News from 05/11/1993
1993; Gale Group;
Autores
Srikumar Sen, Boxing Correspondent, Anthony Harris, Jon Ashworth, Freud, Sarah Underwood, Arthur Leathley and Rachel Kelly, Rob Hughes, Richard Ford, Home Correspondent, Neil Bennett, Philip Howard, Stewart Tendler and Michael Evans, Hilary Finch, Jeremy Kingston, Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent, D. J. Yorke, George Sivell, Carl Mortished, J. H. Scotson, Nick Nuttall, Environment Correspondent, Stewart Tendler, Crime Correspondent, Sarah Jane Checkland and Andrew Pierce, Kevin Eason, Stuart Jones Tennis Correspondent, Bernard Levin, Martin Fletcher, Nicholas Wood, Nicholas Watt and Philip Webster, Kris Anderson, David Hewson, Richard Beeston and our Foreign Staff, Patricia Tehan, Martin Flanagan, Peter Ball, Alice Thomson Political Reporter, David Curry, A. W. Tait, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Rachel Kelly, R. J. Luck, Richard Evans, Racing Correspondent, Alison Roberts, Arts Reporter, Ruth Gledhill Religion Correspondent, Alan Hamilton, Peter Millar, John Mayo, Director General, Rachel Kelly, Property Correspondent, Janet Bush, Keith Pike, Edward Gorman, Susan Gilchrist, Sally Jones, Philip Webster and Jonathan Prynn, Inigo Bing, Richard Cork, Margot Norman, George Brock, Nicholas Harling, Nicholas Wood Chief Political Correspondent, Lucy Berrington, David Miller, Barry Millington, John Hopkins Golf Correspondent, Tony Samstag, Jill Sherman and Nicholas Wood, Raymond Keene, Peter Davalle, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Paul Wilkinson, Alix Ramsay, Karen O'brien, Chris Partridge, Michael Dynes, Whitehall Correspondent, Oliver Holt, Roger Boyes, Roger Boyes and Andrew Finkel, Nigel Hawkes, Science Editor, Pamela Hopley, Bill Frost and Ronald Faux, Graham Fuller, Adam Fresco, Andrew Finkel and Hazhir Teimourian, Mike Munro, Richard Duce, Christopher Thomas, John Goodbody, Ross Tieman Industrial Correspondent, Joseph L. Kearns, Adrian Deevoy, Matthew Parris, Alan Lee, Walter Gammie, Anthony Loyd, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Sarah Jane Checkland, Ian Brodie, David Sinclair, Philip Pangalos, Stephen Pettitt, Pat Sweet, Geoffrey Osborne, Michael Horsnell, Nicholas George, Frances Gibb Legal Correspondent, Colin Narborough World Trade Correspondent, Valerie Grove, Anne McElvoy, Martin Waller Deputy City Editor, Anna Cless, M. Cowdery, John Jones, Michael Dynes and Richard Ford, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Jonathan Mirsky, East Asia Correspondent, Jonathan Mirsky, Francis Pearce,
Resumo£1.4bn power shift aims to boost regions A shake-up in the way government is organised around England, with a view to regenerating inner cities, has won guarded support from councils Splitting up of England among Sponsor Minister Fly Free For the rest of your life Index Matthew Parris Peer wins right to sell Sevso silver Kurd firebombs hit London Green hue on winter Games Telecom Profits What foe well-dressed woman cleric will wear Blood scandal spreads HIV panic David Puttnam 300,000 officials strike today The Famous Grouse Finest Scotch Whisky 30p Bowlers and hankies at the mad hatters' tea party Political Sketch Major dashes Hume's hopes on peace initiative AEA! KGB man demands police apology Clarke and Lilley haggle over VAT cash Tories slump to an all-time low in polls News in Brief Nurse's abortion claim Satellite TV criticised BA defends Gulf action Widow strangled Treasure worth £1.75m Undertaker goes on air Store's honest mistake Jury awards £350,000 damages to Elton John Singer celebrates as newspaper faces huge bill for fictional story about 'diet of death' Princess pours scorn on health fears The Times Weekend By a Staff Reporter: Boy friend 'killed call girl's client' Booker book shelved in favour of romance Women of the new-look cloth Sainsbury's Homebase House and Garden Centres Wife tells jury of bathroom death plot Witnesses tell of James's tearful walk to his death Currys Save on Phones Howard tackles squatters with fast-eviction scheme Police given frontline role in reclaiming houses and shops Flower-power musical wilts as sun sets on the Aquarians Branson is The Times salesman of the year Scare stories focus government's mind The Barnet Saleroom Marshall & Merriman & Associates Boats kill dolphins News in Brief Forgery charge Stung to death Bird hoard Woman drowns We have failed you, Puttnam tells cinema audiences Academy hears call for younger generation to revive British cinema By our Media Correspondent: Studies say VAT will cut book purchases The Times Dillons Debate Membership Miles Satellite viewer wins legal fight TV licence fee tied to inflation Rural children 'are I at Increased risk from leukaemia' Ford Peer's win leaves rivals smarting Sevso silver By a Staff Reporter: Victim criticises judge for asking his advice Readers show skill Sky Toyota's Budget Busters Investigation into Falklands 'war crimes' nears end Crown Prosecution Service to receive dossier on claims that prisoners were shot by Britons Stores add a sparkle to bonfire festivities Weekend Shopping IBM CJD death verdict opens the way for compensation Man's child support rises 1,200% Vietnam ordeal provoked US troops to torture and murder Police may privatise burglar alarm calls Lord Chancellor attacked by judge Speaker to investigate rail bill 'dirty tricks' Tories have accused Labour of causing chaos in the Commons by breaking the rules of the parliamentary game Comet You Know where to Come Smith calls for peace force to be permanent Private sector gets Whitehall work Major is 'damaged' by power struggle (AFP): Major May call halt to negotiations on colony Sage Sterling All survive as jet slides into Hong Kong harbour China mobilises lone condom machine to control masses Peace envoys' car crash puts paid to Kashmir siege deal Kurds hit Turkish targets in Europe with firebomb blitz Ciller calls on neighbouring states to halt support for militant separatists Guerrillas test Ankara resolve in war of 10,000 dead Astec Paris Travel Service Blood scandal shows risk of plasma trade Although voluntary blood donations tend to be safer, the market for commercial products is likely to grow because too few people freely offer to meet demand America and Russia to build space station America and Russia are to expand co-operation in space. The first tangible result should see a Russian cosmonaut joining a Us Shuttle mission next year Russia sends marines into Georgian war Philips Pains for Labour on minister's pregnancy Cabinet dilemma over maternity leave divides Norway Briton on trial over plutonium From Associated Press in Philadelphia: Mother guilty of killing daughter Makro Drunken looting marks Muslim capture of Vares Swedish peacekeepers police streets in vain victoria troops run amok after Croat withdrawal Budget Israelis say talks deadlock resolved US senator proposes tax rise on bullets News in Brief Deal on Libya Chrétien team (Reuter): Bush Jr stands Iraq enquiry (Reuter): Killer stoves (AP): Ring in the new Bolger re-election hopes boosted by economic revival Despite New Zealand's high level of unemployment, the government is on course to retain power. the Labour opposition has been distracted by leadership doubts UK director dies in Malibu blaze Thatcher has US enthralled B&Q The Home of D. I. Y By our Foreign Staff: Sydney police find two more tourists' bodies Hunt resumed for serial killer who preys on backpackers SAA Unhappy families in the adoption lottery The hopes of thousands of childless couples have been raised by Virginia Bottomley's white paper on adoption. But will the reality leave their expectation dashed? Hollywood discovers the dorm Britain beleaguered prep schools are to get the star treatment, Rachel Kelly reports Fawkes: no fairy tale Bonfires without guys on top? Peter Millar thinks England has gone soft The Times 'I asked if the Ira was prepared for 3,000 more dead. They said yes' After a fortnight of growing horror in Northern Ireland, Gordon Wilson talks of the need for tougher security Silliness always gets my vote Foolery is an essential part of the Commons, says Mathew Parris The London Hernia Centre Multiyork Philip Howard Why is the prime minister quoting Horace? Because the poet is still fun, 2,000 years on Schools boss carpeted Diary Out of Europe Diary Picture Gallery Behaving like animals In the politically correct world of animal liberation human beings are expendable. The law appears to take the same view Signing off Diary No time to Bragg Diary Note of mystery Diary Parliament goes off the rails The ritual of MPs makes for bad bills, Peter Riddell says Embers of War No public interest is served by the Falklands investigations Property and Theft An end to squatting will help the homeless in the long-term Box Clever Television should be a major British export CPS and rising crime figures Shortcomings in the health service RSI judgment Fuel tax hardship Preserving type Whitehall way for local councils Package holidays Wrong rectory Sinking fast Court Circular Anniversaries Personal Column British Library Picture Gallery Today's royal engagements Birthdays today Reception Dinners Service dinners Service luncheon Memorial services School news Church of Scotland At Home Insurers' Company Forthcoming marriages Appointments in the Forces Latest wills Trailfinders William Haggard Richard Clayotn, civil servant, better known under his thriller writer's nom de plume of William Haggard, died on October 27 aged 86. He was born in Croydon on August 11,1907 Personal Column Multiple Classified Advertising Items Jack Jones Jack Jones, a moderate member of the miners' union leadership, died near his home in Coalville, Leicestershire, on October 25 aged 69. He was born in Kent on May 8,1924 Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Sea Cadets Major-General Edwin Walker Edwin Anderson Walker, a two-star US Army general whose extreme right-wing views brought his military career to an end in 1961, died in Dallas, Texas, on October 31 aged 83. He was bron in Center Point, Texas, on November 10,1909 Professor Desmond Nuttall Desmond Nuttall, Professor of Curricullum and Assessment Studies at the Institute of Education University of London, died suddenly on October 24 aged 49. He was born on February 12,1944 Socialists and Lord Mayour's Day This attempt by the umemployed in tag on to the tall of the Lord Mayor's Show procession reflects the depths of distress in the capital as winter approached News The Times Crossword No 19,380 Business People in the Times Weather The Times Tomorrow Payout warning takes shine off BT profits Low inflation will force Bt to cut ?500 million from its revenues in the current year. It has already announced lower weekend charges that will cost Bt £125 million Ofwat to squeeze water prices Index Exchange issues guidelines to stop market leaks Index Akzo seeks Nobel prize Write-off takes toll at Boots Singapore Airlines Jam Today, Jams Tomorrow Business Today Open Skies Open Doors Opening up Warning hits First National Lloyd's trusts Euromoney up J Smart falls Raglan rights MMT ahead BT US carrier calls for free market in airport slots American Airlines wants the Europen Community to embrace an open skies policy, eliminating subsidies to state-owned carriers and improving access to airports ES Com EC may withdraw concessions over Gatt Philips returns to black but says more jobs to go Business Roundup Wm Low refocuses Canada cancels Eh-101 Volvo urged to drop link WPP sells Scali group The Stock Exchange's pretend world Let industrialists look after the shop The party is over for water companies and shares Flying high in a free market Disposals fuel BP's drive to tame debt Manchester pays penalty for cup exit New chiefs for troubled Pentos The Times Gartmore's valuation is £339m Brewers hurt by fears of price war spillover Stock Market Market at a Glance Major Changes FT-SE Volumes Liffe Options Buoyant builders point up recovery Recent Issues Major Indices Traditional Options Commodities Wall Street London Financial Futures Money Markets Sterling Spot and Forward Rates Other Sterling Money Rates (%) European Money Deposits (%) Gold and Precious Metals (Baird & Co) Wall St wilts as the news gets better Dollar Spot Rates Lifting the Chancellor's pre-Budget purdah veil Kenneth Clarke will present the first unified Budget on November 30. Janet Bush looks at what is considered in preparing the statement Mary Archer may bow out The Times City Diary Economic sparkle The Times City Diary Turbulent times The Times City Diary Gremlins galore The Times City Diary No Xtra help The Times City Diary Broken away The Times City Diary BP Boots D. F. S Furniture Company plc Dividend disconnection Tempus Picture Gallery Gartmore The Times Unit Trust Information Service Widespread falls Securitised Endowment Contracts Plc Bidding for the best buys Computer auctions used to have a bad reputation. Now they are a recognised way to sell new products cheaply, reports Pat Sweet Computer Task Group U. K Multiple Display Advertising Items A break for the office boffin "Training" often means asking a colleague. Now there's a new answer Science link-up Online TMA Ventures Ltd Sound method lets you talk to your computer David Hewson looks forward to a time when he will be able to whisper instructions to his desktop PC Framlington Fountain highmead How to target mail shots Parallel processing could help firms reach customers who will be interested An eye on the East Chris Partridge reports on business opportunities in the Eastern bloc Information Technology TSI Group Motorola S+T+C Selection Monuments to a great adventure Who deserves the Turner Prize? Richard Cork assesses the four shortlisted artists as their provocative work goes on show Unchallenged in the tunes league Concert: André Previn has returned to London's musical life, armed with a new Cello Sonata. Review by Stephen Pettit LSO/Previn Barbican Theatre Rock Aldwych Theatre Entertainments Weekend Choice A daily guide to arts and entertainment complled by Kris Anderson 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 No great catch for this crew Theatre: Jeremy Kingston reviews the Royal Shakespeare Company's Melville adaptation Moby Dick Other Place, Stratford Fanfare for a virtuoso Hakan Hardenberger Barbican Austerity measures Maurizio Pollini Festival Hall Maurizio Pollini Festival Hall The Times Bitter suite Terry Hall Jazz Caf?, Camden Concert Rock on Friday: A talk on the mild side with Canada's finest … Revival (or requiem?) for a Special … Hendrix lives Voodoo chile (seasonal return) New Albums: Yet another opportunity to become fully Experienced Christy Moore Top Ten Albums Pearl jam He's a megastar, he's Bryan who? Adams. you know, the "I Do It For You" one, 16 weeks at No 1 and so on. David Sinclair meets unknown hero Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Hartwell Ford SAAB Multiple Classified Advertising Items Toyota Peugeot Multiple Classified Advertising Items Medway Mercedes-Benz Multiple Classified Advertising Items JCT 600 Multiple Classified Advertising Items An epidemic of road cones From the north of Scotland to the West Country, roads are blocked each weekend by thousands of red cones. Motorists are reaching the end of their tether, Kevin Eason reports Well worth the 15-year wait The Saab 900 will create many new fans for the Scandinavian marque Salsa party Steal a march on thieves Roadwise Man who could Picture Gallery ... cars that can't Place in the sun Lots of bottle Motoring Multiple Classified Advertising Items Volvo Rover Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Motoring Team Multiple Classified Advertising Items Coming clean at the pump Companies respond to investigation Multiple Classified Advertising Items Newman ensures champion Bowe cashes in on title Pressure grows for Lewis bout Legal & Public Notices Lament of a doleful daredevil Oliver Holt discovers what might have been had Carl Fogarty had better luck this season Warehouse club consent lawful Law Report November 5 1993 Queen's Bench Division Defence of honest factual mistake Jennings at heart of Slough revival Manchester United sunk by sea change in football Rob Hughes looks at another English failure in the European Cup and the lessons it provides When tea-drinking Turks had plenty to shout about Freud on Friday Pitch too small poses problem for Peppard Non-League Football by Walter Gammie Norwich revel in new role of standard-bearers in Europe Goss presents strong case for World Cup Goal glut confirms Arsenal's cup skill By our Sports Staff: Border the second Australian to reach 25,000 runs For the Record Autosport Australian Grand Prix Farrell leads England to net gain Sally Jones finds the England netball captain full of confidence for the game's future Fixtures Racing Results from Yesterday's Five Meetings Senna admits regret over Irvine incident Sport in Brief Edwards optimistic Maximum incentive Pickering withdraws Attempt at record Skelton opens in style Kankkunen lifts title Gosden bullish about Turf chance Optimism grows as Europeans sample the tight Santa Anita track Mackeson beckons for Panto Prince Rapid Raceline Thunderer: Doncaster Guide to our Racecard Thunderer: Yarmouth Thunderer: Hexham Thunderer: Market Rasen Fortune favours Supple this time Indecision indicates Gower should be the retiring type Alan Lee Cricket Commentary Henman makes good impression Byrd flies in late as Guildford go down Becker overcomes tense opening Odds favour Chinese breakthrough David Miller hears an authoritative voice dismiss suspicions over world record runs Fixture turmoil emphasises player demands New Zealand choose Larsen at flanker Word-Watching BBC 1 Radio1 Variations Choice Satellite Motor Cycling Premier League to investigate transfers Three-man panel set up to restore faith of public following allegations of secret payments Gilford maintains momentum to set pace Times Two Crossword Winning Move Word-Watching Zenith Clement Freud Blackburn pickup expensive Flowers
Referência(s)