Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 19/11/1993

1993; Gale Group;

Autores

George Cole, John Coleman, Jon Ashworth, David Adams, D. Ian McCALLUM (Principal Research Officer), Andrew Pierce, Rob Hughes, Simon Barnes, Alison Roberts Arts Reporter, Jill Sherman Political Correspondent, Sarah Bagnall, Insurance Correspondent, Bill Frost, Neil Bennett, Ronald Faux, H. Blagden, Janet Bush, Economics Correspondent, Soumya Bhattacharya, Ross Tieman, Industrial Correspondent, Philip Howard, Ian Murray, Adam Lebor East Europe Correspondent, Clive Davis, Carl Mortished, Peter Mandler, Kevin Eason, Colin Narbrough, Alan Witt, Arthur Leathley Political Correspondent, Walton of Detchant, Martin Fletcher, Noel Falconer, Ross Tieman and Jonathan Prynn, Steve May, John O'leary Education Editor, Alice Thomson and Robert Morgan, Melvyn Marckus, City Editor, Stewart Tendler Crime Correspondent, Kurt Schork, David Hewson, Norman Hammond, Archaeology Correspondent, Peter Ball, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Tim Reid, Ross Dunn, Rachel Kelly, Michael Evans, Defence Correspondent, Richard Ford Home Correspondent, Peter Millar, Stuart Jones, Tennis Correspondent, Daniel Johnson, Henry Stanhope, Jenny MacArthur, Michael Clark, John Young, Young, Michael Hamlyn, Michael Reid, Janet Bush, David Porter, Adrian Thomas, Keith Pike, Jonathan Prynn Political Reporter, David Guest, Brian Cooke, Nigella Lawson, Edward Gorman, Richards Ford Home Correspondent, John Cassels, Derwent May, Simon Tait, Susan Gilchrist, Rosanna de Lisle, Maria Harding, Richard Cork, Sean Mac Carthaigh, Christopher Moore, David Miller, Keith of Castleacre, James Landale and George Sivell, David Toop, Gillian Bowditch, Scotland Correspondent, R. V. Taylor, David Powell Athletics Correspondent, Marcus Binney, Raymond Keene, Vaughan Freeman, Kim Gordon-Bates, Guy Burt, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Colin Narbrough World Trade Correspondent, Simon Strickland, Chris Partridge, Richard Evans, David Ekserdjian, Jeremy Laurance and Roger Dobson, Peter Morgan, Oliver Holt, Marcel Berlins, Jeremy Rhodes, Janet Bush Economics Correspondent, David Devore, James Naughtie, Stewart Tendler, Ross Tieman Industrial Correspondent, Philip Webster Political Editor, Rob Hughes, Football Correspondent, Brian Alderson, Matthew Parris, Walter Gammie, Edward Gorman and Tim Jones, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Sarah Jane Checkland, Philippa Toomey, David Sinclair, Philip Pangalos, Stephen Pettitt, Kate Bassett, Michael Horsnell, Tim Rodda, Michael Evans Defence Correspondent, John Parfitt, Sam Kiley, John Phillips, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Edward Marriott, Jonathan Mirsky, East Asia Editor,

Resumo

Major gives Ulster peace top priority Unionists told: you have no veto Jobless down by 49,000 Index Go Places Main Points of Queen's Speech Draw declared in Lamb-Sarfraz case Christmas Books Safety calls follow school bus deaths No defence evidence in Bulger trial Enquiry demanded into spy blunders The Great Divide N&P 30p Police helpers planned Evidence too costly Learner wins £130,000 Power lines cancer link McAuley gets 7 years Ship runs aground Pizzaland CSA dispute fathers Euro-election battle News in Brief Howard wins legal right to prevent prison lockout Tory condemns attack on Welfare state Granada Menacing Dennis has royal beano Pupils, parents and teachers share grief and confusion 'These were the loveliest children ... They were the cream and had everything going for them 'She was looking forward to her birthday so much' Young music-lovers remembered in concert tribute American Express Sarfraz declares before Bothani can take the crease Two international cricketers believe their honour remains unblemished as their legal bowling ends without a result Comet Man on run over child support bill Man who switched off England unrepentant The British Hernia Centre Four held after rocket killing 'Boring' idealist who spied for Russia gets 25 years Unlikely agent played flamenco guitar, to learn Russian and betrayed his country for greed The mole who nearly got away The Times Alliance Leicester Citroën By a Staff Reporter: 'What about his mum? Will you tell her I am sorry?' James Bulger murder trial Cow & Gate Keene on chess Dixons Hundreds pay last respects to Laura By a Staff Reporter: Unhurried Beaujolais cuts price and punch Judge fears judicial prejudice will Cause US-style race strife Weekend Shopping Panasonic Business Hammer blows put paid to Nazi shrine Scientists write off writing experts Barclays Means Business Young offenders to be locked up in crime crackdown Government gets tough in attempt to regain initiative on law and order Intelligence agencies face greater scrutiny Security Services Queen shifts spotlight on to world security and peacekeeping IBM Picture Gallery Howard pushes for reform Police Pits sell-off set for end of next year Coal Late redraft cuts shop options Other Bills Making a mark Council reform Clean-up Major promises urgent action to protect the public Back-to-basics policy must go back to drawing board, says Labour leader Debate Business red tape attacked Benefit outcry expected Industry Social Security Secuncor cellular services Christmas at Currys Maastricht rebels upset Europe New agency to fund teacher training Education NHS whistle-blowers put their careers on the line A report confirms that doctors and nurses concerned about failings in the health service are under pressure to keep quiet By a Staff Reporter: Boxing MC lands blow for women Sainsbury's Homebase House and Garden Centres By a Staff Reporter: RAF 'tried to sack corporal in labour' Picture Gallery Stage set for arts funding fall Radio Rentals 3 held over £1m theft News in Brief Pit verdict Inmate hanged Crossing death Hunting ban Court napping False alarm Our Foreign Staff: Democratic road blocked by new Nigerian regime A military junta rules Nigeria. A ban on democratic institutions was coupled with a pledge to set up a constitutional conference to chart the country's future course Cathay Pacific Picture Gallery Rome faces return to Fascist rule Army gets tax gift for its loyalty to Yeltsin News in Brief Kurds held (Reuter): Envoys moved (Reuter): Briton jailed (Reuter): Savalas sues (Reuter): Birds seized Bosnian factions offer convoys safe passage Independent aid agencies, fearful of mass deaths this winter in the former Yugoslay republic, are accusing the Un Protection Force of only protecting itself Jaguar Icy weather forces Uk team to halt Sarajevo surgery Hyde Park Hotel SKY Comeback Kid reaps rewards of Nafta victory Bill Clinton's image as a weak fumbler has been ended by his tough Nafta battle. He must now show he has the skills to heal the wound torn in the bitter Democratic ranks Relaxation as a fine art Best Travel News of the Year—20 per Cent off Holidays Worldwide, Exclusive to Times Readers A Mediterranean cruise is everyone's dream holiday Cox & Kings Travel Multiple Display Advertising Items Today's Featured Operator; Swan Hellenic Picture Gallery Taco and burger fight culture war Chinese dissident says US puts cash above morality Your Questions Answered Mandela launches Anc drive for votes Democratic era begins with campaign to mobilise the electorate Viglen New world dawns for township De Klerk dream may end with rude awakening Makro Forte Hotels Are you Harrogate or Hong Kong man? A plain man's guide to the traits that distinguish two very different business traditions This year's fashinable parlour game, invented by Lord Rees-Mogg, involves dividing the commercial world into two. Peter Millar explains how to play Be brave, let them go The night-time tragedy on the M40 must not be used as a reason to stop schools organising educational trips TES Do-gooders who swap begging bowls for a briefcase Today, Britain's 200,000 fund-raising operations, competing for a total annual income of £16 billion, rely more on sharp business brains and good management than just faith and hope, says Rachel Kelly 'Before Mr Clark came, they didn't expel no one He told us to buck up' One man is hauling an inner-city sink college to respectability by the scruff of its scrubbed neck The Times Multiyork Philip Howard Forward with poetry! But we must not allow children to neglect the backward glance Rumour flourishes The Times Diary Picture Gallery Unprintable conduct At the start of the parliamentary session, MPs should face the damage done to democracy by their antics Good news for Major Tory prospects are improving, says Peter Riddell Peer Pressure Their lordships may prove harder to please than the Tory party Safer Minibuses Rules governing the use of passenger vans must be reviewed Hand Signals Mixed signals on single currency Top-heavy defence Spirited riposte on school report Playing truant and paying the cost Farming grumbles Happy landing Making best use of Crown courts Football fan's death Sugar search Plant import control Naming Europe Court Circular Anniversaries Personal Column The Royal Fine Art Commission Birthdays today University news Oxford Today's royal engagements PPP Bayliss Lecture Receptions Prime Minister Appointments in the Church Garrison skeletons tell grisly tale Archaeology Memorial service Framlingham College Middle Temple Forthcoming marriages Dinners Lincoln's Inn Service dinners RN College Greenwich Luncheon Danish-UK Chamber of Commerce Geoffrey Coates Personal Column Kenneth Hurren B. K. P. A. John Bowker Julio Linares The Cycle Shows The Stanley Show O . S. Tubbs Kevin Fitzgerald Kevin FitzGerald, author, raconteur and rock climber, died at Chinnor, Oxfordshire, on November 9 aged 91. He was born on June 19,1902 News The Times Crossword No 19,392 Picture Gallery Business Times Weathercall AA Roadwatch WPA Health Insurance People in the Times Weather The Times Tomorrow Rolls to shed further 1,000 workers Ferranti losses worsen Stock Market Infotch Jobless total tumbles by 49,000 in October The biggest monthly decrease in unemployment for four years was probably a statistical anomaly, but the official view is that the economy is now turning round Arts Figures give mixed signals on economy Sport OKI Amstrad warning cuts 20% off value Motoring: Never Too Old to Drive Business Editor Trade Plea Trade Wind Trade off Trade Blows Sutherland hails Nafta vote World trade deal 'almost within grasp' Royal Orchid Plus Governor defends Bank as overseer By our Economics Correspondent: Faster US growth predicted European ministers fail to agree on steel cuts American limit on BA in air access dispute Business Roundup Fresh blow to Merrett Bett Brothers advances First payout from RPC Currency fillip for Sony Millwall reduces loss Hogg Robinson up Ericsson leaps ahead Gatt partners queue up for pork After Nafta, trade negotiators seek a trade-off Rattle of chains at Ferranti Sugar, the City's Graham Taylor South East still suffering says Whitbread Storehouse back in black BhS and Mothercare lead the revival Barratt calls for retention of Bes housing schemes Cable & Wireless Shares make lively start but are pegged back by profit-takers Markets at a Glance Major Changes Ft-Se Volumes Liffe Options C&w takes to airwaves to avoid £200m Bt fees Fresh blow for Renault-Volvo merger Major Indices Commodities London Financial Futures Wall Street Recent Issues Money Markets Other Sterling Money Rates (%) Dollar Spot Rates Unreliable figures could leave Clarke in the dark The government's official economic statistics may be in need of a health warning. Janet Bush looks at the implications for this month's Budget The Times City Diary Chickening-out on Wall Street British Home Chores Tempus C&W British Gas Electricity users get good deal Whitbread Change for the better at Bsi Leica Camera Ltd Gains reduced at close No Title British Gas blames 'squeeze' for bigger third-quarter loss Grampian rides out recession GKN order Serif cash call Company News in Brief COI Sale of flats cuts debts at Regalian Vtech Fee recovery and currency gains lift Willis Corroon C E Heath leaps 254% The Times Unit Trust Information Service Take an Old Master home The National Gallery has put its collection on multimedia CD-rom Calls to cost less On-Line Adding up the fastest milk bill in the west Don't be surprised to see your milkman holding a computer, says David Guest Information Technology Northern Counties Housing Association Limited A pack with a powerful punch Business users are finally waking up to the potential of sound, graphics and moving video on computers. David Hewson reports Read all about it on the library computer Practical PC Staying in to play on video Almost overnight, the games industry has had to grow up New Vision Baffled by science The installation of CD-rom system can be fraught with difficulties Disctronics Learning comes to life in the classroom Students and teachers now have a wealth of pictures, sound and text at their fingertips. George Cole reports When small is beautiful, and secure CD-rom is seen as an excellent method of bulk data storage Fountain highmead Australia is no longer the land of milk and honey, but there are still opportunities for a few in the Antipodes. David Guest reports Expatriate jobs go down under Information Technology Multiple Classified Advertising Items NCC K/F Associates Selection & Search Dixey Robb Association Search & Selection… Blyth Software Portraits enjoy a facelift The National Portrait Gallery's postwar holdings at last have a smart new setting. Richard Cork reports The Nutcracker Opera Doctor's orders Art Market Diary Polska! Rock Baton change sets up winner London Concerts Entertainments Weekend Choice Theatre Guide Cinema Guide Welsh voices seek perfect stage The competition has begun to find the right architect for Cardiff's £42 million opera house project. Simon Tait reports Cultural glories of the great survivors Radio: Adrian Thomas introduces "Polska!", Radio 3's three week celebration of Polish arts The Times Sweden: the name on everybody's hits Britain, beware; America, watch out the hot new sounds are coming from Stockholm and all points north. David Sinclair reports Pop on Frida: Today Stockholm, tomorrow the world... Dylan sings other people's songs, badly... Patra's rude ragga New Waves The insider's guide to the Next Big Thing London Queen Elizabeth Hall Oh, mama, could this really be the end? New Albums: Don't think twice; save your money Top Ten Albums In from the cold Concert Teenage Fanclub " Thirteen" To Advertise Multiple Classified Advertising Items RAC Multiple Classified Advertising Items Lexus SAAB Approved Used Cars Multiple Classified Advertising Items Fax Multiple Classified Advertising Items BRB 23 Are you ever too old drive? Elderly drivers can often be safer than youngsters. As a conference focuses on older road users, Vaughan Freeman finds age no barrier to skills at the wheel A marque or excellence When a Continental buyer said ignore the cost, Lagonda had the answer Not to be outfoxed Roadwise Motoring Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Sunday Times Multiple Classified Advertising Items Winter Offer Multiple Classified Advertising Items Sainsbury's joins the clean-up A Time story spurs action over petrol Multiple Classified Advertising Items Bodily harm includes psychiatric injury Judge not concerned with of interim damages Experts' reports are no abuse of legal aid Legal & Public Notices Copyright protection for non-nationals European Law report Luxembourg Football club was not an unregistered company Enforcing foreign order Windsor Park passion play with miraculous conclusion Simon Barnes on a World Cup match in Belfast that was memorable for being a lot like any other game of football Charlton to look for new players to enhance squad World Cup Qualifiers Bingham leaves rich legacy to successor Yorath delivers damning verdict Going down and out in Pans Rob Hughes reflects on an eventful night for the victors and vanquished around the world Hosts perplexed by England's absence Beaujolais nouveau comforts despondent France Triumphant Sampras puts fun back into game Top seed books passage to overshadow conduct of Courier James brings quick gains Sporting Index Hesitant Streak For the Record Today's Fixtures McColgan schedule still gives cause for concern No pizza, but plastic crabs go down well Multiple Display Advertising Items Widespread options in growing world of sports betting Richard Evans, racing correspondent, explains how an alternative concept is gaining in popularity with punters Pipe confident of better times ahead Today's Races on Television Rapid Raceline Ascot Results from Yesterday's Three Meetings Leicester Hennessy favourite now 100-30 William Hill Sedgefield Rush to join exclusive club must be resisted Forster rise marked by first cap for All Blacks Word-Watching Callard's resolve stiffened by recent setbacks Oliver Holt meets the full back waiting to learn if he still has the selectors' confidence Simon shows no sign of easing up Record books chart Smith's progress Sport in Brief Watson leads way Siddall's surprise Cash incentive Foster chasing clock Freeman sets record TV Licensing Bbc1 Radio 1 Picture Gallery Variations Picture Gallery Satellite Tennis 44 No sense in building new structure on old foundations David Miller believes the Fa must look beyond Graham Taylor or Bobby Robson to restore the national side's fortunes Taylor in no mood to admit defeat Times Two Crossword No 17 Winning Move Word-Watching Morse Data Systems Rugby Union 46 Messing about with the Willows Inside Good year for eager reader Daniel Johnson, literary editor, makes his choice of this year's novels. Plus: light fiction and horron Supped full with horrors? Guy Burt takes his pick of recent horror novels, the fastest-growing fictional genre among young people Keeping it in the family Philippa Toomey selects three of the finest sagas Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Something in the woodshed Marcel Berlins on new crime novels from Oxford viragos to Miami vices Cops and robbers played for real Officer and gentleman Rommel and the Prince of Wales are meat and drink to biographers Gothic fables about royalty Rosanna de Lisle Charles The Untold Story Gollanez, £14,99 Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Literary frolics in follies of stone Marcus Binney on master builders from Piranesi to Frank Lloyd Wright Season of mellow misto Gastronomic literature should return us to the kitchen, says Nigella Lawson Multiple Display Advertising Items Page-turners for pointyheads Peter Mandler on how history and science meet in prestige paperbacks Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items More than just pretty pictures For David Ekserdjian, art books are a post-prandial pleasure to savour Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items All the world 's a bookshelf Kate Bassett selects the best of this season's publications on the stage Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Waiting for the fat lady James Naughtie thinks opera-goers are well served by the latest literature Search for the pleasure-dome A poet's mind and a novelist's eye are reflected in these unusual travelogues Cultural shocks An of the East Travels in Indonesia By Norman Lewis Jonathan Cape £16.99 Obscure Kingdoms Around the world in search of Royal Courts By Edward Fox Hamish Hamilton, £16.99 Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Santa Claus is coming to town Brian Alderson on Christmas tales, fresh versions of nursery classics and the latest children's fiction Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items

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