Jornais Acesso aberto

The Times - 15/06/1978

1978; Gale Group;

Autores

By Fred Emery Political Editor, By Hugh Noyes Parliamentary Correspondent, By Annabel Ferriman, By David Spanier Diplomatic Correspondent, By John Young Planning Reporter, From Christopher Walker, By Margaret Stone, From Donald Macintyre Labour Reporter, From Our Correspondent, By Our Labour Staff, By Paul Routledge Labour Editor, By Our Labour Editor, By a Staff Reporter, By Our Political Editor, By Our Consumer Affairs Correspondent, From Christopher Warman Local Government Correspondent, By Our Education Correspondent, By Penny Symon, By Our Political Correspondent, By Trevor Fishlock, By philip Webster Parliamentary Staff, By our Motoring Correspondent, From Alan Hamilton, By Robin Young, By Robert Parker, By Arthur Osman, By Peter Hennessy, By Arthur Reed Air Correspondent, By Geraldine Norman Sale Room Correspondent, By Hugh clayton Agricultural Correspondent, By Our Planning Reporter, From Charles Hargrove, From David Wood, From Peter Nichols, From Ian Murray, From Michael Leapman, From David Cross, By Peter Strafford, From Nicholas Ashford, From Michael Hornsby, From Our Own Correspondent, From Michael Knipe, By Edward Mortimer, By Our Diplomatic Correspondent, From Patrick Brogan, From Peter Hazelhurst, From Charles Harrison, From Michael Binyon, By John Woodcock Cricket Correspondent, From Norman Fox Football Correspondent, By John Blunsden, From Peter Ryde Golf Correspondent, By Jerome Caminada, By Pamela Macgregor-Morris, By Michael Phillips Racing Correspondent, Richard Holmes, Tim Heald, H. R. F. Keating, Peter Strafford, David Williams, Jeremy Lewis, Richard Harris, Ronald Lewin, European Parliament, by Prudence Glynn, John Higgins, Stanley Sadie, Irving Wardle, Ned Chaillet, Max Harrison, Ronald Butt, Roy Lewis, PHS, John Young, PAUL PAGET, , R. TATE, , NELSON OF STAFFORD, , DAVID BARRITT, , J. V. BARTLETT, , A. M. BINNIE, , ANDREW R. COOPER, , ST JOHN ELSTUB, , J. S. FORREST, , KENNETH HUTCHISON, , F. E. IRELAND, , KIRBY LAING, , DENIS D. MATTHEWS, , T. A. L. PATON, , P. E. TRIER, , M. V. WILKES, , R. A. WEALE, , FRANK BLACKABY, , JAN HILDPETH, , BRIAN YOUNG, , MARTIN PULBROOK, , PAUL STAFFORD, , DOUGLAS JAY, , ROBERT SAUNDERS, , JOAN STANTON, , DAVID R. J. HOLLOWAY, , DONALD UPTON, , AUBREY JENKINS, , ROYSTON MORLEY, , From Our Motoring Correspondent, By Our Medical Correspondent, R.C.C., Major-General Sir James d'Avigdor-Goldsmid writes:, By Melvyn Westlake, Peter Norman, Ronald Kershaw, By Our Financial Staff, By Peter Wainwright, From Our Economics Correspondent, By Our Economics Staff, By Caroline Atkinson, By George Clark Political Correspondent, From Our European Business Correspondent, By Kenneth Owen, By Derek Harris, By Patricia Tisdall, From Michael Hornsby, , From Peter Hill Industrial Correspondent, WILFRED PENNEY, , B. R. BARNFIELD, , I. GREENWOLD, , JAMES ANDERSON, , A. M. MCKAY, , IAN MORISON, , BY THE FINANCIAL EDITOR, Patricia Tisdall, By Ray Maugham, By Desmond Quigley Company News Editor, By Tony May, By Bryan Appleyard, Peter Waymark,

Resumo

News: Denial over random breath tests, Ennals move on financial cuts to teaching hospitals, Student totals 'likely to grow despite fewer births', Japan and China to recommence long-delayed talks on treaty despite opposition from Moscow, Cuban leader's denial of Shaba involvement rejected by Mr Carter, NEB gives new figures on basis of aid to tanner, Fresh move by West on Namibia, Brassière case woman gets £10,400 from US Army, Britain urged to halt arms for Lebanon, Those distorted waves from Westminster, Husband agrees that papers 'engulfed' house, Boy at top of hospital list died, Call for direct access to Ombudsman supported, Tory task to 'win moral argument', Challenge over wage restraint defeated at Nalgo conference, Lord Thomson sees bright future for press, Fashion The smile of reason, Quebec: a separatist shout with a hollow ring, Human error blamed for £16m leak, Scots miners invited to move union to left, Ethiopian threat over support for Eritrea, Beef prices rise as cattle exports double, African wars burden Red Cross, Strike at naval dockyard delays warship refits, British Airways to cut some fares, Polls point to close result in election, Russians deny charge of cutting cargo rates, QC pleads for clubs to remain male preserves, Couples should own homes jointly, Law Commission says, France steps ahead led by confident M Giscard, Police are being hampered by restraints of criminal procedure, commissioner says in his first report, Discontent over Cairo's failing public services, Shetland council accepts assembly place, MP's denial on suspeict bricks for a bungalow, Why Dockland is down on its uppers, Socialists in disarray over direct EEC elections, Israel accuses UN of failing to prevent Palestinian infiltration, Dispute on firemens' hours to go to arbitration, Professor calls for legislation to reduce hazard in industry, Labour 5-vote win after Liberals are taken to brink of July poll, London bid to stage Olympics in 1988, First step to US sale of uranium to India, Greenfingered envoy helps trade British export drive in embassy garden, Flogged Britons fly home today, Kidnap trial lawyers threatened, Ginburg trial expected to open next week, Salisbury resists envoys' plea for all-party meeting, Romanian and British leaders agree on détente, Lancia Gammia arrives late at the market, New ways of penalizing offending drivers suggested, Fight over abortion reopening in Congress, West rushes cash aid worth $70m to Zaire, S Africa whites 'ready for change', Repairs to Brighton pavilion delayed, Tory lawyers review official secrets question, The Times Diary, Banned girl footballer sues the FA, Mr Haldeman to be freed, Newspapermen on strike try to stop deliveries, Call for dangerous play equipment to be removed, Swiss Hindu in Manila sets fire to herself, Tax clampdown on some school fee schemes, Conservative surprise at intensity of Howe attack, £950,000 for a room with a view, Amnesty report rejected by Unionist, Artist's complaint on critique upheld, Harrods staff picket store over 'poverty wage', No clues in hunt for killers of Riviera Britons, Moscow refuses consul access to jailed American, Californians start to learn public cost of private tax reductions, MPs propose fund to guard nation's heritage, Science report Cancer: Effects of alcohol and tobacco, Unions seek priority on power-sharing, Growing Whitehall power over councils criticized, Support for flags of convenience, School lifts ban on trousers, President of Italy urged to quit office, Mr Begin to take a few days off work. Law: Order to strike off solicitor, Chancery Division All of church site must be bought London Transport Executive v Congregational Union of England and Wales (Incorporated), Court orders release of Miss Bhutto, Farm union chief charged after picketing a field, Court of Appeal Division of a big house with lodge a change of use Wakelin v Secretary of State for the Environment, Norma Levy on cheque charge, Woman's sex bar case fails. Index. Display Advertising: Oxford University Press, The Industrial And General Trust Limited, Usha, B. S.& W. Whiteley Limited, The Guardian Investment Trust Company Limited, National Dairy Council, Abbeyfield Society, London & Scottish Marine Oil Company, Bank Base Rates, British-Borneo Petroleum Syndicate Limited, Gatwick Heathrow Airlink, Park Saint Roman, Pool Promoters Association, Office And Electronic Machines Limited, British Airways Concorde, Black & Edgington, M. J. H. Nightingale & Co. Limited, Government Of New Zealand, Team Avon, Glenfiddich, The Advertising Standards Authority., Bell's Scotch Whisky, Arts Council Of Great Britain. News in Brief. Weather: The Weather. Arts and Entertainment: Venetian glassware found in attic brings £14,150, Broadcasting, Radio, The Times Crossword Puzzle No 14,926. Picture Gallery. Sport: Rugby Union Rowlands says Welsh can save face, Racing Setback to O'Brien's Ascot hopes, Athletics Coe hoping for return next week, Croquet, Tennis Connors and Tanner see the need to drive home a point, Cricket Brearley and Bari to exchange views on non-recognized batsmen, Sports in Brief, Motor racing Peterson learning secret of the black magic circuit, Golf Oosterhuis hits a rough patch as he approaches start of US Open, World Cup Germans recover discipline and make their presence felt in round two, Swimming Time is against Miss Admans, Motor racing Ferrari decline to comment, Show jumping Broome shows his class to overtake young Scot, Boxing Disqualification of English captain causes uproar. Reviews: A parity of intellect and daring Moon in Eclipse A Life of Mary Shelley By Jane Dunn Weidenfeld & Nicholson, £8.50), Crime Goldilocks By Ed McBain (Hamish Hamilton, £4.50), Endearing soldier Charley Gordon An Eminent Victorian Reassessed By Charles Chenevix Trench (Allen Lane, £8.95), LSO/Arrau/Beethoven Festival Hall, Every Good Boy Deserves Favour Mermaid, Tormented genius The Young hamilton A Biography By James Thomas Flexner (Collins, £7.95), Nikolais Dance Theatre at Sadler's Wells, Going a long way Eastward Ha! By S. J. Perelman (Eyre Methuen, £3.95) The Most of S. J. Perelman A definitive collection: thirty years of his finest and funniest writing (Eyre Methuen, £7.50), Baroque opera in Paris, The Golden Cradle Greenwich, Fiction The Public Burning By Robert Coover (Allen Lane, £5.50) Laughable Loves By Milan Kundera Translated by Suzanne Rappaport (Jahn Murray, £4.95) Autumn Manoeuvres By Melvyn Bragg (Secker & Warburg, £4.50) On Margate Sands By Bernard Kops (Secker & Warburg, £4.10) Change and Decay in All Around I See By Allan Massie (Bodley Head, £4.50), Opera Viva St Paul's, Covent Garden, Larger lunacies War on the Mind The Military Uses and Abuses of Psychological Warfare By Peter Watson (Hutchinson, £9.95), China adrift The Correspondence of G. E. Morrison Volume II, 1912-1920 Edited by Lo Hui-min (Cambridge, £52), Maazel at Covent Garden. Politics and Parliament: EEC fisheries deal no nearer fruition, Government anxious to avoild having a mortgage famine, Government defeated twice on Wales Bill House of Lords, Mr Steel complains of lack of Tory policy, Labour have 'brought Britain through': Government and people working together, PM explains why it is a vote of confidence, Chancellor accused of ignorance and deceit House of Commons, Businesses will decide to cut payrolls. Property: Rentals, Flat Sharing. Classified Advertising: Director's, Car Buyer's Guide, £5,000 + Appointments, Art Galleries, Funeral Arrangements, Legal Notices, Entertainments, Services, Appointments Vacant. Editorials/Leaders: Unfair Soviet Competition In Shipping, Lebanon's Angry Confusion, Dalton's Good Deed Should Be Restored. Letters to the Editor: Uncertainty over Japan's Gatt rate intentions, The essence of bank base rate competition, VAT goes full circle, Penalizing the bouncer, Caravans in the Cotswolds, London conference centre, Progress on the fast reactor, Control is the way to live safely with asbestos, Farm cooperatives, Feather pillows, Opticians' closed shop, Workers on the boards, Learning from John's gospel, Catastrophic possibility, Engineers' need to continue their education after qualifying, IBA and Amnesty, Interpreting money supply changes, RUC interrogation, Food from New Zealand, An unusual six, Access to archives. Court and Social: Court Circular. Deaths. Feature Articles (aka Opinion): 25 years ago From The Times of Monday, June 15, 1953 British cars' triumph. Official Appointments and Notices: University news Oxford, Latest appointments, Bryanston School. Marriages. Births. Obituaries: Professor George Clarke, Sir David Campbell Former President of the General Medical Council, Mr Robert Fabian, Mrs JANET Heseltine. Business and Finance: OECD hopes for pre-summit pact, Discount market, Serck pays £3.25m for private foundry group, International Rivals may emerge for Husky Oil, Economic notebook Is the Bonn summit a lost cause?, Warren Plantation doubles to near-£11m, Eurosyndicat, Healey view sought on differentials, Battle over skilled men blamed for cutbacks, Commodities, MP's concern over import of Soviet uranium, CompAir is held to 2pc rise, Super loom may have to go abroad for sponsor, Spear sells Australian unit below book value, Japan buys grain, Crisis cartel move held up, Yearling bonds dip to 9 3/4 pc, Public spending last year revised upwards by £600m, The 'Sun' to print in Scotland, Pension funds and trusts on a 'collision course', Grocery sales dip stops Robertson Foods from meeting its target, Options, Efficiency drive lifts Staveley 48 pc to £10m, Suits case postponed, Price war is costing independenit grocers £1m turnover a day, South Korea plan for stockpile fund, Yen at fresh dollar peak, Ministers meeting in London tomorrow, Great Portland scrip issue as revenue climbs, Chairmen Further increase seen at Alpine Holdings, Tory pledge on changes in jobs protection Act, Further provisions by Westland, Briefly Cement Roadstone's £5.6m takeover, Terms Of Trade, Gilts take a cautious stance, There seems little doubt that Product liability: slow fuse to a legal explosion, Bridgewater Investment Trust Legal problems hold up bid, Business Diary: Travels with his aunt · Small print, Hartwells' 'rights' to raise £1.37m, 8,800 jobs in Swedish shipyards are likely to go, Britain's trade switches to visible deficit of £169m but trend is still improving, Lower Saxony expects grants to attract DM4,000m investment Optimism in Germany over ICI expansion, Bonn seeks binding pledge against protectionist acts. Stock Exchange Tables: Stock Exchange Prices Trade figures restrain equities, How the markets moved, Stock markets Gilts market becalmed ahead of today's new 'tap', Latest results, The Times Share Indices, Authorized Units, Insurance & Offshore Funds, Foreign Exchange, Recent Issues, Eurobond prices (midday indicators), Wall Street. Business Appointments: Business appointments Sir William Mather is the new chairman of CompAir.

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