News from 23/12/1994
1994; Gale Group;
Autores
Frances Gibb, Legal Affairs Correspondent, Christine N. Reeves, Louise Grey, Tom Rhodes and Andrew Pierce, Anatol Lieven, Kathryn Knight and Richard Lawson, Neil Bennett, Janet Bush and Patricia Tehan, James Erskine, Matt Wolf, Philip Howard, Julia Hewellya Smith, Jeremy Kingston, Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent, Clive Davis, Roy Clare, Lynne Truss, Carl Mortished, Simon Wilde, Roger Maynard, Bernard Levin, Giles Coren, Robert Miller, Jeremy Laurance, Health Services Correspondent, Martin Fletcher, John Hopkins, Golf Correspondent, Norman Hammond, Archaeology Correspondent, Peter Ball, Julian Critchley, Nicholas Watt, Ireland Correspondent, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Matthew May, Libby Purves, S. R. Lancelyn Green, Alan Hamilton, Robin Young, Michael Clark, Eve-Ann Prentice, Michael Hamlyn, Joel Brand, Howard Gardner, M. Al Fayed, Nigel Burke, Alan Hamilton and Jon Ashworth, P. H. S., Sean Mac Carthaigh, J. S. Richardson, David Miller, David Toop, Wolfgang Münchau, Melvyn Marckus City Editor, Stuart GRANT(partner), Raymond Keene, Peter Davalle, Paul Wilkinson, Tom Wright, Michael Ball, Richard Evans, Colin Legum, Peter Lane, George Sivell, Assistant Business Editor, Ted Williams, Nigel Hawkes, Science Editor, Stewart Tendler, Kate Alderson, Philip Webster, Janet Bush and Peter Riddell, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Winston Fletcher, Nicholas Wood, Chief Political Correspondent, Neil Bennett, Deputy Business Editor, Martin Waller, Deputy City Editor, John Goodbody, Dominic Kennedy, Robert Sheehan Bridge Correspondent, Ross Tieman Industrial Correspondent, Christopher Walker, Nicholas Watt Ireland Correspondent, John Friend, Public Relations Officer, Caitlin Moran, Walter Gammie, Peter Riddell, Alan Lee Cricket Correspondent, Richard Beeston, Kjell URSIN-SMITH(Managing Director), David Sinclair, Philip Pangalos, Kate Bassett, T. J. Blackford, Michael Horsnell, Jonathan S. Hawes, Benedict Nightingale, Tom Rhodes, M. J. Gordon, David L. Astor, Dafydd Evans, Martin Waller Deputy City Editor, S. J. Johnson, John Phillips, Alan Jackson, Colin Campbell, Michael Hornsby and Wolfgang M?nchau, David Hands, Rugby Correspondent, Catherine Milton, Christine Cheesman, Philip Bassett and Ross Tieman, Christopher Irvine,
ResumoGuinness case sent back to appeal court Compensation could cost millions Dublin paroles 39 jailed republicans Index A sporting reshuffle The Times Ding-Dong Merrily Russian jets kill 27 in daylight strikes on Chechen capital Anatol Lieven, the last British correspondent in the embattled city of Grozny, reports on the day Russian aircraft struck the streets Trade balance in the black for first time since 1987 All in the same boat Barclays No Title Spain's veto threat wins vote on British waters Tribunal cleared firms' share dealings Thatcher Cabinet and corporate spies played roles in business saga that ended in court Clarke rated least popular Chancellor Burberrys Takeover battle set benchmark for City aggression The Guinness Affair Rebuilding their lives after business disgrace Care cost blow to old people's heirs Crashed plane had flown too low before News in Brief Police shortfall Murder remand Doctors' hours Loyalists jailed £90m rents lost Rail sentences Scott switches Crossword dates Cunard chairman braves storm on the Qe2 Boarding party offers refunds in attempt to avert threatened sit-in and lawsuits Three survive as gas blast and fireball destroy home 'It is amazing that we escaped. Nothing short of a Christmas miracle' Mobile network charges you What goes bang and makes the Chinese groan? The Times Second used That is Orange of course Girl of seven was alone with dying mother Maples By a Staff Reporter: British fishermen fear clashes after defeat by Spain Aitken steps up referendum call Study puts lefthanders in the right The Times Demos Millennium Lecture Series Indian brave was hoaxer from Hastings By a Staff Reporter: Row as Seaforth is scrapped Sheehan on Bridge Timberland Woman hired for contract killing gets life 20p Boxing Day The Times Average cost of Christmas tops £200 Festive bills as Tunnel trippers let the train take a strain of spending Cost of Christmas Champagne bargains galore put nation in party mood Christmas Shopping Save the Children Delay cost Eurotunnel £100m Ceasefire lures shoppers back to Belfast Keene on Chess Gentle robbers get light sentence Minister outraged by ski trip for offenders Alliance Francaise Light goes out for British matches Cabinet minister vows to challenge rabbis' marriage blacklist in court President defers poll decision as Berlusconi quits How Italian Parties Line up Lock sex case jury fails to reach verdict Selfridges Prime Minister's brother given jail sentence From Reuter in the Hague: Infant 'euthanasia' challenged Monaco rules out abdication News in Brief (AP): Divorce granted (AFP): Apology given (Reuter): Aid warning (Reuter): Blood sport (Reuter): Briton chosen (AP): Silent night (AFP): Snake's off Chechenia mission in turmoil after general resigns Bombs turn Dudayev foes against Yeltsin Carling British police go on the beat in Bosnia Body of US pilot returned World Summary (AP): Malaysia to cane cheats (Reuter): Syria to hold Israeli talks Two die as Sarajevo market is hit in countdown to truce Clinton aide under suspicion of lying to federal judge Jobless man held for bomb on subway Heat wave grips southern Africa Pelé put on spot as Sports Minister Lotus Picture Gallery Gingrich attacked over book deals A good priest doesn't need to be respectable' Not just a social worker in a dog collar, a wear who gave hope to the homeless says charity is not enough The Valerie Grave Interview I think Bob Maxwell saw himself in me Julia Llewellyn Smith meets newspaper heiress Eleanor Berry, recovering from the streess of sensational court case Interflora Why we go bonkers at Christmas "Hypermania" is gripping parents as they shop, queue and go quietly mad in the run-up to the festivities Esso With songs in their hearts Carol-singing, according to recent reports, is a dying art. Determined to refuse this heresy, Giles Coren set out in Victorian clothes on a cold winder night with five chirisers, and proved the cynies wrong Philip Howard Bad writing is a kind of mean-spirledness with the language Picture Gallery All in the same boat Even at this season, contemplating our incompetence and petty-mindedness is enough to give one a sinking feeling Picture Gallery Où est le boeuf? The Times Dairy One's miff The Times Dairy Counter attack The Times Dairy All change The Times Dairy Paint it blue The Times Dairy The most unpopular invasion Richard Beeston on Russia's attitude to Chechenia Golden English Item One in the great debate on Britain and the world Ulster's Great Expectations A moment of peace for the people of the Province A Sporting Reshuffle If Pele is Brazil's minister, can Britain not have Bearley? 'The Right path' Anglo-French praise Universities in crisis Ethics of keeping Hindley in jail Fears of further Rwanda genocide Caesarean births Busy shipyard Miller mix-up Solicitors' complaints Doubled and halved Wrong crusade? Time for Major to apologise? All systems go Season 's bleatings Court Circular World's earliest cotton textiles are found University news Birthdays today Institute of Biology Appointments in the Forces Appointment Personal Column Picture Gallery Anniversaries Church services tomorrow Forthcoming marriages Latest wills The Times Angus MacIntyre Angus Macintyre, Senoir Fellow and Tutor in Modern History at Magdalen College, Oxford, died on December 21 aged 59, he was born on May 4,1935 Musical Instruments Multiple Classified Advertising Items Malcolm Adiseshiah Malcolm Adiseshaih, Indian economist and Deputy Director of Unesto, 196370, died in Madras on November 21 aged 84. He was born on April 18,1910 Multiple Classified Advertising Items Trailfinders Multiple Classified Advertising Items B. K. P. A. The British Kidney Patient Association Multiple Display Advertising Items Samuel Lipman Samuel Lipman, music critic and publicist, died in New York on December 16 aged 60. He was born in San Jose, California, on June 7,1934 Jeremy Parsons Jeremy Parsons, patron of Finnish arts, died in London from an Aids related illness on December 2 aged 43. He was born in Exeter on February 28,1951 To-day all the world goes down to the country. Everbody has either a country News The Times Crossword No 19,733 Business WPA Health Insurance Forecast In the Times Tomorrow Picture Gallery By our Industrial Correspondent: Indonesia signs up Rover for car plan South Thames Tec failed to control costs Infotech Uk back in surplus after seven years BAT can buy American Tobacco Arts 25-27 Sport Hope fading for Stanhope as shares are suspended BA reviews link with Saatchi after coup Bell Atlantic Foreign Sales Corporation Lynne Truss on Last Night's Tv Business Today Zeneca deal Festive buyout Germany to clamp down on imported employees Legal & Public Notices Picture Gallery Income plan case will go to Lords Eastern steps up North Sea stake By our Business Staff: Buyout puts miners back in business at Tower pit From Reuter in Istanbul: Polly Peck ruling overturned De Morgan setback NatWest sells stake Oil company buys in US Thorn EMI defence sale Surge in unit trusts Twin property deal Warburg's Railtrack role Tiphook chief bankrupt Tourist Rates Law on shareholders' rights to be reviewed Business Roundup The Present You Need! Zeneca to pay up to $480m for US health group Labour queries bonuses for Leeds society's top team By our Deputy Business Editor: BTR Nylex to acquire Formica for $600m A Herro from zero? Saatchi's ousting remains unexplained Good news from the balance of payments Receivership beckons Pennington By our City Staff: Scottish Equitable given £150m boost Ivory & Sime wins tussle over trust British Gas Canadian Pizza gives warning on profits Commodities Liffe Options Shares catch festive spirit as they near 3,100 level Stock Market London Financial Futures Money Rates (%) European Money Deposits (%) Gold Sterling Spot and Forward Rates Major Indices Recent Issues Rights Issues Major Changes Zeneca Canadian Pizza Dollar Rates Other Sterling FT-SE Volumes Table topping Tempus Jupiter Tyndall Wall Street Goodbye, Mr Smiff The Times City Dairy Lucky cove The Times City Dairy Fair shares The Times City Dairy Stuffed The Times City Dairy Memo to Maurice Saatchi : launching an ad agency ain't what it used to be A fresh start in advertising in the 1990s is a tall order, says Winc Time and money run out for Tec Philip Bassett and Ross Tieman report on the arrival of the receivers National Grid windfall could remove pylons Lloyd 's innovates to stay ahead The Times Unit Information Service Nintendo Shares advance in thin trading Investors Chronicle Hold on to your mobile The most fashionable Christmas gift this year is the mobile phone. Matthew May seeks the networks' advice on how to keep it for longer than a phone call CD-Roms deepen the press identity crisis As anxiety about privacy grows, newspaper editors are discussing how to tackle the problem of jigsaw Id TLS the Times Literary Supplement Microsoft and the Christmas Papal hoax Protests over Internet report of Vatican deal Have you heard the one about? Online House trained In touch Have you heard the one about? The Times On the move More and more Fresh ideas Money in their madness Theatre: Two fine plays reach the big screen; an updated farce opens in Manchester: and other reviews Film versions of stage plays have not always been successful, Says Matt Wolf. But the new Madness of King George is the a triumph for its British cast and director Only if you like to samba Viva O Carnaval Lilian Baylis Pop Sensitive panto? It can happen Cinderella—The play Contact, Manchester She 's not even a close relative Charley's Aunt Royal Exchange, Manchester Pop Entertainments Theatre Guide Cinema Guide Hands off to a great year Pop on Friday: A year of great albums . . . Trad jazz classics revisited Reinventing tradition Jazz: Authorilative interpretations of the Sidney Bechet legacy Pizza On The Park Entertainments Such a nice boy, and what a good voice . . . what do Michael and the Cult have in common? Passionate fans, for one.. . plus the CD that's a magazine is back Alan Jackson avoids the souvenirs, but leaves with happy memories of one man and other people's music Read it hear first New Albums: Volume is back, chock full o'facts and furious fretboarding, while weirdo beardos Zz Top colour their roots blue Top Ten Albums Surprise package News Waves Warning: do not judge Royal Trux by their record sleeve Delicate sound of thunder Louise Grey on the happy return of goth's goths Meeting price of maximum exposure Richard Evans talks to George Ward, the businessman turned horse-racing sponsor By our Racing Staff: Jodami to run at Wetherby Snow Reports For the Record Leuila loses permit quest Fixtures Heavyweight mouthpiece who renders own verdicts The Times Snowline Test arena where champions thrive Test Records Wales intent on staging World Cup The Times Double blow for New Zealanders Open invitation for Palmer Torvill and Dean top television bill John Goodbody finds Britain's Olympic ice dancers overcoming competition from football Boardman challenge Woodhall on home soil Manchester hopes fade Mair takes festive title Borwick rallies Williams on verge of signing Coulthard Sport in Brief Yugoslavia return to international fold Brazil welcome back European counterparts after year in exile David Miller, in Porto Alegre, Brazil, finds the most gifted of football nations meeting again City follow Hosier's lead Revised Draw Word-Watching By our Sports Staff: Second record tumbles to Tomba Guiseley turn to Watson Angelic food for thought Radio Choice Radio 1 Mystique disappears when you get close Review BBC1 Variations Satellite Choice Clement Freud Atherton finds grounds for optimism Melbourne pitch offers England encouragement on eve of second Test Cardiff s lead trimmed back by accurate Jenkins Times Two Crossword Winning Move Word-Watching SMA Charitable Trust Football Chairman calls on FA to give freedom to top clubs
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