Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 20/10/1992

1992; Gale Group;

Autores

Bernard Ingham, Jon Ashworth, Fran Bennett, David Harrop, Helena Kennedy, Christopher Walker on Board the Admiral, Tim Judah and Dessa Trevisan, Jeremy Laurance, Susan Hay (Chairman), Alison Roberts Arts Reporter, Jill Sherman Political Correspondent, Bill Frost, Brian Parker, Neil Bennett, Sheila Gunn, Political Correspondent, Ivo Tennant, Geoffrey M. L. Claridge, Ross Tieman, Industrial Correspondent, Clive Davis, Carol Leonard, Lynne Truss, Richard Streeton, Stuart Jones Football Correspondent, Sir Frederick Lawton, Matthew D'ancona, Education Correspondent, Tony Patrick, Maggie Parham, Colin Narbrough, Peter Riddell Political Editor, David Watts, Diplomatic Correspondent, Ray Clancy, Jeremy Laurance, Health Services Correspondent, Martin Fletcher, Stewart Tendler Crime Correspondent, Joan Schwitzer, William Forrest, Patricia Tehan, Matthew Parris Political Sketch, Nick Nuttall Technology Correspondent, Peter Bills, Platt of Writtle, Alan Hamilton, I Mont-Gomery, Nicola Thorne, Louise Hidalgo, David Watts and Patrick Moser, Michael Clark, Kate Alderson and Paul Wilkinson, Michael Hamlyn, David Hands, Doreen Goodman, John Percival, Jeremy Sams, Ross Tieman and Patricia Tehan, Harvey Elliott, Air Correspondent, Edward Fennell, Lindsay Cook, George Brock, Robert Kirley, Janet Daley, Andy Lavender, Chris Thau, Lin Jenkins, Philip Webster, Chief Political Correspondent, Conor Pickering, John Higgins, Adam Lebor and Michael Evans, Defence Correspondent, Siobhan Brooks, Lindsay Cook, Money Editor, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, Patrick Clancy, Craig Brown, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Paul Wilkinson, Davina Lloyd, Roger Bolton, Heather Kirby, B. M. Lane, Barry Pickthall, David Pannick QC, Ian Ross, Michael Dynes, Transport Correspondent, Jamie Dettmer, Matthew Bond and Jon Ashworth, Christopher Lakeman, Philip Webster Chief Political Correspondent, James Pringle, Robert Morgan, Parliamentary Staff, David Livesey, Hermione Parker, Srikumar Sen Boxing Correspondent, Peter Rost, Richard Evans Racing Correspondent, Liz Smith, Sheila Gunn Political Correspondent, Scrivenor, Keith Blackmore, Malcolm Harrison, Robert Morgan, R. Footer, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Roy Goode, Chairman, Michael Phillips, Kurt Schork of Reuter, David Sinclair, R. Gutch, Nicholas Wood and Nicholas Watt, Martin Waller, Michael Horsnell, John Pitts, Arthur Leathley, Nicky Willmore, Vince Wright, Harvey Elliott Air Correspondent, David Watts, Diplomatic Correspondent and Catherine Sampson, Anatole Kaletsky and George Brock, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Colin McQuillan, Andrew Longmore, Tennis Correspondent, Christopher Irvine, Stuart Jones, Football Correspondent,

Resumo

Heseltine retreats over pits in bid to buy off Tory rebels Index Lynne Truss The Day the Leaders Had to Eat their Words Princes left £1,000 in earl's £88m will Media Review only a delay insists coal chief Law Bush comes out fighting Friendship plea Virgin A… Rate cut likely as pound tumbles Ghost of industrial past is chosen as saviour of the present Bruised Heseltine survives to fight again another day Has Michael Hesltine been guilty of arrogance or was he set up his enemies? There was no shortage of theories about his future after his performace yesterday Man in the Front Line Quest for a killer question St. Joseph's Hospice Force of numbers led Major to admit he was defeated Backbenchers given a grilling at lunch 1992 Committee Danger of defeat halts coal bill In Brief New venue Mail deluge Reprieve fails to impress bankbench sceptics Backbenchers gave early warning of outcry over cuts The energy select committee tried to impress on ministeres 14 months ago the value of ensuring the place of coal in providing for Britain's long-term energy needs Threatened miners win unlikely allies Nuclear Power By a Staff Reporter: Doomed pits 'had no future' Canon Scargill and Lynk reject 'whitewash' Homebuyers Auction Commons told of rethink on the pace of pit closures Cook demands an enquiry Labour Government fails to silence rebels Backbenchers Licensed dissenter to lead aid effort Nissan Queen ends Britain's war of words with Germany Maternity leave to increase in EC deal Bank of Ireland London's £100m red route network will pay for itself within six months Embassy seeks clues to 1942 crash pilot Mystery over the identity of a British pilot shot down over France in October 1942 has deepened Home gas leak kills family of three News in Brief Motorway hanging Privacy law opposed Juror ruins murder trial Frenchman cleared Baghdad appeal filed Drivers fight path ban British bangers praised National Westminster Bank Crowd storms docks Nikki Allen murder suspect is led to cells Psychology tested as cancer treatment A Race Apart Lagerfeld revives Chanel £100,000 of bookings 'taken in ferry fraud' Safety on oil rigs criticised News in Brief Gunman jailed Dogs freed Couple gassed Home protest Toyota Adoption fee plan attacked as damaging to children Adoption agencies fear that charging propsective parents a fee will lead to fewer children finding new families Legal aid changes echo NHS reforms The way it isn't Protesters fail to block bail hostel Britain and Australia poles apart on huskies Halifax By our Technology Correspondent: Anti-theft tags may befitted to bread Family wins battle against Bupa over £11,000 hospital bill Patients with private health-care policiers risk facing large hospital bills as recession-hit insureres reject cliams Consultant's letter failed to settle claim National Westminster Bank Picture Gallery Cash cuts 'threaten mass arts closures Private schools say exam list will exclude their best pupils Political writer's love of life recalled Bomb call gave wrong target Bush goes on the attack in last-chance Tv debate Republican alarm grows as polls point to Democratic landslide US Election: The Battleground States Picture Gallery Clinton economic path veers to right The Bush camp's preoccupation with allegations about Bill Clinton may cost the president the White House, Jamie Dettmer says in his Washington commentary Even garden gnomes do their bit to diish the president ANC report admits to brutality in prisons RSPCA UK concern over sale of F15s New in Brief (Reuter): Rebel held Troops cleared (AFP): Official killed (Retuer): Nets banned Brothel count Yugoslav commander threatens to halt Croatian withdrawal Hp Bread shortage adds to Sarajevo woes Police seize federal ministry in Belgrade Patten's talks on colony clouded by ill omens Chris Patten's ideas for r eform in Hong Kong have already been attacked b y Chiina, and he is unlikely to find that the recent polituro shake-up has softened thier mood Former aide says Gorbachev feared trial questions on Vilnius shootings East 'bankrupt in five years' New men called to the helm Snappy dresser aims to put zip into China Mood mutinous in Russia's increasingly shabby navy (Reuter): Bodies may be those of top Greens News in Brief (Reuter): Nuclear ban (Reuter): Deadly meal Estonia leader Papers, procedure and parenthood New government proposals can prevent foreign adoption even if a child's country gives permission. Heather Kirby reports Everest My part in his story Half a century on, a former desert war correspondent recalls Montgomery's rout of Rommel a El Alamein The Times Pupils do it in stone The new library is lettered in the Gill tradition Putting a spring in your step Hooked on a quiet cup of caffeine Bottom Line What the tea or coffee addict needs to know A life lost with the job Imperial Cancer Research Fund Putting a spring in your step Siobhan Brooks discovers that the flat-footed can lose their waddle and learn to walk tall Lynne Truss Retune your tranny and take to the street in solidarity with the oppressed Radio 4 listener No poodle, this rottweiler Left-wing conspiracy theorists are shocked by ferocious press attacks on the government, writes Janet Daley The U-turn that spells disaster Few leaders could survive yesterday's upheaval, says Peter Riddell Peace-mongers Diary Bring back the board Diary Master race Diary A Necessary Retreat The prime minister must now prepare for new pitfalls ahead Forbidding City Heads Patten wins, tails China loses Diplomatic Hot Dogs Let our British huskies die at home in the Antarctic Concern at dangers of limiting social security budget Care of children Women priests Sexual harassment Student unions Electoral law Writing for money Identity cards and need for privacy Alive and well Bird count Dressing down Court Circular Birthdays today Today's royal engagements Appointments Personal Column Picture Gallery Anniversaries Memorial service Panufnik Memorial Concert Mim Holdings Limited Dinners Luncheon Reception Meeting Lecture Institute of Biology Forthcoming marriages Marriages Professor Ernest Ludwig Stahl University news Professor Alan Woodruff Professor Alan woodruff, CMG, OBE, who died of a heart attack in Khartoum on October 12 aged 76, was Wellcome professor of clinical tropical medicine at the London tropical of Hygience and Tropical Medicine from 1952 to 1981 and, since 1981, had been professor of medicine at the University of Juba, Sudan. He was born on June 27,1916 Dr David Hyatt Dr David Hyatt, campaigner for racial and religious understanding, dired on September 8 aged 76, He was born on May 1,1916 Word-Watching Pers0nal Column Rosan Reeves Auction Rooms On this Day October 20 1879 A Yacht for the Czar Takashi Hasegawa Veronica Papworth Veronica Papworth, fashion writer and illustrator, died on September 21 aged 79. She was born on May 13,1913 Announcements & Personal Notices News The Times Crossword No 19054 Today's Times People Weather TV Listings London Life Manx Money In a Hole Law Times The Pound Stock Market Interest Rates Currencies Gold North Sea Oil Retail Prices Business 21-28 Lloyds closes merchant bank division Decision denies bank a City foothold Lloyds Bank is restructuring its operations after the failure of its bid for Midland British stance on Europe puts off foreign investors Grosswind that could ground Dan-Air Arts 27-29 Alarmed markets send pound plunging Building societies see £264m cash outflow Sport 36-40 JB Blancpain Law on Tuesday Give King Coal a chance to prove itself UK pits can compete with gas given a level playing field, says Peter Rost The Times Unit Trust Information Service Trinity share dealing off to buoyant start Business Roundup Baltic cuts dividend Loss grows at Gieves My boosts profits Jobs and investment suffer as recession in capital deepens Retail sales are expected to slump again this winter confidence slides Mines cast gloom over Boot US and Britain in talks to liberalise air services Standard Chartered EC agrees indirect tax rules By our City Staff: Shipping venture sinks Quadrant into red British Funds Recent Issues Stainforth joins ailing Regal JAL Clients of failed Manx bank may get £5,000 National Westminster Bank ITN extends consortium stake talks Bio-Tech trials Chevron deal FT-SE Volumes Liffe Options City's conundrum over a brand new art form Major Indices Goldman's ICI stake may be move Commodities London Financial Futures Wall Street Major Changes Lloyds bites yet another bullet Comment Savers strike Open book on Downing St duo The Times City Diary Bowled over Smith arrives Water-borne Video player Clinton roadshow drifts towards the trap of Fortress America The Democratic contender for the US presidency is unlikely to offer any fresh New Dealism, writes Colin Narbrough Economic View Pension law committee is anxious to hear scheme members' views Clients' VAT gives businesses added credit Compensation needed for collecting taxes GL Equities mark time Heath Group Strolling through town with the players Street Life: Nuisance or entertainment? Andy Lavender finds buskers as numerous as ever on London's streets Jarre turns his spotlight on the dark continent Arts Briefing Rock page 28 Private view Arts Briefing Apocalypse again? Arts Briefing No Title An odd couple Arts Briefing Last chance … Arts Briefing Theatre page 29 Entertainments Cinemas Today's Events London Theatre Guide Cinema Guide News Releases Yesterday the world , tomorrow …? Rock: David Sinclair watches a group apparently unconcerned by declining populatiry Happy Mondays Deeply divided and despairing of help Televison Review: Tony Patrick on a bold attempt to focus attention on the problems facing Somalia A Journey Home BBC 2 Morris provides a vehicle that makes touring enjoyable Dance: John Pereival reiews the first Mark Morris piece to be presents by a British company LCDT Royal, Plymouth The Times America gets his best shot Music: Jeremy Sams on Stephen Sondheim's latest show, Assassins, of which he is musical director; plus jazz and Bergonzi's farewell Assoasins flooped in New York during the Gulf war, Will its ironic view of the skelecons in America' cupboard find favour in London? As well as your feetwarmers, don't forget your footnotes Jazz: Interview Clive Davis meets John Chilton, well established as both bandleader and jazz musicologist By arrangement with Van Walsum Management Limited RSC NT Saved by the belle Jazz: Concert Review A Night at the Cotton Club QEH A note of regfret at the final flourish Music: Recital Carlo Bergonzi Covent Garden No sugaring of the pills Bernard Ingham (left) rebuffs Nigel Lawson's charge hat he distorted his daily press summaries to Mrs Thatcher Creative, Media & Marketing BBC First among Equals Drake International Multiple Classified Advertising Items The News, Warts and All Senior Marketing Managers International Law Firm Superb Telesales Opportunity Ambitious Graduates & Young Professionals Let's put the British back into the Bbc Our oldest broadcaster stands accused of mistaking London Britain, and neglecting the nation's history Marketing Executive PIMS A Winning Personality Could Earn You £20K in your… Sales Consultants Considering a Change of Career? Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Times Newspapers Town halls trek east Louise Hidalgo discovers how local councils are advising the new democracies Public Appointments Director of Government & Political Affairs Wiltshire County Council Career Exchange Humberside County Council The Japan Society The citizen's charter brings out the cynics Employees suspect that every new deal is simply further govrnment thinkering, to be followed by job losses Hays The Stroke Association Querry Dougall Recruitment Daniels Bates Partnership Legal Recruitment & Human… Group Company Legal Adviser The Chambers of Robert Webb Q. C Coventry University Litigation Partners Zark MacRae Brenner, Recruitment Berrymans Company Secretary International Finance in London Multiple Classified Advertising Items An aid to a better deal for all New legal aid proposals mirror the way in which budget-holding family doctors provide services. John Pitts, the Legal Aid Board chairman, unveils the reforms Young, talented and going nowhere fast If a firm is to encourage ability, older partners must be encouraged to move on The law's longstop Clink-clink Show goes on Eastern premises Starting young Video law Look again at 'slow burn' killings After a successful appeal, the law's compassion for those provoked over a long period needs reassessing Chancery Bar Association Autumn Lecture Cut-off date applicable only to group action Law Report October 20 1992 Court of Appeal No duty to consult residents Legal Appointments Quarry Dougall Recruitment P. R. Hanna & Company Solicitors Coroner's jury discretion Hambers & Partners: Professional Recruitment West Sussex County Council No advisory opinions on hypothetical questions Europen Law Report Luxembourg University of Bristol Last chance to join the debate Is the Male? The legal system is run by and for men. Helena Kennedy pleads for a fairer hearing for women The Times B. P. Collins&co. Solicitors Bernard Julhiet Lipson Lloyd Jones The bench is not a men's club Sir Frederick Lawton takes issue with a false picture of judicial office News of the World Nucifora promoted to captain Pools Forecast France seeking to strike a blow for on-field discipline Rugby Union South Africa consider strengthening side Lewis invites coalminers to his party For the Record Sprague a hit Blue Jays cameo Baseball Finchfield will travel Hockey Jockey Club rejects strike plan but calls early summit Chester Results from Yesterday's Four Meeting Rapid Raceline National prize-money up Commons rejects tax plea Chepstow St Jovite to join strong Classic raid Golden Guest can initiate Chepstow double for Cecil Plumpton Liverpool look to Wright Hirst might not be risked Multiple Display Advertising Items Wilkinson pleads for calm from Leeds supporters Football Gascoigne comes back Teenager in the last 16 Sport in Brief Title threat Starting up Still missing No Italians Ban criticised Morris plea Elway strikes late to sink Oilers Results and Tables Patient Houghton earns reward Cricket: Zimbabwe Captain Marks First Test with Century Bebeto surprises shaken Barcelona Overseas Football Overseas Results Today's Fixtures Football St Mellons suffer baptism of fire Squash Tudor adds seven miles to his lead Yachting BBC1 Variations Satellite King George's Fund for Sailors Rugby Union 36 Brain claims payments are widespread in rugby Peter Bills looks at the contentious issue of cash inducements in English rugby union, which a former England player says a rife in the game Offiah is passed fit to face Australia in final Concise Crossword No 2923 Winning Move Shearer and Saunders shackled Defences hold sway as Villa and Blackburn are off target Graf means to enjoy herself National Westminster Home Loans Limited Cricket 38 Stewart heeds censure

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