Jornais Acesso aberto

The Times - 01/11/1974

1974; Gale Group;

Autores

By Michael Hatfield Political Staff, From Fred Emery, By Paul Routledge Labour Editor, By a Staff Reporter, From Michael Knipe, By Arthur Reed Air Correspondent, By Marcel Berlins, By Our Political Staff, From Our Correspondent, From Ronald Faux, By George Clark Political Correspondent, By Our Social Services Correspondent, By Martin Huckerby, By Our Education Correspondent, By Clive Borrell, by Our Education Crrespondent, From Christopher Walker, By George Clark, From Ronald Kershaw, By Hugh Clayton Agricultural Correspondent, From Arthur Reed Air Correspondent, By Tim Jones, Hugh Clayton, By Peter Waymark Motoring Correspondent, By Kenneth Owen Technology Correspondent, From Richard Wigg, From Roger Berthoud, From David Cross, From Our Own Correspondent, By David Spanier Diplomatic Correspondent, From Peter Strafford, By Roger Vielvoye, From Eric Marsden, From Michael Hornsby, From John Woodcock Cricket Correspondent, By Geoffrey Green Football Correspondent, By John Blunsden, By Lewine Mair, By Rex Bellamy Tennis Correspondent, By Michael Phillips Racing Correspondent, By Michael Seely, By Peter West Rugby Correspondent, By Gordon Allan, Meyer W. Weisgal, David Robinson, Irving Wardle, Leonard Buckley, Alan Coren, Alan Blyth, William Mann, David Howell, P H S, Tim Devlin Education Correspondent, Pat Healy Social Services Correspondent, ED BERMAN, Chairman, , SYLVIA SAYER, , D. A. HEARN, , PETER STUDD, , MICHAEL JAMES, , NEIL KINNOCK, , D. A. S. LITTLE, , FLORENCE E. TEWSON, , P. HAMMET LE BRUN, , ANGUS MAUDE, , GEOFFREY HAND, Dean, , Cliye Wolfe (chairman), Arthur Bliss, Yehudi Menuhin, Norman Del Mar, Charles Groves, Joyce Butler, George Thalben-Ball, Somers, Hugh Casson, Manoug Parikian, Arthur C. Clarke, Felix Aprahamian, , From Charles Hargrove, By Kenneth Gosling Arts Reporter, By Norman Hammond Archaeological Correspondent, By Geraldine Norman Sale Room Correspondent, By Our Sale Room Correspondent, By Our Medical Correspondent, From Herbert Mishael, By Malcolm Brown, By Tim Congdon, By Adrienne Gleeson, By John Woodland, By Peter Wainwright, By Our Financial Staff, By Edward Townsend, By Clifford Webb, From Frank Vogl, By Ronald Kershaw, By Peter Hill, JOHN CLUNAS, , STANLEY BRAIN, , L. T. GRIFFITH, Secretary, , M. A. COOPER, , EDWARD STERN, , M. A. HOGG, , T. A. DAVIES, , W. McMILLAN, , B. W. RIBBONS, , BY THE FINANCIAL EDITOR, Peter Jay Economics Editor, By Ashley Druker, Gerald Ely, by Wilfrid Knapp fellow of St Catherine's College, Oxford, by a Special Correspondent, by Wilfrid Knapp, by Edith Hodgkinson Overseas Development Institute, by David Blake, by Vanya Walker-Leigh,

Resumo

News: Chinese ceramics fetch less as speculative spiral ends, Basque priest under house arrest, £2m centre to train North Sea divers recommended, National Theatre to cut its operations, Refusal of French to concede reforms led to independence, Mr Benn hedges on Lever investment bank, Mr Wilson sharply rebukes three ministers for criticizing Simonstown visit, 1,000 tons of Irish beef halted at port by farm pickets, French MPs sound alarm at danger to the Mediterranean, Vatican denial on cancellation of mayor's visit, The Times Diary Wine prices go down with a plonk, UN veto greeted with relief in South Africa, Professors paid a fifth more in Army, Record crops of wheat and barley in EEC, Expected to be the world's foremost gas exporter by 1980, Five die in Israel attack on refugee camp, Mr Peart's plan to help beef farmers 'another palliative', Smoking: Effect on the heart and chest, Independent body likely to manage £1m grant, The calamity that is called Bangladesh, How the Jews were led away from the slaughter and into their own land, Emigrant workers pose difficult problems for Government and unions in France, Irish leaders expected to demand indication of election date for Ulster Constitutional Convention, Population of third world 'will double in less than a generation', Rising water drowns supply of natural gas from Yorkshire field and £4m plant is closed, Further strikes in support of two pickets, Stability now but strains on the way, Mr Scanlon to preside over European unions, Rapid population growth directs the planners' course, An open letter from Prague, Report upholds apartheid concept at universities, Swapo man in Stockholm states negotiation terms, State control is not the way to give industry a greater sense of social responsibility, Buchan charge on sugar deal denied, Britain joins oil sharing nations group, BBC and union upset by Labour criticism, 'Suspended CB' for soldiers who refused order, British Airways pilots get £70 weekly rise, Seat-belt compulsion Bill gets first reading, Israel puts troops on exercise as precaution, 43 people killed as blaze sweeps train carriage, Corruption protest crushed by Saigon police, Realistic socialism: an ideal much modified by events, Haddock at 75p a pound this weekend while turkey falls to only 27p Food prices, Call to ban 'dangerous extra flights' by pilots, Muddle in ports still has to be conquered, EEC commissioner calls for decision on regional policy, Prison hostages freed unharmed in surprise raid by Dutch troops, Pakistan raises arms ban in Kissinger talks, London fares to go up by 36% from April 1, Independent living in a house built on science, Ombudsman criticizes red tape in Department of Health for causing long delays on aid, More cash may not be enough to help the one-parent family, Turkey's invasion secrets 'leaked to journalists', Teachers' view of a classroom revolution, Normanton painting to be sold, Police chief had over £200,000, court told, Swiss lawyer in murder case seeks new trial, Trial hears of coup attempt in Sierra Leone, Korean students clash with police, Greek court considers trying junta for treason, Triple veto to save S Africa averts dangerous precedent, Holiday villages built in Moorish style like Arab cities in an archaeologist's paradise, NUM militants to seek £30 rises, France may stop broadcasts in English, New regional development plan for EEC summit, Yard takes over Heathrow airport security, Boy died trapped in old refrigerator, Revolution on the land goes forward in spite of opposition and peasant hesitations, Schools are closed as Scots strikes continue, Giscard invitation rejected by M Mitterrand, Sikorski 'clue' was misread, National pride and industrial needs guide educational advance, 'Clash' denial as county council director leaves, Democrats confident of New York, Kenya gets new foreign minister after election, Winetasting demand at 'Bordeaux fraud' trial, Afghanistan: The walls of Kandahar, Mr Nixon given fresh blood transfusions. Picture Gallery: Algeria I, Index. News in Brief. Display Advertising: Bell's, Snmc, Air Algerie, Pia, English China Clays, cofitour, Imi, Mouton-Cadet, Leicester, Glaxo Holdings Limited, Office National DES Ports, S.N.C.F.A., Adwest group, Population Count Down, Ansafone, Hoechst, The Electricity Council, Europa, Halifax, Algeria, S.N.I.C., Yellow Pages, Laing, Twa's, sonacome, Sn-Sempac, Panam. Politics and Parliament: Parliament may need morning sittings to debate EEC laws, Minorities have an amendment problem, White Paper on defence delayed until January, Port demonstrations a shortsighted policy, MPs told of EEC oil deficit plan, Expansion of higher education promised, Rate-support, Mr Peart outlines main elements of new beef regime to be negotiated in EEC, Agriculture in grave state: emergency price review wanted House of Commons, Many police forces below strength as crime rise continues House of Lords, Exchequer to give £1m towards theatre, Price equalization scheme for sugar announced. Weather: The Weather. Arts and Entertainment: Broadcasting, Karpov wins third game in world chess contest, The Times Crossword Puzzle No 13,831. Sport: Fences at last for Isle of Man, Sports in Brief, Only one out of 119 equals par, A chance of revenge for Miss Newberry, Belgians show spirit but Middlesex too strong, How Night Echo reached peak form, Miss Wade in the final, Broome lands first place on Jagermeister, BRM team to operate under new company, Pullin starts comeback for Bristol, Portam and Royal Aura for export, Amiss will make himself known to Australians, Bannister emphasizes three sociological benefits, New Zealanders promise to entertain, Revie's shrewd use of substitutes proved to be the turning point, Foreman claims the count took place too quickly, Universities to compete in Nile festival, Eagle two helps Wiechers to lead with 66, It is time women's lib took a hand in the British game, Room at the bottom for Scottish clubs, Dunlop double takes total past £100,000. Official Appointments and Notices: University news Oxford, Church news New Bishop of Lancaster, Life support system wins safety award. Classified Advertising: Cinemas, £4,000 plus Appointments, Announcements, Entertainments, Motor Show Place, Appointments Vacant also on pages 25 and 26. Reviews: Last night's television Leeds-United! Bbc 1, Monty Python Bbc 2, NPO/Maazel Festival Hall, ...and new films in London La Maman et la, Buzz-saw Bard Lear The Place, Boris Godunov Covent Garden, Miklós Jansó's return to Hungary. Editorials/Leaders: Statistics For A False Dawn, Proper Use Of The Veto, When A School Can Do No More. Letters to the Editor: Colour bar in a club, Lighting up the Thames, Piccadilly Circus, Strength of cement structures, Assurance funds and problem of frozen rent, Use of fireworks, Alexandra Palace organ, Keeping the unemployment wolf at bay, When a jury disagrees, BBC coverage of the election, Enclosures on Dartmoor, Christmas cuts, Pay restraint: between the devil and the TUC, Deprived children, Secrecy of the ballot, Mechanization, Arguments on a Welsh Parliament, Need for initial capital investment, Sex education, Jobcentres and efficiency, Reducing public transport fares to push cars out. Court and Social: Court Circular. Deaths. Births. Marriages. Feature Articles (aka Opinion): 25 years ago From The Times of Tuesday, November 1, 1949. Obituaries: Ekaterina Furtseva The politics of culture, Sir Seymour Karminski, Lieut-Col Leslie Parkin. Business and Finance: Discount market, Sheepbridge bright in hard year, Finance houses cut base rate to 12 pc, £6.6m loss by Jessel subsidiary, Feedex Limited, Printers fear paper famine by 1980s, Restriction demand on Japanese car imports, Giltts fall sharply again as market weakens, Ranger receives official backing, Wm Press surmounts North Sea loss in rebound to £1.27m, BOC will appeal against US Airco rule, Base rates: the waiting game, Energy consumption growth is halted, Record at Wm Low, US shareholding study, Forward sugar price reaches fresh peak in London trading, Vickers strikers reject £10 offer, De Vere's strength, New terms for Herstatt settlement, 'Tin prices should attract investment ', Malayalam Plantations Limited, Bank Base Rates, Transvaal Consolidated Land And Exploration Company, Limited (T. C. Lands), CBI to consider setting up pay guidelines for employers, Simple arithmetic challenges the £3,000m Doomsday machine, Australia is willing to sell its uranium, Iranian-W German pellet plant deal, The sun may yet help to solve Britain's energy problem, BSC pressed to justify East Moors closure plan, Wages surge 'may reverse slowing price trend', Ford US to cut costs after third quarter dive, Briefly, State breweries fetch over £7m, Copper market has more settled day, Hambros Bank has signed an, US Treasury financing plans total $11,350m for next six weeks, Rank Danish offshoot stopping production, NCB to extend Durham pit, The Lep Group Ltd., Two groups bidding for Australian Estates, Profits rose again last month, How the markets moved Rises, Land values hit Lawdon and they go in the red, Business Diary: Tilston reverses out · Sharing a pint, Fresh rise sought for cement. Business Appointments: Executive changes at John Dickinson. Stock Exchange Tables: Commodities Sugar up £71 to £561 a ton, Stock markets, Authorized Units, Insurance & Offshore Funds, Latest dividends, Foreign Exchange, Cocoa closes firm 3-2 cents up, Issues & Loans October issues at high level, Eurobond prices (midday indicators), Wall Street, Gilts weak. Law: Woman's actions 'not consistent with guilt', No power to enlarge holding in new lease G. Orlik (Meat Products) Ltd V Hastings and Thanet Building Society, Judge of the first rank. Property: Now is the time to find your bargain house, New Homes, Flat Sharing, Country Properties, Residential property Lure and pitfalls of the past.

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