and begs to differ from the BBC pundit, finding the selection on the tame side The Theatre Club Feeling at home in Jamaica, W1 Jazz Review: London Nasty, brutish and short of essential human qualities Television Review Piccadiely Thratre Fresh nostalgia Arts Brief Another slice Happy returns Last chance … The prince's guinea pigs George Hill meets the diverse group who are the first students at the newly opened Prince of Wales's Institute of Architecture Emperors, presidents and popularity With Brazil's politics in turmoil, two pretenders are claiming the right to the throne, a position vacated 103 years ago Rescued from the front line The spirit of Dunkirk is sweeping Morayshire as a group of Bosnian mothers and children seeks refuge Putting the family on the couch All over America, families are solving their problems through therapy. Kate Muir reports on the success of a national obsession A week of films And Briefly Couture kids Sweet America Disney dolls Gums goodness Looking after number two, three, four and five... Children off your hands, freedom beckoning and nothing to worry about except yourself—and the parent trap Conkered by nature From small beginnings ... Scientists are extracting DNA from creatures that died 30 million years ago, reports Nigel Hawkes Creative Media & Marketing Time International Part Time Telephone sales Producer Music Sales Ltd Trainee Partners Roedean IEL Travel Limited BBC Hawk Development Management Plc Managing Director Early humans 'scavenged' A new study of our ancestors argues that two million years ago, man was not a hunter. He was eating leftovers Publishing Assistant A dreary panorama all round Paul Woolwich continues the debate on the uncertain future of current affairs television with an attack on timid scheduling and impossible demands Change of scene for Newcastle's finest The hit children's series Byker Grove has gone on tour In-flight TV takes off Personalised entertainment is a burgeoning market And nation shall write unto nation A new BBC magazine puts the World Service into words Glossy picture of gloom And now for some really good news: the advertising industry is on its last legs Selling Point Curing an absent mind Absenteeism is a problem afflicting local authorities, Hugh Thompson writes. But there are solutions WMEB The Masonci Trust Dor Girls and Boys Diary of Times Classified Carroll Foundation Correction Tunbridge Wells Health Authority British Museum Charter marks from "the voice of god" John Major thinks the Citizen's Charter is great, but as Douglas Broom reports, the public is yet to be persuaded The Times Appointments with the GP Medical secretaries do more than simply keep track of patients, discovers Beryl Dixon. They are specialists too Personal Column An Important Member of the Hospital Team Hele Medicine Association Action Announcements & Personal Notices Fast ticket to Boston Working abroad can be challenging, especially if you are at Harvard Cancer Relief Research into Ageing Concise Crossword No 2911 Winning Move BBC1 Satellite CPL Variations Radio1 Classic fM

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