Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 22/06/1993

1993; Gale Group;

Autores

Julia Llewellyn Smith, Anthony Harris, Jon Ashworth, Edward Owen, H. Lummer, Anatol Lievin and our Foreign Staff, John Vincent, Kate Trevelyan Thomas, Jeremy Laurance, Simon Barnes, Sarah Bagnall, Insurance Correspondent, Andrew Longmore, Alexandra Frean, Media Correspondent, Robert Breckman, Ivo Tennant, Ian McColl, David Blunkett, Karl Knight, Philip Howard, Ian Murray, Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent, Kathryn Stott, David Thurlow, Lynne Truss, Carl Mortished, Simon Wessely, Tony Patrick, Stuart Jones Tennis Correspondent, Dr. Thomas Stuttaford, Bernard Levin, Christopher Farmer, Nicholas Wood and Andrew Pierce, Martin Fletcher, John Hopkins, Golf Correspondent, Peter Ball, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Ruth Gledhill Religion Correspondent, Ian Menzies, Alan Hamilton, Martin Salmon, Rodney Milnes, Nicholas Watt, Anthony D. R. Holland, Michael Clark, J. D. Brearley, Charles Bremner, Sarah Bagnall, Philip Bassett, Industrial Editor, S. H. Malik, Edward Fennell, Cecelia Compton, Philip Bassett, Andrew Green, George Brock, David Miller, Lin Jenkins, Barry Millington, Geoffrey Wheeler, Alison Roberts Art Reporter, Alison Roberts, David Toop, Robin Fitzsimons, George Sivell, City Editor, Catherine Sampson, Raymond Keene, Jonathan Prynn, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Paul Wilkinson, Helen Long, Alix Ramsay, Michael Horsnell and Paul Kelbie, Summit sketch, Nigel Hawkes, Roger Boyes, Janet Bush Economics Correspondent, George Brock in Copenhagen, Jonathan Prynn and Sheila Gunn, A. S. Christofides, Julian Muscat, Michael Hornsay, John Goodbody, Geoffrey M. Foot, J. Paul (Head Teacher), Christopher Walker, David Conn, G. S. Evans (Director), Gerald Larner, Matthew Parris, Scrivenor, Anthony Loyd, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, J. E. A Wickham, Alan Lee Cricket Correspondent, Nicholas Wood and Jill Sherman and Philip Webst Er, Philip Webster, Nadine Meisner, Philip Pangalos, Ben Lynfield, Kate Bassett, Norma Bagshaw, Benedict Nightingale, Derek Harris, Dr Thomas Stuttaford, Jill Sherman, Political Correspondent, Wolfgang Münchau and Joanna Pitman, Rippon of Hexham, Richard D. Ryder (Chairman), Richard Morrison, Frances Gibb, Jack Bailey, Vince Wright, Martin Waller Deputy City Editor, John Phillips, Alan Jackson, John Polyzoides, John Wadham (Legal Officer), Walter Ellis, George Sivell City Editor, Jonathan Mirsky,

Resumo

Heseltine heart attack adds to the pressure on Major The prime minister returns to Britain today to settle the fate of one minister and face the debate over party financing without best advocate Britain rejects Delors package Index Lynne Truss Our Foreign Staff: EC ministers lean on Muslims to negotiate carve-up of Bosnia Hypeosaurus Rex Tory MPs urge Fowler to list private donations Clinton overwhelmed by 3.5 million letters End of Student Dream? Inside Mercury Law Trouble at the tribunal At last—a taste of sporting victory Political pressure catches up with dynamo Heseltine Heart attack comes after a series of high-profile setbacks Correction Collapse in Venice gives Major a political relapse Riddell on Politics Microsoft The prognosis is good, despite his recent emotional battering Naval guide to a Commons outing Political Sketch Gay groups meet Yard detectives News in Brief Councillor found dead Hospital for kidnapper Sacked nurse stays away Youth who served six months was 'entirely innocent' Flawed evidence from a short-sighted witness and failure to produce an alibi cast a schoolboy half a year of freedom Man shot dead on busy London street Sams arrested after ex-wife heard voice on Crimewatch Warden quits over 'too tidy' graveyard Wimbledon begins amid tight security and curbs on touts Sports lovers flock to the heavily fortified gates of tennis's Mecca Anger over £250 crash death fine Forte Crest Midland The Listeing Bank Exclusive girls' school plays down pupils' revolt Sixth formers defy headmistress over popular teacher's dismissal Censors set dinosaurs loose on small children As the hype was not enough, the Film Board has given Jurassic Park an extra publicity boost with a PG rating Pressure grows to move News at Ten Marketing men grapple with the elusive Euro-consumer Radio 1 to change its tune Investors in People National Power Judges rule cutback in legal aid were lawful MacKay urged to resume dialogue with Law Society Sex lessons to become compulsory Fen becomes reserve to protect rare spider By our Legal Correspondent: Right to silence may be curbed First direct £5m Renoir signals art sale revival Timed tickets will help foil palace touts Royal officials prepare for 7,000 visitors a day after August opening All Nippon Airways The Times World Chess Championship Short welcomes support Woman, 22 starved herself By a Staff Reporter: Guard was harassed by his male boss By a Staff Reporter: Lorry before wicket halts village cricket match Food firm in court over pasta News in Brief Nuclear alert at Faslane Peace at stones Robens stroke Rapist escapes Unfit homes Killer jailed Murder hunt Lords vote on treaty referendum postponed Cuore Spotive Parliament today Old-style Tory with a taste for trouble Labour may repay Maxwell's £31,000 amid Nadir row EC's labour laws driving away business, leaders' told Shuttle European Industry PM's soft answer turns away the British press pack Summit sketch Mitterrand widens gulf over protection Free Trade Baton fights back as allies try to pin Blame for war Helmut Kohl will have difficulty stomaching attempts to blame Germany for EC foreign policy failures A 'Voice' for Serbia Bosnia enemies united in death AXA Equity & Law Picture Gallery Anti-Rome party seale its triumph with capture of Milan Local elections have given the Northern League control of Milan. The party's aim will be to make to a showplace of efficiency to justify its view that Italy's woes are due to the burden of a backward, corrupt south Alle Suspected Eta car bombs hit Madrid (Reuter): Kravchuk retracts decree News in Brief (Reuter): Kohl challenge (Reuter): Algiers backed (Reuter): Rights 'flop' (AFP): Block on line Midland The Listening Bank Turks' dream fades as rebel colonel lays claim to Baku Russia and Turkey are competing for influence in Azerbaijan and Central Asia. With Baku lying open to rebel forces, Moscow seems to have won a crucial round Picture Gallery Caviar cartel fights cut-price Russians Israeli ministerial fraud case threatens Rabin coalition Tokyo turmoil dampens hopes of G7 trade deals While the prospects loom large of yet another summit of world leaders incapable of making decisions, the fall of the Miyazawa cabinet could end Japanese protectionism United Airlines Picture Gallery China watchers puzzle over envoy's script Peking seeks to placate peasants Christopher's treadmill of gloom leaves America without a Vision America's foreign policy has been characterised by confusion, contradiction and retreats, writes Martin Fletcher from Washington Mandela seeks pact with Zulus News in Brief (AP): Election void (Reuter): Pluralism date (Reuter): Haiti ruling Clinton tries to trace 'new' brother United Airlines Now the stories are his own Eddy Shah, the man who bulldozed the print unions, is writing novels with the same energy. Walter Ellis met him He flies himself to key locations in his private jet Hero on the home front General de Gaulle is to look down again on Londoners Major's army of misfits With graduate unemployment standing at 200,000, and rising, is there any point in going to university? To Mr Clinton, another brother Ben MacIntre on a new sibling for the president Is cancer all in the mind? Argument rages over the theory that patients can worry themselves to an early grave. Simon Wessely reports A happy pill good enough to make analysts depressed Homelife On Jacques's nerves The European leader with a nasty pain in the posterior, and the dangers of too much salt Medical Briefing A child feels death's chill Why did doctors tell a boy aged nine that he had cancer when he didn't? The health authority blamed the error on a doctor Lynne Truss As we seasoned time-travellers say, if it's Fiji, it must be Saturday again Fifth columnist? The Times Diary Picture Gallery Rules that court disaster British trials are deliberately weighted in favour of the defendent, and the burden of proof must not be shifted France without subsidies Cosy cartels are falling apart, says Glean Hands There is no panacea against corruption Ukrainian Crises Independence demands the reality not the rhetoric of reform Hypeosaurus Rex To label a film disturbing is to guarantee its success Use of DNA files to combat crime Curb on NHS debate Invalidity benefit Surgical technique New boundaries for old counties Primary teaching tasks Citizens of Germany 'Ratting on animals' Asil Nadir and Tory party funds Sporting chance An addict's lament Court Circular Canon Bruce Duncan Reception Meeting Picture Gallery Today's royal engagements Personal Column Birthdays today Dinners University news School news Church news Deputy lieutenants The Royal Air Force Forthcoming marriages Luncheon Shirley Robin Letwin Shirley Robin Letwin, political theorist and Conserative publicist, died of cancer on June 19 aged 69. She was born on February 19,1924 Personal Column Norman Jones Norman Jones, CBE, TD, group chief executive of of Lloyds Bank, 1978-83, died on June 7 aged 69. He was born on November 5,1923 Probably every one admits in the abstract the importance of controlling Sir James Smith Sir James (Alfred) Smith CBE, TD, a former chief justice in the Bahamas, died in Toronto on June 3 aged 80. He was born on May 11,1913 Gabriel Preil Gabriel Preil, Hebrew poet, died in Jerusalem on June 12 aged 84. Preil, who lived most of his life in America, was born in Estonia in 1909 News The Times Crossword No 19,263 Picture Gallery Business People in the Times Times Weathercall AA Roadwatch Tourist Rates Sport Weather Pilkington Features Law A tale of two cities The Times Tomorrow The Tate goes west Dynasty in the saddle Arts TV Listing Opinion Columns Letters The Papers Lights Switch Lack of Spark Dim View Power Boost The Pound Stock Market Interest Rates Currencies Gold Retail Prices John Charcol Talk about a Better Mortgage Small Business Picture Gallery All economic news is not necessarily bad news Arts Sport Lloyd's looses and problems blamed on self-regulation Consumer confidence at lowest since Gulf war British Steel cuts payout after losses reach £149m British Steel gave warning that its finances could not compete if Europe wanted to "stack the cards" against Britain by means of continued state subside Cheshire Building Society Invesco payoffs anger shareholders Salesman admits to breaking the law Wellcome shares dip after heart drug study is halted By our City Editor: Zeneca slips before cash-call deadline Court appoints trustees to Melton Medes funds Business Roundup Alexon shares halted C&J Clark chief to quit GE nearer GPA deal Kingfisher acquisition Profits slump at Allen Forth Ports confident Two buys for Sidlaw Aiwa jobs lift for Wales Bonus boosts BAA chief's pay package Thorn EMI sells lighting unit and plans other sales Disposal of Thom EMI's lighting business will result in a £43 million charge, offsetting a £43 million gain from the sale of the Thames Television stake CBI urges career advice shake-up Continental Airlines Picture Gallery NIE powers to a 26½p premium Insurers on course for profit this year (AP): Japanese jitters send the Nikkei plunging AP: Small firms 'squeezed out' of US market Legal & Public Notices (Reuter): BAT appeal ruling in US confirmed Renold bounces back into profit BP-Azeri oil talks go on despite turmoil Recent Issues Rate cut talk helps to push shares over 2,900 Stock Market (Reuter): Firm dollar and bonds lift Dow Wall Street Major Changes Beleaguered Lloyd's tries to lure fresh capital into market Names have been leaving Lloyd's of London in droves, as losses mount. Sarah Bagnall looks at the efforts being made to ensure its survival The Brady bunch at Invesco The Times City Diary Lloyd's, please note Taste of cold steel Tempus Kingfisher Zeneca Inadequacy of the insolvency laws Amersham / Wellcome Tempus Closure of government laboratory Investors ignored The Times Rentals Thorn EMI 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 Dep0sits ( %) Gold and Precious Metals (Baird & Co) Dollar Spot Rates Solid start to account London Business School Group has designs on cash for growth Business to Business Multiple Classified Advertising Items William Hillary Multiple Classified Advertising Items Gultronics Systems Integration Center Picture Gallery Multiple Classified Advertising Items The World of Quality Sorbet venture bears fruit Import & Export Multiple Classified Advertising Items Microsoft & Software Packard Bell Active Investors Seeking Business Partners Briefings Rebirth of extinct species? Opera: Richard Morrison on a provocative new video; plus reviews from Athens and Garsington Returning exiles royally entertain The Return of Helen Concert Hall, Athens A fresh breeze from the Rio de la Plata to the Thames Nadine Meisner previews the London season of the Tango Para Dos company from Argentina Theatre Television Haydn at home in this manor L'ifedeltà delusa Garsington Manor Entertainments Today's Choice A daily gulde to arts and entertainment compiled 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 acrose the country Royal National Theatre Mote splash than progress London Theatre: Fringe shows, long on titles but shorter on coherence Backstroke in a Crowded Pool Bush Mixed, mismatched Groping for Trouts in a Peculiar River/ Chelsea Girls BAC, Battersea/ Man in the Moon, SW3 Safely through customs Comedy Cabaret: Tony Patrick The Times Last word in monkey business Television Review: Can chimpanzees be taught to use language? Nigel Hawkes on scientists' controversial attempts to talk to the animals No longer sold on selling Today's most promising young artists seem less obsessed with marketing than their Eighties predecessors, writes Alison Roberts Welcome return after long exile World Music Tom Zé Queen Elizabeth Hall Slowly but surely Rock Gary Clark Camden Jongleurs Gala night for a top-notch deputy Gerald Larner on Birmingham concerts Philharmonia/ Sinopoli Symphony Hall, Birmingham Keys to the shires Kathryn Stott Adrian Boult Hall, Birmingham Woody's debut Arts Briefing Quarry Dougall Hughes-Castell Ltd Chambers Quarry Dougall The Post Office Associate Position Multiple Classified Advertising Items Trouble at the tribunal Sacked employees may have to wait a year before they get to an industrial tribunal, says David Conn, who follows several cases to their end Solicitors under attack The legal services ombudsman is not happy with the handling of complaints Your PC is stoned Inns and Outs Quarry Dougall Paisner & Co The SFO may be going too far Hong Kong Dilemma Zarak Magrae Brenner Poly Gram Selector Europe Zarak MacRae Brenner Lipson Lloyd Jones Zurich Insurance South Kensington Lawyer for Ukraine Multiple Classified Advertising Items Profitable Practices Investigations Whose law will rule Hong Kong? As Britain's negotiations continue with China, Robin Fitzsimons examines a continuing conflict over the legal framework under which the colony will be governed after 1997 Lawyers have profound reservations about whether the courts will remain as independent as promised Home Office Hewitson Becke+Shaw Solicitors Zarak MacRae Brenner OBP Career Change? Paying the price of poor management New research too many firms are stock with old-fashioned ways of working Franchising Employee liable to tax assessment Failure to consult established Crown Prosecution Service Company Secretary Designate Chambers of David Barnard Common law offence applicable Procedure for sterilisation declarations Southern Water plc Coole & Haddock Graduate Recruitment Coordinator Legal Adviser Edinburgh Seaside setting inspires Vowles S Africans to play in GB Talking finance Open record Stepping down For the Record Pools Forecast Janzen has credentials to keep one step ahead Rivals pay glowing tributes to new US Open champion Final Scores from Baltusrol Rapid Cricketline Multiple Display Advertising Items Michelin Suns eclipsed as Paxson's rainbow fills pot of gold Simon Barnes believes that football's claim to be world's most popular game is under serious challenge from basketball Haynes's batting rises above farce Essex denied spoils by resolution of Robinson County Table Glamorgan's path eased by Watkin Benson leads trip to Holland Yesterday's County Championship Scoreboards Today's Fixtures Opening pair too good for Sussex Manchester starts fund to help poor relations David Miler in Lausanne looks at the latest move in the bidding to host the 2000 Olympic Games Word-Watching Cricketcall Candy sweet on Plate contender Intrepidity misses Curragh Thunderer: Newbury Channon has Irish target Inner City ready for Newmarket return Yesterday's Results Thunderer: Brighton Yarmouth Thunderer Thunderer: Warwick Nutty Brown off mark Rapid Raceline Edberg's experience overcomes resilience of Rusedski Andrew Longmore on a grateful qualifier content to packet his loer's cheque and move on Wimpleton wizard returns to Fairyland Lucky shot off racket frame inspires comeback by Agassi Company Gold Day Results Today's Order of Play First day crowd well up Yesterday's Results at Wimbledon Foster heads successful British trio Parade of the walking wounded Quiet market Help at hand Power cut Quote of the day BBC 1 Variations Radio 3 Satellite Cafédirect Golf England remain defiant in defeat Australia take 2-0 lead in Ashes series as disastters of first three days prove too difficult to overcome Agassi warms to Wimbledon's welcome Concise Crossword No 3128 Lord's Scoreboard Winning Move Word-Watching Olympic Games Sun Microsystem Computer Corporation Border cautious in victory

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