Jornais Acesso aberto

The Times - 01/07/1977

1977; Gale Group;

Autores

By Michael Hornsby, From Patrick Brogan, By Richard Allen, By Hugh Noyes Parliamentary Correspondent, By a Staff Reporter, By Paul Routledge Labour Editor, From Christopher Walker, By Our Education Correspondent, By Pat Healy, Social Services Correspondent, By Tim Jones and Peter Godfrey, By George Clark Political Correspondent, By Patricia Tisdall, From Michael Horsnell, By Clive Borrell, Crime Correspondent, By Christopher Warman Local Government Correspondent, By Penny Symon, By Our Political Reporter, By Kenneth Gosling, By Our Local Government Correspondent, By Our Political Staff, By Geraldine Norman Sale Room Correspondent, From Pearce Wright, Science Editor, By Our Labour Reporter, By Arthur Reed Air Correspondent, From Peter Evans Home Affairs Correspondent, By Peter Waymark Motoring Correspondent, By Diana Geddes Education Correspondent, By Our Religious Affairs Correspondent, By Our Financial Staff, By David Wood Political Editor, From Patricia Clough, From Our Correspondent, By Roger Berthoud, From Harry Debelius, By Jonathan Kandell, From Nicholas Ashford, From Peter Hazelhurst, From Charles Hargrove, By Richard Davy, From Donovan Moldrich, From Charles Harrison, Bruce Douglas-Mann, Scyld Berry, Dr Tony Smith, By Rex Bellamy Tennis Correspondent, By Pamela Macgregor-Morris, By John Blunsden, By John Nicholls, By Jim Railton, By Michael Phillips Racing Correspondent, By Richard Streeton, Philip French, Michael Church, Max Harrison, Paul Griffiths, Kenneth Loveland, Irving Wardle, Thomas Walker, Ned Chaillet, Geoffrey Smith, Clifford Longley Religious Affairs Correspondent, PHS, Bernard Levin, Richard Davy, E. H. BATEMAN, , JOHN D. TAYLOR, , GEORGE RYLANDS, , PHILIP LONGWORTH, , DOROTHY SILBERSTON, , STEPHEN PARKINSON, , GEORGE LAKOS, , BRUNO DE HAMEL, , MICHAEL BOWER, , AUSTEN ALBU, , BOYD-CARPENTER, , DAVID WALDER, , ARTHUR H. SHEARING, , From Our Diplomatic Correspondent, Professor J. L. Cooper writes:, By Our Medical Correspondent, By Michael Hanson, by John Clayton, by Michael Hanson, by Hugh Clayton, by Oliver Stanley, M.H., by Ann Weir, By Ronald Kershaw, By Wallace Jackson Commodities Editor, By Clifford Webb, By Our Industrial Correspondent, From David Cross, By Christopher Thomas, By Desmond Quigley, By R. W. Shakespeare, By Ronald Pullen Banking Correspondent, From John Earle, By Derek Harris, From Frank Vogl, By Nicholas Hirst, JOHN HOSKYNS, , By Edward Townsend, E. C. B. CORLETT, , R. C. KIRK, , JEROME I. KARET, , PETER FELLGETT, , C. WHYTE, , R. M. SILVERBLATT, , HOPE SEALY, , BY THE FINANCIAL EDITOR, Peter Hill, Caroline Atkinson, By Victor Felstead, By Alison Mitchell, By Ray Maughan,

Resumo

News: African states in bitter clashes over disputed territory at OAU Council of Ministers, Mr Carter cancels B 1 bomber production, Kenya says E African Community is dead, Garages to display new petrol price signs, China ready to arm Palestinians, Expelled tearaway to lead 640,000 unionists, Uganda marks centenary of missionaries, Swiss recommended to join the United Nations, Amazon jungle Invaded by land-hungry settlers, Are the Gospels a 'myth'?, Whitelaw promise of better police pay, Crucial Pakistan talks today on election pact, Priests whose parish is wherever the British Army is sent, New group in NUJ launched, Cambridge University tripos results in economics and languages, Performing-right inquiry call heavily defeated, Tanker terminal inquiry told of blast danger, JET project hopes fade at end of EEC summit, Averting doom in the year 2000, Agricultural Property Legislation preserves land as excellent security, UN move to counter Rhodesian raids, Aid withdrawn from pensioners' heating scheme, Vets demand ban on live animal exports, S London welcomes the Queen, Chartist tells of Czech suppressed hopes, Man said to be Amin agent fined in Kenya, Beaverbrook accepts £14m bid from Trafalgar House, Lisbon plan to cut cost of helping refugees, EEC summit notebook Herr Schmidt ends his visit with helicopter outing to Henry Moore, Callaghan forecast of new economic era, Terrorists shoot two Fiat executives after night of violence in Italy, Pension investment on the farm, Budapest shows caution on Eurocommunism, One man's testimony to fading hopes..., Rates exemption plan to encourage small firms, President Sadat legalizes some political parties, Four-year housing plans to be introduced next year, Unions combine to stop l0p rise in school meals, £63m offered to users suffering effects of drug, Galaxies point to shape of the universe, Printers stop 'Sun' editorial, Preparing for Mr Teng's public rehabilitation, Estate agent, director and his company cleared of plot to defraud in Sussex land deal, Government approves pit productivity deal, Church unity talks 'have overlooked basic issue', Complementary flair and dynamism from Trafalgar, 61 Hungarians jailed for diluting wine, Text of communiqué on growth and jobs, Madrid warns OAU over Canaries inquiry plan, Is ownership important?, Gandhi team was paid to help sterilization, The Liberal gamble with Labour: and why it looks unlikely to pay off, Mr Vance seeking closer relations with China, Foreign Report Oiling the wheels of Red Sea diplomacy, Britain under fire at summit over fishing ban, Fierce artillery duels set crops ablaze in southern Lebanon, Rubber-stamp legislature fades away in Spain, Why the Green Paper is not enough, Applicants to teaching college 'least qualified', Council makes workers on strike eligible for rebates, Moderator calls on authors of new book to go, 'Kangaroo courts' gibe at official hearings after prison rioting, Britons held in Laos to be expelled, Tourists provide a second harvest, Atlantic air charter price control to end, British Library cataloguing bits of ancient ephemera, Developers prefer to take the easy way out, Science report Medicine: The cost of treating animal bites, A story of steady growth with a warning against too much optimism, Questions on Windscale storage ponds, Mrs Bandaranaike set for poll win in Sri Lanka despite opposition of former leftist allies, The Times Diary/, Air race to introduce new smoking substance, More want Britain to leave EEC, Dutch treat themselves, Japan closing sanctions loopholes, Head teachers' organizations to amalgamate, Kidnap for ransom fails in Israel, South Africa's immigration figures hit crisis level, Cinema certification urged for television films, Why do some sleep less?. Index. News in Brief. Picture Gallery. Law: IRA men jailed for bomb plot, Girl's age gauged from her teeth, Law Report June 30 1977 Court of Appeal Friend given shooting lease by squire cleared of 'undue influence' In the estate of Sir Philip Lee Brocklehurst, deceased, Court of inquiry into the Grunwick dispute is set up, but the atmosphere at plant remains tense, David Bedford fined, Stonehouse appeal is rejected, Grunwick court declined to judge, Blackmail of store by a former diplomat, Somalis jail British girl for one year. Display Advertising: Knight Frank & Rutley, Platignum, Carter Jonas, Stonehill Holdings Limited, Jones Lang Wootton, Hanson Trust, Silk Cut, Vickers, Player's Navy Cut, Bia, National Westminster Bank Group, Strutt & Parker, Vanderbilt, Bank Base Rates, Bidwells, Humberts, Property Holding & Investment Trust Limited, Woolwich, Cluttons, Smiths Gore, M. J. H. Nightingale & Co. Limited, John D. Wood, Bernard Thorpe & Partners, Billy The Beaver, Tyndall, Nsm, Iran Air, Torrini, Savills. Politics and Parliament: JET project: scientific team at Culham asked to wait another month, The right within limits of agreements to be free not to join a trade union, To prosecute postmen now would be wrong and counter-productive, War widows' pensions, Second reading of Europe Poll Bill before recess, New council to boost Ulster economy and industry, Royal Assent, Dual role seen for Price Commission House of Lords, Judge to head urgent court of inquiry into Grunwick dispute, Judgment is reserved in post boycott, Next week, No practical prospect of UK leaving EEC: reform the better way House of Commons, Tories will back SNP in attack on Government. Weather: The Weather. Arts and Entertainment: Broadcasting, The Times Crossword Puzzle No 14,642, Radio, 18th-century cabinets on new legs for £10,500. Classified Advertising: Cinemas, Domestic And Catering Situations, £6,000 plus appointments, Funeral Arrangements, Legal Notices, Entertainments, Services, £6,000 plus Appointments. Property: Thatching fancy with reality, Flat Sharing, Residential Property. Sport: Athletics Kenyan breaks Bedford's world 10,000 metres record, Gymnastics Britain choose schoolgirl to face China next week, Tennis Three hours of summer lightning, Baseball, Three changes in French side to face Pumas, Football Docherty to see directors about his future, Motor racing Most drivers will be beginners in tackling French course, Sports in Brief, Show jumping Steenken joins professional ranks today, Cricket Derbyshire could count the cost of missed chances, Yachting The Sadia seems certain to go to Nadia, Racing Homeboy set for Chinese takeaway, Rowing Lightweight London four overcome Thames Tradesmen, Cycling Tour de France time trial won by German, Golf Sentimental journey for Sanders, Rugby Union Bennett returns for Lions. Reviews: Saltarello Choir Holborn, Premiere by misadventure, NPO/A. Davis Festival Hall, Michael Berkeley concerto premiere, One Day in Sheffield Crucible, Sheffield, Haunting allegory of a doomed love affair Coup de Grace (aa) Academy Cinema One Day of the Animals (aa) The Car (aa) Plaza 1; Warner West End 3; ABC Fulham Road, Edgware Road; Rich and Strange (a) Covent Garden Cinema, Mr Tom Keating, Schtz Choir Westminster Cathedral, A rewarding passage to India Much Ado About Nothing Aldwych, Tonight BBC 1, Tippett exhibition marks fourth opera. Feature Articles (aka Opinion): Fabergé: a magical world in miniature, 25 years ago From The Times of Tuesday, July 1, 1952. Editorials/Leaders: The Brookings Consensus, New Thoughts On London, Prisoners Have Their Rights As Well. Letters to the Editor: Compulsory seat belts, Cambridge conspiracy, Journalists' closed shop, Old Morris Workshop, The guardsman case, Indexation an aid to curing inflation, The cold facts of LNG carrier fire risk, Frank question on missing 6p stamps, House of Lords reform, Putting the news in perspective, Chico's cry, Unions in a changing democracy, EEC balance-sheet, Quandary over a redundancy claim, Vacations, Ambisonic encoding recommendations, Doubts over pharmaceutiral patents move, New opportunity in Ulster. Court and Social: Court Circular. Marriages. Official Appointments and Notices: Launderers' Company, Latest appointments, Church news. Obituaries: Professor Marston Morse, Lucien Coutaud, Princess Elena Powerful romantic interest in the life of King Carol II. Deaths. Stock Exchange Tables: How the markets moved, The Times Share Indices, Authorized Units, Insurance & Offshore Funds, Recent Issues, Foreign Exchange, Eurobond prices (midday indicators), Wall Street, Stock Exchange Prices Quiet but firm, Stock markets New issues steal the limelight as prices rally. Business and Finance: Copper is 'in balance' so far this year, Motor vehicles lead Carding to better times, Greater efforts to frame wheat pact, New chief is named for Jacques Borel, Machine tool sales up 8 pc, Commodities investment worry, Lyons sells Tower Hotel to EMI for £6.5m, Dollar recovers against major currencies, Banks put loans case to Wilson Committee, Tighter curbs by U S on Hongkong textiles, Commodities, Laurence Scott's best year yet, Trafalgar House takes the plunge with Beaverbrook, Balance sheets get stronger, CEGB profit of £100m 'in compliance with price code', Lively Stead & Simpson widens its margins, Too much talk of eroded differentials?, Britain 'not realizing its potential', Western Europe becomes free trade area today as EEC customs barriers fall, British Shipbuilders launched with 'all-out' drive to win orders and keep yards open, British Shipbuilders afloat at last, Robt Kitchen Taylor back in the black, Granada streamlining pays off and Barranquilla looks good, LOFs tells members to keep their nerve, Benn talks on oil future with unions, International Singer sees better second half, Italy opens deep-sea oil search, Capital Spending, Hope, but no joy from Luis Gordon, Burton Group jobs statement next week, Ford strikers back after compromise on lay-offs, Alumina fibre project, Closedown at offshoot puts brake on Braby, Mr Carter holds out hopes of 18-month oil price freeze, Sotheby 'heavily oversubscribed', Leyland double-deck bus plan goes ahead, Briefly London & Midland at peak £1.57m: outlook good, Chrysler hopes high for phase two pay pact, More forceful role is seen for accountants in industry, 'Modest rise' in US business confidence, Business Diary: Crumpet voluntary · Now read on, Shaw Carpets' second-half loss. Business Appointments: Business appointments Three changes to board of Kleinwort, Benson. Births.

Referência(s)