Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 20/12/1995

1995; Gale Group;

Autores

Victoria McKee, R. H. Keys, Anthony Harris, Edward Owen, Iain R. Webb, Nick Nuttall, Gillian Bowditch Scotland Correspondent, Chris Ward, Simon Barnes, Richard Ford, Home Correspondent, Andrew Longmore, Richard Thomson, R. B. Coles, Inigo Gilmore, Janet Bush, Economics Correspondent, David Rhys Jones, John Diamond, Sally Howard-Vyse, Philip Howard, Hilary Finch, Jeremy Kingston, Joanna Bale, George Sivell, Arthur Leathley and David Adams, Lynne Truss, Carl Mortished, Gareth Boote, Brian Currie Deputy President, Simon Wilde, Stewart Tendler, Crime Correspondent, Jack Sewell, Philip Bassett Industrial Editor, Robert Sheehan, Bridge Correspondent, Robert Miller, Giles Coren, Jonathan Prynn, Transport Correspondent, Martin Fletcher, Jad Adams, John Hopkins, Golf Correspondent, John Redwood, Stephen Perry, Nicholas Watt, Ireland Correspondent, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Rachel Kelly, Thomas De Waal, Martin Barrow, Michael Evans, Defence Correspondent, Alan Hamilton, Stephen Farrell, Robin Young, Michael Deeny, Chairman, Joan Harborne, Peter Jupp, Director, Jenny MacArthur, Andrew Barr, Quentin Letts, Charles Bremner, Eleanor R. G. Barrott, John Kavanagh, Hazel Cavendish, Sarah Bagnall, Michael Binyon Diplomatic Editor, Martin Fletcher and Janet Bush, Robert Brodtman, Peter Wright, P. A. Latham, Brenda Maddox, Nicholas Wood Chief Political Correspondent, Richard Evans, Racing Journalist, Barry Millington, Arthur Leathley, Political Correspondent, G. H. Wigglesworth, Raymond Keene, David Charter, Education Correspondent, Adam Sage, Christine Buckley, Peter Davalle, Alan Lee, Cricket Correspondent, Elizabeth Smith Secretary-General, Charles Elphicke, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Paul Wilkinson, P. H. S, Tim Congdon, Chris Partridge, Alice Thomson and James Landale, Jill Sherman, Eric Reguly, Oliver Holt, Russell Kempson and David Maddock, Roger Boyes, Charlotte Mullins, Richard Warden, Janet Bush Economics Correspondent, Stewart Tendler, Rodney Hobson, Harvey Elliott and Quentin Letts, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Kathryn Knight and Michael Horsnell, Nigel Williamson Whitehall Correspondent, Kenneth Ellison Davis, Richard Duce, Joanna Pitman, Guy Walters, Giles Whittell, Christopher Walker, Chris Parker, Sean Coughlan, John Dayton, Kathryn Knight, Matthew Parris, Anjana Ahuja, John Shaw, Roy Greenslade, Peter Riddell, Tony Dawe, Richard Beeston, Michael Dynes, Philip Webster, Jason Cowley, Philip Pangalos, Alan Mitchell, Michael Horsnell, Alan Coren, Benedict Nightingale, P. P. L. Wells, Tom Rhodes, Richard Morrison, David Powell, Arthur Leathley, Alasdair Murray, Alan Jackson, Colin Campbell, Catherine Milton, Patricia Tehan and Richard Thomson, Jonathan Mirsky, Christopher Irvine, Russell,

Resumo

Interface Red Cross in appeal for Afghanistan Deep and evens Index Fishing rebels inflict defeat by two votes 13 Tories defy party whips Bottomley gives regulator of lottery a second chance Pleased to meet you Index Here's looking at your See-through fashion Party seeks to save Mp from bankruptcy as he faces £500,000 bill for libel action Index Scent of battle Ministers knew of Holloway squalor Index His England John Osborne's last look back Famous Grouse Fishermen's friends swept into net on the tide of ambition Political Section Rail sell-off critics condemn record of first operator Monopoly ended by franchise awards Dimplex Inmate tells of 'rat-infested tomb' I'll show no fear, says 'Rambo' Judicial selection secrecy to end Councils delay curbs on asylum Meningitis kills student within six hours News in Brief Greener roads Officer's 'error' Child rescued Titanic libel Self-styled Lucifer terrorised wealthy in their homes Masked 6ft Sin robber stalked victims By a Staff Reporter: 'Drunken lawyer lunged at girl' European Passenger Services I still love him, says wife who gave evidence against Ashby Assault case Pc to keep his job Santa gets police escort after attack Second shooting raises fear of IRA drug purge Computers Made Simple! Calculators blamed for generation of arithmetic dunces Grandparents set the pace Expelled pupils 'being failed' by special units School bullies pick on racial minorities Tories' new spin doctor co-wrote libellous story Conservative Mp awarded £40,000 over accusation of betraying Clegg Christmas adds up to £7bn extra spending Canon saves driver stranded by clamp Reliant car plant lays off workers News in Brief Canal death Council rapped Wrong track Feed the Children Parents of murdered girl appeal for help Starts Here In the Times By a Staff Reporter: Constables win libel damages from BBC PC World the Computer Superstore Anti-terrorist commander leads fight for poetic justice 'Ultimate detective job' for philosopher-policeman compared to Morse Ice proves greater peril than bullets Medical Briefing AA Shops Subsidy fraud by farmers tops £8m Brocket faces prison for £4.5m insurance swindle Aristocrat faked burglary at country estate where presidents and princes gathered Drunken family of 18 cause chaos on flight Judge tells asthma families to move Private eye slipped up on video assignment At Sainsbury's prices it must be the season of… 'Defective regime is wrecking fishing industry' Unitary councils blow Gateway 2000 In Parliament West Indies on back foot against baseball onslaught Europe Online Major spoilt for choice on big election gamble Riddell on Politics Haagen-Dazs Burden of Bosnia mission taken up by British general Escom UK Limited Wall Street bids for peacemaker Muslim refugees dread command to go back home January Sale Bargains Rabin video stirs doubts on amateur cameraman Yemen planes 'buzz' island seized by Eritrea Saga Services Ltd Minister's Bethlehem visit called off Rams bring muddy joy to hippos Direct Line Mortgages China excludes Patten from handover party Militia bombardment rains destruction on Kabul The campaign of shelling by the Taleban is the latest agony to be suffered by Afghans, Michael Dynes reports (Reuter): Ministers to devise Nigeria strategy Football Comes Home Communists build on lead in Russian polls Arctic victory leaves Kozyrev out in the cold at ministry (Reuter): Bid to retake rebel bastion No hiding place in shattered capital New voice of Spain takes over Belgian transport strikes cause havoc End of dispute is no brake on pedal power (Reuter): France 'to keep checks at borders' News in Brief (AP): Deadly stunt (Reuter): 139 die in crash (AP): Tycoon freed (AFP): Bones to pick First Lady under fire on Whitewater 'contradictions' Red faces over black Barbies "What can I get for Richard?" US business urges budget deal Republican values slide in Fornigate' Stone raises storm with film on Nixon Dole was wrong on Watergate Model agrees $2m divorce settlement Reuter: Cia boss predicts huge surge in world terrorism Sheer delight in the bare necessities The secrets of see-through fashion HOBBs Sale now on Corby Trouser Press HSBC Group Girls just want to have fun Christmas parties are a minefield of temptation-but it isn't only men who are indiscreet. Jason Cowley on women behaving badly RAC The lost art of the formal introduction Rachel Kelly on why hostesses no longer do the proper thing at parties RAC Who'd be a butcher at Christmas? The meat's off, says Giles Coren Inside Section 2 Why Britain must speak for Europe John Redwood resists the idea of a Franco-German superstate Digging in Picture Gallery A Christmas miracle Tim Congdon on Britain as the home of the enterprise culture Aghast Jail bird Tub-u-Iike Looking back Alan Coren Have you ever had a ding-dong with an angel? Bottomley and Davis A bad decision by both politician and regulator Mud, Mud, Glorious Mud One creature's sticky wicket is a heavenly hippo track Kabul Crucible In the dust of Afghanistan grow the seeds of Islamic terror Giving new hope to Brixton area Costs against JPs Wheat tax Cuts threat to Bbc World Service Dispute over 'safe' drinking limits London treaties Penny foolish Funeral fashion past and present Sport on TV Penny wise Court Circular Today's royal engagements Evangeline Bruce Painting returns to its old home after 250 years Birthdays today Church news Luncheon University news Appointment Personal Column Dinners Anniversaries Forthcoming marriages Latest wills Mary Lascelles Mary Lascelles, FBA, literary critic, teacher and poet, died on December 10 ages 95. she was born on February 7,1900 Personal Column IATA John Bushell John Bushell, Cmg, former British Ambassador to Vietnam and to Pakistan, died on December 14 aged 76. He was born on September 27 1919 Konrad Zuse Konrad Zuse, computer pioneer, died on December 18 aged 85. He was born on June 22,1910 Ahmed Karadawi Ahmed Karadawi, refugee worker, died of lung cancer in Khartoum on November 20 aged 50. He was born in Kordafan on October 19,1945 On this Day December 20,1848 Picture Gallery News The Times Crossword No 20,043 Business Times Weathercall Citizen Time Well Spent In the Times Tomorrow Shares halted in troubled mining company Pledge to scrap nuclear power subsidy overturned Arts 32-34 Nat West sells Bancorp in $3.56bn US deal White Hart hotel backer pulls out Media 28 BTR sells Dunlop for £300m Fed funds cut by a quarter point Sport 35-40 Women join panel of the wise men Baume & Mercier Geneve Will House Prices Rise next Year? Business Today Profit alerts OECD warning Solicitors convicted in £8m fraud case EU nations must tackle deficits, says OECD Coal funds group sold to Friends Provident PolyGram issues profit warning Eurotherm drives up 31% Bruton flies in to aid steel deal Sale that came down to a question of scale Engineers reveal slowing growth and orders RTZ breakthrough AEG disposals cost jobs Japan plans bail-out Thames Water project Persona in £20m deal Trinity expands BNFL to build £360m plant at Sellafield Business Roundup Loan portfolio changes hands Tourist Rates Courtaulds and Coats Viyella issue warnings Buyback costs NatPower £260m NatWest not so Fleet of foot Pennington Bancorp deal could mean cash for shareholders Byatt's plans do not add up Edwards looks for fresh funds Glaxo Wellcome sale to earn $1bn Cash from Warner-Lambert joint venture will repay debt First Choice banks on holiday cut International Factors Central Transport cautions investors Commodities Liffe Options Profit warnings test nerves of investors Philip Pangalos London Financial Futures Money Rates (%) European Money Deposits (%) Gold/precious Metals (Baird & Co) Sterling Spot and Forward Rates Major Indices Recent Issues Rights Issues Major Changes First Choice Glaxo Dollar Rates Other Sterling Ft-Se Volumes No riches, only rags Tempus Eurotherm Wall Street Corporate us protests The Times City Diary Out of view Heads or tails Pat on back? Free market Can South Africa match the 'tigers' of South-East Asia? Foreign investors are waking up to the possibilities, but remain cautious Lloyd's external members entitled to expect their interests to be defended Reform vital for system of auditor liability Barings is losing its bearings More fond memories Remove this discrimination Stage is set for panto season in Euroland Legal & General The Times Unit Trust Information Service The Samaritans Losses trimmed in nervous trading The Omega from Vauxhall The fourth dimension Compaq Profits that are heaven scent The demand for new perfumes has sparked a high street price war Casualties of Monty's war Sixty agency journalists face losing their jobs in the new year, writes Roy Greenslade Keen wind sharpens fresh-air industry Despite the slump and sick building scares, the air conditioning business is set for growth, Rodney Hobson reports The Facilities Management Software Solution Euro Personnel Services Haden BICC Group Global FM The Times Appeal for a draught Building & Property Facilities Management Confusion still reigns In Brief Putting a price on houses in 1996 Experts were wide of the mark with their predictions on house prices for 1995, says Rachel Kelly. For next year they are more realistic Property Multiple Classified Advertising Items English Courtyard Multiple Classified Advertising Items Property around BRITAINùSPOT the only Region to Show a Price Rise Multiple Classified Advertising Items Regalian Pangbourne, Berks Portugal Power to hear second complaint Court of Appeat Law Report December 20 1995 Court of Appeal Restricting satellite litigation Right to oral hearing over dispute Limit to right of legal self-help Former client waived legal privilege La Creme De La Creme Manpower Personal Secretary/p. A. Directors' Secretaries Exec. Sec Sanction for false statement Hospital blood sample request Promotion Co. World Famous Clients Multiple Classified Advertising Items DK Multiple Classified Advertising Items A caviller's dream of Restoration Television Preview: John Osborne's final screenplay mixes characteristic bile with (below, right) a life of Purcell The Times Television Visual Art There is one very practical reason why Osborne… Candid camera on the Nazi hens Photography Shows: Life through the lens, from 19th-century anthropology to modern City law firms Jazz Tomorrow Audience has the blues Jazz The Photographers' Gallery is playing host to a… It's all a question of balance Roll up, roll up, to watch children learn the skills of the circus. A wary Hilary Finch enters the ring Leap into crime Young Arts Other Offers Pop Join now Still holding back the years Pop Simply Red Wembley Arena Music 1 Original thinking in need of practice Dufay Collective St John's Classical Concerts Charitable guitars Wigmore Hall Music 2 'Dazzling farce' Entertainments Enchanted Toy Shop Choice 1 Today's Choice Theatre Guide Cinema Guide Choice 2 Striking camp still strikes gold Theatre Privates on Parade Greenwich New space for major Tom Jumpers Norwich Playhouse Theatre 1 Theatre 2 Dunwoody given ride on One Man at Kempton Sony Results from Yesterday's Two Meetings Hexham Ludlow Express Gift heads Ladbroke betting Royal Marines Rapid Raceline Platt transfers his versatile talents from pitch to pen Football Times writers give their Christmas selections of the best in sporting literature in 1995 Spurred to fame by childhood sorrow Picture Gallery Inside story captures drama of life in fast lane Motor Racing Christie's tale of the track runs out of steam before the tape Athletics Fairley offers definitive history of art and the thoroughbred Equestrianism Inspiring triumph against all odds Cruel juggernaut of sport claims two more victims Midweek View Tomba forgets problems Word-Watching Sheehan on Bridge Bible for athletes still running after 50 years David Powell salutes another milestone in the history of a sport's most authoritative magazine Keene on Chess Winning Move For the Record Today's Fixtures Tarango makes belated apology In Brief Hilton banned Parker power Woodhall's date Wild rice The Times English cricket commanding a place in the sun Simon Wilde on Test venues that suffer most from inclement weather Montgomerie wins award VH-1 Word-Watching West Indies slide to third defeat Cummins ensures Leeds take revenge Leeds 30 london Broncos 12 Snow Reports Radio 1 Greatest show on earth? Radio Choice Arturo, Pete, Dud and the bare-faced lyres Review Bbc1 Variations Choice Satellite Sports Books 36 Fraser surplus to England's requirements Malcolm stays on sidelines Times Two 7crossword No 657 Saracens optimistic of securing Sella Scots take their hats off to tradition David Rhys Jones on the change of heart affecting women bowlers' heads Ardiles ready to apply for Norwich job Rochas Athletics 37 The Great Windows Robbery Sun The Network is the Computer Students told to toe the line over free and fluffy speech Network Nutall Thought police silence critics City banks spend, spend, spend In harmony with Armani The Army top brass plan a Nato peace mission in 3D Animation system used for Casper the movie helps troops find safe routes through the war zone US Air Force orders Satcom system Multi-format magazines will use net to catch new readers Games 'do not cause aggression' I strive, I seek, I find zilch Tennyson's OK-but it's wacky Phill who really has me nettled Dell Direct Learn to keep an eye on Nelson BT Literary lions prowl the net in search of poetic justice Everything from the Bard to Beowulf ? the word spreading worldwide History moves from bookshelf to disk How CD-Rom is finding the war's missing links Of the hundreds of thousands of people who have fled from the former Yugoslavia, many are children whose where-abouts are unknown to their parents. Nick Nuttall reports on how databases have reunited these families, and will continue to do so now a peace accord has been agreed Children separated from their families by strife in Bosnia are back in touch thanks to a technological experiment A mother's heartache is brought to an end Red Cross to help refugees in Britain Cybercops of the Yard set sights on info bandits A special police unit at New Scotland Yard is cruising the sinister and expanding world of the computer criminal, Stewart Tendler reports. The villains are brokers in data who use gullible and often naive young computer enthusiasts to break down the defences of companies and governments Say goodbye 'Burglar Bill'. Today's public enemy number one is 'Screaming Nightingale of the Electronic Temple' Computer rape alarm to send thieves fleeing A tiny device can make equipment let off an ear-shattering noise at first touch Hunt down that des res at the touch of a button Jump into '96 with Webbed feat Another year older and deeper in the net? Then let me predict your future Banks refuse to put credit card security on the line If you're net shopping with plastic, be warned. Some firms can't take orders AOL Fast mail service for Santa Gere leads online campaign against suffering I've got what Bill Gates wants. But I won't sell Cover Story: How supernerd student Steve Jenkins managed to snatch the net rights to windows 95 from right under the Microsoft billionaire's nose An Apple for the teacher (but a Pc is just as good) Will graphic realism turn video evidence? Planet Internet Working wonders by the flick of a switch How the disabled make computers serve their needs US moves closer to an online code of decency Sky is no limit as supplier fulfils demand United effort to preserve Britain's natural wonders Forget surfing when you can ski the net as a virtual tourist If you've ever booked a skiing holiday and arrived to find the pistes melted, or a beach trip where you need an overcoat, the Internet has a solution. Chris Ward reports on how information technology is changing the travel industry Live weather reports take the guesswork out of holidays, so pack your toothbrush and have fun Grounds for complaint in the coffee break Scientists blinded by Gaelic need assistance Ready, steady go for young programmers OSI switches to the power trade £12m contract to train legal staff Orange and Demon link up to ease net access Faster and easier passage to be provided for mobile phone and desktop users Eye spy a man with a head for business Data storage enters the crystal maze Highwire How hologram imagery can reduce a mass of information to a tiny cube Groups can leap on a new bandwagon Storm One giant step for the micro-world Victoria Mckee finds that big is beautiful in a Virtual reality supercomputer the size of a house Software scores on a learning curve Fasten your seatbelts - we're on a journey to the net Us giants race to put Tv news in the pipeline The old guard muscle their way back to top jobs in It Technocrats were once over the hill at 30. But firms now see you can teach old dogs new tricks The internet The Times Conference on software Agends Time Computer System Ltd.

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