Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 03/01/1994

1994; Gale Group;

Autores

Jon Ashworth, Stuart Maclure, David Tytler, Iain R. Webb, Andrew Pierce, Sheila Gunn, Barry Trowbridge, Simon Barnes, Rachel Cusk, Andrew Longmore, Frank Holmes, Alexandra Frean, Media Correspondent, Nicolette Jones, Ross Tieman, Industrial Correspondent, Christopher Brown Director, Philip Howard, B. H. Adams, Jeremy Kingston, Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent, James Bone, Alan J. Day, Lynne Truss, David Gordon, Kevin Eason, Motoring Correspondent, Michael Horsnell and Gillian Bowditch, Nick Herbert, Geoff Brown, Lucy Gibble, Michael Barratt, Jon Ashowoth, James Coen, Alan Lorimer, Peter Ball, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Sandra Lewin, Nicholas Wood and John O'leary, Rob Hughes Football Correspondent, Libby Purves, Peter Bills, Alasdair Ogilvy, Jeremy Laurance Health Services Correspondent, Peter Waymark, Alan Hamilton, Peter Millar, Daniel Johnson, John Young, Keith Stevens, Janet Bush, Keith Pike, Kevin Eason Motoring Correspondent, David Hands, Charles Bremner, Joel Brand, Louise Gray, Susan Gilchrist, Russell Kempson, David Billis, Director, Jerome Burne, Colin Campbell Mining Correspondent, Lindsay Cook, Deputy Business Editor, Wolfgang Munchau, C. L. Fox, Nicholas Harling, Sydney Friskin, Jamie Osborne, Barry Millington, Norman Hammond, David Powell Athletics Correspondent, Tim Jones, Transport Correspondent, Eluned Price, Raymond Keene, Peter Davalle, Alan Lee, Cricket Correspondent, Emma Wilkins, John Savage, Richard Evans, Oliver Holt, Barry Pickthall, Adrian Rogers, Geoffrey N. Dence, Michael Binyon and our Foreign Staff, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Julian Muscat, Richard Duce, Christopher Thomas, William Rees-Mogg, Philip Webster Political Editor, Nick Nuttall, Technology Correspondent, Sara McConnell, John E. Freeman, Kevin McCarra, Matthew Parris, Nicholas Wood and John Shaw, John Shaw, Peter Riddell, Ian Brodie, Tony Dawe, Richard Beeston, Ged Martin, Stephen Pettitt, Kate Bassett, Nicholas Wood and Nicholas Watt, Michael Horsnell, Misha Glenny, Anne Wilson, Frances Gibb Legal Correspondent, David Adams, Latin America Correspondent, Alyson Rudd, Michael Henderson, Peter Robinson, Tony Hetherington, Daniel Johnson, Literary Editor, Christopher Irvine,

Resumo

New fertility treatment facing ban 'Babies from dead' condemned Test-tube baby monitors face their third ethical dilemma in a week, raising fears that scientific progress is outstripping their ability to exert control Work for nothing until May Index William Rees-Mogg Yeo 'may be forced to resign as minister' Free Electricity Picture Gallery Power and the monarch In the Times Tomorrow The Times Major gives IRA a month to join the peace process Holiday Sport Naxos 30P Clinton to bar east Europe from Nato Blair and Brown aim to change poll lead into solid support Major woos teachers in bid to improve discipline Correction Lunn Poly Prince wins praise from No 10 Crushed WPC moves her toes By Staff Reporters: Carey to meet rival rebels Mawhinney wants hospital conciliators News in Brief Yacht towed to safety Malkin home this week Timeshare con revived Taxi clue in rapist hunt Driver run over twice Expedition in Moscow Street star recovering Soaring book sales open new chapter in publishers' fortunes Chinese saga wins high praise and sales Child agency 'giving out confidential information' The Chelsea Man, 64, dies of heart attack confronting burglars The Mini rallies for middle-age challenge Crown Jewels move to safer and more spacious setting Multiyork Snow breaks 1,000ft fall for three times lucky hiker Teachers fail minibus course Leukaemia Research Fund London International Boat Show Tunnel price war may cost jobs Picture Gallery Solicitors face tribunals in public The court that deals with the increasing number of legal malpractice hearings has bowed to the trend for open justice Detroit sees end of road for petrol cars Backing for Jenkins on virgin birth Keene on Chess MP's home life inspires series on teenagers Shake-up may leave many Tories sitting on timebomb seats Boundary Commission changes reflect exodus from cities By a Staff Reporter: Major is safe, but others face fight Recent Services Travel By a Staff Reporter: Shuffling the voters Flame-proofing found defective after cleaning Picture Gallery By a Staff Reporter: Heart man's happy new year Boots Ex-cabbie stabbed to death in flat News in Brief Top spin Danger toy New year rape Unsafe-blower Child dies Bond winners Fading playground of Empire's elegant eccentrics Exotic paradise a distant memory for dwindling British community in Tangier Tangier was once a magnet for the unconventional. Now the dream is almost over Thomas Cook Sound of music fails to strike right note in Sarajevo Sarajevans did their best to celebrate the new year in spite of shortages of food, water and electricity, but 1994 began as 1993 ended in the Bosnian capital, with the sound of shelling Yeltsin vows to press on with reform programme Nato sounds alarm over Zhirinovsky threat to Eastern European democracy Neo-Fascist gives the West crucial clues to salvage of Central Europe Vladimir Zhirinovsky, for all his rhetoric, has lucidly identified the political reality behind the excitement of post-Cold War Europe Miele Anything else is a compromise Fourteen die as peasant rebels defy Mexico army Subaru Computer whiz buys hack-free wedding day India and Pakistan try to ease tensions Balladur accused of appeasing Tehran over terror suspects By our Foreign Staff: Kabul factional battles threaten Rabbani rule Clinton 'could face criminal charges' US wraps history in cotton wool for big move (AFP): Picture Gallery Arafat pressed to compromise Hurd off to Middle East as Isreal spurns PLO By our Foreign Staff: Search for crews as ships sink Forte Leisure Breaks (Reuter): Avalanches paralyse French ski resorts News in Brief (AP): Kurds clash Fears on waste (Reuter): Gunmen strike (AP): Trunk call (Reuter): Death of Joker The house that was just so Ian Brodie on Kipling's American paradise that was lost within three years That's enough mother worship If we agreed that there was far more to life than giving birth, women without children could stop feeling worthless or thwarted Amdega Chalet girls on the slide Boys are taking over at cheap ski resorts Chanel Boutique The Missions to Seamen Rise and shine If underwear can become outerwear, why shouldn't pyjamas be allowed downstairs for dinner" Fashion The Seotch House Matthew Parris Why does the approaching prospect of limitless supplies of free electricity not seize the public imagination? Let us apologise to the Jews The Vatican's recognition of Israel should be followed by a general act of Christain constrition Freedom at the going rate An independent Bank will test the Government Riddell on Monday Faux pas Hot seats One long party The Times Diary Role model The Times Diary How to drive comedians up the wall Year of the Atlantic The Western allies need their own 'partnership for peace' Giving Rope Barring Zhirinovsky does more harm than good Maids and Ladies Safari therapy Cameron march Is anybody there? Ask the agency J Pennington Street, London E1 9xn Telephone 071-782 5000 Let's have a House of Senators Significance of a minister's morals Hunting and the law Language 'torture' Discordant note At home alone First things first at the baptism Running the lottery Happy in your work? Old habits Court Circular Birthdays today Forthcoming marriages Marriage New president Personal Column Picture Gallery By a Staff Reporter: Irish mount search for lost Armada galleons Rennie Mackintosh art found at junk shops to sell for £1m Royal College of General Practitioners Rare bracelet goes on show after legal battle Anniversaries The Times Church news Professor Edward Hitchcock Edward Hitchcock, Professor of Neurosurgery, University of Birmingham, died from a heart attack on December 29 aged 64. He was born in Monmouthshire on February 10,1929 Raymond Gardner Raymond Gardner, divorce lawyer, died on December 29 aged 79, he was born on June 27,1914 The Times DJM: Nature notes Ralph Downes Ralph Downes, CBE, organist, died on December 24 aged 89. He was born in Derby on August 16,1904 Thomas Watson Thomas J. Watson Jr. president and chairman of the IBM corporation, 1952-71, died of complications following a stroke at Greenwich, Connecticut, on December 31 aged 79. He was born in Dayton, Ohio, on January 8,1914 (From Our Own Correspondent): France in 1899 News The Times Crossword No 19,429 Sport Times Weathercall AA Roadwatch Highest and Lowest People in the Times Forecast The Times Tomorrow Warne's wizardry inspires collapse South Africans bemused by leg spinner's tricks in second Test Glimmer of hope for chasing pack as United slip Leaders Arts Education First-day successes Business Bicknell forced to return home by injury Recent Services Travel L… Ireland call up O'Connell for Paris opener Team England a make bad start to an uphill task Scoreboard Kirsten impresses For the Record The Times Giants stride boldly into first final Today's Fixtures Hammond's dry run Azharuddin retained Fahey takes first leg Good start to tour Leeves goes out Douglas in form for England recall Sport in Brief Mortgage money rides on point of a dart Simon Barnes finds players who possess a competitive will as hard as diamonds Britons earn gold Snow Reports Priestley collects WDC title Radcliffe's value put into perspective Results Whitaker travels to Barcelona confident of success Europeans pursue more cup success The Times Warrington undone by two silly mistakes Castleford benefit from Joyner rule Word-Watching Exeter Leicester Kilcash heads British challenge Jockeys in best position to judge whip response Ayr Wolverhampton Apprentices banned Large Action underlines festival claim Sherwood sets sights on saddling third Sun Alliance Hurdle winner Richard Evans Nap: Peastwood (2.25 Cheltenham) Nb: Toogood To Be True (12.40Chletenham) Peatswood is value in Spa Hurdle Cheltenham BBC2 Today's Races on Television Windsor C4 Rapid Raceline Dubai visits check Dettori's flying start Cheltenham Results from Saturday's Four Meetings Windsor Leaders over the Jumps Hoddle enjoys happy return to County Ground Andrew Longmore sees Chelsea profit from the lack of belief at the Premiership's bottom club Kelly makes his mark as United title march falters Champions held again at home Francis makes the right moves Little sign of hope for Horton Memories of past greatness still dog Souness Industrious Parlour at heart of Arsenal's resurgence Plymouth follow Clough's lead Peter Robinson praises the second division team flying the flag for the West Country Fry's good humour remains unbowed Weekend Results and Tables Pools Check Celtic board feels fury of unforgiving supporters Divisional final remains useful exercise Wickenham Teams Lineout weakness gives Ireland cause for concern Teams The Times Corless hunts for talent Charvis justifies pre-match billing Bayfield starts comeback Chalmers faces big challenge in battle of stand-offs Teams The year of the blockbuster Books: Nicolette Jones looks back at the publishing sensations of 1993 and forward to an exciting new crop promised for 1994 Will Grace do the Eliotts a favour? Television Review Theatre On the beat of optimism Rock Review Megadog Brixton Academy Siberian cold comfort Philharmonia/Katz Albert Hall Books Comedy is no laughing matter London Concerts King's Consort Wigmore Hall Pete Pan Sadler's Wells Entertainments Bailey Today's Events A dally guide to arts and entertainment complied by lucy Gibble 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 Postcards from the edgy Kate Bassett takes a walk on the wild side with the best—and, in one case, worst—of current avant-garde theatre in New York Some hihgly ecentric companies have weathered the years formidably well The Times Sometimes it's hard to be a man The chronicler of small-town America has turned his attention to the sex war. Rachel Cusk finds mixed results The Book of Guys By Garrison Keillor Faber, £14.99 This Week's Offers More damned, thick, square books Classics Of megaliths and magic Norman Hammond The Making of Stonehenge By Redney Castleden Routledge, £25 Explorling the World of the Calts By Simon James Thames & Hudson, £16.95 The Celts Edited by V. Kruta et al Thames & Hudson. £45.00 The Times Educational Supplement Paperbacks The Night By Terence Stamp Phoenix, £5.99 Snakes and Ladders By Penelope Farmer Abacus, £6.99 Looking Back By Shusha Gupp Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, £5.99 Agreed drug figures conclusive Identifying company's directing mind Education Multiple Display Advertising Items Institut francais Multiple Display Advertising Items International Study Centre Financial provision claim fails Compensation orders to reflect offences charged No ouster after rape Cambridge Centre for Sixth-From Studies St. Margaret's Oxford Alliance Francaise Lambrook School Independent Schools Joint Council Grosvenor Gardens… St. Clare's Oxford Will John Patten pull his socks up next term? Stuart Maclure hopes the Education Secretary stops interfering in 1994 and builds up teachers' quality and confidence Music-makers call the tune At one £15,000-a-year school, the state pays a large part of pupils' fees A chance to study the real tapestry of history The National Trust has seen the light over education Left out in the cold no longer Write with the left? Help is at hand SIB investigates switch of Clerical Medical funds to Cyprus Christmas spending spree leaves a hangover for retailers' margins Susan Gilchrist says that though festive sales soared, stores' profits may not By a Correspondent: Federated buys stake in Macy's Leeds leaderless a year on Sara McConnell counts the candidates By our City Staff: New BP oil find off Shetlands Miners with the mettle to come out on top Mining Prospects for 1994 The Porteolic Television and Radio Radio 1 Variations Choice Wake up to a Classic Breakfast Show Daily 6-9 Am Satellite Digging Deep BAe in talks to sell space business Bowled over Picture Gallery Imro aims to fine rogue managers Times Two Crossword Why Sully sallies forth to Sainsbury's The Times City Diary Caley's birthday The Times City Diary Dairy Crest flotation faces delay Winning Move Word-Watching Carmakers ready for bumper 1994 Leaderless Leeds Hargreaves Landsdown Asset Management Ltd BOC man weighs anchor to go solo Tourist Rates

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