News from 05/03/1994
1994; Gale Group;
Autores
Mary F. Bridger, James Landale, Liz Dolan, Richard Dale, Julia Llewellyn Smith, Thomas Keneally, Tunku Varadarajan, Paul Heiney, Brian Woodrow, Graham Chainey, Derek Hayes Divisional Director, Iain R. Webb, Andrew Pierce, Anatol Lieven, Patricia Davies, Rob Hughes, Rose Wild, Simon Barnes, Jane MacQuitty, Sarah Bagnall, Insurance Correspondent, Jill Sherman Political Correspondent, Michael Scott Rohan, Bill Frost, Andrew Longmore, Jan Morris, Gordon Allan, Alexandra Frean, Media Correspondent, John Diamond, Giles Gordon, Ben Preston, Patrick Woods, J. M. Coetzee, Philip Howard, Hilary Finch, John Marriott, Jeremy Kingston, Sara McConnell and Liz Dolan, Lou Rawls, Mel Batty, Clive Davis, Albert Dormer, Carl Mortished, Kevin Eason, Motoring Correspondent, Nick Nuttall, Environment Correspondent, John Wadham (Legal Director), David Flusfeder, Tony Patrick, Kevin Eason, Colin Narbrough, Eve-Ann Prentice, Diplomatic Correspondent, Geoff Brown, Gerald Davies, Joe Joseph, Robert Miller, Arthur Leathley Political Correspondent, Rosemary Markham, Martin Fletcher, Terence J. Holloway, Ross Tieman and Jonathan Prynn, John O'leary Education Editor, Patricia Tehan, Ruth Gledhill, S. L., Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Alison Roberts, Arts Reporter, David Barnes and John Mayo, Susan Grossman, Peter Waymark, Michael Evans, Defence Correspondent, Richard Ford Home Correspondent, Robin Young, Rosamond Daly, Rodney Milnes, Michael Clark, Richard Scott, Michael Hamlyn, Lawrie Smith, Doug Sager, 7, C. J. Bishop, Director, Laurie Taylor, Frances Bissell, David Hands, Sarah Bagnall, John Percival, Peter Barnard, Derwent May, Joel Brand, Graham Wood, Douglas Jaggers (sprout-lover), Margaret Dibben, Ray Ward, Richard Cork, Peter Ball and Keith Pike, Stephen Anderton, Michael Hall, John Woodcock, Janet Daley, Richard Dunwoody, Barry Millington, Stewart Tendler and Richard Ford, George Plumptre, Albert Friedlander, John Higgins, B. M. E. Wilson, Vincent Strudwick (Principal), Colin Narbrough and Joanna Pitman, V. F., Vaughan Freeman, Raymond Keene, David Robinson, Christopher Prout, John Russell Taylor, Heather Alston, David Wood Political Editor, Stephanie Lewis, Richard Evans, Nigel Hawkes, Alice Thomson, L. P., Nicole Cole, Roger Boyes, Nigel Hawkes, Science Editor, Ray Whitney (Chairman), Edward Armitage, George Devlin, Brian Beel, Stephanie Billen, Julian Muscat, Martin Waller, Deputy City Editor, Polly Toynbee, Maurice Geller, Christopher Thomas, John Goodbody, Rupert Goodwin, David Rudnick, Sara McConnell, James Pringle, Nicholas Watt Ireland Correspondent, Anthony Loyd and Jill Sherman, Mel Webb, Anthony Freeman, Kevin McCarra, Christopher Walker, Middle East Correspondent, Peter Clarke, Moira Petty, Christopher Elliott and M. G. G. Pillai, Sir James Goldsmith, Christine Wheeler, Ben MacIntyre, Sarah Jane Checkland, Helen Pridham, Russell Twisk, Alan Lee Cricket Correspondent, Richard Beeston, Pete Johnson, R. d'ARCY Ryan, David Sinclair, Simon Jenkins, Philip Pangalos, Stephen Pettitt, W. H. Saumarez Smith, Kate Bassett, Anthony Meyer (Policy Director), Christine Michael, Benedict Nightingale, Edward Ashpole, Alicia Drake, Marianne Curphey, Jill Sherman, Political Correspondent, Jonathan Meades, Michael Evans Defence Correspondent, Richard Morrison, Patricia Tehan Banking Correspondent, Brian Clarke, Angling Correspondent, Susan MacDonald, Lindsay Cook Deputy Business Editor, J. M. B. Young, A. R. Childs, Alan Jackson, Oliver Bennett, Hilary Kingsley, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Chris Brasher, Peter Mason, Stuart James, Jonathan Mirsky, Christopher Irvine, Melvyn Marckus,
ResumoIn the Five Section Saturday Times Malaysia pays double price in radar deal Labor MP questions GEC profits Mahathir decries 'tinpot nation' slur Index Weekend Poacher is hooked by a fish that had swallowed a chip Weekend Youngest MI6 chief named Magazine Success for The Times Search for fourth body Bombers guilty Sport Britain bows to plea for more troops as forces are attacked N&P Saturday Edition 40P with 7-Day TV Guide Spymaster fades into the shadows with secrets intact Graduate of Beirut's school for spies groomed for MI6 Man in the News Samsung Electronics Bligh descendant reclaims bounty Correction Lunn Poly Clarke forecasts sustained upswing News in Brief Muslim's wife sacked Steroids 'affected killer' Crash victim missing Geldof bankrupt Young arsonists jailed Tories pick candidate Times supports awards Parents rally to head facing second 'abuse' complaint Channel 4 sued over quiz format The CARD—a unique event in newspaper publishing The Sunday Times Freedom aftershock kills earthquake cat Hawking's house to be demolished Fidelity Investments Tonya Harding attacked as she walks in park Peugeot Thorp nuclear plant wins go-ahead for fuel reprocessing By a Staff Reporter: Police sued by woman detective By a Staff Reporter: Boy killed himself fearing school ban Abortion woman 'devious' Hanson BA faces second dirty tricks claim By a Staff Reporter: Judge sparks legal battle over DNA after jailing rapist Halifax Why Bard dreamt up midsummer title Van held 11 illegal immigrants By a Staff Reporter: Rescued climbers criticised by police Inadequate schools get last chance BT Police link with Thailand to end trips for child sex Seat Toledo Guildford detectives 'were rotten apples' Hebron massacre wounds Jews too Credo By our Health Services Correspondent: Device gets drugs to heart of the problem Buoyant sales put three car plants back on full time Leicester Square man refused bail News in Brief Florida death Back to school CSA pursuit Police widow Keene on Chess Anglers wade in for bumper season Allied Dunbar Smith scorns Tory record on crime The Labour Leader has set the tenor of the forthcoming elections with a scathing attack on the Government's record Midland The Listening Bank Protester's egg hits Bottomley U-turn on pensions provokes backlash Banda enlists Tory spin-doctors for poll Auditor General seeks wider powers Islamic zealots step up battle against Mubarak Militants ambush Nile cruiser as Hebron mosque murders stoke anti-West passions in Egypt Brooklyn gunman 'linked to terrorists' News in Brief (AP): Rushdie threat (Reuter): 'Freeze' refused (AFP): Thought police Rocker rallies (Reuter): Drug shoot-out (AP): Life bulb Holocaust survivors find film 'too rosy' Metro Tahiti Special The new Passat German MPs press Bonn to explain role in Libya gas project US intelligence reports say that the poison gas factory at Tarhuna, 40 miles southeast of Tripoli, is a virtual copy of Rabta, where German involvement embarrassed the government in the 1980s UK to tap into Moldavia's stock of wine treasures Reuter: Hundreds saved from holed liner Canon Snails achieve stardom at their own pace European deputies wield new power Serbs refuse to take guns from exclusion zone UN resolve challenged after reconnaissance pinpoints heavy weapons AEA Technology UN trawls for crack troops to police Bosnia Doubts cast on radar system Lloyds Bank Clinton aide likely to be Whitewater's first casualty Action Stena Sealink The World in Cartoons White House diet provokes head chef to throw in kitchen towel Washington: George Mitchell, 60, the Senate leader, last night announced he will not stand for reelection next January (Martin Fletcher writes). It was a blow for Mr Clinton, who relies on his skill to push through his legislative agenda (AP): Streisand art collection sold off for nearly $6m Comedy film star dies China takes trade risk by seizing dissident White right and Inkatha sign up for the election Conservative white and black parties climbed aboard South Africa's electoral bandwagon at the last minute. The move is still hedged about with conditions The Times Hosokawa reforms pass into law Minsk and UK agree pacts on investment News in Brief Barter aid (AFP): Gang gunfight (AP): Port flooded (Reuter): Embassy attack Mercury Communications Free trade, up to a point Western civilisation faces disaster in competing against low-wage economies, Sir James Goldsmith warns Secret's out Wrong sign Pricey Prince The Times Diary To see or not to see The Times Diary Targets for a Balkans bullet More British soldiers will be an incitement to endless conflict, not peace, in Bosnia Profound Judgment How the law lords tipped Britain's constitutional balance Great Game Goes on Spooks enter the era of accountability and lobbying Feline Fable Even the death of a cat can make a moral for man Immunity orders past and present Europe's powers Facts, myths and the truth of history Sprouts on the menu Ding-dong over a very des res Cricket practice The whole hog? Court Circular Tomorrow's royal engagement Sherborne School University news Anniversaries Personal Column Service dinners Dinner Weekend birthdays Announcements Picture Gallery Church services tomorrow Forthcoming marriages Latest wills Count Alexander Labinsky Count Alexander Labinsky, singer and co-founder and chairman of Nimbus Records, 1971-94, died in Wyastone Leys, Monmouth, on January 28 aged 68. He was born on June 19,1925 Robert Lea Robert Francis Gore Lea, OBE businessman, died on February 24 aged 88. He was born on January 22,1906 The Times Lieut-Col Derrick Hignett Lieutenant-Colonel Derrick Hignett, leader of the Phantom Force, 1941-43, and former joint master of the Fernie Hunt, died on February 20 aged 93. He was born on August 8,1900 Church news Hugh Tayfield Hugh Tayfield, South African cricketer, died in Johannesburg on February 24 aged 65. He was born in Durban on January 30,1929 Jean Sablon Jean Sablon, French singer, died at Cannes-La Bocca, Alpes Maritimes, on February 24 aged 87. He was born in Nogentsur-Marue, near Paris, on March 25,1906 Mr Wilson is Back in Downing Street Planning for the future Since 1988, the Government has been encouraging people to make their own provision for retirement. Helen Pridham reports People are realising they can no longer rely on the state Rothschild Asset Management The ever-widening choice Once only insurance companies sold personal pensions. Now, they face competition from all sides Gartmore Personal Pensions From Goode to better How can occupational schemes be protected? Stuart James reports on last year's committee findings Are you safe in their hands? From next year Marks & Spencer is selling pensions N&P Education is the key to good sales advice Transferring a pension requires meticulous information News The Times Crossword No 19,482 The Times Today Times Weathercall AA Roadwatch High Tides Forecast George Smith Magazine Generators stake to be sold for £4bn The sale of the Government's remaining stakes in National Power and PowerGen will bring the total cash raised through privatisations to more than £55 billion O'Reilly seeks Independent bid referral US trade weapon seen as threat to Europe Stock Market Picture Gallery Profile The Pound Picture Gallery Melvyn Marckus Judge tells Lloyd's litigants the money may fall short Gold Picture Gallery Sport Whittingdale Higher profile: an Everest climber scaled the 130 ft… Business Editor Robert Ballantyne Tax fears curb borrowing Heaven from Penny Shares Non-executives are not the answer to boardroom greed Cookson sale will finish restructuring Hambro helped by homes upturn Race to save Euro Disney Union asks investors for £11m extra cash Scottish Power buys Lufthansa stake to be cut Inspec set for market Coutts Consulting in red Litho off to good start Loss of union voice at Bank angers Labour Business Roundup The Sunday Times Catalytic elements in a chemical reaction Zeneca: David Barnes and John Mayo Partners in power Sarah Bagnall profiles the two men at the helm of ICI's one-year-old multi-billion pound global offshoot Cookson's margins will be boosted by metals sales Tempus Midland Glaxo prospers as rival is warned by German watchdog Stock Market Markets at a Glance Tourist Rates FT-SE Volumes Liffe Options Cash call as Henlys gets back in black Recent Issues Major Indices Picture Gallery Commodities Major Changes London Financial Futures MG Corp sued for $500m Sale delay Pearson stake Wall Street Money Markets Money Rates (%) Divorce Sara McConnell and Liz Dolan say splitting up the finances is becoming easier, but couples can still do a lot to minimise the pain Property History Bank Accounts Cheap Way in Lautro begins to bite Comment Pension Rights Maintenance Chettenham & Gloucester Building Society Sales Talk The Equitable Life The Times Schroder Investment Management What to ask about personal pensions Sib will soon start remedial therapy for potential pension swappers, says Sara McConnell How to spot the tricks of the trade The Appointment The Pitch Objections The Close Henderson The Investment Managers Buyers' Essential Checklist Twelve questions that everyone should ask their personal pension adviser before signing anything The strength of the company the size of the commission and is there a cooling-off period? Save & Prosper Scottish Widows Briefings Fidelity Investments Investor Gartmore Personal Equity Plans Invesco Cash in on being careful How Motor Policies Compare Contents and Buildings Cover Battle over disputed savings Liz Dolan reports on cases where banks and customers disagree as to whether accounts are still open Post mortem into dormant deposits National Westminster Bank Shares line gets busier All you need to know about share dealing on the telephone. Robert Miller reports When it is worth investing in a stockbroker Eurolife Cheap way into shares Telephone Sharedealing Mercury Britain's Leading Investment House Towry Law Financial Planning Ltd The Times Britannia Building Society Foreign Colonial Beware the perils of going for a quick fix Sara McConnell explains the dangers of mortgage panic Briefings Fixed-rate bet turns sour Framlington Investment Management Limited Another First from Abbey Life Parents home in again Should you buy your student offspring a place to live? Nicola Cole reports Buying a home for children at university seems common sense, but the economics are not so simple… Save & Prosper Abbey Life How the Big Lenders Can Help Drawbacks to flat self rule Feathering Young Nests Credit union users may soon have safety net Margaret Dibben looks at moves to establish a deposit protection scheme for the self-help groups run by a limited company What is a Credit Union? M&G Latin America trusts launched Sun Life Pep wars cut the cost of fund charges Should tax incentives govern the choice of personal equity plans, Robert Miller asks Investors look at DIY Save & Prosper Securitised Endowment Contracts PLC Perpetual Find a plan to suit Unit-Linked Insurance Investments Financial Times Magazines Family Assurance friendly society Interest Rates Roundup Asset Nursing Home and Residential Care Fees Specialist Ease public concern over the handling of fraud trials by making greater use of existing disciplinary tribunals Why personal pension plans are unsuitable for public sector workers CGT Allowances for January Sun Alliance Life & Pensions Banks' safe-custody fees fail to add up in the light of experience Norwich Union The Times Unit Trust Information Service The new Singer & Friedlander Tai Pan Fund Cheap buyers in for shares Fidelity Brokerage Fitzgerald to ride Remittance Man Cariboo Gold to spark Doncaster double for Bailey Newbury BBC1 Today's Races on Television Newbury Rapid Raceline Ladbrokes Yesterday's Results Nap: Majed (12.30 Newbury) Next best: Cariboo Gold (3.00 Doncaster) Racing next Week Doncaster By a Correspodnent: Davy Blake defies hefty burden Scottish champion hunter chaser stakes claim for Newbury final Stratford Wolverhampton Hereford Lingfield Park Dickinson hope to collect at Corbridge Havant aim to claim final point for title Sport in Brief Haycock wins recall Cousins heads team Kankkunen prevails Grubb changes flags Dutch bank on spin Draw favours Lomas Fahey takes first leg Rising Stars France intend to halt six-match losing sequence Today's Teams in Paris Cellnet Scotland face daunting test of character Irish eyes set on extending Twickenham success Today's Teams in Dublin Referee sees nothing sinister in prospects for Paris rematch David Hands talks to the Irish official who dismissed two Frenchmen during the last visit by the England team to Parc des Princes Celtic can rebuild on firm foundations Traditional rivalries in Glasgow offer club's new owner basis for revival Weekend View Dalglish seeks new partner for Shearer Guide to the Weekend Fixtures Tomorrow All Whites agree to name change Stopover at Wembley for Norway on way to World Cup Faldo misses out in birdie harvest Intrum and rivals race neck and neck for Cape Horn Lawrie Smith describes the great strain on rig and keel and crew as they prepare for fresh storms Cheltenham festival will be like Hamlet without 'The Prince' Saturday portrait: Richard Dunwoody by Andrew Longmore Brand back in Fantasy Land Scores Thomson in final after early setbacks Substitute Webster saves day for Wales Vital for England to bounce back Weekend games will provide test of Atherton's leadership Teams Hughes and McDermott put Australia in control Scoreboard The Times For the Record Snow Service Booking your place in the cricket bible's roll of honour Snow Reports Cricket McCann flies in to assume control at Celtic England must dig deep in trying time David Hands says Will Carling's men need to adopt a more positive attitude to overcome the try drought that has blighted their season Table Report warns of dangers to horses in Atlanta heat Financial Services Ltd Simon Barnes Motoring MaZDa 323 Arts Travel Books George Plumptre's surname is pronounced… Theatre Planning an evening out, or a day with your family? The Times critics select the best entertainment around Films Opera Word-Watching Classical Rock At your Service Ruth Gledhill finds warmth in worship at a church in York Jazz Dance Museums Galleries Children What to tell the children In an enlightened spirit of subversion, Janet Daley offers a Conscientious Parent's Guide to DIY sex instruction So what do you say sex actually is: a way of making babies, love for another person, a form of recreation? The Man with the Garden Answers Harrods Knightbridge Multiple Classified Advertising Items Dateline Multiple Classified Advertising Items Opera & Ballet Multiple Classified Advertising Items Concerts Royal Albert Hall Lockheed Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items A nasty Twist for children who want more Ibsen lands in video age Theatre: At the Barbican, Benedict Nightingale reviews Yukio Ninagawa's epic staging of Peer Gynt Hippodrome The Card - a unique event in newspaper publishing The Sunday Times ENO Smooth and sassy Soul Festival Hall Great British Hopes Rising stars in the arts firmament Manchester Airport Your entry to the arts world Two tickets for the price of one, exclusive weekend breaks, glimpses behind the theatrical scenes … all for £12.50 a year The Theatre Club Theatre Guide West End Entertaiment Joremy 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 This Week's Special Offers Park with the Theatre Club New on Video: From Ealing classic to Japanese masterpiece Encyclopaedias begin to byte back Multimedia Can a single CD really replace a whole library? Join now Jazz Recordings: Legacy of an idiosyncratic jazz legend; plus the latest classical and pop releases 20Th-Century Opera Pop Singles Orchestral Pop Albums Vocal Steinway Hall Multiple Classified Advertising Items Music Multiple Classified Advertising Items Music In Print Potters Music Klaver Music Foundation of Great Britain Multiple Display Advertising Items The Royal Exchange Theatre Company Indian Music The Korg Multiple Classified Advertising Items Argent's & World of Pianos Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Weekend The Bands That Made You Dance Around town: things to see; places to eat Museums and Galleries Where to Eat Delights in a dramatic setting Manchester on Show The industrial buildings of Britain's City of Drama house a wealth of cultural attractions Fact File Fuelsaver Your masterpiece is in the post In the first of a series on shopping by mail, a look at ideas for arty gifts from New York The Times Gifts for a growing market Stuck for a present for a green-fingered friend? Here is a new shop in which to dig around Shop naturally and save the planet The environmentally conscious consumer now has the muscle in the marketplace to create a commercial demand, but who is meeting it? Israel Hay a Griat Holiday The Galaxy Range Heat Resistant Protection for your Table Foam for Comfort Ltd The Old Tannery Collection Cubes Shelving Trestles Desks Etc Butler's Tray Seymour Shirts Asthma Individually Made-To-Measure Trousers & Skirts Irish Linen Allergy Relief Products Ltd. English Oak Furniture The National Bed Federation Ltd., Poetstyle Ltd Dalewood Keys Ltd Slumbershades Multiple Classified Advertising Items Gift of Beauty British Antique Replicas Taking a shine to silver Silversmiths are making pieces most people can afford, says Michael Hall Motoring Hartwell Ford Saleroom Multiple Classified Advertising Items Saab Currie Motors Jaguar & Daimler Authorised Dealers Classic gift seals love affair Having a licence is one thing, really being able to drive is another. Her boyfriend's Porsche taught Alice Thomson the difference Defying death in the Ford Mondeo On a wet day at Brands Hatch, Kevin Eason was taken for the most terrifying ride of his life The Times Picture Gallery Used Car Brief Ford Fiesta Driven Mad Volvo Estate How Spielberg and the BBC sell books Giles Gordon introduces a list, launched today by The Times and Dillons, to show what the nation really buys Motoring with Middlemarch Russell Twisk reports on Penguin's performance in the new literary market of audiobooks Middlemarch By George Eliot (4 tapes, £9.99) The Age of Innocence By Edith Wharton (2 tapes, £7.99) Both Penguin Audiobooks No curtseys for Coetzee What the critics said: Derwent May's bookbuyer's guide The Times/dillons Bestsellers Wonder of a baby's brain Is natural selection the clue to how human minds work? Bright Air, Brilliant Fire By Gerald Edelman penguin, £7.99 The Book Guild Ltd., New Paperbacks Sex, sons and lovers Polly Toynbee compares visceral with academic research as a means of revealing Nineties' sexual mores Sexual Behaviour in Britain: The National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles. By Wellings, Field, Johnson, Wadsworth Penguin, £16.99 The Hite Report on the Family: Growing Up Under Patriarchy By Shere Hite Bloomsbury, £15 A very suitable blockbuster Vikram Seth's India is charming and barmy - and sells like hot chapatis A Suitable Boy By Vikram Seth Phoenix, £8.99 Magical mayhem Rupert Goodwin on the fantasy worlds of Terry Pratchett Books in the Times next Week Adrenalin Rush A hoarder on the farm is worth his weight in manure Farmer's Diary Country-air cure for flagging feet Marathon update: with just six weeks to go before the big race, the training gets tough for the Times running teams Chris Brasher offers a training tip for runners with 'terminal tiredness' Brace yourself for the final stretch Extended training sessions will condition your body for next month's great run, Mel Batty says Cursing under the duvet A cold played havoc with Christine Wheeler's training Win a weekend in Ireland The Times with Relais & Châteaux are offering readers the chance to win a weekend away and to save money on a short break Save up to £400 on a short break in a luxury hotel and enjoy the magic of Ireland Standing up to the enemy Hares are curious creatures: they rear up on their hind legs to make sure hungry foxes can see them. Edward Ashpole finds out why Sky-divers herald the start of spring Feather Report Be privileged: spend a weekend fishing, playing golf, or just being pampered How to Book Hertz Chelsea & Kensington Multiple Classified Advertising Items Watermark CPM Alto Club Cambridgeshire Wales Warwickshire Barratt The Times Duval Estate Agency Limited The architects' Grade choices Modern homes join classics For Sale about £335,000 Find a rural retreat Picture Gallery The Times Reader Offer Even small plots need big ideas George Plumptre on the dilemmas of moving to a smaller garden and the joys of starting afresh Weekend Tips In my mother's footsteps Lessons from some of Britain's greatest—and largest—landscapes can be applied to even the smallest garden. The trick is to get the scale right Garden Answers Norfolk Garden Supplies Multiple Display Advertising Items Bramley's Nurseries The Times Reader Offer Jamand Ltd Multiple Display Advertising Items Rosewall Multiple Classified Advertising Items The Times Groworganic Agriframes Lawnflite Ltd Antique Timber Company of Monmouth BAC Conservatories COUNTax Agriframes Ltd., Elm House Nursery Country Talk Dolphin Stair Lifts Multiple Display Advertising Items Join the Easter getaway Still Booking: exotic tours to far-flung destinations and short breaks at home and on the Continent Long Haul Europe Skiing The Continent Channel Islands Best Western Hotels Stena Sealink Wine and dine where the grapes grow The Times Reader Wine Tour to Portugal Enjoy the Vinho Verde, Douro and Dao regions Five days only £468 Relaxing down on the farm Weekend Breaks in Britain: perfect refuges can be found for beleaguered urbanites Farm Holidays: Where to Go Picture Gallery Manors from heaven The Big Value Flight Guide A glimpse of the Pyramids Weekend Breaks Abroad: Alice Thomson whizzes through 48 centuries in 48 hours in Egypt Picture Gallery The one and only QE2 The British Virgin Islands CIE Tours International Travel notes Mark Warner Travel Tips Ski West Swan Hellenic Skiing across the roof of Europe Spring Snow: go high, go late for some of the best sport the Alps can offer, says Doug Sager How to prepare for the long, challenging trek Where to Find Late Skiing The attractions of sun, powder snow and rock bottom prices Multiple Display Advertising Items Sheraton Grand Hotel Edinburgh Multiple Display Advertising Items NSR Travel Overseas Travel Prague £129 Poland £99 The French Selection Greece by Design Multiple Display Advertising Items Vacanze in Italia The Magic of Italy Italy Earthwatch Research Team Explore Worldwide New England Country Homes The Ramblers Association Polurrian Hotel Highbullen David Gladwin Concorde Ltd Spring Sale £45.00 Scottish Tourist Board Saturday Rendevous Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items The Times Chess Winning Move Times Two Crossword Bridge The Listener Crossword No. 3243: Wrong Number by Ix Computer Games Microsoft The Patent Office A Channel Hopper's Guide to the Week's Robert De Niro's greatest hits Vision Testament of a film-maker Channel-Hopping David Flusfeder makes his pick of the week's programmes on all channels Picture Gallery TV Series Beginning March 5-11 Sister sets fur flying Off the Box The biggest since Brando The man with a face 'you don't remember' is the subject of a rare tribute. Richard Scott on the De Niro season Channel 4's Robert De Niro season starts with The Deer Hunter, Sunday, 9.30pm. The Long Goodbye, Monday, 10pm, opens a Sky Movies Gold tribute to Robert Altman Thermabond Nun too clever Times Experts Survey the Week of Viewing Arts Amnesty for jokes Oldies Put that in your pipe Science Picture Gallery Square's toast Soaps On your marks… Sport Master of geniality does a devil of a job Terry Wogan tells Moira Petty about modern dilemmas as entertainment Do The Right Things, BBC1, Saturday, 8.15pm I camcord, therefore I can Can members of the public produce watchable television Peter Barnard Video Nation, BBC2, Monday, various times Thermabond And she never met Edmonds When Mary Goldring studies the state of the BBC, one big name eluded her. Peter Barnard reports on her findings The Goldring Audit, Channel 4, Sun, 8pm The road from jail to Yale to Hollywood Behind a new mini-series is a story that reflects American realities. Hilary Kingsley describes a former prisoner's struggle to express himself Laurel Avenue BBC2, Sat, 9.15pm; Sun, 9.50pm Painter, scientist, robber - and fly Films on TV David Robinson makes his pick of the week and John Marriott (below and overleaf) rounds up the best of the rest. The War Film and Thriller of the Week are highlighted by Richard Scott on pages 8 and 9. Running times, published in good faith, may be altered. Videoplus numbers can be found on pages 10 to 23 Saturday March 5 With Dutch courage War Film of the Week In a deadly joust Thriller of the Week Saturday March 5 Victory out of defeat Variations How to resolve some of life's tricky problems Saturday March 5 Choice glitter from Jarman; Wogan wonders; wildlife park under threat; Paglia takes to the streets BBC1 Sunday March 6 Being brave from the grave Variations By George, a new spin on familiar sounds Sunday March 6 Choice: 18th-century divorce; Adler addict BBC1 Son, sand and some scandal Sky One Monday March 7 Variations Another mystery from the Baker Street files Monday March 7 Choice: sisterly art and Soul; Hubble in trouble; Holmes comes home; clouds break over China BBC1 Tuesday March 8 Claws out for that family feud Variations Fame and fortunes of India's suitable boy Tuesday March 8 Choice: literary giants; tennis court comedy BBC1 Wednesday March 9 Terry tackles the great Danes Variations Those hits and myths from disabled folklore Wednesday March 9 Choice: disability facts and fantasy; days of messy divorce; kings of vice; building a siege machine BBC1 Thursday March 10 Ready, willing and very able Variations BBC1 A man at the very top of his profession Thursday March 10 Choice: steeplejack the lad; outdoor pursuits Friday March 11 A nasty hitch for hitchhikers Variations That woman who makes married life hell Friday March 11 Choice: tales of the wife's mother; when families break up; liberated dads; the pain of bereavement BBC1 Saturday March 5 Celebration of sisterhood Pick of the Week Recommends Sunday March 6 Monday March 7 Tuesday March 8 Wednesday March 9 Thursday March 10 Friday March 11 Classic fM 100-102 BT Magazine Tag Heuer Contents The Times Magazine Magazine Something for the Weekend The laws on drug use no more apply to the middle-class user than does the law on petty smuggling Logos and burbles Cost of shoplifting Books for teens Counting MPs Hot stuff A bad lot Beyond the Clouds Picture Gallery Peugeot Between the Lines The essence of Bridget Riley's life is as elusive as that of her paintings; but then her paintings are her life, Ginny Dougary discovers. Portrait by Graham Wood Picture Gallery Burberrys of London Mercury The Shape NEC Sunderlani Honda is not the only Japanese car manufacturer in Britain in trouble. Nissan, once the saviour of Sunderland, is locked in a bitter battle with the city's other local hero: its football club. Alan Jackson reports. Photographs by John Angerson Daks Daks Close to the Stars Thet met, they fell in love, they kissed, They're beth and Margaret, and their on-screen affair has given Brookside a million new viewers. And Robert Crampton met them. Photograph by Tim O'Sullivan Debenhams Failing the sex test Killing baby girls is still common in India and there is little political will to stop the practise, writes Christopher Thomas Rebel without Corse Mariuccia Mandelli is not bound by the same rules as other designers, as the easy lines of her collections for Krizia show. Iain R. Webb meets her The Dufflecoat Company The Genuine Panama Hat Company Stockbags now in French Navy! Sandals Returning to the Flock It's time to cover up your bare, minimalist walls, Oliver Bennett writes, as papers of the past become the future for interiors Main photograph by Paul Massey Picture Gallery Forest Mere Picture Gallery Stockists Picture Gallery British Philatelic Bureau Air New Zealand Chasing a tale On the Road Tracing the past is becoming increasingly difficult in Sri Lanka and other former parts of Britain's Empire in the East Habitat Restaurant Guide Eating Out Bend The Times Cook Food & Drink Frances Bissell has been The Times Cook for seven years, establishing herself as one of Britain's leading cookery writers. from this week she brings her approachable, home-made style and vast experience of world-wide cuisine to The Times Magazine Picture Gallery Flora Drink Since she was eight, Jane MacQuitty has been drinking wine-and she has been writing about it for The Times for 11 years. The pronouncements of her taste-buds will now be found every week in The Times Magazine Flora Wine Guide National Breakdown Dolphin Special Needs Bathrooms A good head for noses Whisky may have a familiar smell, but there are 26 bouquets in one single malt, writes Robin Young Pilot The Luxury Camry Enter Password Cracking It with the Men who Know Part 101: Haunting for Beginners The Vulture Picks over the bones of contemporary culture Small Birds Singing The Times Thomas Keneally A Childhood Bermuda Mercedes-Benz
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