Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 06/07/1993

1993; Gale Group;

Autores

Anthony Harris, Anatol Lieven, Edward Gorman Ireland Correspondent, Jill Sherman Political Correspondent, Robert Morgan Political Staff, Neil Bennett, Alexandra Frean, Media Correspondent, Elizabeth Obadina and Kate Alderson, Ivo Tennant, P. G. Harris, Philip Howard, Simon Hughes, Michael Horsnell and James Landale, David Steel, Hilary Finch, Ian Murray, Jeremy Kingston, Clive Davis, Irl F. Engelhardt (Chairman), Lynne Truss, Carl Mortished, Sally Mordant, Colin Narbrough, Geoff Brown, Joe Joseph, Bernard Levin, Ruth Gledhill, Religion Correspondent, Stuart Jones, John Spencer, Bruce Clark, Jane Whitehead, Nicholas Wood and Michael Evans, Patricia Tehan, Dr Catriona C. Muir, Martin Flanagan, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Wolfgang Münchau and Ian Brodie, Clifford Tibber, Michael Evans, Defence Correspondent, Alan Hamilton, Rodney Milnes, Michael Clark, Philip Robinson, John Young, Mike Watson, David Hands, Charles Bremner, Anna-Maria Rollin, Simon Roberts, Geoffrey Hosking, Peter Barnard, Philip Bassett, Industrial Editor, Aileen Ballantyne, David Howell, Michael Binyon Diplomatic Editor, Jim Lester, Hilary Heilbron, Patricia Tehan, Banking Correspondent, Margot Norman, Annabel Geddes, Dan Neuteboom, Wolfgang Munchau, Kari Knight, Barry Millington, Geoffrey Wheeler, Alan Toogood, Horticulture Correspondent, Oliver Holt Motor Racing Correspondent, David Powell Athletics Correspondent, Marcus Binney, Raymond Keene, Jonathan Prynn, Lin Jenkins, and Tom Rhodes, Alan Lee, Cricket Correspondent, James D. Zirin, Paul Wilkinson, Lawrence Freedman, Richard Evans, G. D. Howat, David Pannick QC, Roger Boyes, Michael Theodoulou and Ian Brodie, Janet Bush Economics Correspondent, Ian Samuel, Peter Taylor, Rodney Hobson, Julian Muscat, Roderick MacLean, Adam Fresco, Richard Duce, Martin Waller, Deputy City Editor, Joanna Pitman, Matthew Parris, W. Roy Large, Anne Dixon, William Boyd, Scrivenor, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Richard Beeston, Nadine Meisner, Philip Pangalos, Melinda Wittstock, Stephen Pettitt, Kate Bassett, George Steiner, Benedict Nightingale, Derek Harris, Tom Rhodes, Dr Thomas Stuttaford, Jill Sherman, Political Correspondent, Frances Gibb Legal Correspondent, Pat Koza, Jack Bailey, Frances Gibb, Lindy Price, Hugh Leach, Arthur Leathley, Michael Henderson, Michael Evans, Martin Waller Deputy City Editor, Ross Tieman, Conal Gregory, Esther Culpin, Michael Meacher, George Sivell City Editor, J. J. Rowe, David Utting, Sarah Bagnall Insurance Correspondent,

Resumo

Judges will fight to keep trial by jury Proposals to abolish automatic right to jury trial could lead to a confrontation between the legal establishment and the government Setback in Lords for BR sell-off Index Lynne Truss British aid volunteer killed in Sarajevo's Sniper Alley After the Fire Wise Men still divided on tax rises Unfair Advantage? Gooch gives England new heart Backbench Tories draw the line on defence cuts Alzheimer's Disease Society Law the Solicitor's Spokesman Man charged over baseball bat attack News in Brief Doctor's plea rejected School expels boy of 6 Sect member dies Actor wins libel cash Woman raped at Henley Boy's marrow surgery Salmonella outbreak Woman treated as slave Harrods Britain's own worst enemies left sitting on defence Political Sketch Archbishop predicts that women will be bishops As an ecclesiastical committee prepares to vote on ordaining women priests, Dr Carey gives his views on female bishops IRA van bomb destroys town centre Tories quell Commons revolt Coal pit closures ITV hints at fresh attempt to switch news flagship City beats roadblock disruption St. Joseph's Hospice Irish police forced to let wanted widows go free Elderly sisters vanish to continue life on the run A sighting in Ireland by police has failed to halt the year-long grand adventure of two quiet widows from East Grinstead Rapist was ex-mental patient Test match funsters strike a blow against BBC guide Are BBC staff reaching the high standards set in their new English style guide, asks Alan Hamilton By a Staff Reporter: Vigilante solves crime on leave from prison By a Staff Reporter: McVicar's son escapes from police custody Canon Picture Gallery Hotel pays £8,000 for honeymoon racism Peugeot By a Staff Reporter: Nadir was a guest at No 10 six times Judge gives addict peer last chance to kick heroin habit Nordic sport Man with machete holds 30 girls hostage in school Centrebank Minister rejects organic appeal Students' union takes on campus church cults Mercury Adjustments mean deeper cuts in all but name White paper: Rifking aims to prune £1bn from defence budget Service redundancy programmes will continue drive for savings Finance Changing Shape of Britain's Armed Forces Financial reality is obscured by end of the Cold War Navy is biggest victim of cuts Labour MPs joins forces with Tory critics of cuts Amid protests from backbencher and warnings of job losses Despite the end of the Cold War, the latest round of cuts will leave the armed forces overstretched, MPs claim An age when red coats ruled the world Imperial History Review will lead to a tide of job losses, say unions Mercury Panasonic Picture Gallery Recession forces lawyers to cut fees Survey finds big variation in cost of legal work Town gets tough on undeserving poor Police say pushy tactics beggar belief Calculator given tag of £200,000 Childminder claims the right to smack Sams made up killer, QC says Midland By a Staff Reporter: Motoring ban for Woosnam The Times World Chess Championship Missing voters threaten to wreck boundary changes The Apricot Connection Picture Gallery Lilley is attacked over lone mothers Major praises aid deal Why the minister protests too much West must let Yeltsin police the East Geoffrey Hosking argues that the West should learn form its Yugoslav mistakes and encourage Russia's army to find a positive role in averting conflicts in the former Soviet Union Shevardnadze survives battle tank explosion Abandoned town at mercy of Armenians House of Fraser Stores Our Foreign Staff: Battered UN gams respite as Croats lift siege of bases Confidence in UN peacekeeping has been sapped by a week of setbacks and embarrassments. Even its efforts to provide food and medicine face breakdown By our Foreign Staff: Volunteers brave Sniper Alley Honda Picture Gallery Culture of violence cuts deep in Bonn Poles go on shop spree to beat VAT Iraqis braced for showdown after UN team pulls out The clash over surveillance cameras could bring another punitive missile strike on Baghdad and at the very least ruin Iraq's desperate hopes of resuming oil exports Honda Picture Gallery Rusting funfair lightens Baghdad gloom Olympus Tokyo old guard wages defensive poll battle as foes multiply Japan's election promises to be a watershed. After 38 years in power, the Liberal Democrats could end up in opposition Balladur weaves bond of trust in France Lagos explodes in violent protest over election veto Austin Kaye Britain keeps US guessing over cash for Russian Fund The G7 summit Picture Gallery Denktas to quit talks on Cyprus News in Brief (Reuter): Arrest sought (Reuter): Bhutto invited (Reuter): Mob justice Juvenile plea Purity league Tintin grows up and discovers sex Hampton Court Palace Flower Show More life and death, please Oxford Heating Ltd Honey's fatal sting Peter Taylor on man's ancient and ambiguous relationship with bees A good man in an African jail William Boyd celebrates a brilliant Nigerian writer now behind bars Beth turns a bionic ear Illness robbed a child of her sense of hearing. Technology helped her to regain it. Aileen Ballantyne reports Rear Window Wash away the aches Lynne Truss Promise not to deafen me, and I promise not to strangle yo Groupies gather Panic response What sort of nation shall we be? Untill it decides on a role in the world, Britain can only tinker with its defences, says Lawrence Freedman A ministry of dirty works The stench from the offices of some senior members of the government is overpowering and can no longer be ignored Collected V-signs And evening star Still first for service Flexible Defence Mr Rifkind's plans demand sceptical examination Mothers and Fathers Ministers are right to lead debate on family policy Seven Divided Men Mr Clarke will be little the wiser from his reading yesterday The choice of experiencing childbirth without pain Young criminals A name with fizz Coal and irony 1 Pennington Street, London E1 9xn Telephone 071-782 5000 Trade in mahogany Wind of change Units of justice Interests of justice Business letters Better armed Booker judgments Letters should carry a daytime telephone number.… Relief sought fop debt-ridden Africa Manchester's year Seasonal errors Added value Court Circular Today's royal engagements Personal Column Picture Gallery Birthdays today Institute of Biology Legal appointment A new world of flowers opens at Hampton Court Battle of Britain Thanksgiving Service Luncheon Memorial services Latest wills Appointment Forthcoming marriages Marriages Anniversaries Personal Column Professor Ralph Johnson Ralph Johnson, director of postgraduate medical education and training at Oxford University, died, aged 59, on July 1 of heart failure after being stung by a swarm of bees. He was born on December 3,1933 Joe De Rita Joe De Rita, comedian and the last of The Three Stooges, died at the Motion Picture and Television Fund Hospital, Los Angeles, on July 3 aged 83. He was born on July 12,1909 Absolutely All Sold out Events British Heart Foundation the Heart Research Charity Leukaemia Research Fund Royal National Lifeboat Institution John Pico John John Pico John, a milliner whose hats adorned fashionable women and film stars throughout the Western world, died following a heart attack at his home in Manhattan on June 25 aged 91 The Royal Wedding Thomas Hayley Thomas Theodore Steiger Hayley, anthropologist, and psychoanalyst, died in London on June 23 aged 79. He was born in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) on October 4,1913 Hats for starring occasions: Greta Garbo, left, in… Clash over right to jury trial Tory battlelines drawn on defence Aid worker killed Unscheduled stop Gooch inspires hope IRA wrecks town Women bishops Widows on the run Tintin grows up on the wild side The Times Crossword No 19,275 Marquess cleared Girls held hostage Refugees flee Iraq showdown Britain's bill Back to ten Picture Gallery Business People in the Times Times Weathercall People in the Times Pilkington The Times Tomorrow Lloyd's Debate Summit Talk Dropping Light of India The Pound John Charcol Small Business Protest at Bank on BCCI anniversary Wise Men spell out options for rate cut A "slow and patchy" recovery gives Chancellor Kenneth Clarke scope for a further small cut in interest rates, if he follows the advice of his Seven Wise Men Arts Picture Gallery More wisdom, but no more insight Sport Bairstow goes in shake-up at Queens Moat Houses Television and Radio Builders still in recession EBRD moves to fill power vacuum The Times Reuter: Sutherland urges G7 to help Gatt Britain to double aid for Vietnam O&y poised for first legal step to recovery The Times Yorkshire-Tyne Tees to cut 188 jobs in revamp Business Roundup Nursing group ahead Gardiner cautious Scott Pickford eases Bromsgrove looks East Carclo orders 'are up' Advertisement the Scottish Provident Institution Defence link still eludes GEC and British Aerospace Names keep up pressure at Lloyd's meeting Lloyd's management faced heated questions from names who demanded to know whether the insurance market owes them a duty of care after their steep losses Stevens defies calls to quit Ruling clears Coopers men for work Greycoat control may go to Postel S&n profits fall flat for first time in decade By our City Staff: SE to issue insider guidelines Griffin Factors National Power buys stakes in US plants Stream of flotations expected to continue Legal & Public Notices Bull to axe 6,500 jobs worldwide Mining threat Fyffes buying Unigate sale Capita coup Kerry listing Just the ticket Coutts Consulting proposal rejected Major Changes Rolls-Royce shares hit by fear of forced selling from abroad Stock Market Tokyo shares becalmed World Markets The Times Carclo Less circus, more focus as recession bites G7 summit Wolfgang M?nchau, in Tokyo, expects this week's Group of Seven summit to return, almost by accident, to the big economic questions Going against tradition The Times City Diary Royal command The Times City Diary In the swim The Times City Diary All bets off The Times City Diary Stroll on The Times City Diary National pride S & N Construction Planting seeds for return to profit UMWA should return to the negotiating table Proportional pay Foreign power Tempus British Airways Book-Talk Siemens The Times Unit Trust Information Service FT-SE Volumes Liffe Options Major Indices Commodities London Financial Futures Money Markets Sluggish start to account First direct Siemens looks east to bolster tumbling sales As part of a global review of its business, Siemens may expand in Britain, where lower costs will be an advantage if the Maastricht treaty is fully adopted in other Ec countries By our City Staff: UK offshore oil output rises Business to Business Business for Sale Telecommunications Well, we are in the Eec like It or Not Investment Opportunity Residential Development Earns proven 20K + p. a. Company Profiles (Licence) Ltd The Bacchanalia Group PLC Picture Gallery American Airlines lands US Air route Countryside shares £300m development New Zealand Migration Consultancy The Times Pirtek Commercial Property Engineer calls for ?20m to cut debts Import & Export Funds aim to nil the equity gap for firms thinking big Surviving the recession with a creditors' voluntary arrangement Abu Dhabi Trade Opportunity Gultronics Systems Integration Centres USA Imported Union Camp Corporation Café samples wine importing INVESTORS/Venturers sought for consortium to… No. 1 Offshore Company Specialists Business Consultants Do you wish to advise your… Low Interest Time Briefings Quarry Dougall Zarak MacRae Brenner Michael Page Legal Quarry Dougall Zarak MacRae Brenner Eastern Electricity Schering-Plough Practice Manager Acting for 60,000 lawyers The high-profile Rodger Pannone next week becomes president of the Law Society. Frances Gibb talks to the man who might have been a priest Moving on The Times Another Titanic? Inns and Outs Cold comfort Wheel power Package deal Costs up Smell a rat Legal Appointments Quarry Dougall When you can trust jurors to forget Counsel Index Legal Appointments Zarak MacRae Brenner CJA Recruitment Consultants Group Zarak MacRae Brenner Matrimonial. Solr 2 yrs Pqe+ reqd by estab Berks… Wellman Smith Michael Page Finance Wellman Smith Mr. Nigel Baker Q. C. Courts caught in a time warp England's civil law system is long overdue for change, Hilary Heilbron, QC, writes Zarak MacRae Brenner The Chambers of Martin Bethel Q. C. Legal Appointments Quarry Dougall Legal Exit Bristol North West London Criminal Litigation Solr 1 yr Pqe+ urgently reqd by… Please mind your language in court The Times Amphletts Role of judge at trial Legal Appointments Global Markets Recruitment Ltd. Graham Gill & Young Beiten Burkhardt Mittl & Wegener Knowledge fixes cause of action Nottinghamshire County Council Comdisco Law Report July 6 1993 Defence to unlawful advertisements Mergers & Acquisitions Lipson Lloyd Jones Court of Appeal Refugee returned to first stop in Community ODA After the fire, the sparklers Heritage: Marcus Binney on suggestions, outlandish or inspired, for the restoration of Windsor Castle On a sound footing if music comes first Although not every performer at the Glasgow International Jazz Festival is strictly jazz, Clive Davis thinks it probably the best of its kind in Britain Opera Dance Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition Entertainments The Times Today's Choice A daily guide to arts and entertainment complied by Kari Knight Theatre Guide Jeremy Kingston's Assessment of theatre showing in London HOuse full, returns only Some seats available Seats at all prices Cinema Guide Geoff Brown's assessment films in London and (where indicated with the symbol) on release across the country No gold at this Rimbaud's end Opera: A new work by Kevin Volans, premired but apparently not quite ready The Man who Strides the Wind Almeida Acient and eloquent L'Orfeo St James's. Piccadilly Ancient and eloquent Idiosyncratic attitudes Concert RPO/Geriev Barbican The Times Dancing with tears in their eyes Thetare: Benedict Nightingale sees Brian Friel in wistful mood; Kate Bassett hardly recognises Chekhov Welsh rare hits Festival: Top-class musical performers at Gregynog in deepest Powys Barks worse than their bite Television Familiarity breeds sellouts Swan Lake Coliseum Campion the wonder Arts Briefing Prize Fish Sisters several times removed Last chance... Essex resist Kent's frantic final surge Middlesex conjure astonishing triumph Pools Forecast Picture Gallery Yorkshire attempt to halt slump Yesterday's Scoreboards Cricketcall Whitaker in form for title defence Sport in Brief Ferryman for Spurs Fisher's Open double Victory confusion Lightbody in final Martin optimistic Iberia Word-Watching Rapid rise built on instinctive talent Richard Evans finds Peter Chapple-Hyam able to decline Arab patronage Thunderer: Newmarket Thunderer: Pontefract Results from Yesterday's Four Meeting Today's Races on Television Newmarket C4 By our Sports Staff: Nelissen snatches lead from champion Indur?in Rapid Raceline Mauled Lions leave legacy to inspire home nations David Hands detects a changing face to world rugby after the British Isles tour of New Zealand Service limits Wimbledon's appeal Stuart Jones on the power-play that poses a threat to grass-court tennis For the Record Prost has stinging reply for Mansell Chelimo surges to world record The Times BBC1 Variations Radio 3 Choice Picture Gallery Satellite Austin Reed Cricket Gooch keeps England's Ashes hopes alive Thorpe plays impressive supporting role in exposing shortcomings of Australia's attack Captain's greatness revealed in test of adversity Concise Crossword No 3140 Winning Move Word-Watching Tennis South Africa to tour Sun Microsystems Computer Corporation

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