Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 12/10/1998

1998; Gale Group;

Autores

Malcolm Harper, Director, Louis Blom-Cooper, Jon Ashworth, Nick Nuttall, Robert Cole, Julian Muscat, Tennis Correspondent, Alexandra Frean, Adrian Lee, Grace Bradberry, Rob Hughes, Sarah Potter, Paul Hoggart, Mark Souster, Richard Hobson, Michael Evans, Defence Editor, and Tom Walker, Philip Howard, Carol Midgley, Hilary Finch, Milton Friedman, Jeremy Kingston, David Hatcher, Norman De Mesquita, David Elstein, Chief Executive, David Hallchurch, William Hutton, Lynne Truss, Carl Mortished, Stewart Tendler, Crime Correspondent, Tom Walker, Christine Buckley Industrial Correspondent, Gerald Davies, Robert Sheehan, Bridge Correspondent, Robert Giffen, W. P. Goss, Pat Gibson, Valerie Elliott, Stewart Tendler Crime Correspondent, Donald McCready, Ann Scanlon, Dominic Walsh, Debra Craine, Philip Brooksby, Peter Grobel, Alasdair Reid, Raymond Keene Chess Correspondent, Simon McCreary, Nicholas Booth, John Taylor, Alan Hamilton, Robin Young, Rodney Milnes, Jenny MacArthur, Michael Clark, Marianne Curphey, Insurance Correspondent, Lisa Armstrong, Fashion Editor, Roland Watson, Keith Pike, Anna Blundy, David Hands, (Chief Justice), Oliver Holt, Football Corespondent, Richard Matthews, Neil Addison, Jasper Gerard, Nigel Williamson, Daniel McGrory, Michael Alwyn, Richard Bath, Robin Russell-Jones, Michael Theodoulou, Sydney Friskin, Nicholas Harling, Margaret Beckett, R. M. Robinson Chairman, Simon de Bruxelles, John Hopkins Golf Correspondent, Celia Brayfield, Stephen Wood, Adam Jones, David Powell Athletics Correspondent, Raymond Keene, Victoria Walker, Lawrence Freedman, Nigel Hawkes, Caroline Merrell, Carl Mortished, International Business Editor, Brian Greenoff, Cathy Harris, Jane Hughes, Oliver Holt, Richard Owen, Damian Whitworth, Roger Boyes, Ian Murray Medical Correspondent, Stewart Tendler, Robert Cole, City Correspondent, Roger Bootle, John Allison, William Rees-Mogg, Nick Szczepanik, Giles Whittell, Audree Magee, Ireland Correspondent, Simon De Bruxelles, Kevin McCarra, George Caulkin, Chris McGrath, Gerald Clark (President), Moira Petty, Alan Lee, Walter Gammie, P. M. Cullinane, Peter Riddell, Ben MacIntyre, Steve Fleming, Philip Webster, Mark Henderson, Martin Waller, Carl Mortished International Business Editor, Mark Baldwin, Tess Knighton, Alexandra Frean, Social Affairs Correspondent, Roland Watson, Political Correspondent, Frances Gibb Legal Correspondent, David Orr and our Foreign Staff, Richard Morrison, Bill Edgar, David Powell, Michael Evans, Alasdair Murray, H. Moorhouse, Susie Steiner, Peter Robinson, Jan Raath, Edward Gorman Sailing Correspondent, Howard Campbell, Christopher Irvine, Christine Buckley, Industrial Correspondent,

Resumo

David on cruel nature Calman accused Index Nato bombers on alert for order to hit Serbs Multimillionaires gave Labour £8m for election Flabbergasted Haitink bows out of the ROH Titanic Offer Free CD Rom Game, set and match Henman Smashes Agassi Gascoigne checks into drink clinic First Telecom Monday Blair passes his biggest diplomatic test with China Philip Webster hears praise for a soft-spoken policy on human rights, so long as country's economy holds Borrowing may have to rise, Brown admits MESH Computers plc Whitehall's newest high-flyer demands time for his family Valerie Elliott on a man blazing a trail for minorities and parents 'Diana City' plan provokes protest Hague alert on lost Tory voters Leak may put police informers at risk St. Joseph's Hospice Body blow for the Royal Opera No home, no programme, and now no music director. Crisis faces the House, writes Richard Morrison British Airways Off-road test becomes deeply embarrassing A new car has had the corrosion test of the century, writes Alan Hamilton Toast to Briton who invented champagne Harrods Ministers face Labour revolt on welfare cut Backbenchers are ready to fight for cash paid to widows, reports Roland Watson Disabled benefit 'won't be taxed' Virgin RNIB Stella makes do with just a bunch of frocks Endangered GPs move next door to police PC World A taste for independence and pasties Simon de Bruxelles on the big hopes of small-scale Cornish nationalists Broadmoor searches for staff in Australia Tiffany & Co. Argentina to honour Britain's war dead News in Brief Gun victim home Boaters drown Food alert Man severs penis German victory Man swept away Boy killed at mall Road hog Appeal for lone women to adopt children In care Alexandra Frean on the launch of a campaign which recognises that one parent is sometimes better than two NatWest Virgin atlantic Safety is the first casualty in brutal new fight craze Bar is in danger of return to elitist era BT Not guilty plea on 'fat cat' charge Unhealthy alternative to visiting the doctor Norwood Ravenswood NHS delays 'increasing danger of blindness' Home Office to reveal further fall in crime Total figure is down but serious offences and public fears are rising, writes Stewart Tendler Policing millennium to cost at least £58m British Heart Foundation Software RG Britain says farewell to Irish splendour Minister hails 'great leap' for frog The Government is giving the last male British pool frog nine Swedish girlfriends Goose refuelling stop in danger NatWest Tiny Venison poachers fall victim to Far East money crisis B52s join Nato armada poised for airstrikes 13 countries are contributing aircraft, writes Michael Evans In the shadow of disaster, Belgrade falls back on black humour at the zoo Skydigital Sceptics turn deaf ear to British evangelism for Third Way German to be hanged in Iran The Royal Bank of Scotland Russia writes off sick Yeltsin Anna Blundy reports on the fast-waning influence of an ailing President propped up only by his aides Investors in People Paris to travel by driverless Météor Italian politics return 'to bad old days' Skydigital Fury as Jewish nun who died in Auschwitz is made saint £1.5m Rushdie bounty renewed World in Brief (Reuters): UN arms apology (Reuters): Ferry owner bailed (AFP): Clark Clifford dies (AFP): Queue to be hangman (AFP): Boys, 11, held over twin axe murders Esso Rebels threaten more civilian planes in Congo Mugabe's U-turn shocks his critics Picture Gallery Cyprus base Iraqis embarrass Britain Lloyds Bank Business Banking Clintons spend anniversary oceans apart Gay student critical after brutal attack in Wyoming Web PC Direct Tinseltown buys a $500 million facelift Holly Wood Home of the stars goes in search of lost tourists, writes Giles Whittell Author sued over Lolita 'rip-off' The Royal Bank of Scotland Mobile mania Satellites Reptile migration Naismith's Rule Iguanas blown in by Marilyn Series 3mx Short and hilly or long and flat? Sounding out crickets Micro-machines will soon mimic the sensors flies use to track crickets, says Nicholas Booth Ariston I'll go on as long as I can do what I want Sir David Attenborough is back on screen with his best series yet Prime Health PAN Hague looks back in time for make-over Designer Katharine Hamnett is too Eighties, says Jon Ashworth Forum Skirting the long issue There are some short cuts to longer styles, says Grace Bradberry Longines Swiftcall Rukba PAN The death of the family? We are becoming two nations - the childbound and the child-free. Celia Brayfield reports on the state of the modern British family Married people are clearly not happy, especially men Raising a family has become a vanishing skill Victims of new work prejudice Time Underwhelmed in underwear The Lapada Show National Heritage Memorial Fund Handel with care at Glyndebourne Opera Clear victory for Handel Opera Sbc Folk that lives on the bill Mary Stuart Girls' night out Pop Boyzone Wembley Arena NT A year in the life of a violin vituoso Drone from clones Theatre Twins Birmingham My year with Ludwig Music: The violinist Arme-Sophie Mutter has abandoned everything for Beethoven. She tells John Allison why. Plus, concert concert reviews Classical Concerts Magic in the air OAE/Bruggen Queen Elizabeth Hall Cultural clash of cymbals BBCSO/Davis Festival Hall Concerts This week in the Times Wait for the punchline in Kosovo Lawrence Freedman on the scripting of a crisis Screen siren This is very much alive parrot Don't laugh off William Hague, he comes from a long tradition of tough-minded Tories Politics of the begging bowl Neil will put sense - and honesty - back into party funding, says Peter Riddell Pro Bono Garden blight Nerd instinct The Treasury Micawber Brown cannot ignore falling growth Water Wars This conflict between Turkey and Syria will not go away Echoes for Kosovo Troy has fallen, but its message has an enduring stage-life Blair 'shuns' issue of Chinese rights Adoption Week Spielberg's war Does jury trial mean 'better' justice? Evidence on BSE Judge's case dropped Brunei stubbed out Aid to islands 'Educational elite' Catholic ruling on intercommunion Digital TV Tories and Europe Court Circular Today's royal engagements Winchester College Service luncheon Picture Gallery Sir Seymour Egerton Professor Michael Kitson Birthdays today Trafalgar Day Personal Column Marriages Anniversaries DJM: Nature notes Election Forthcoming marriages Pompeii 'at risk from a second destruction' Service dinners The British Kidney Patient Association Musicians Benevolent Fund To place death notices, acknowledgements or notices… Geoffrey Button Geoffrey Piers Henry Dutton, Ao, Australian writer, publisher and republican, died on September 17 aged 76. He was born on August 2,1922 Gray's Inn Clark Clifford Clark Clifford, Special Counsel to President Truman, 1946-50. US Defence Secretary, 1968-69, and attorney, died on October 10 aged 91. He was born in Fort Scott, Kansas on December 25,1906 Vera Searle Vera Searle, OBE, athlete and former chairman of the Women's Amateur Athletic Association, died on September 12 aged 97. She was born on August 25,1901 France Confinement of the King, Queen and Royal Family and the Attempt to Murder the Queen News of the French Revolution told of the dispatch of troops led by Marquis de la Feyette to Versailles. There they met the King's Guards, who defended the Royal Family. After a short, bloody encounter the King and Queen were escorted by la Fayette to Paris News The Times Crossword No 20,920 Business WPA Forecast In the Times Tomorrow A question of faith Hoddle Faces Uncertain Future after Latest Setback Oliver Holt, football correspondent, says time has run out for the England coach Henman Beats Agassi in Basle Final Julian Muscat sees Briton blast his way towards world top ten Index Advanced Laser Therapy Wigan produce show of strength Rugby League: Warriors Get It Right at Third Time of Asking to Secure Place in Garnd Final Pessoa reaps reward of father's coaching Equestrianism: Brazilian Sweeps to an Historic and Emotional Showjumping Triumph at World Games in Rome Iberia Williams learns harsh lesson of rule of Law Sailing Electric Guittar goes solo Basketball Kenyan lifts Sutton's crown Athletics Australians thwarted Easy for Williams Ipswich seek double Holt secures ticket Padres are on brink Rominger returns Davenport suffers surprise defeat Sport in Brief Giles finds familiar way to goal Hockey Brimble at double for Clifton Henman delivers the finished article Dismissal of Agassi confirms British No 1's growing stature on world stage Cool Goosen steps into the limelight to deny Spaniards Golf: South Africa Retain Dunhill Cup with Clean Sweep Infinal The Times Scotland prop injured in maul Rugby Union Bellamy's late goal takes heat off Gould Eruopean championship: As England struggle, three narrow victories provide, best of British Raw passion gives Irish action men the edge Group Three Dell Hearts beat faster as Dodds proves the saviour Pitiful England earn nil for style European championship: Hoddle betrayed by passionless Wembley performance Gascoigne's exile reveals folly of managerial dogma Kevin McCarra says that by ostracising some of his wayward but talented players, Glenn Hoddle has severely limited his chances of winning matches PCCD Germany humbled by Turkey success Deane set to join Robson European Championship Qualifiers Carling F. A. Premiership Rudge puts casein fine style Nationwide League: Disappointing Barnsley forced to face home truths Fragile Birmingham exposed by fortunate Hyde equaliser Pop limits England strike rate Draw lets Cotterill celebrate Ball still full of bounce Barrow wins stay of execution Clinical Jones happy to take a leaf out of Aldridge's book Cable & Wireless Surprise end to Lincoln's lean run Little club shows the benefit of continuity Ailing Bath rally to quell Irish uprising Allied Dunbar Premiership: Seat of power gradually returning to West Country Lam inspires Northampton Legal & Public Notices Ship-shape Bristol sail into calmer waters David Hands sees the second division leaders maintain their impressive start to the season with a 29-19 victory over Orrell Clarke sizes up dual goals Legal, Public, Company & Parliamentary Notices Sturnham's fate hinges on hearing Ulster show road to follow Resilient Bedford snatch an epic win Saracens show title credentials Allied Dunbar Premiership: Leicester's old hands fail them but champions porduce the goods Australians relish the chance to tuck into some home cooking David Powell joins a crowd of 12,000 for an annual feast of drinking, streaking, pitch invasions and, oh, some Aussie Rules From a Correspondent in Dublin: Ireland run out of steam in opener Lloyds Bank Peel provides platform for Newcastle Cisco Englishmen flounder along the British Way Hoddle hobbled by enemy within I felt sorry for me, too. It was a rotten way to spend Blue Peter's official 40th birthday Sad sale of Motspur Park Non-league joy Why the Carling match should go ahead Rugby music Tribute to Doug Smith Beautiful game Teur who played for the sheer enjoyment of the game… Tennis sanctions Tomorrow Athletics For the Record Schools Sport Rugby Union Cricket Cycling The Times Marching to new tune Baton twirling has long been associated with cheerleaders and majorettes, but, as Victoria Walker reports, its enthusiasts are trying to turn away from the past and gain recognition as an international sport NatWest Local knowledge confounds foreign ambition Chris McGrath on an enterprising challenge brought down to earth in the Velka Pardubicka Thunderer: Leicester Saturday's Results Thunderer: Ayr Thunderer: Newton Abbot Leaders on the Flat Rapid Raceline Counties facing new call-up to national service Cricket Alan Lee, cricket correspondent, examines the latest struggle over the future of the game in England Poll reveals new mood Richard Hobson finds grassroots followers riding the tide of change Guide to the Week Ahead Bolton courts a tennis dream Campbell hails win over India Word-Matching Sheehan on Bridge Winning Move Keene on Chess Newcastle spring a surprise Ice Hockey The Times Doctrine of direct effect not applicable Court of Appeal Law Report October 12 1998 Court of Appeal Director was not a 'person aggrieved' Seots Law Report October 12 1998 Outer House Psychological damages available subject to proof Dogs can be dangerous to other dogs Injunction principles apt in judicial review No legal aid for defendant abroad Petition dismissed where cross-claim exceeds debt Company tax claims must be dealt with in chronological order Private pager intercept lawful Court of Appeal Law Report October 12 1998 Court of Appeal Sentence varied The Times Commissioners not defendants Sentence for protecting the public Defendant was not served Capitalisation, week's change Compaq Planet Microsoft Results and Statistics NTT RJB's coal comfort Reporting this Week Hint on interest rates expected Economic Outlook Sunday Tips Gates is biggest taxpayer in US Tourist Rates The Facts The Board TUC sympathy for drinkers BSI Corporate Profile: Hays Ministers press City to reduce size of council 'Expert' comment on bug becoming irresponsible Business Letters TSB Verdict Dividend cut expected from RJB Mining Standard Life Bank Chaos can escape confines of markets Franchise team takes over Pierre Victoire IoD reports falling confidence Alternative Investment Market Continental gas prices take toll of UK interconnector Cobra Beer sets sights on flotation Cliveden checks out The Times Economy fears bring slowdown for Rolls Meridiana Clear lessons to be learnt from the East Asian episode Milton Friedman runs the rule over the various exchange rate regimes Iran's conciliatory position presents threat to North Sea Carl Mortished explains how the rehabilitation of Tehran could hurt Britain's oil industry and undermine part of the Chancellor's tax strategy Word-Watching Thrust Richard Noble The Pound Change on Week Stock Market Tribute to a gene genius Television Choice Mulching, morality and other minor matters BBC1 Royal & Sun faces customer challenge to funds' merger Times Two Crossword Profile 47 Bear market could force mutual insurers to convert Greenalls may sell pubs chain M&s halts European expansion programme BAe in talks with Germans Direct Markets 48 Centrica makes £250m bid for PowerGen assets

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