News from 22/04/1994
1994; Gale Group;
Autores
Srikumar Sen, Boxing Correspondent, Nicholas Hinton, Phil Yates, Julia Llewellyn Smith, David Marsland, Anthony Harris, Jon Ashworth, Donald Acheson, Patricia Davies, Anthony Holland, Neil Bennett, Janet Bush, Economics Correspondent, J. V. G. Mallet, Ivo Tennant, Ross Tieman, Industrial Correspondent, Philip Howard, Eve-Ann Prentice, Diplotmatic Correspondent, Ben Preston, Education Correspondent, Jeremy Kingston, James Bone, Lynne Truss, Sara McConnell and Robert Miller, Carl Mortished, Simon Wilde, Stewart Tendler, Crime Correspondent, Colin Narbrough, Stuart Jones Tennis Correspondent, Gerald Davies, Philip Bassett Industrial Editor, Patience Purdy, Bernard Levin, Robert Miller, Giles Coren, Arthur Leathley Political Correspondent, Jeremy Laurance, Health Services Correspondent, Jane Bird, Richard Binns's, Christopher Kitching, Kris Anderson, David Hewson, Peter Ball, Ingo Gilmore, Nicholas Watt, Ireland Correspondent, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Matthew May, Peter Southwell-Sander, Ian Murray and Arthur Leathley, Peter Waymark, Alan Hamilton, Rodney Milnes, Michael Clark, Raymond P. Segal, Steward Tendler, Crime Correspondent, Bruce Lidington, Kevin Eason Motoring Correspondent, Brian Moynahan, Charles Bremner, David Guest, Philip Ellis, John Shelton, Nicholas Wood and Janet Bush, Joel Brand, Paul Hickman, Susan Gilchrist, John Humphrys, George Brock, Toby Cummins, Bruce Cheesman, W. Morton, Raymond Keene, Alan Lee, Cricket Correspondent, Cheryl Taylor, Lawrence Freedman, Richard Evans, Nigel Hawkes, Julian More, John Shergold, Anna Cole, Kate Alderson, Stephen Toomey, Julian Muscat, Nicholas Wood, Chief Political Correspondent, Martin Waller, Deputy City Editor, Dominic Kennedy, Trevor Spooner, Giles Whittell, Philip Webster Political Editor, Christopher Walker, James Pringle, Matthew Parris, Raymond Seitz, Tom Rodwell, Caitlin Moran, Walter Gammie, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Andy Martin, Ian Brodie, Brian Clarke, David Sinclair, Kate Bassett, Michael Horsnell, Nigel Hawkes Science Editor, Kathryn Thompson, Frances Gibb Legal Correspondent, Charlie Pye-Smith, Barbara Mills, Patricia Tehan Banking Correspondent, G. A. Browning, Robert Scott, (Chairman), Michael Hornsby, Countryside Correspondent, Michael Henderson, Alan Jackson, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent,
ResumoDiscovery of planets points to life beyond our solar system Takeover brings bonus for savers LLoyds windfall for building society cu stomers Nixon falls into coma Index Bernard Levin Minister does U-turn on council tax backdating Duke to mark South Africa's return to the fold Marathon Names Passport to France Magazine Saturday in the Times Weekend Weekend Money Vision N&P Veterans win veto on D-Day events They also serve who only stand and answer questions Political Sketch Leap in high street sales strengthens hopes of recovery The Royal Bank of Scotland By our Legal Correspondent: Bar moves to scrap monopoly of training Paralysed wife sues husband for failing to fix window Halting bullying will cut crime, says Yard chief By a Staff Reporter: Keeper is fined £250 over hybrid partridges Two on drug charges Cuts claim 1,000 jobs Bonus for car workers Murder appeal wait Shot man questioned Channel tunnel delays IRA murders policeman Drunk rings alarm bells Waterjel Hospital in Allitt case suspends nurse News in Brief Trinket traders vie to cash in on D-Day veterans' invasion French shopkeepers in no dount that 50th anniversary of landing is a cause for celebration By a Staff Reporter: West's wife remanded in case of child rape Ratpack leads dogged Pooh-hunt Suicide journalist had compulsion to pat bottoms By a Staff Reporter: Lady Kenya foils thieves with cup of hot coffee Patek Philippe Geneve When my father wept for the fallen Raymond Seitz, the outgoing US ambassador, tells why dignified remembrance is important to him BMW Appeal victory sets Hill on path to new life in America Quashing of murder conviction clears way for £500,000 claim over wrongful imprisonment Police call off hunt for pub bombers Preferrd Direct Insurance Dixons Britain's Best Deals Embittered teachers poach pupils from opt-out school Texas By a Staff Reporter: More golfers tell trial of cheating Spring greens offer home-grown value Weeknd Shopping Keene on Chess Amazing offer! A string of pearls in every copy Mercury Children die from blood infections caught in hospital Pensioner wins fight for therapy HSE Pill 'does not raise breast cancer risk' Picture Gallery Resorts 'unsafe for swimming' Guardian Direct Pupils held over thefts in Majorca News in Brief Plea rejected Rail for sale Heroin arrest Attack claim Diggers found Jacobi's stage Oriental Oxford US cocaine dealers jailed for 16 years Labour 'fears violence' if BNP support wanes BTCC Parties locked in phoney war and fantasy politics Riddell on Politics Military vehicles 'rotting' A picture of innocence MacGregor fights back Around the Lobby Washed out The week ahead Rabin pledges to scrap settlements on Golan Heights Right-wing rabbis tell troops to defy Israeli leader over eviction of Jewish settlers Pentagon bungles enquiry into 'friendly fire' helicopters Sun (Reuter): Japanese accord paves way for Hata News in Brief (Reuter): Christian plea (Reuter): Envoys held (AFP): Tattoo ruling (Reuter): Pope's choice (Reuter): Olé Cordóbes Whites face change with dignified distress South Africa's ruling class prepares to relinquish its 'Garden of Eden' James Flannery reports that although most whites welcome next week's polls, stress is widespread. Photographs by Simon Walker Far right presses for homeland pledge before joining contest House-to-house fighting breaks out in Gorazde Serb infantyr Nato threat of renewed air strikes and sweeps into besieged Muslim town America's allies struggle to pin down Clinton's policy on the Balkans After two years of wavering by the us, Nato and the United Nations wonder how Washington will react if a Bosnia deal can be struck New perspective given to Picasso's passion Magistrate spurns Berlusconi News in Brief (Reuter): Envoy expelled (Reuter): Victory vote Fire arrests (Reuter): Lager out Dell British envoy to Bosnia takes his sleeping bag Singapore to cane second foreigner for vandalism Britian to contest Hong Kong teenager's punishement in spray-paint casc South African Abroad? Woolwich Retreating UN leaves token force in Rwanda (Reuter): Rebels tell Sihanouk to get out News in Brief (Reuter): Rape rebuke (AFP): Dinner service (AFP): Excess wives (Reuter): Hearty winner (AFP): Naked ambition Pyongyang could build five bombs in weeks, US says Doomed regime sets store on nuclear security For the beleaguered North Korea, joining the exclusive club of nations with nuclear weapons is a question of survival, Lawrence Freedman writes Survival syndrome wins killer reprieve B&Q Daughter recalls 'abuse' of childhood CU Nothing like a dame to spoil the party What makes Dame Vera Lynn such a potent political force at the age of 77, asks Julia Llewellyn Smith On the Annihilation of Species Darwin's theories provided the basis on which modern may still views the natural world. Now the creatures which inspired him are threatened by a devasting fire. Nigel Hawkes reports Pecking Order: Darwin's Finches The Times Life, love and Edna Edna O'Brien on the deplorable of her bedroom-and the terror of publishing a new book A prince dogged by losses In which Pooh goes walkabout and Charles is left pining Rukba Multiyork Philip Howard6 Writers have been dropping trade names into their prose for centuries A tale of two dogs Pedlars of filth and smut? The BBC is toying a new That Was The Week That Was, but the world has changed and satire has moved on Spam's off Cash call Lara's nemesis Ghost of Thesiger A people without a voice Lord Tebbit predicts chaos over Europe Taxing Times Consumers are spending, but for how much longer? Hard Justice The West should take care when lecturing Singapore Joint Schools The chairman of the Bar Council is on the right track Bosnia at war: deprivation, sufferings and warnings Concern for Angola Keeping local services Over the top Railway museum row Women at work Child Support Agency D-Day memories and celebrations Crime and punishment St Paul's service Returned to sender Court Circular Birthdays D-Day Dinner Royal engagements Picture Gallery Schools Professor Geoffrey Rose M Philippe Daudy Service dinner Personal Column Memorial service Church appointments Anniversaries today Forthcoming marriages The Royal College of Ophthalmologists Latest wills Dinners Dr James Deeny Dr James Deeny, Social medicine pioneer and former Chief Medical Adviser to the Irish goovernment, died on April 3 aged 87. He was born on November II 1906 Musical Instruments Trailfinders Dennis Hartas Dennis Hartas, Commercial, air racing and display pilot, died on march 27 aged 69. He was born on April 27,1924 Heritage Robert Russell William Robert Russell, former Chairman of the Shipping line, Shaw Savill and Albion, died on April 11 aged 80. He was born on August 6,1913 Irene Eisinger Irene Eisinger, czech So[rano, died at Weston Super-Mare on Apri; 8 aged 90. she was born in Kosel im Schlesien, then part of Austria, on December 8,1903 Baedeker Guide Books as Books News The Times Crossword No 19,523 People in the Times WPA Forecast Runners relive the agony The Times Tomorrow Tapestries for the Bard America from coast to coast Business Lloyds to pay £1.8bn for C&g Acquisition will signal start of mortage price war Sales buck trend with 0.8% rise Stock Market Infotech Police raid Schneider premises The Pound Arts Eurotunnel may set call at £600m Gold Brent Crude Sport Maine-Tucker Television and Radio Motoring Halt Bypassed Speeding up No Title Radisson Edwardian Picture Gallery Ford shake-up seeks to specialise production The British-born chairman of Ford, who worked as a young manager on the Cortina, has rationalised production so that all cars are likely to be designed in Michigan Caird falls into the red Gardner sales top £1bn Wew ahead European-style work councils under fire Rail firms to seek several franchises Company News in Brief Lancer Boss receivers in deal with Germans Business Roundup News Corp sells stake Wm Low recovery signs Se names directors Cluff lifts production Oxford Molecular price Roxboro acquisition Henry Boot UK workers lose jobs to Chinese in Babcock shake-up Liberty revamps voting structure Ibm exceeds expectations Pitman's mortgage shorthand Pennington By our City Staff: Etam to end 'Romford girl' image Austin Reed strides out with growth in profits AMP Multiple Classified Advertising Items Robec% Group Tie Rack advances SmithKline Beecham raises payout by 18% Lloyds move creates stir in banking sector Stock Market Markets at a Glance Tourist Rates Ft-Se Volumes Liffe Options Surprise £51m rights chills Albert Fisher Recent Issues Major Indices Traditional Options Major Changes 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) Mr In and Lord Out after the first full lap Dollar Spot Rates Lloyds finally discovers a soulmate-in Cheltenham Patricia Tehan and Robert Miller find plenty of evidences that the marriage of the high street bank to the sixth-biggest society makes sense Dual accolade Double take on the doormat The Times City Diary Hair apparent The Times City Diary Just the ticket The Times City Diary Broker's hunt The Times City Diary Food for thought The Times City Diary Babcock Albert Fisher Finding help over Lloyd's Closer to the light Tempus SmithKline Beecham Ceetex 94 The Times Unit Trust Information Service Small gains on the day Investors Chronicle All eyes on IBM results Losses and profits: what next, asks Matthew May Ignorance of the fax will cost you Special features on your equipment could save lots of money on phone bills P&P Talisman Roose & Partners Europe buys into Soho Online New numbers Training Fake holograms False alarm Software swap Relaunch No Title More than a nuisance Dr Steven Bellovin tells Jane Bird how experience with a hacker led him to write a book to help other victims Biting off a bit of the Apple A small company is involved in a big American push for sales success Voted Wich Computer ACER No Title It needs outsiders Experts are shedding their specialist skins to be more general but David Guest says there is some way to go Vision R&O Multiple Classified Advertising Items Overseas Jobs Express Information Technology Software Sales Jinlayson Wagner Black Eagle Star Richard storms the Tower Shakespeare is being performed in the Tower of London, perhaps for the first time. A chilld but eager Jeremy Kingston reports Fairy-tale lost in the telling An absorbing new British score is let down by a hyperactive staging Opera: A Judith weir premiere at ENO Pop Shocking set of symptoms Television Review Pop Life with a one-man band A consummate raconteur reopens a beautifully restored theatre Entertainment Sotheby's Country House Sales Entertainments Weekend Choice A daily guide to arts and entertainment complied by Kris Anderson Theatre Guide Jeremy Kingston's assessment of the showing in London Cinema Guide Geoff Brown's assessment of films in London and (where indicated with the symbol )on release across the country A journey that's really necessary Ride were a hit, then they were't, now they are again. No wonder Caitlin Moran still can't work out why she loves them so much Theatres Between hard rock and a place Little Angels' melodic metal tops the charts here, but they mean zero to Americans. Alan Jackson finds out why Pop on Friday: little Angels get set for paradise . . . Cud and Pulp aim for places in the premier league.. rock in print Top Ten Albums Sotheby's New tricks from old dogs New Releases: Veterans Cud and Pulp overcome the problems of making that difficult umpteenth album Tom&viv The Stone who won't stay dead Three new books voice old doubts over Brian Jones's death Finishers from four hours eight minutes Natrasweet London Marathon Results The Times continues its exclusive coverage of the NutraSweet London Marathon with the competitors who finished between 4 hours 8 minutes and 5 hours 11 minutes. The final names and times of finishers, provided by Unisys, will be published tomorrow. The Times Holyfield in mood to contain Moorer The Times For the Record Stop, look, listen. . . and think like a trout The Flyfisher as Detective Next Week Multiple Classified Advertising Items Arming yourself to land the big one Top doubles Sporting wisdom revised English players should benefit Low at Highbury Word-Watching Caught out Another Davies takes centre stage World No 1 takes the long way home for par finish in Ford Classic Kelly challenges in style Roberts contemplates Woking's downfall Results from Yesterday's Three Meetings By our Sports Staff: Irish make low-key start Carlisle Knight new captain of Davis Cup team Sport in Brief Signs point to Wigan Clark's sound progress Royal Windsor record Intrum gains ground Aintree's second place Barclay honoured Eddery ruled out of first colts' classic Sandown Park Grant quits the saddle after victory at Perth Alflora to bloom in mile contest Today's Races on Television Nap: Painted Madam (2.00 Sandown) Next best: Shintillo (3.05 Sandown) Perth Taunton Ludlow Swan on outsider Multiple Display Advertising Items Neill finds good sport in welcome call to bar Freud on Friday Illingworth makes his message clear Glamorgan left in doubt Scoreboard Kent enjoy easy practice Scoreboard Move by Jones may provide clue to future of global game Rugby Commentary Appleyard loses out on Wales tour berth BBC1 Radio 1 Classic Countdown Variations Choice Satellite Boxing England strike positive note on final day Antigua Scoreboard The Times Hendry regains touch to build big lead Times Two Crossword Kafelnikov confirms rise in status Winning Move Word-Watching Linguaphone No Title Golf Picture Gallery Pleasures of Provence Hidden France: alpine stronghold Unspoiled Golden Isles Xii Stena Sealink La vie proven?ale To really enjoy Provence you need to live there. Julian More should know—because he does Stena Sealink Hampton House Travel Stena Sealink Mountains of blood and tears The last of Richard Binns's three briefings on lesser known corners of France. This week: an Alpine stronghold of the French Resistance The vercors Hidden France Stena Sealink Keycamp Holidays 'Something Special' Drive France The French Collection Multiple Display Advertising Items Matthews Inter Europe Travel Ltd Brittany Ferries Shopping for a ch?teau The DrÔme Property Search House-hunters on their way to Provence should stop here to look for bargains, writes Cheryl Taylor Stena Sealink Stena Sealink Papier-mâché Ian Nice has two faces. Andy Martin explores the capital where it is easy to have a year on the Stena Sealink Marvels of Mercantour Andy Martin dons snowshoes and walks into a world from the past Gilding the blue water coast The Golden isles on the western edge of the C?te d'Azur are a picture of what the Rivera used to be before it was over-developed. Traffic isn't a problem, says Brian Moynahan. There isn't any Stena Sealink Picture Gallery Stena Sealink Hotels, Restaurants and Ferries Bed and Breakfast The Cathars' last refuge Turbulent history and sudden violent acts of nature mark the wild hill country of the Corbi?res, Charlie Pye-Smith reports Ferry Ine Stena Sealink Stena Sealink Lots of local colour There is scareely a modern French painter of note who has not been seduced by the colours of the south Stena Sealink Unicorn Holidays Stena Sealink Westbury Travel Ltd Where to See It Stena Sealink
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