Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 29/09/1998

1998; Gale Group;

Autores

Phil Yates, Arthur Leathley, Transport Correspondent, Eric Stockton, Rosemary Righter, Jon Ashworth, Raymond Snoddy Media Editor, David Adams, Helen Johnstone, Brian Collett, Mark Inglefield Political Reporter, Nigel Hawkes and Peter Pallots, Rob Hughes, Martin Posner, James Zirin, Mark Souster, Richard Hobson, Gavin Lumsden, Philip Howard, Rachel Campbell-Johnston, Derek Wheatley, Peter Foster, Elizabeth Hartley-Brewer, Geoffrey H. Lloyd, Gillian Harris Scotland Correspondent, Michael Evans, Defence Editor, James Landale, Political Correspondent, Roger Maynard, Tom Walker, Kevin Eason, Geoff Brown, Robert Sheehan, Bridge Correspondent, Joe Joseph, D. J. Davies, Jill Sherman, Chief Political Correspondent, Stewart Tendler Crime Correspondent, Roy Sheppard, Robert Wright, Dominic Walsh, John O'leary, Education Editor, Ken Coates, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Ruth Gledhill Religion Correspondent, Libby Purves, Peter Waymark, Robin Young, Mark Inglefield, Matt Sims, Michael Clark, Phil Gordon, Roland Watson, Anna Blundy, Martin Fletcher Chief Ireland Correspondent, Charles Bremner, Deborah Collcutt, Grace Bradberry Style Editor, Geoff Harwood, Jasper Gerard, Steve Buckel, Russell Kempson, Edward Fennell, Richard Cork, Paul Durman, Ian Scales, Patrick Taylor, Tim Knight, Timothy Clode, Bijan Omrani, James Drake, Marit Hargie, Simon de Bruxelles, Celia Brayfield, Alan Toogood, Horticulture Correspondent, Stephen Wood, Philip R. Thomas, Dalya Alberge, Arts Correspondent, M. Khonsari, Raymond Keene, Adam Sage, Daniel Goleman, John Russell Taylor, W. Salisbury, Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent, Paul Wilkinson, Nich… Bethell, Chris Partridge, Jasper Jarard, David Marsh, Bronwen Maddox, Alan Lee and Claudia Joseph, Jill Sherman, Craig Seton, Richard Owen, Damian Whitworth, Ruth Taplin, Roger Boyes, Nigel Hawkes, Science Editor, Oliver August, Grania Langdon-Down, Philip Webster, Political Editor, Dalya Alberge, Rodney Hobson, Julian Muscat, Sue Spenceley Burch, Nicholas Wood, Christopher Thomas, Philip Lowe, Nick Szczepanik, John Goodbody, David Young, Giles Whittell, Philip Webster Political Editor, Christopher Walker, Jason Nissé, Mel Webb, Gerald Larner, Annie Turner, Matthew Parris, Chris McGrath, Ian MacKILLOP, Russell Jenkins, Stephen Hoare, Peter Riddell, Ian Brodie, Michael Gove, Tony Dawe, Bernard Silk, Nadine Meisner, J. Fraser McLuskey, Fraser Nelson, Martin Waller, Michael Horsnell, Chris Ayres, Paul Cavadino, Carl Mortished International Business Editor, Andrew Newman, Christopher Warman, Alexandra Frean, Social Affairs Correspondent, Nick Wilson, Sarah Cunningham Retail Correspondent, Dr Thomas Stuttaford, Roland Watson and Alasdair Murray, Chris de Souza, Frances Gibb, James Christopher, Neil Cooper, Robert Whymant, Philip Bushill-Matthew, Richard Ford, Christopher Irvine,

Resumo

The Times Fantasy League Check your Scores Blair throws weight behind zero tolerance Inside Unpopular reforms to go ahead Fisherman's five-hour sea ordeal Index What to Do when the Affairs Goes Public Kohl and Waigel bow out as Germany enters new era How father passes on key to good mothering Index US summit raises Middle East hope Index Debut for American favourite Tiffany & Co Tuesday 30p Every Weekday MCC ends 200-year ban on women members Pony-tailed New Dealer warms up for Gordon's global tour Matthew Parris Conference Sketch Targeting tested on mean streets of New York Plans reflect failure of other anti-crime schemes Mx Hight Speed Processor MCC votes to admit women LVF truce maybe recognised Killers overcoming antibiotics By a Correspondent: Labour bar on cash-for-access journalist Police fear for missing Briton News in Brief Sister struck off Children hurt D-Day men meet St. Joseph's Hospice Schools rugby player broke rival's jaw Youth is given 12-month sentence for kick that 'sounded like a gunshot', reports Paul Wilkinson Girls held over death of widow Broadmoor for 'black magic' killer Murdered priest may have given killer shelter Picture Gallery Rape victim 'was denied police help' Singer adds spice to launch day Virgin Army captain shot open barrack doors after party Head who married a divorce is told to quit Ericsson The school where one class had 22 teachers Saudi dissident faces extradition over bin Laden links Sobbing mistress never came back Abbey National Potato king's plot produces a record crop Taffy Tattie and friends show 422 varieties at one show Compaq Spuds He Likes Britain's love for the versatile vegetable has gone off the boil Student is left homeless-just for being male Peter Foster on a crisis in colleges as landlords turn away men Peter Foster Father wins truancy case on sums failure Siemens 'Pindown' probe shuts boys' school Cambridge welcomes youngest student since Pitt the Younger NatWest Patient who killed 'was a known risk' News in Brief Charge dropped Struck off Corrections Revolutionary art restored to glory Masterpieces of the Mao era to be shown in Britain writers Dlaya Alberge Tsar's necklace set to fetch £1m One Penny Renault Policemen win £2m TV libel case Granada to pay for accusing three officers of a cover-up writers Michael Horsnell Intel inside Date announced for digital screen battle BBC Set for Technology Confusion Tax hits Prescott crusade New charter to make courts more helpful Blood company set for legal battle in plasma price war European firm accuses British authority of unfair practice report Nigel Hawkes and Peter Pallots Trolley technology rolls to aid of disabled children Directline Home Insurance Starling causes a stir in the Highlands Boeing By a Correspondnet: Toddler, 2, helps his sister to an early birth Mandelson warned to safeguard rights Hewlett Packard Union leaders demand 'jam today' from Brown Chancellor is accused of depressing the wages of low-paid workers after speech refusing to change economic policy. Jill Sherman reports Darling hastens welfare reform No meeting of minds in welcome for Schröder Riddell On Politics £200m from lottery for good causes SIDElines Blackpool 98 The Royal Bank of Scotland Officials disown leaked list of 'Trots and Lefties' Leadership embarrassed by critical comments ondelegates' trustworthiness, writes Roland Watson Sponsors help to clear £4.5m debt Party casts off its chains The Bill Joint vote on Pr and reform of Lords may heal split Democrat fears ease as campaign cash rolls in Our competitors promise to save money on BT's… Home-run hero gives America a reason to cheer TheOpenUniversity Mississippi bears brunt of hurricane Evacuation plan saves Southern states, writes Giles Whittell in New Orleans Vauxhall Storm-hit town looks to its sporting saviour No Title Nortel Networks Europe's left turn raises fiscal doubts Bonn leaders pledged to boost welfare, writes Charles Bremner Slovak opposition hails poll result Picture Gallery Italians demand right to foul air as Rome falls to army of Vespas Scooter ban backfires as nation continues its love affair with two wheels From Associated Press in Tirana: Nano to step down after riot challenge Ethiopian feeds Moscow's new poor Fighting goes on despite Serb claims of peace Schröder picks his tamed rebels The radicals who hurled Molotov cocktails in 1968 have taken over the helm, writes Roger Boyes Business, drivers and Nato wake up to Germany's new Red-Green menace The Times Tiny Right threatens to topple Netanyahu Labor leader predicts post-poll chaos Islamic world disowns 'embarrassing' Taleban Saudis recall Kabul envoy as Iran begins border manoeuvres, Christopher Thomas reports Demon Internet Le Pen disputes public office ban World in Brief (AFP): Crash victim found (Reuters): Voters opt for nobody Sharif under pressure Two on bomb charge (AP): Sudan hospital attack (AFP): Transplant go-ahead (AFP): Jurassic beetle found All you need to survive public rupture: an apology For the famous, breaking up is different-it's done in a blaze of publicity. How you handle it is what counts, says Celia Brayfield Herbal Food Supplement The Harley Medical Group Hungry for anti-obesity drugs Arts Dial a Phone Nature's Best The value of nativity plays Snobbery that drove me from Catholicism Libby Purves: My Faith Tomorrow Ben Elton Forum Would you survive the psychologist's couch? How to be a good boss Make Yourself Work Perfect Time Know when to Be Assertive You're not so flash, Gordon Michael Gove says Brown is no thoroughly modern Mandy Jasper Gerard: Howard's way The Times Diary Jasper Gerard: PC Prince The Times Diary Picture Gallery Tranquillity in harness If the price of keeping police horses is turning them into billboards, so be it Buffet's off The Times Diary What angry Cabinet ministers could have heard on the… The Times Diary Own goal? The Times Diary Kohl's poisoned chalice David Marsh on the Sisyphean task for Schr?der Brown Calms down The Chancellor concentrates on his own job at last Rebels and Retribution Sierra Leone should pursue clemency not executions Vrrrm! Vrrrm! For Freedom The motor scooter must remain a transport of delight Labour's choice of Euro candidates Research funding Little and large Iran and the easing of Rushdie edict Soviet 'fatwas' Clinton's crisis Fighting crime Smacking not a hit with all parents Lather over literacy Power House Picture Gallery Court Circular Today's royal engagements School news Dinners Birthdays today Personal Column Old boys go back to days of adventure Service dinner London MOD Naval and Civilian Officers Meetings Luncheons Anniversaries Forthcoming marriages Autumn flower show is strong on new varieties Betty Carter Betty Carter, jazz singer, died in New York on September 26, aged 69. She was born in Flint, Michigan, on May 16,1929 Personal Column Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Flights Directory Multiple Display Advertising Items The British Kidney Patient Electrostore Limited Featherston Shipping Limited Announcements Churchill's Stairlifts plc Court & Social SIR Arthur Vick Sir Arthur Vick, Obe, former Vice-Chancellor of Queen's University, Belfast, and director of Harwell, died on September 2 aged 87. He was born on June 5,1911 Professor T. V. Sathyamurthy T. V. Sathyamurthy Emeritus Professor of Political Science, York University, died on August 25 aged 68. He was bron in Madras on October 29,1929 The Siege of Khartoum On this Day EasyJet The Times The Times Crossword No 20,909 News Picture Gallery Business Newspapers Support Recycling Sport Forecast Perfect Day Arts Tomorrow in the Times Features Law Special Report The Papers Radia and TV Opinion Columns Obituaries Letters Index Business Editor Patience Wheatcroft Booker chooses defeated defender of Argos as chief John Charcol Index Ecclestone trust to gain from $2bn bond issue LTCM partners face personal bankruptcy Index Banking moves lift Nikkei Hinchliffe debt may jeopardise Knoydart estate Index NWT to be served final warning by Opraf Index Business Today Barclays Capital to announce job losses Domino's Pizza delivers $1bn for founder Big players seek expansion as independents feel heat Unit trust investors stay calm in plunge Cendant chiefs $30m Ministers call for calm as JLC reveals debt CBI says welfare curbs are urgent Man United plans to open 150 club stores Perry chief quits after six months Bennetts preparing to bow out of Oasis UK trade gap worsens New jobs for Wales Proudfoot pays again Marshalls expands Minerva in £50m deal Greenalls to refocus ALP share complaint Core losses deepen Gannon acquires Morrels for £48m Business Rounup Tourist Rates TLG succumbs to £353m Wassail bid Jaguar BY our City Editor: The missing formula Commentary Paget departs from Telspec Slowdown hits Close customers Progress hope at Pilkington Hopes of interest rate cut cheer the Square Mile Stock Market Commodities Liffe Options London Financial Futures Money Rates (%) European Money Deposits (%) Gold/precious Metal (Blair & Co) Sterling Spot and Forward Rates Major Indices Recent Issues Rights Issues Major Changes Tempus Close to the edge Oasis Pilkington Dollar Rates Other Sterling FTSE Volumes Allied London Wall Street Blair may have swallowed a seriously bad Big Idea Economic View The winner is The Times City Diary Close call The Times City Diary Remote control The Times City Diary Trendspotting The Times City Diary Happening Hilton rewrites the hotel advertising book Market Leader Bad taste The Times City Diary Picture Gallery Rowe & Maw The Times Unit Trust Information Service Royal air maroc Equities reverse early losses Lehmann Communications Battle of the bulging Film Festival: A well-sated Geoff Brown is delighted by the many and various movies on offer in Toronto The Times Galleries Out of sight is out of order Concert A guide to the best available recordings, in conjunction with BBC Radio 3 Building a Library Theatre Goldsmiths' Fair Reflections in golden eyes Visual Art: Richard Cork enters Jonathan Miller's fascinating halls of mirros at the National Gallery Barbican Centre Portraits of a rotten vicious era In 1977 Dennis Morris captured the Sex Pistols on film British Museum Around the Galleries Listings Recommended Today Guide to arts and entertainment compiled by Marit Hargle New West End Shows Films on General Release Geoff Brown's choice of the lates movies Multiple Classified Advertising Items Gate's swinging satire Theatre Multiple Classified Advertising Items Little women Men Should Weep Glasgow Multiple Classified Advertising Items Picture Gallery Multiple Classified Advertising Items Dumb & dumber Dumb Type Barbican Multiple Classified Advertising Items Theatre Multiple Classified Advertising Items 298,000 readers of this section go to the theatre at… Waiting for Africa Multiple Classified Advertising Items To Advertise Call 0171 680 6828 Allen & Overy Finance Lawyers Freshfields MacIarlanis Fax: 0171 782 7899 Cartoon Network Battens Solicitors SMCL Energy Ltd The Lawyer Halifax Company Secretary Graham Gill & Young To Advertisement Call 0171 680 6828 Protecting the public - and the sex offender Tomorrow a law governing the supervision of paedophiles comes into force, writes Paul Cavadino Proving the case in China Picture Gallery Brick Court Chambers Chambers A rough deal on the road to silk Microsoft Chambers Professional Requirment Michael Page Bechtel Laurence Simons Michael Page TMP Worldwide The Best Kept Secret in the Legal World? Calming family conflict Mediation can case difficult divorces, and help other civil disputes. says Frances Gibb The College of Law Laurence Simons Legal Advisor Lunchtime lessons in the law Grania Langdon-Down on courses aimed at legal support staff Banking/Finance & Telecom Lawyers The Crown Estate Holborn College Multiple Classified Advertising Items 18 St John Street Chambers, Manchester Private Practice Industry the Zarak Group Twenty Four Old Buildings Try a Career that Isn't Legal! Multiple Classified Advertising Items Number One Fountain Court When Ford took the Nazi route James Zirin on the car giant's use of slave labour in wartime Garfield Robbins Metropolitan Police Lipson Lloyd Jones After the Diana inquiry In France victims have the right to prolong criminal proceedings International Law Firm Capital markets lawyers US Qualified International Litigator/intellectual… IQPC Ltd Corporate Partner - US Firm Ericsson London Stock Exchange Women advised on safety with clients Multiple Classified Advertising Items Camerons Solicitors Business for Sale Multiple Classified Advertising Items Businesses for Sale Multiple Classified Advertising Items Why the absence of customers is music to store owner's ears Bernard Silk meets a reluctant trader - keener on posterity than his own prosperity Multiple Classified Advertising Items Warning for those with designs on copyrigh Multiple Classified Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Ethical + Reputable + Important Cash Centres Ltd Multiple Classified Advertising Items Would you like a recession proof income? Multiple Classified Advertising Items Franchises FasTracKids Multiple Classified Advertising Items Crestcom Multiple Classified Advertising Items Franchises Briefings Picture Gallery Time for this year's cream to rise to the top Mel Webb previews the next step on the road La Manga final Business to Business Multiple Classified Advertising Items Communications 2000 International Calls Low-Cost Calls Regus Tax Free Second Income Business Opportunities Global Millennium Bug PC Solution C. C. T. V. Franchise Printujize International Company Services Limited Corporate Golf Finalists by Region KallKwik Print Copy Design The Times Newspapers How To Out-Sell, Out Market, Out-Promote,… The Sunday Times Walker leaves his rivals green Subeen can compensate Loder Racing: Newmarket Trainer Bounce Back Rare Weekend Reverse Newmarket Rapid Raceline Specialists Yesterday's Results William Hill Racing Ahead Southwell Sedgefield You thought it was too late to sign up? Far from it. Fantasy League may have been going for close on a month now, but there are weekly and monthly prizes to be won. So enter a team and go for October's £1.000 Beware the curse of the yellow card Puma Fantasy League Faxback Service Transfer Line Player List with Up-To-Date Scores How keepers make their point Nick Szczepanik analyses the week's games and explains how some inspired choices led to this week's ?500 prize As I was saying... Fantasy Quiz Team of the Week Fantasy Quiz Picture Gallery Fantasy Player of the Week: Shay given The Times Main Fantasy League Entry Form Fantasy league Fantasy League Top 100 The Sunday Times Gregory's boys in no mood for early exit Uefa Cup: Recalled Collymore Vows to capitalise on latest chance By our Sports Staff: Kosice may feel Fowler backlash Burley rubs salt into Celtic's wounds Word Watching Blackburn hope for tonic Sheehan on Bridge Keene on Chess Winning Move Hakkinen keeps his composure Motor Racing For the Record Pools Forecast Picture Gallery Tour absentees hope for clemency Rugby Union: England Coach to Name Survivors Froms Summer Party Lombard Trophy St Helens poised to sign Iro and Wright Rugby League Leader has a break in race to top merit table Sport in Brief Cup descends into mediocrity Julian Muscat, tennis correspondent, on the tournament falling short of its grand design Hendry is still the favourite to prevail Snooker Saints manage to ride storm Today's Fixtures NFL Details Word-Watching Radio Choice A weatherman's pleasure Television Choice Eight out of ten celebrities prefer whiskers BBC1 Satellite and Cable Storm over Di Canio intensifies Banks leads protest movement Times Two Crossword Golf QPR job beckons Francis Wright finds goal touch Tennis Hope this Ref's Not a Pushover Graham unsettles Leeds players Still well connected after 40 years From skiffle to satellites, the TMA has seen it all Siemens Don't hang up on handicapped Disabled Access Cut-price BT is a cool operator Britain was ahead of the race in offering consumers choice, and still leads the field, writes Annie Turner The Beast that gobbles gigabytes for breakfast Networking Energis An eye to the future Toney Dawe on how videophones are set to revolutionise our lives Does your PC Plod? Beware the Arthur Daley operators Chris Partridge reports on the phoney firms cashing in through fraud and theft How new world players get wired for the future Global Alliances Picture Gallery The biggest shop in the world Selling on the Internet is Britain's fastest-growing business opportunity Recal Telecom Skills shortage near crisis level Recruitment Dials destined to change the world In search of the latest discoveries, Tony Dawe finds a vision of the future that is already virtual reality Force Tapping the little fish in a big pond Small Business Breakthrough in protocols puts home workers online Teleworking All The Phone Companies Together Minutes mean money Bandwidth Trading We Connect Giant rivals give birth to big baby Data Communications City hall opens 24-hour hotline Stephen Hoare investigates how Brent is turning to the website to handle all council inquiries on the Internet Industry braces to face millennium bug Millennium Bug Spam that leaves a bad taste Office workers arc in danger of being buried by unsolicited e-mail, writes Sue Spenceley Burch Mobile Data Comms Cut out the chat Cash and carry has had its chips Sue Spenceley Burch finds that the card are marked in favour of turning Britain into a pennliess society Kingston Voiceware Baffled by phone bills Billing Picture Gallery France Spain China Israel Diamondtron Exploring the Orient Japan Round-Up of Telecom Developments Worldwide Pesky bug that won't go away The millennium time bomb ticks remorselelssly, but managers have a solution to hand, says Sue Spenceley Burch Orange Megabytes that make money Utilising Technology Birmingham A guide to credit management A message to big business Some say the new commercial debts Act will do more harm than good The post comes to the rescue with smart system How a large company hired an outside high-tech service to streamline invoicing Paper cuts and shrunken textiles Roche's long road to legislation Tony Dawe chronicles a minister's crusade to tackle a problem crippling the small operator Europe chases its debtors A Brussels directive may force laggards to pay up with interest-and compensations. Rodney Hobson reports TIPS for Conducting Overseas Business Stick all that on the slate, could you? Nick Wilson looks at how managing trade credit effectively can help both customer and business Royal Mail delivers the goods to those in authority Christopher Warman finds a first-class way to reach recalcitrant council tax payers Twelve heads are better than none Edward Fennel on a group that wants to change the culture of late payment in Britain The Better Payment Practice No more cheques in the post, please David Yound finds credit controllers striving to do better Royal Mail Bills at the speed of bytes Tony Dawe outlines the combinations of new technology and an unbeatable postal delivery service In the electronic age, it's still hard to pip the Post New services are helping to keep an old institution at the forefont, as Charles Darley, right, explain Royal Mail The ever so nice debt collectors Stephen Hoare watching the people with the impeccable telephone manners Separating can't-pays from the won't-pays The leading firms explain how they operate-and offer some tips on how to get your money back Name and shame is the game Craig Seton has a final reminder for incorrigible later payers: your creditors are compiling a little black book Pay up or we send the solicitors round How are large firms going to respond to the new Act? Edward Fennell reports Royal Mail How to get the money back Martin Posner known where business gets it right and wrong with debts Why the customer is right to like you Christopher Warman on business relations Britvic puts the fizz into debt collection Remember the 1st of November Tony Dawe sounds a warning for the community of late payers Now it's a matter of nerve Using the new legislation to take on an improtant client may not be as easy as you thought Can the law change a culture? Edward Fennell finds support for the late payment. Act and not a little scpticism about its likely effectiveness Royal Mail Rich pickings for global conmen Stephen Hoare finds out how the business world is fighting back against sophisticated fraudsters Pulling punches: the wrong plan of attack Debt collecting isn't for the faint-hearted, says Christopher Warman Can you deliver a winning mailshot? Royal Mail Competition Picture Gallery Royal Mail

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