Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 18/06/1993

1993; Gale Group;

Autores

George Cole, Julia Llewellyn Smith, Anthony Harris, Jon Ashworth, David Adams, Nicholas Wood, Political Correspondent, Anatol Lieven, Simon Barnes, Richard Ford, Home Correspondent, Eric Dymock, Andrew Longmore, Neil Bennett, A. P. Thirlwall, Ivo Tennant, Philip Howard, Ian Murray, Jeremy Kingston, A. P. Scott, Director of Manfacturing Industries, Carl Mortished, Kevin Eason, Motoring Correspondent, Kevin Eason, Colin Narbrough, D. G. Raby, Stuart Jones Tennis Correspondent, Philip Bassett Industrial Editor, Bernard Levin, Jeremy Laurance, Health Services Correspondent, Martin Fletcher, Alan Symons, Jane Bird, John Hopkins, Golf Correspondent, David Hewson, Sydney Shenton, Julian Critchley, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, W. B. Deller, Richard Evans, Racing Correspondent, Alison Roberts, Arts Reporter, Michael Evans, Defence Correspondent, Jeremy Laurance Health Services Correspondent, Peter Millar, Daniel Johnson, Nicholas Watt, Jenny MacArthur, Michael Clark, Peter Cole, Philip Pangalos and Colin Narbrough, David Hands, David Guest, Marie-Louse Burrows, Chairman, Philip Bassett, Industrial Editor, Robert Cockburn, Jeremy J. Beadle, Janet Todd, Richard Cork, Margot Norman, Adrian Cosker (Head of economics), John Woodcock, Roger Boyes and Tim Judah Balkans Correspondent, Janet Daley, Philip Webster and Philip Bassett, S. C. Dexter, Kari Knight, Geoffrey Wheeler, David Toop, Wolfgang Münchau, George Sivell, City Editor, Tim Jones, Transport Correspondent, David Powell Athletics Correspondent, Raymond Keene, Vaughan Freeman, Jonathan Prynn, John Russell Taylor, Meryl Cumber, Paul Wilkinson, Chris Partridge, Richard Evans, Tim Jones Transport Correspondent, Alice Thomson, Jill Sherman, Christopher Elliott and Angela MacKay, Denham, R. I. Wells, Fiona Reynolds, Director, Michael Hornsby, Agriculture Correspondent, Rodney Hobson, Julian Muscat, Martin Waller, Deputy City Editor, Joanna Pitman, David Young, Christopher Walker, Adrian Deevoy, Matthew Parris, Sheila Gunn and Michael Evans, Hermione Parker (Editor, Citizen's Income Bulletin), Peter Riddell, Sarah Jane Checkland, Ian Brodie, Tony Dawe, Alan Lee Cricket Correspondent, David Sinclair, Philip Pangalos, Michael Binyon, Diplomatic Editor, Benedict Nightingale, Misha Glenny, Robert Seely and our Foreign Staff, Tony Weston, Peter Davies, Director General, Richard Morrison, Sam Kiley, Martin Burch, Marketing Director, Martin Waller Deputy City Editor, John O'leary, Education Correspondent, Mark Saville, Royal Courts of Justice, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Ben Preston, Education Reporter,

Resumo

Nadir threatens a 'Watergate' to rock the Tories Fall in jobless boosts hope of early recovery Index Valerie Grove Politicians linked to super gun deals Wimbledon No Title Record puts pressure on Gooch Warning of cancer errors 'last year' 'The Trial' Mix-Up UN gives order for arrest of Somali warlord Leica The freedom to see Motoring Party official admits fault in accepting gifts Dixons Britain's Bestdeals Fury at Robinson's plan to visit Ulster Correction Outward Bound No Title Double act leaves the House intact Matthew Parris Political Sketch Recession catches up with Ascot News in Brief Sir Robin subpoenaed Huntsman cleared Royal pest's 'suicide' No Title Kidnap victim tells jury how she had a vision of Christ Student dies after prank Oxford Union swayed by catwalk philosophy To the Best Dad Third riding death prompts safety enquiry Working party will look close-country fences Cricketer hits record for 11 sixes Insults fly as children fight over father's art millions Overdose woman was 'doomed' from birth Woman attacked News in Brief Plea fails JP's appeal Ferry mystery Necklace alert Solutions Court rules closure of bone marrow unit was unlawful Judge says 'valuable, perhaps literally vital' time has been lost Nordic sport A Staff Reporter: Nurse sacked over mouse in sandwich Man faked drowning to claim £200,000 Dangerous foreign ships face EC ban You only Realise your Company's National Power Ahead of current thinking Give yourself up, police urge voice on the phone Gay murders: speculation could cause stragler to strike again Investigation Playing a dangerous game Club Scene Texas Soho woos the pink pound Business Boom Navy reserve force falls to defence cuts Welsh motorway plan runs into opposition Flood dispute threatens plan to save Broads Sainsbury's Homebase Ancient sites protected from army's tanks Hutchison Telecom The Times World Chess Championship Fide angers grandmasters Pinter irate as BBC upstages his Trial Welles's version of Kafka on TV clashes with playwright's film premiere Eight-year ban for drink-drive racing duke EC changes push down beef prices Weekend Shopping Woman's sex change baffles doctors Mailsort Children's viewing 'must be ad-free' Dockyards vie for Major's vote in Trident contest Comet You Know where to Come Welfare state blunts Clarke's knife Riddell on Politics National Insurance increase defended Schools' opt-out loophole closed The week in Parliament Forte Posthouse Tax help plan for Lloyd's names attacked Do It All Muslims bridle as Serbs and Croats gloat over old maps Mutual affection for a divided Bosnia brought together Serbia and Croatia in the past, but Misha Glenny believes they still face two serious difficulties Bosnia leader calls on EC to prevent carve-up of republic The division of Bosnia by the Croats and Serbs is only a matter of time and, as Lord Owen has been forced to admit, it will bear little relation to his own map Boxing Helena British journalist wounded on front line US points finger at Germany Lunn Poly US attack came a year too late Foreign force strike at heart of Mogadishu's tortured politics Strong UN action has raised doubts about the use of violence. For Somalis, it has provided a chance to speak out regardless of the warlords' wishes Hurd says military actions by UN are no lasting solution B&Q The Home of D. I. Y Vote on economy bolsters Clinton Democrats back budget package Rapid progress on a modified version of the president's economic plan may signal better times for the administration First Call Bearer of hope: Andrew Gobea, held by Dr Donald Kohn… UN stepping up pressure on Haiti's rulers By our Foreign Staff: Connally may hold JFK clue Summit outing laid on for First Family Iraq faces new threat of air raids News in Brief (AFP): Court tussle (AP): River deaths (AP): Hanging move Pepsi claims A few hundred men battle in the desert to rule Baku On the road from Baku, rebel forces and government troops are dug in. The conflict reflects growing disillusion with the Popular Front's use of power Yeltsin clinches power-sharing deal with the regions Aborigines plan legal action against Britain National Savings In praise of the second Student politics, journalism, acting, champagne and sex-this is what university is for, says Peter Millar The Times A late entry m the Ascot hat stakes Margot Norman throws all caution to the wind and picks up a frothy little confection for her day at the races St. Christopher In pursuit of the tycoons he began by buying 15 shares in each of their companies Why should Nicholas Coleridge, outragcously successful at 36, still need to vaunt his rat-like cunning The Valerie Grove Interview Has pop music died of old age? Reunions are a symptom of an industry living in the past Wharfside Fine Furniture Dollond & Aitchison Whatever happened to the idea of neighbourly solidarity and a good clip round the ear? Parents and teachers used to present a solid front Speed-reading The Times Diary Picture Gallery Timed to the last tock The latest clock is guaranteed not to lose a second in a million years or your money back-but will the universe still exist then? Feminism meets its match Not in camera-on camera Julian Critchley calls for openness in constituencies Good for Britain The rest of Europe should follow Britain's economic lead Honours Be Blowed The Conservative party should look to its members for funds Aboriginal Sin It is too late to prosecute Captain Cook for war crimes No 'fast track' for Lloyd's litigation Names' losses Jobs for the boys? A social strategy to protect the poor Tax reforms to close the Psbr gap Fish prosecution Inroads into the West Country Righting the balance Perils of pop Court Circular Birthdays today Institute of Petroleum Meeting Today's royal engagements Gray's Inn Reception Dinners Service reunion Appointment Personal Column Picture Gallery Service dinners Luncheon The British Kidney Patient Association Marriages Contracts & Tenders Forthcoming marriages Service luncheons Eric Trist Eric Lansdown Trist, social scientist and a founding member of the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations, died at Carmel, California, on June 4 aged 83. He was born in Dover on September 11,1909 Personal Column Piergiuseppe Beretta Piergiuseppe Beretta, chairman of the famed Beretta firearms manufacturing company, died in Gardone Valtrompia, in the province of Brescia, Lombardy, on June 10 aged 86. He was born on June 16,1906 Chief Samuel Asabia Chief Samuel Asabia, chairman of the Nigerian Stock Exchange, has died in Lagos, aged 61. He was born on December 1,1931 (From our Special Correspondent): On this Day Deparature of the Great Eastern Janet Green Janet Green, playwright and screenplay writer, died in Beaconsfield on May 30 aged 84. She was born at Hitchin, Hertfordshire, on July 4,1908 Michael Hughes Michael Hughes, historian, died while on a lecture tour in East Germany on May 23 aged 51. He was born in Wirral, Cheshire, on March 3,1942 Multiple Classified Advertising Items IAM National Breakdown Multiple Classified Advertising Items SAAB the Classic Saab Multiple Classified Advertising Items Scotts Focus on Japanese Cars Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Nightmare on Acacia Avenue As Britain's cities and towns become more crowded, a parking space can become territory to be defended, Kevin Eason reports Legendary Jaguars return to Le Mans After a pilgrimage this week to the scene of a triple victory 40 years ago, the modern big cats are entering the 24-hour race this weekend Tribute to Hunt Roadwise Woe betide the woman driver Even a 'liberated' man can turn into a chauvinist pig behind the wheel News The Times Crossword No 19,260 Business People in the Times Times Weathercall AA Roadwatch WPA Health Insurance Weather Pilkington Reactolite lenses Tomorrow in the Times Ebb and Flow Low Tide On the Crest The Pound Why summer sales are starting early Infotech Inspectors find deceit and failure at Astra City advisers, directors and even the Stock Exchange emerge badly from the Dti report into the Astra takeover of a Belgian contractor to the Iraqi supergun project Arts Sport National Grid Making Electricity Work Hanson loses to institutions Underlying inflation rate at 25-year-low Television and Radio Trade chiefs in hush-hush Heathrow rendezvous Pay deals settle at 4% to halt decline Severn Trent ST US trade deficit worsens Car production at 16-year high By our Industrial Editor: Seeking to make the experts more expert on unemployed Leyland DAF team comes out fighting Norco liquidation threatens 800 jobs Business Rounup AAH increases payout Hardy Oil & Gas rises Electra lifts asset values Cater Allen advances Company News in Brief Mega jobs Byatt challenges linkage of water quality and prices Our City Editor: Severn Trent and Southern flow on S Wales Electricity clears debt By a Correspondent: Regulator tells British Gas chiefs to stop bleating Chloride continues batteries disposal Our City Editor: Dawson benefits from sterling fall CNT Land and premises with added value Heseltine changes stance on trade bodies Devro issue price set at 170p Molyneux deal Derwent buy Daimler hopes Booker change Kvaerner up Legal & Public Notices Write-downs help send Regalian to £83m loss Regalian's auditors are likely to draw attention to uncertainties over asset values and cash flows, although the annual accounts will not be qualified Lucas takes knock after offering little cheer Stock Market Dow subdued ahead of triple witching Wall Street No such word as redundancy in Japanese social contract The egalitarianism found in Japanese companies, and so lacking in the West, is surviving another downturn, writes Joanna Pitman The Times City Diary The Times City Diary Business Letters Energizer battery is lighting the way Share certificates lack collectability Dividing water courses Tempus Regalian Dawson British Coal The Times Unit Trust Information Service FT-SE Volumes Liffe Options Major Indices Commodities London Financial Futures Money Markets Other Sterling Money Rates (%) European Money Deposits (%) Dollar Spot Rates Small losses on the day Lincoln SHiRE Acorn man plants an oak tree Dr Hermann Hauser is making a come back and his ideas could help Britain, says Jane Bird Fountain Unbeatable Value Your own home-concert box TV graced by CD quality music Apricot Mitsubishi Electric Cordless phones get in a twist Portable handsets are proving awkward for users and makers alike Spreading the word—by fax David Hewson explains how this fast-changing system offers many benefits Twinhead Viglen Wanted: women Online Expert help in short supply The huge numbers of PC users face a lack of troubleshooters to back the user-friendly revolution, reports David Guest Support staff needed for computer users could generate 40,000 jobs Information Technology Group I. T. Consultants Foxware Social Research Systems Resources CIL All Box Number Replies Should Be Addressed to Cerco GCHQ Trainee Manager Airing their differences Sculpture at Chelsea Harbour: Richard Cork on an attempt to marry modern and traditional Antwerp's MacAbre new mascot Theatre Critic's Choice Lost in limbo Television Review Rock City of Angels Entertainments The Times World Chess Championship Weekend Choice A daily guide to arts and entertalnment complled by Kari 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 Young love no more than sad Theatre: Authentic innocence in leading roles is at the expense of conviction Romeo and Juliet Regent's Park Heroine of the hour Opera Dido and Aeneas Spitalfields Multifarious magic Peking Opera The Little Phoenix Queen Elizabeth Hall Samples of what might have been Rock on Friday: How pop finallly consumed itself. . . showers of praise forecast for Verve. . . Paw's bark with bite Pop's obsession with quotation has become as sterile as the modernism of 70 years ago, says Jeremy J. Beadle Pop has settled back into not dislocating anything The revolution is over Windmills of the mind Records: Psychedelia for the 1990s from Verve; the ageless Neil Young Top Ten Albums Neanderthal men Concert 10cc Hammersmith Apollo Seven Days What's out and about this Coming Week W. R. Harvey & Co (Antiques) Ltd Sunset Blvd New Waves The insider's guide to the Next Big Thing The perk that drove a thousand careers Between 70 and 80 per cent of all executive-class cars are bought by companies—but that many change. Kevin Eason explains Driving Inspiration A low tax or a high life Drivers are willing to pay more tax to keep the car they want, reports Meryl Cumber Magnificent howl of the mighty V-12 The ultimate engine is part of car history says Eric Dymock Diesels make their mark Once they were fell to be noisy and dirty, but new models dispel the image Kenning Leaseline He can sell but can he drive? Too many company motorists are not skilled enough. Help is at hand Dream machines If you need to ask the price-then you cannot afford one. Vaughan Freeman looks at the ultimate in status symbols Subaru If you want to sell, play safe As crime rises, manufacturers are leading the way to greater security Lexus When only four will do There are times when four-wheel drive is an essential, says Eric Dymock Rover 800 Series Finance doubts won't go away The options on offer still demand car, Meryl Cumber reports Chicago poised for title as Jordan shines in eclipse of the Suns Carling out of Lions match with Auckland O'Brien clears psychological hurdle to put record straight Sports Service The Times For the Record Today's Fixtures A 'times' Reader Special Event Red tape keeps Dooley at home Artist who holds strings of power Wimbledon elite look to the guru who acts on gut feelings Andrew Longmore on a man who works in the no man's land between technology and human emotion Sabatini impressed by McNeil's potential Britons fall by wayside Masur too steady for Bates Thunderer: Redcar Solo performance packs real punch Thunderer: Newmarket College Chapel plays to gallery Piggott and O'Brien rekindle glorious Royal Ascot memories Today's Races on Television Rapid Raceline Thunderer: Royal Ascot Guide to our Racecard Drum Taps in line for bold Melbourne Cup challenge Thunderer: Goodwood Thunderer: Ayr Results from Yesterday's Two Meetings British trio in running after strong finishes Parry shoots 66 to share first-round lead with American pair in US Open McCague stakes Test claim Yesterday's Scoreboards Openers prove hard to shift Keane plans move to Old Trafford Sport in Brief Barnes shares lead Medical centre survives Warrington sale International challenge Champions in field Word-Watching Multiple Display Advertising Items BBC1 Variations Radio 3 Satellite Bewitch your Bangers Basketball Australian openers punish England Gooch made to wait five hours for breakthrough as luck deserts his side at Lord's Slater shows wisdom of giving youth its head Concise Crossword No 3125 Winning Move Word-Watching Morse Computers Ltd Golf

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