News from 27/02/1993
1993; Gale Group;
Autores
Elizabeth Jennings, James Landale, Liz Dolan, Susan Gerleman, Gillian Bowditch Scotland Correspondent, Clive Wilmer, Nicholas Wood, Political Correspondent, Mary Killen, Jane MacQuitty, Richard Ford, Home Correspondent, Robert Morgan Political Staff, Bill Frost, David Miller Chief Sports Correspondent, Ronald Faux and Paul Wilkinson, David Rhys Jones, John Diamond, Roy Porter, Philip Howard, Malcolm Field, Jeremy Kingston, John Habgood, George Sivell, Peter J. R. Bradley, Glyn Austen, Lynne Truss, Carl Mortished, Albert Dormer, Edward Platt, Michael McCarthy, Adam, Gerald Davies, Ray Clancy, Joe Joseph, Jeremy Laurance, Health Services Correspondent, Francesca Greenoak, Howard Davies, Patricia Tehan, Peter Royle, Peter Ball, Ruth Gledhill, Richard Evans, Racing Correspondent, Robin Young, Nicholas Watt, J. Steward, Elizabeth Dashwood, Michael Clark, Piers Ricketts, Michael Hamlyn, Frances Bissell, Sylvia R. Hartnell-Beavis, David Hands, Peter Stone, Roy Denman, Sarah Bagnall, Annie Rankin, John Percival, Ros Drinkwater, Derwent May, Kate Muir, Steven Downes, R. E. H. Edmonds, Adam Lebor, Roger M. Poole (Assistant General Secretary), Lindsay Cook, Sydney Friskin, Martin Hoyle, Nicholas Harling, M. J. Dawson, Lindsay Cook Money Editor, Rupert Bruce, Marion Loring, Alison Roberts, Catherine Milford, Wolfgang Münchau, David Powell Athletics Correspondent, Raymond Keene, Peter Knottley, M. Agass, Raymond Keene, Chess Correspondent, Colin Narbrough World Trade Correspondent, Michael Bell, Jonathan Braude, Phil McLennan, Richard Evans, Michael Wright, Alice Thomson, Roger Boyes, Iain Polley Partner, Janet Bush Economics Correspondent, Brian Beel, G. H. Postlethwaite, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Nicholas Wood, Mike Swan, Joanna Pitman, Nick Nuttall, Technology Correspondent, Sara McConnell, Sir Denys Henderson, James Pringle, Susan Gerelman, Mel Webb, Brian Alderson, Srikumar Sen Boxing Correspondent, Christopher Hawtree, David Watson, Martin Best Musician, Michael Hornsby, Caitlin Moran, John Broadhurst, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Sarah Jane Checkland, Peter Victor, Alan Lee Cricket Correspondent, Philip Webster and Nicholas Wood, Philip Webster, Helen Pickles, David Sinclair, Simon Jenkins, Sam Wilson, Lucasta Miller, Tom Tickell, Jonathan Meades, Michael Henderson, Anne McElvoy, J. A. Barnard, John Phillips, Peter Moss, Dena Arnaud, Adrian Holloway, Colin Campbell, Ian Brodie and George Brock, Sam Kiley, Africa Correspondent,
ResumoDeath in the afternoon: bombers hit New York Early evidence suggests the New York bombing is the work of "foreigners", marking of end of American immunity from terrorism Index Weekend The Chartered Association of Certified… Burma's Gulag Major fights back against pessimists Short and Kasparov split from world chess body A Great Tradition Britain slides into an Arctic weekend Weekend Money Clinton backs free trade as key to ending world recession Claridge's Top Offer on Hotels Bomber on the ran after gasworks blasts Four arrested as constable's shooting is linked to explosions P&O IRA learns value of economic targets Labour call for pact on terrorism PC eager to resume patrols Tory whips block bill for disabled News in Brief Councillor charged In silence for James Strangeways arrest Harlow sets £987 tax Jury told of murder kit Lineker fined after crash Friendly Societies Crippled woman, 79, beat husband to death with plastic bedpan The Sunday Times Yentob shrugs off elitist tag to take top post at BBC1 Teenage torturer is given five years Court of Appeal to examine school rapist's sentence Family Assurance Society Juror's boss fined for contempt Nissan Why today's kings of the chess board refuse to be treated as pawns Young champions assert their independence after long stand-off with old-guard administrators Defiance of the game's rulers by Nigel Short and Gary Kasparov is the culmination of a marathon dispute, Raymond Keene writes By a Staff Reporter: Worker on sick leave for years wins cash N&P BBC Baby mix-up blamed on sloppy supervision Father rejects report and calls for disciplinary action at maternity hospitalParents who took home the wrong babies from hospital are not satisfied by an enquiry's findings Pupils suffer higher stress in home life Dti Trainee priest cleared News in Brief Children killed in fire named Political move Coining it in Telephone trick Historic sale Body found Counted out Hospitals told lack of cash must not delay operations Architects urged to remember the owls Cheltenham&Gloucester Building Society National Savings Proton Japanese Technology Downing Street puts its faith in recovery Major returns to political reality Riddell on Politics Mayfair Carpet Gallery Ltd. Halifax Picture Gallery Tories are warned against witch-hunt Heseltine plan for pits faces defeat Son in custody dispute too young to choose lawyers Boy of 11 cannot dismiss Official Solicitor Norwich Union Storm cuts family's island link Loss of respect leads to disaster Credo White House fends of f sceptics on eve of Bosnia air drops Counsel offered to redundant officers Russians fear new isolation Amato seeks ways to limit bribery scandal Belgrade Muslims fear intolerance Serbian nationalism is rising in a city that once embodied co-existence, and religion is becoming a test of political loyalty Direct Premium Account The Times sends aid for the children Junta's enemies broken in Burmese gulag Chain gangs build road for traffic in drugs and girls Burmese generals have turned their pro-democracy student enemies into slave labour, writes James Pringle from Mong Hpayak The Travel Collection Hong Kong delay cheers traders From Associated Press in tokyo: Boy beats Japanese race ban Academics picked in Seoul reshuffle Mogadishu clashes threaten to delay pull out by marines Setback as Arabs confer News in Brief Speaking up (Reuter): UN man quits (AP): Cartel crack (Reuter): Opposition win (Reuter): Students held (Reuter): Left to die Britain ponders diplomatic role South Africa tops crime table Bombers choose symbol of power New York workers experience terror familiar to London 'Suicide' doctor accused Nationwide Alexander Chancellor in New York Behind every seemingly fufile piece of medical research lurks some vested commercial interest This most recent health scare is especially cruel to balding people Major gets set The Times Diary Trade is America's business as usual Howard Davies, with the prime minister in Washington, reports that free trade is alive and kicking Whee! The Times Diary Mary's field of dreams The Duke of westminster's estate could soon be lost as cynically as it was won Paper man The Times Diary Darling, you were disgraceful The Times Diary More than a Gesture Clinton is determined to set a new pace in Bosnia Newbury Pie The Tories' only hope of winning the by-election is a maverick Masters of their Fate Short and Kasparov have done chess a service-and more Thieving magpies Christian soldiers split on roads that lead to Rome ' Scallywag' distribution Competitive tendering Why British lose out in Brussels Dangerous species? Court Circular Memorial services Personal Column Luncheon Westonbirt School for Girls Picture Gallery Dinners Church services tomorrow Forthcoming marriages Birthdays Loretto /Heriot-Watt Essay Prize Royal engagement Sir Rex Niven Sir Rex Niven, CMG, MC colonial servant in Nigeria for 40 years, died on February 22 aged 94. He was born in Torquay on November 20,1898 Charles Aubrun Professo Charles Aubrun, former director of teh Institut Hispanique at the Sorbonne, and professor of Spanish at Bordeaux and Nice, died in a Paris hospital on February 2 aged 86. He was born on April 4,1906 Personal Column Moriarti's workshop Willoughby Gray Willoughby Pownall Gray. MC, MBE, actor, died on February 13 aged 76. He was born on November 5,1916 Howard Paul Howard Paul, inventor of a robotic device whicgh promises to revolutionise hip replacement and many other surgical procedures, died of leukaemia at Stanford University Hospital on February 10 aged 59. He was born in West Hartford, Connecticut (From a French Correspondent): The Comte De Chambord Herve Mille Herve Mille, a leading flgure in the French press and the right-hand man of the late newspaper and magazine tycoon Jean Prouvost, died in Paris on February 22 aged 83 News The Times Crossword No 19,165 The Times Today Tessiers Weather Times Weathercall AA Roadwatch Abroad Lighting-Up Times Around Britain Tourist Rates Superlative Travel Question Time Low Returns Classic Case Pep Talk Blockbusters The Pound Profile G7 finance chiefs seek agenda for world growth Severn buys East Worcester Water Germans passionate on banana issue Football Cricket Foreign Colonial OFT to look into supply of office equipment Weekend Sporting Fixtures Page 31 Pathfinder with right chemistry to ]change the face of an industry Business Profile: Sir Denys Henderson The Chairman of Ici tells George Sivell of his hope for demerger M&G Group Fidelity Investments Alexanders passes final payout after losses Business Roundup US buyers lift Mallett Arcadian cuts losses IMC Industries falls Isotron lifts payout BhS changes work practices with loss of 1,000 jobs Full-time jobs are being replaced by part-time work as retailers attack costs in the battle for survival on the high street, with higher basic pay offered as a recompense By our City Staff: Accountants of BCCI face writs Hambro Clearing Limited By our Insurance Correspondent: Names could share losses of £220m Owners to fight bid with 5p dividend The Sunday Times By our Financial Staff: Treasurers want more details put in report and accounts Mercury Woolwich raises Euro cash Union Bank raises dividend Record receipts Pubs are sold Gabicci in talks British Funds Unit-Linked Insurance Invenstments Hopes of rate cut lift shares Stock Market Recent Issues Major Changes (Reuter): Small advance for Dow Wall Street Poor Results Watchdog makes a pitch for investors The insurance industry's ombudsman suggests people should turn the tables on salesmen, and question them about their commissions. Lindsay Cook reports Many elderly people have claimed the risks of home income plans were not explained By our Money Editor: Checking out loan protection cover Pensions still being pillaged Comment Lindsay Cook Weekend Money Editor The Higher Income Plan Premiums rise for Royal claimants Equitable Unit Trust Managers Ltd Save & Prosper Abbey revives accounts for charities Guarding pension assets Tackling equity trap Schroders Beale Dobie & Company Limited Owning up to the twee and the staid Soldiering on for a return of £400 By our Money Editor: Making the most of direct debits Save & Prosper Scottish Widows N&P Investment Trust Selector Pep Ecclesiastical Perpetual Bumpy ride on the dragon Going for growth Multiple Display Advertising Items London Life Mortgage landmark by Bristol &West Finding a way through the maze of independent financial advice In an occasional series, Tom Tickell looks at how not to make mistakes with investments Some advisers see themselves as financial doctors giving people the right medicine Save & Prosper Saving on inspection of deeds Fidelity Investments Invesco MIM Towry Law Financial Planning Ltd The IFAP Centre State pension means testing is here already Charges take the shine off Peps Expensive credit card mistakes Pensioning off initial commission Granny bonds to preserve pensioners' savings Save & Prosper Interest Rates Roundup Allied Trust Bank The Equitable Life Firm end to the account Fidelity Brokerage 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 (Balrd & Co) Dollar Spot Rates Defence stands firm as title beckons Border breaks Gavaskar's run record Australian captain relieved to become leading run-scorer in Test cricket Guide to the Weekend Fixtures England a dismissed in only four hours Scoreboard Allcock struck down by street fighter Multiple Display Advertising Items Clumsy Uncle Eli begins to get his act together Brisby rates Renagown highly Best intentions keep United's prodigy safely under wraps Saturday portrait: Ryan Giggs, by Michael Henderson From our Irish Racing Correspondent, Dublin: Classical Charm can book passage Haydock Park Ruling returns to form Jockey Club criticised over doping Police agree to launch investigation into Her Honour case Richardevans Kempton Park Results from Yesterday's Four Meetings Today's Races on Television Edinburgh Muse Cheltenham-bound Market Rasen Lingfield Park BBOA in satellite link-up Rapid Raceline Officials temper with rugby carnival at their peril Buckton revels in art of promotion and persuasion David Hands talks to Peter Buckton about his new role in spreading the rugby union gospel Rising Stars Cunningham instils winning attitude Basketball For the Record History points to Quins in cup (AP): Seizinger keeps word Skiing Board to kick-start experiment with rules Operation will keep Atkinson out for month Football University Rowing Bowe takes chance of close look at Hide Smith jumps at chance of world title Athletics Ambitious Sittingbourne prove big attraction Non-League Football Brasher wants talks on marathon route Sport in Brief Snow Reports Rugby Union England douse Indian fire to win at last Jarvis returns to fray with five wickets as spin gives way to seam in Bangalore Bangalore Screboard Three make odd numbers add up Hopes rise for British ski jumping Simon Barnes Backing Flo-Jo Brutal truth Poor pitches Fit to drop Racing again Football Adaytum By our Sports Staff: West Ham honour Moore by retiring No. 6 shirt A great tradition: shoppe till ye droppe The British have little right to be sniffy about 'trade', Roy Porter says, given that we invented shopping Collecting Give me marks out of ten for life Weekend voice Arts Holidays Thomson Relais & Chateaux Offer Peaceful Normandy landing The traumas of getting herself and her tow babies to a French g?te were quickly forgotten in the bliss of the beach and rock pools, Elizabeth Dashwood writes Multiple Display Advertising Items Off to Omsk? Essential advice to assist the unwary tourist through the travel jungle Ireland Aer Lingus P&O The ragged sentinels Derwent May admires the diversity of scarecrows, but do they frighten birds? In the farmyard, mathematics (to not add up Farmer's Diary Paul Heiney Curtain call in the reeds Feather report Cox & Kings Travel Wales sends out its dragons Robin Young takes a biased view of the St David's day assault by the Welsh on London's restaurants Where market forces are naturally better Edward Platt goes shopping for organic food in the revitalised Spitalfields in east London Leith's Variety is the staff of life Food Spy Bread now comes in every shape Pasta from oven to table Frances Bissell conjures ups satisfying and substantial dishes of baked pasta Still fizzing 150 years on Jane MacQuitty celebrates a century and a half of Krug champagne Best Buys Forte Hotels A violent history recorded in clay Staffordshire figures, long considered twee, tell stories that are far from quaint. Sarah Jane Checkland learns the gruesome truth Saturday Rendezvous The Times The books, the bite and the bona fides All Box No Replies Should Be Addressed to The Times The irresistible pull of the bells Helen Pickles sallies forth and explores the peal appeal of Grandsire, Oxford Bob and Reverse Centerbury Pleasure Uniting nations St Francis's church, west London, welcome a multitude of ethnic groups Anglian Window Centres My Perfect Weekend Poet Weeding out the gimmicks from a garden of gadgets The International Spring Gardening Fair offers a chance to examine innovatory equipment. Francesea Greenoak picks the winners International Spring Gardening Fair Weekend Tips Gardening Countax Multiple Classified Advertising Items Jacques Amand Ltd Classic Roses Multiple Display Advertising Items Lady Muck Fruit Cages Multiple Display Advertising Items Best Buys Fruits for the Connoisseur Ransomes Westwood Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Shaikh & Son (Oriental Rugs) Ltd Multiple Display Advertising Items Asthma Multiple Display Advertising Items Magnify Euromirror Blockbuster Movies Offer of a Lifetime for John Wayne Fans Multiple Display Advertising Items Pretending it's only mock 'n' roll Euro-STEPPER Twin set with too few pearls Theatre: Rediscovering an Italian master and a Restoration mistress The Venetian Twins Playhouse, Oxford Oh for the life of a lady The Artifice Orange Tree, Richmond Wide awake, looking good Dance: Brum's heauty revived Sleeping Beauty Birmingham Hippodrome A brutal burlesque The Sunday Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items Leger Raymond Gubbay Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items IMG Artists Nordstern Art Insurance Limited Multiple Classified Advertising Items Theatres Multiple Classified Advertising Items Kit for the blackboard jungle Alice Thomson goes back to school for a fashion lesson in dressing down, and asks three headmistresses: Please, Miss, where did you get that outfit? The Times Running muddy rings round the country Steven Downes celebrates today's cross-country championships in north London Clubs, spikes and books: how to join the cross-country crowd Multiple Display Advertising Items Hidden cost of home add-ons Property For Sale The cream of Britain's hotels Enjoy a luxurious break with our special offers Relais & Chateaux Relais Gourmands Picture Gallery From the West Country to the Scottish Highlands Picture Gallery Enjoy a gastronomic tour de force of Britain The Airds Hotel (20) Giving thought for food Robin Young finds out why Albert Roux of London's Le Gavroche welcomes the French spirit Relais & Ch?teaux Stay in luxury with our two unique offers Enjoy a Relais & Châteaux experience with our Carte d'or and Limited Editions offers—and win a three-night stay in the Big Apple Relais & Chateaux Albert Roux Shares Some of his Recipes Win a New York trip Word-Watching What's on Amanda Wakeley Dress Designer Evenings out American Express SM Cards Satelitte James Meade Limited Saturday Television and Radio Radio 3 Variations BBC 1 Variations Satellite Radio 3 Please Help a Little Donkey in Distress Pot shots and a shot at Potter Lynne Truss on the olfactory hallucinations of Sounds of the Seventies, The Art of Tripping and Lipstick on Your Collar Tv Review Winning Move Word-Watching Picture Gallery Men behaving badly-again TV Preview Band of hope plays it ultra cool A thick, damp mist of incoherence wreathes the Bettie Serveert group Guilty Secrets Tony Banks, MP Thomas Lloyd Leather Furniture Saturday Review The Sunday Times Wine Club Of limited interest PHS Talking crap Sick lists Radio gaga Pictures on a page Saturday Review Count Man is in no danger of dying out yet, but as sperm counts drop and infertility rises, Aileen Ballantyne Writes, concern is growing for the health of our species. Main photograph by Lennart Nilsson Making Babies Infertile men are increasingly turning to scientific techniques to help them to become fathers Doing what Does Not Come Naturally High technology proved the only solution for Deborah Morris and her husband in their quest to parent a child 58.8 Miles per Galion Nissan Film promotion by any music necessary Movie-makers are single-minded when it comes to cashing in on a hit soundtrack to sell their celluloid product, and there are benefits for performance too, Mark Jolly writes Peace at Last Renault a Certain Flair The Importance of Stealth Lives lived between the lines No one can ever know another person completely-so every biography must involve at least an element of invention. Humphrey Carpenter discusses the delicate relationship between the biographer's imagination and his subject's life Audi Audi Queuing up for a piece of adult education the La way From a networking or a potential dating point of view, some courses are obviously better than others News from the Front The Softback Preview Amsterdam Marriott, February 1992 Marriott Positive exposure for Catherine Milner looks at the work of this year's five joint-winners in the Bt New Contemporaries competition for artists Photographs by Phil Sayer Picture Gallery Marriott A Class Act Tc Opera has crept into parks and football matches, and is now on prime-time Tv. But will it ever really become a form of mass entertainment in Britain? Richard Morrison has his doubts. Illustration by Ralph Steadman Picture Gallery Words and Illustration Martini Vintage selling by numbers A maverick wine buff believes mathematical formulae can predict prices, Robin Young writes Martini DVLASs next Clasic Collection Auctions Restaurant Guide Restaurants Brasseries Cafes Dives Flying in the face of the flock In the shadow of Reichs and tsars Max Egremont visits Kaliningrad-once the powerful centre of East Prussia, and now a Baltic port struggling to come to terms with its war-torn history The perfect place to be a pilgrim Santiage de compostela is heavenly for spiritual and cultural visitors alike, Charles Fitzroy writes Picture Gallery Dawn over a mountain kingdom Around the World in 80 Days Overseas Travel Trail Finders Multiple Display Advertising Items VFB Special Interests Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items AITO Multiple Classified Advertising Items Quest Worldwide Travels The Magic of Spain Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Cruise & Sail Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Hoseasons Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Overseas Travel Multiple Display Advertising Items The Magic of Spain Multiple Classified Advertising Items Austravel Multiple Display Advertising Items Italian Espandles Multiple Classified Advertising Items Carnell Ltd Playing it again in a double feature Round up the Usual Suspects By Aljean Harmetz Weidenfeld and Nicolson, £5.99 Casablanca As Time Goes By By Frank Miller Virgin, £14.99 Flashbacks of a dance of death Looking for the Possible Dance By A. L. Kennedy Secker & Warburg, £7.99 pbk Strangers you read on a train Guppies for Tea By Marika Cobbold Black Swan, £4.99 pbk The Stainless Angel By Elizabeth Parlmer Arrow, £4.99 pbk Telling Stories By Valerie Windsor Sinclair-Stevenson, £4.99 pbk Titan of the stormy Cape The First Life of Adamastor By André Brink Secker & Warburg, £77.99 pbk The Italians Pop in for It All Day Long Little platoons of the republic of letters Prehistoric fact and mammoth fiction Barosaurus and Tyrannosaurs By William Lindsay Dorling Kindersley, £6.99 each Paperbacks Augustus Rex By Clive Sinclair Penguin, £5.99 The Drowned World By J. G. Ballard Phoenix, £4.99 The Other Woman By Colette Virago, £5.99 A River Runs Through It By Norman Maclean Picador, £5.99 Bronislava Nijinska: Early Memoirs Translated and edited by Irina Nijinska and Jean rawlinson Duke University Press, £15.95 Hitler's Englishman: The Crime of Lord Haw-Haw By Francis Selwyn Penguin, £5.99 French Dirt By Richard Goodman Pavilion, £5.99 'Nescafe' Espresso Awash with brilliance The Times and the Royal Academy invite readers to a private viewing of the great age of British Watercolours The Times Bridge by The Listener Crossword No 3191: Run Off in Triplicate by Adam Chess Right to put a foot down Fair game Way to go Secret use of Welsh Glib conceit 'It was not until I met my mother that I encountered cruelty' A Childhood: Kennieth Griffith City of Angels Selfridge
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