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FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1989
Maggie offers more time on I.D. Bill
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By DAVID GARDNER
and GERAINT JONES
THE jilted business­
woman charged with
the murder of crossbow
victim Diana Maw was
freed by a court yester­
day.
Jane Salveson, 35, a design
consultant, was discharged
after Crown Prosecution
Service lawyers ruled that
police had in su ffic ie n t
evidence to proceed with the
case.
Last night, Scotland Yard
refused to com m ent on
b itter criticism over its
handling of the affair.
D etectives had claim ed
that Miss Salveson’s ‘bizarre’
obsession for former boy­
friend Michael Stevens led
her to murder Miss Maw —
his new girlfriend.
But after the decision, at
Ealing m agistrates, W est
London, her solicitor, Brian
R aym ond, sa id p o lic e
appeared to have had a
‘fix a tio n ’ th a t she was
guilty.
He added: ‘As a result, the
real killer of Diana Maw is
out there now.’
By JOHN DEANS, Political Correspondent
rH t PAMELLA STORY: Pz
18. 19
of the
BAe man’s letter
A SENIOR British Aerospace director sent a
letter to Pamella Bordes after she was
exposed as a call girl.
The letter, on a card posted on March 27, was
signed: ‘Take care of yourself, David.’
David A. W ilson,-who is the Director of Commercial
Contracts of British Aero­
space Inc, was On his way
Daily Mail Reporter
back to Britain last night.
bers printed on it. Wilson,
Jet
who printed his home address
His message to her, which in Great Falls, Virginia, on
arrived at her flat in Victo­ the back of his letter to
ria, London, at the beginning Pamella, said yesterday: ‘I ,
of April, read: ‘Pam, congrat­ have no comment to make.
ulations on making it to the Pamella was introduced to
big time. I knew you could do me a long time ago before she
got into the sort of circles
it!!
that have been mentioned.’ ,
‘Give me a call next time
your executive jet touches
He said that he did not
down west of the Atlantic. know her ‘Mr Fixit’ Adnan
Take care of yourself, David,’ Khashoggi, and when he was
W ith the card W ilson asked if Pamella had ever
enclosed his business card asked him about contracts or
with its Washington business
Turn to Page 2, Col 4
address and telephone num­
MRS Thatcher headed
off a major backbench
revolt over the Govern­
ment’s controversial
soccer identity card
scheme yesterday.
Jealousy
In a spectacular display of
nimble political footwork, the
Prime Minister insisted th at
the measure intended to foil
football hooligans should go
ahead this year.
Mr Raymond said Miss
Salveson had provided a
very strong alibi at an early
stage in the investigation.
On the day and time when
she was allegedly seen in
Miss MaW’s street carrying a
crossbow, seven people said
she was with them at a
meeting. All gave statements
to police, he said.
He also criticised detectives
for relying on the crucial
testimony of an ice-cream
salesman, who said he saw a
m an openly carrying a
crossbow and bolts in Miss
Maw’s street days before the
murder.
The vendor later picked
out Miss Salveson in an
identity parade.
During an earlier hearing,
the court was told that Miss
Salveson, consumed by jeal­
ousy, trailed 36-year-old
Miss Maw and Mr Stevens,
even following them once to
the theatre.
feut Mr Raymond said
yesterday that the ‘rather
pathetic behaviour’ of one
But she offered her jittery MPs
extra time to tackle the plans, and
promised that the lessons learned
from the Hillsborough disaster could
be incorporated into the legislation.
After 24 hours of mounting political
ten sion , during w hich Mrs T hatcher
appeared to stand almost alone in support of
the troubled Football Spectators Bill, the
Cabinet thrashed out a plan
Under the formula, MPs will have six
months in which to debate the Bill rather
than the July deadline — three months away
— originally set by the Prime Minister.
As well as allowing longer for the emotional
atmosphere created by the Hillsborough
tragedy to clear, the new timetable will
enable key recommendations from inquiry
chairman Lord Justice Taylor to be taken
- into account.
Before Mrs Thatcher’s display of personal
determination in the Commons, Tory MPs
had. been forecasting that the Government
would have to ditch the Bill this year or face
Turn to P age 2, Col. 6
Woman
freed
after
murder
In nocen t: J a n e S a lv e s o n
Turn to Page 4, Col 1
W e a th e r 2, Fem ail 13, D iary 23, TV Mail 26,27, C inem a 28,-30,. M otoring -32,33, L e tte rs 34, S u m m er C asino 36, S p o rt 43-48
PAGE 2
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
Gummer’s ‘woolly’ thoughts
on keeping the cold at bay
THE best ‘central heating’
is a woolly jumper, a Minis­
ter suggested yesterday.
Central heating damages
houses, wastes energy and is
unnecessary in bedrooms, said
Local Government Minister
John Gummer.
His remarks echo former
J u n ior H ealth M inister
Edwina Currie’s controversial
advice to pensioners on keep­
ing warm. Mr Gummer told
th e Commons com m ittee
Daily Mail Reporter
examining the Local Govern­
ment and Housing Bill: ‘The
way to destroy houses is to
have central heating — every­
thing starts to crack-up.’
Mr Gummer, 49, a lay
member of the Church of
England General Synod, said:
‘I have never had a heated
bedroom in my life. And I am
Green enough to believe that
there is a great deal that we
have got to learn about the
waste of heat.’
His Labour shadow, David
Blunkett, said: ‘It’s easy for
someone who is well fed, well
clothed and well provided-for
to dismiss the need for decent
heating for those who live in
damp and cold conditions.’
Shadow Housing Minister
C live Soley described Mr
G um m er’s 'com m ents as
‘bizarre’.
PAMELLA
LETTER
Continued from Page One
British Aerospace affairs, he
replied: ‘Never.’
British Aerospace, one of thei
largest companies in Britain, is
a major supplier of warplanes
around the world.
Asked last night whether
British Aerospace had ever had
any connection with Pamella
Bordes, Irene Dodgson, a
B ritish Aerospace excutive,
said: ‘I have checked and Ms
Bordes certainly has never
been on the books of this
company. She has not been
employed by us.’
Dock union agrees
to hold strike vote
Daily Mail Reporter
NERVOUS dock leaders
yesterday paved the way
for a strike they fear
will end in defeat.
The Transport and General
Workers’ Union reluctantly
gave the go-ahead for a ballot
of 9,300 port workers in the
row over the Government’s
decision to scrap their jobsfor-life scheme.
TGWU deputy general sec­
retary Bill Morris made it
Lawson struggles to
hold interest rates
building societies last month to £8billion, and an explosion in a North Sea
oil rig which will temporarily shut
down some production and cost Bri­
tain’s balance of payments £800miHion.
The biggest blow to hit Mr Lawson
was the decision by the West German
central bank to raise its interest rate
% per cent to 4y2 per cent, which was
seen as the signal for higher interna­
tional borrowing costs.
But as the Chancellor has attempted
to keep Britain in step with West
German monetary policy on exchange
and interest rates, the question was
whether he could afford to step out of
line now.
The extraordinarily high bank lend­
ing figure left the Treasury as bewil-
dered as everyone else. It touched off a
mini-collapse in share prices as it
appeared to suggest that the Chancel­
lor’s present high Interest rate was still
not scaring away new customers.
One third of the lending was put
But even if the cost of borrowing has
down to new mortgages, and another
to go up to stop a stampede away from
big chunk involved lending on the
the pound, finance experts were claim­
corporate sector, which may involve
ing that this should not necessarily
buying capital equipment
mean anything extra on home loans.
The figure of £8billion was at least
The
argument
was
that
the
building
£3billion more than the City expected,
Millions of pounds were wiped
societies were so flush with money that
and
significantly goes against the
off share prices as the Treasury
they could hold the line for at least a
latest figures of consumer spending
couple of months.
and the Bank of England
and credit, which up to now have
The pressure suddenly went on the
always shown the squeeze on borrow­
worried over w hether th ey
pound
yesterday
because
of
a
rise
in
ing money working its way through
could keep the present base
German lending rates, a surprising
the shops.
increase in loans by banks and
rate of 13 per cent.
The official explanation is that
March was the month when
outstanding interest charges
were paid on loans, so that the
figure could be a maverick.
To add to the gloom, Energy
Secretary Cecil Parkinson had
to admit to the Commons that
he did not know when the
Brent North Sea field would
re-open.
It was shut down after an
explosion last Tuesday on
Shell’s Cormorant Alpha gas
By JENNY HOPE, Medical Correspondent
platform, although there were
By CHRISTOPHER BELL, Political Reporter
no casualties.
tions
between
husband
and
NEW laws to end kidneySIB Leon Brittan last night ■ of plain commonsense that we
wife
or
two
members
of
thei
Fears that the price of petrol
for-sale tra n sp la n ts w ere
launched another scathing cannot totally abolish frontier
same church — an Anglican
would rocket to £2 a gallon
unveiled yesterday.
attack on Mrs Thatcher’s controls if we are to protect
bishop in Africa recently
within days were voiced by
our citizens from crime and
attitude towards Europe.
received a kidney donated by
They will make it illegal to
lilPs last night.
stop the movement of drugs,
an unrelated evangelist —
buy or sell human organs and
After just 100 days in the of terrorists and of illegal
Mr P ark in son told the
would be possible under a
to u se p aid-for kidneys,
jo b .
th e
E u r o p e a n Immigrants,’ she said.
Commons that the explosion
vetting procedure.
hearts, livers and lungs in
Commissioner said she had
had slashed daily offshore oil
But speaking in Preston,
operations. Those convicted
adopted the wrong approach
production by 17 per cent
fingerprinting may
will face up to three months .beGenetic
over the need to retain Lancashire, the former Cabi­
used
to
check
that
donors
He in s is te d th a t th e
in prison and £2,000 in fines.
international frontiers in the net Minister contradicted her
are blood relatives.
saying: ‘As far as drugs are
wellheads in the giant Brent
fight against drugs.
A d vertisin g for hum an
concerned, the problem of
field
must remain closed down
Action
was
ordered
by
Mrs
organs will be outlawed and it Thatcher after allegations by
And he virtually accused her frontier controls Is one Of
until safety experts have given
will be an offence to act as a four Turks that they were
of inventing problems and vocabulary and imagination
the all-clear, which makes it
broker in such transactions.
having a closed mind.
more than one of substance.
possible that oil firms will
paid to donate kidneys for
increase pump prices again
The Human Organ Trans­
transplants in London.
This latest attack — Sir
‘We have enough real
very soon.
plants Bill, introduced in the
Leon has already defied the dragons
Mr
Freeman
was
confident
to
slay
in
the
fight
Commons, should become law the Bill would stop ‘this
Prime Minister by backing
Mr Parkinson did not rule
against
drugs
without
invent­
by sum m er, said ju n ior
the European Monetary Sys­ in g m o re.’ U rg in g an
out the prospect, but pointed
abhorrent trade’. He said that
H ea lth M in ister R oger
tem — Is likely to fuel the open-m inded approach to
out: ‘Production from the
anyone, from nurses and
Freeman.
feeling that he has ‘gone Europe he added: ‘Some have
Brent field is less than 1 per
o th er m ed ica l s ta ff to
native’ in his new role.
cent of world production. It is
It says that live donors for directors of private hospitals,
sought to play up the disad­
impossible to calculate the
tr a n s p la n ts sh o u ld be could be liable for prosecution
Last year Mrs Thatcher said vantages, but that does not do
effect of any temporary short­
restricted to near relatives if involved in u n law fu l
she wanted EEC .frontiers to justice to the real problems
fall on petrol prices.’
(cousin or closer) but dona­
transplants.
stay after 1992. ‘It is a matter that still have to be solved.’
City — Page FORTY
A TRIPLE fin ancial
setback yesterday left
C h a n c e llo r
N ig el
Lawson teetering on the
edge of another rise in
interest rates.
By GORDON GREIG
Political Editor
B r itta n in n ew Kidney-for-sale
E E C o u tb u rst deals mean jail
DISTRICT FORECASTS
By the BBC’s
JOHN
KETTLEY
NORTHERN and eastern Scotland
and eastern England will have a
fairly cloudy day with a fe w sh o w ­
ers but in sou th w est Scotland,
Northern Ireland and w estern Eng­
land, more broken cloud is likely
with m ost places seein g som e
sunshine. In southeast England the
day will start dull with rain or drizzle
at tim es but this will slow ly clear.
Little general change overnight but a
slight frost in som e parts later.
Rather cool in the north.
1, 2, 3: Showery. Bright
intervals. Wind northerly,
moderate. Max 8c (46f) on
coasts, 12c (54f) inland.
4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12,
13, 14, 15, 20, 21, 25, 29:
Dry. Sunny spells. Wind
light or moderate. Max 12c
(54f).
6, 16, 17, 18, 19, 23:
Cloudy, showers. Winds
northerly, moderate or fresh.
Cool. Max 9c (48f).
22: Showers. Sunny inter­
vals. Winds northerly, mainly
moderate. Max 10c (50f).
24, 26, 27, 28: Cloudy
with a few showers. Winds
northerly, moderate or fresh.
Max 8c (46f).
Southern North Sea: Wind
fresh, decreasing moderate
northerly. Seas moderate.
m
C loud a n d show ers in m a n y
a re as. S u n n y e a ste rn M editer­
ra n e a n . Cool in n o rth .
Sunny
Max: 22c (71f)
Tomorrow:
Sunny 22 (71)
Showers
Max: 12c (53f)
Tomorrow:
Fair 11 (51)
Showers
Max: 10c (50f)
Tomorrow:
Showers 10 (50)
SHETLANuS
Channel: Wind moderate,
north to northwesterly. Seas
slight to moderate. Irish Sea:
Wind moderate, north or
northeasterly. Seas slight.
A
. L u n c h tim e r e p o r t s
28
AND YESTERDAY
W a r m e s t: Scilly Isles 15c, 59f.
C o ld e st: Newquay, Cornwall 0c,
32f. W e t t e s t : C ro m er, N o rfo lk
.44ins. S u n n ie s t: T ire e , I n n e r
H ebrides 12.4hrs. L ondon: Max: 9c,
48f; M in: 8c, 46f; S u n : 2.3hr; R ain:
.04in. B arom eter (6pm): 1017.4mbs;
H um idity: 66 per cent. M an ch e s­
te r: 1020.8mbs.
MOON AND SUN
Moon rises: 9.08pm, sets:
5 .2 7 a m . S u n
r is e s :
5 .53a m , s e ts : 8 .06 p m .
Lights (London): 8.36pm
to 5.21am; M anchester:
8.50pm to 5.25am . H igh w ater
L o n d o n B rid g e : 3 . 15p m a n d
3.23am ; Liverpool: 12.22pm an d
12.36am .
□
CHANNELIS. B ,
B U ii
m
Fair
Max: 19c (66f)
Tomorrow:
Sho.wers 19 (66)
Showers
Max; 14c (57f)
Tomorrow:
Showers 14 (57)
Cloudy
Max: 12c (53f)
Tomorrow:
Showers 12 (53)
Fair .
Max: 20c (68f)
Tomorrow;
Fair 20 (68)
AROUND THE WORLD
Showers
Max: 13c (55f)
Tomorrow:
Showers 13 (55)
Akrotiri:....... .S
Algiers......... S
Amsterdam.. >
Athens......... S
Belfast......... >
Belgrade...... S
Berlin........... C
Biarritz.......... K
Bombay........ .S
Brussels...... R
Budapest..... F
Cairo............. S
Capetown.... .F
Casablanca.-. F
Copenhagen...F
Corfu............. S
Dublin........... C
Dubrovnik... .S
Edinburgh.... S
Faro............... S
Florence...... 0
Funchal......... F
Geneva......... 1Gibraltar...... C
Guernsey..... .C
Helsinki........ .C
Hongkong... 0
Innsbruck.... F
Istanbul........ S
Jersey........... 0
Las Palmas... .C
JohannesburgS
Karachi......... S
Lisbon........... 1-
C F
F
84 London........ n 8 46
66 Luxor........... ..S 39102
48 Madrid........ c 11 b^
77 12 Malaga........ ..C 20 68
11
M alta........... c 18 64
20 68 Melbourne.. ..s 19 66
10 bO Milan........... i- -16 61
12 b4 Moscow ..... 0 11 b2
32 90 Nairobi........ F 21 70
1 4b New Delhi.. S 33 91
1/ 63 Nice............. F 1/ 63
33 91 Oporto......... S tb b9
20 68 Oslo............. K / 4b
19 66 Palma.......... 0 18 64
9 48 Paris............ 0 11 52
23 n Peking......... H 19 66
11 h? Perth............ S 23 /3
20 68 Prague......... F 11 52
9 48 Reykjavik... R 5 41
1/ 63 Rhodes....... S 24 /b
1/ 63 Rome........... F 1/ 63
20 68 Seoul........... R 29 84
1/ 63 Singapore... ..F 30 86
19 66 Stockholm.. C / 4b
10 50 Sydney....... F 23 73
11 b2 Tel Aviv..... S 34 93
2/ 81 Tenerife..... S 21 70
12 b4 Tokyo......... S 22 n
18 H4 Tunis........... S 22 n
11 52 Venice........ R 17 63
20 68 Vienna........ K 1b b9
22 72 W arsaw ...... 0 1b 59
3H 9 / Wellington.. K 18 64
1/ 63 Zurich......... R 10 bO
C
29
19
9
S-sun, F-fair, C-cloud. R-rain. Th-thunder, Sn-snow
clear he wants negotiations
with port employers to avert,
or at least delay, an all-out
strike.
A strike could jeopardise
union funds if it is ruled to be
unlawful.
But the employers will not
negotiate.
They say the decision to axe
the 42-year-old National Dock
Labour Scheme is a political
issue and one on which a
strike cannot be legitimately
called.
- d n
* \
—
!
'Having identity cards
to g e t in here hasn't
made M Ps behave in a
more civilised manner!'
ID cards
Continued from Page One
almost certain defeat. The scale
of her victory became clear last
night as a meeting of Tory
backbenchers called to discuss
the measure fizzled out after
only a few minutes with almost
no debate and few MPs
present.
John Carlisle, chairman of
the Tory sports committee and
one of the most outspoken
critics of the Government on
the ID card issue, summed up
the new mood when he said: ‘I
am much happier than I was.
The rigid timetable has gone,
and the Government is being
far more flexible.’
The rebels fell back into line
after Mrs Thatcher told the
Commons th at, despite the
Hillsborough tragedy, now is
nOt the time to surrender in
the b attle a g ain st soccer
violence.
She said: ‘The decision we are
asked to take is against a
background of four decades of
problems with crowd safety and
two decades of hooliganism.’
In that period, she said, some
300 people had died, and as a
result of thuggery and disaster
on the terraces and outside
sports grounds Britain had
accumulated the worst record
in the developed world.
The Commons atmosphere
was tense for Mrs Thatcher’s
arrival at the despatch box.
For Labour it was an ideal
opportunity for Neil Kinnock
to exploit the split in Tory
ranks and pin down the Prime
Minister on an issue he has
always claimed she does not
understand.
But his tactics of resorting to
personal abuse gave the Tories
the signal to rally to their
leader.
In a scathing assault on Mrs
Thatcher, the Labour leader
stormed: ‘How can you, in the
afterm ath of that terrible
tragedy last Saturday, put the
safety of others second to your
own pride?’
Not one Tory rose to chal­
lenge Mrs Thatcher’s decision
and Mr Kinnock’s performance
was denounced by one Tory ID
card sceptic as ‘stupidity of an
enormous magnitude’.
Back from the dead
— Centre Pages
INFORMATION SUPPLIED BY THE MET OFFICE
ABROAD - CHANNEL IS: 23p, AUSTRIA: 21s, BELGIUM: 45fr, CANARIES: 160pes, DENMARK: 10kr, EIRE: 32p, FRANCE: 7f, W.GERMANY: 2.5dm, GREECE: 180dr, HOLLAND: 3g, ITALY: 1.700L, MALTA: 25c, NORWAY: 10kr. PORTUGAL: 150esc, SPAIN: 160pes, SWITZERLAND: 2.5fr
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
PAGE 3
THE BUTTERFLY’S SECRET ...
gras®
By LIN JENKINS
A BRITISH Rail guard who
attended ‘charm school’ in
the network’s latest effort
to improve its image has
been accused of flooring a
tourist during a row with a
woman passenger.
The man, who was selected to
work exclusively on Intercity
services in the new rank of
senior conductor with its
ch a rco al grey and red
uniform, is also said to have
been rude and abusive.
BR chiefs have apologised for
what they call a ‘misunder­
sta n d in g ’. However th ey
maintain that the American
tou rist was not h it but
merely fell over.
The incident is alleged to have
happened after teacher Mary
Elliott boarded a Paddington
to B ristol Temple Meads
train without a ticket.
a
By BAZ BAMiGBOYE
THE secret of M. But­
terfly is out of its
cocoon.
mmmm
The West End’s newest lead­
ing ‘lady’ revealed all to the
critics last night — that this
she is really a he
The Shaftesbury Theatre premiere
audience had been fooled by the
glamorous Chinese opera diva who
stars opposite Anthony Hopkins
The illusion was kept up even in
the programme. The role of Song
Liling is enigmatically billed as
being performed by G. G. Goei.
But the ‘G’ stands for Glen — a
2 6 -y e a r -o ld
S in g a p o r e -b o r n
Cambridge graduate and a contem­
porary of Prince Edward.
Dupes
Passport
w.'Vjs5s§;
n S'AS'Sft!
SM
Glen, on his British stage debut, is
a Chinese Communist spy who
dupes an unwitting French diplomat
into revealing secrets during
20-year affair.
‘I have based my character on
experiences with my three sisters
and various girlfriends,’ Glen said,
carefully holding a coffee cup so as
not to break the fingernails he has
grown for the role.
Although preview audiences know
Glen’s secret, the producers didn’t
want the news to leak out before
last night’s gala, watched by his
parents, over from Singapore.
He warned them m advance of
some of the extraordinary scenes in
D a v id
H en ry
Hwang’s play.
The strip I do
and the kiss scene
may shock some
but my parents are
b r o a d - m in d e d
enough to know
that it’s all part of
the play.’
. G. Goei . . . beautiful opera diva in M. Butterfly
Yesterday, however, 46-yearold Maria de Haan laughed off
the suggestion as ‘like some­
thing out of a Marx Brothers
movie.’
The allegation, by French Intelli­
gence, follows an investigation into
her relation sh ip w ith Sw eden’s
am bassador to France, Mr Carl
By JOHN DICKIE
Diplomatic Correspondent
Glen Goei . . . himself
Lidbom. Mr Lidbom, 63, was involved
in a top-level inquiry into the work­
ings of the Swedish security police,
SAPO, following the murder of Prime
Minister Olaf Palme.
During the inquiry he was given
access to top secret files on leading
politicians and businessmen.
Miss de Haan, who is of Estonian
extraction, came to the attention of
French Intelligence when she visited a
naval base at Brest with Mr Lidhom,
who is married. The French Navy
maintains that he claimed during the
visit that Miss de Haan was his wife.
As British Intelligence chiefs studied
reports of the French allegations, Mr
Lidbom, speaking in Sweden, accused
SAPO and MI5 of joining forces in a
bid to discredit him.
He admitted meeting Miss de Haan
on several occasions, but added he was
‘tired of gossip and loose speculation.’
Denying that she could be a security
risk, he said: ‘She has lived in London
for 20 years. .. this whole thing is
absolute rubbish.’
And in Britain Miss de Haan, while
admitting her relationship with Mr
Lidbom, laughed off the accusation
that she was a spy.
‘What they are saying is all lies,’ she
said. ‘My first reaction is to laugh. My
children are laughing and so are my
friends. It is ridiculous. To suggest I
am with the KGB is so remote it is
unthinkable.
‘I just happen to have a boyfriend
who is in a high position, People are
Miss Elliott, 25, from South*
ville, Bristol, says she asked
for a return fare unaware
that senior conductors are
allowed to dispense only
single fares at the full rate.
She claims the guard lost his
temper and told her: ‘I can’t
stand people who can’t make
up their minds.’ He snatched
her passport from the top of
her bag adding: ‘I hope you
won’t be needing this for a
while.’
A gallant American passenger
then came to her aid.
Miss Elliott, who teaches in
the Middle East, said: T was
happy to pay the fare, but
the guard seemed out of
control. I- have been living
abroad for a couple of years
so I questioned why I could
not have a return fare and
he went berserk.
Astonished
Fm no KGB spy, just the
ambassador’s girlfriend
A DIVORCEE living in
L ondon h as been
accused of being a
KGB agent following
her relationship with a
top ambassador.
CHARM
SCHOOL
T R A IN
GUARD
‘F L O O R S
T O U R IS T ’
trying to find ammunition and bait
my boyfriend with it. But it is all lies.
‘It is my daughter’s 15th birthday
and I am baking a cake and blowing
up balloons while Swedish journalists
keeping phoning. But the whole thing
is crazy.’
Recalling the visit to Brest. Miss de
Haan. who has two daughters by her
two previous marriages and lives at St
John's Wood, north London, said: ‘I
was flattered that the French called
me Madame Ambassador, but I cer­
tainly didn’t pretend to be his wife.’
SAPO have been subjected to strong
criticism since. the Palme murder in
1986, and there are suspicions in
Sweden that the disclosures about Mr
Lidbom have been timed to take the
heat off them following publication of
the report recommending changes in
their operations.
‘I was happy to give my
address. I wasn't trying to
get away.
‘The whole carnage was aston­
ished by his behaviour. I
could not believe it when the
guard appeared to punch the
American. It would have
been funny if it were not so
appalling.'
Miss Elliott has made an
official complaint. Another
passenger who witnessed the
incident gave his card to the
American in case he wished
to complain.
BR officials, who are keeping
the guard’s identity secret,
say he is a man of integrity
and the highest character.
A spokesman said: ‘Obviously
an incident took place and
we apologise for that. But
this woman got on at the last
m inute w ith ou t paying,
which she should not do, and
when the guard asked for the
fare a m isunderstanding
developed.’
The spokesman said the guard
claimed Miss Elliott handed
over her passport for him to
check her name and address.
He had no comment when it
was pointed out that a pass­
port does not carry a person's
address.
TV S T A R IN
P U N C H -U P
HOWARDS' WAY star John
Moulder-Brown was yester­
day fined £400 for hitting a
motorist who accused him of
cutting him up.
The 36-year-old actor, who
plays yacht captain Richard
Spencer in the TV series,
gave David Sergeant a ‘back­
hander’ on the face, after the
incident on the Ml, Nor­
tham pton Crown Court
heard. Mr Sergeant, 42, of
Frimley. Surrey, suffered a
loose crowned tooth.
Moulder-Brown, of Bexhill.
Sussex denied causing actual
bodily harm.
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
PAGE 4
O R D E A L O F DESIG N ER F R E E D IN
A w o m a n w h o lo v e d
and th en lo st a ll hope
Continued from Page One
By GILL SWAIN
person following anouier after
the break-up of a relationship
was common, 'but should not
be interpreted so horrendously
in the way it was here.’
Although he refused to elab­
orate, he added; There was at
least one person who had a
more im m ediate and more
potent motive for wishing ill
towards Diana Maw than Jane
Salveson.’
Last night Miss Salveson,
who was charged four and a
half months ago, said: ‘I never
doubted that my innocence
would be proved when all the
facts were known.
‘But I am immensely relieved
that this ordeal is over and
that I can become a private
person again.’
She added: ‘The well-worn
cliche that you only know who
your real friends are at times
of trouble has been shown to
be true in my case.’
T h e sh o c k in g m urder
happened in July last year,
when a crossbow was fired at
M iss Maw’s head as she
stepped out of her West Lon­
don flat on her way to work.
JANE SALVESON’S behaviour
was bizarre, undignified, even
shameful as she suffered in the
grip of an overwhelming passion.
But it did not make her a murderer, her
solicitor said. It made her a sad woman.
m wm m i
mem
Rejected, she couldn’t
isss iS stay away from the
great passion of her life
Serious
The 6in steel-tipped bolt
embedded itself behind her ear,
piercing the spinal cord and
killing her instantly.
Detectives led by Det Supt
M alcolm H ackett — who
headed the unresolved Suzi
Lamplugh inquiry — are to
continue their investigation.
But serious questions were
being asked last night about
why police decided to charge
Miss Salveson before submit­
ting the papers to the Crown
Prosecution Service.
One senior legal source said:
‘We did not get the papers
u n til after she had been
charged. As soon as we saw
them we knew there were
going to be problems. There
was no alternative on the
evidence they had. Circum­
sta n tia l evidence is not
enough.
‘One must ask why the
lawyers were not consulted
before she was charged with
such a serious offence.’
CPS lawyer Clare Reggiori
Diana Maw: Jane Salveson's rival in love
told Ealing magistrates yes­
terday: ‘It was clear from an
early stage that the evidence
was not clear cut. It was
necessary to take the view of
senior Treasury Counsel and
C ttA N -A m
B
tti 4 a *
W orried a 6 o u t
fn &
m
tM
W
M
O
m
U
This highly-educated and sophisticated woman
found herself temporarily consumed by her grief and
resentment at being thrown over for another woman.
All she could think about was her ex-boyfriend, her
love rival, and her lost hopes.
Following a former lover after an affair is not
uncommon, as her solicitor, Brian Raymond, told the
court. Men do it too. It can be a nuisance and an
embarrassment, but it rarely leads to harm.
Michael Stevens: Former lover But instead of Miss Salveson’s obsession running its
course barely noticed by any­
one except the couple she
pursued, it led her to court.
She was accused of murder
and all her petty behaviour
was cruelly exposed.
Miss Salveson, 35, is bright
,
/»
, ■«
arid talented. She gained a
first class honours degree in
T .A i p p f i to r
%/
%/
interior design at Leicester
Polytechnic.
She completed an MA in art
and design, then joined top
L ondon
d e s ig n
fir m
Fitch & Co. After that she
never looked back, says her mother, Mrs Edna
Mr Stevens met Diana Maw at a Valentine’s
Day party in 1988, and he was soon taking
Salveson. She was regarded as a high-flier,
her to Hayling.
often sent abroad as a design consultant for
major firms.
When he finally split up with Miss Salveson
in May, she fell apart. She couldn’t stay away
It was sailing that brought her and
from her ex-lover and Miss Maw. She followed
businessman Michael Stevens together. They
them on dates and went to their homes.
met on the Isle of Wight through mutual
friends in 1982 and the affair blossomed. Mr
‘She was deeply distressed and deeply
Stevens was separated from his first wife and
aggrieved and found an outlet for that feeling
in bizarre behaviour,’ said Mr Raymond.
kept a £17,000 yacht at Hayling Island. The
couple went sailing almost every weekend.
‘She never made any direct approach or
Her mother never approved of the relation­
threatened violence. I t was shameful behav­
iour and she bitterly regrets it now.’
ship. ‘He was nice, but I didn’t think there
was any stability there. I told Jane this but
Time and care might have healed her
she said “I know, but we get on very well.’”
wounds. But being accused of murder has left
her shattered. She spent three weeks in
But Miss Salveson was not as happy as she
appeared. Police told magistrates at an earlier
custody, then when she was released on bail
hearing that she had been seeing a psycho­
the conditions were so strict that she had to
leave her job.
therapist for several years.
/m
O
K
im
f A
fN
&
£ &
th e view w as th a t they
couldn’t safely ask a jury to
convict her of murder.’
Mr Raymond said the result
was that ‘a woman who was
guilty of nothing more than
being unlucky in love has
had her life devastated, her
privacy violated and details of
her personal affairs laid bare
in the press.’
He said: ‘Four and a half
months ago I told the court
that for Jane Salveson to be
accused of murder was a
terrible mistake.
‘Now the world knows that
what I said then was true.’
H.M. G ov ern m en t call it ‘p a ssiv e -sm o k in g ’ w ec a li
it secon d -h an d sm oking, or s m o k e r ’s-sm og .
W h atever you call it, it’s a drag. A drag on
a c ig a r e tte you didn’t light and you
d o n ’t w ant.
?
S o w h y p ut up w ith it, w h e n you can
m a k e vour air-environm ent a s fr e sh
a s a m ountain b r e e z e w ith a
MOUNTAIN BREEZE Air Ioniser; in your
o ffic e , you r h om e, e v e n in you r car?
£ ,
No, you d o n ’t h av e t o inhale o th e r p e o p le ’s
to b a c c o s m o k e nor, if y ou en joy a c ig a r e tte o r cigar
y o u rself, do you n e e d t o w orry a b o u t creatin g su ch a
‘s m o k e r ’s - s m o g ’ fo r o th e rs.
T h e MOUNTAIN BREEZE Ioniser e m its a c o n sta n t
str e a m o f n e g a tiv e ions into a room , clearing a w a y sm o k e ,
d u s t and bacteria, silently and econom ically.
Running c o s t s a re rem arkably lo w — 1p a
m onth, w hich o v e r th e 5 y ea r g u a ra n te e period
w o r k s o u t a t a little o v e r 60 p fo r half a d e c a d e ’s
refresh in g fresh-air!
* Made In Britain and approved for electrical
s a fe ty b y th e Electricity Council.
A vailable from A rgos. B o o ts, Holland & Barratt,
all good departm ent s to r e s, health food sh o p s
and electrical sh op s
orteiep h one MOUNTAIN B R E E Z E S 0 6 95 2 1155.
A
Paying tribute to Miss Sal­
veson, he said: ‘She has
shown remarkable fortitude.
All along she had a quiet,
calm certainty that right
would prevail in the end.’
&
&
M O U N T A IN
BREEZE
A breath of fresh air, every day.
O N LY QANTAS FLY TO N IN E A U S TR A LIA N C ITIE S .
If you wanted to fly to Rome, you’d hardly board a plane that only flew
as far as Munich, 500 miles short of your destination.
Yet travellers to Brisbane seem content with flying to Sydney, leaving
themselves with the same distance to cover.
Which is foolish enough in itself. And more foolish still, when you consider
that Qantas fly direct from Heathrow and Manchester to both destinations.
Not to mention Melbourne, Adelaide, Townsville, Perth, Cairns, Darwin and
Hobart. In fact, not only do we fly to more Australian cities thanany other
airline; we fly the shortest routes there, with fewer
stops along the way.
And no matter what the advertisements say, when you’re flying long
haul, it’s better to arrive than it is to travel.
PAGE 6
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
This threat to
Press freedom
WE ALL make mistakes. When they
harm or upset other people, then we
’ should do what we can to put things
: right. That is common morality.
Journalists who get .things wrong are no
Idifferent from anybody else. They have
| a responsibility to put the record
straight. There are several ways they
can do this. The paper can publish a
correction. It can print a letter from
an aggrieved reader. Reporters who
return to the subject ih^a;later article
ca,n make amends.
Those who think their complaint has
been unreasonably brushedaside can
take the matter up with the Press
Council. If the Press Council upholds
the complaint, then by well-observed
convention the paper gives proper
&pace to' this censure. ;
*
Citizens who feel that their reputation
has been besmirched by what has been
printed can, of course, sue for damages
through the courts. And few Western
, countries, it should be said, have
tougher laws of libel and contempt
than does Britain.
But all this is not enough for some
politicians. Hence the deceptively mod­
est sounding Right of Reply Bill,
which comes up in the Commons for
its Third Reading today.
This measure, sponsored by Labour
backbencher Tony Worthington, is as
muddled as it is meddlesome.
It would create a Government-appointed
quango to decide what is true and
what is false; to order newspapers
what corrective replies to carry and at
what length and with how much
prominence.
But this body, this ‘Press Commission’,
would not have the evidence-sifting
capacity of a court of law. It would not
have any clear definition of the
boundary between fact and opinion. Its
powers would be menacing in th e ir '
woolliness.
The commission, as envisaged by the Bill,
is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. Dressed up
as a cuddly protection fo r the citisen, it
constitutes a major threat to the
freedom of the Press.
Think what a sinister instrument such
a Quango for Truth could be in the
hands of those with the itch to muzzle
the media. Not only politicians with
to ta lita r ia n ten d en cies, but also
mighty corporations with cartel-like
instincts could bombard the pages of
newspapers with turgid official ver­
sions: Not so much gagging the Press
as smothering it under the boring
weight of rebuttal and revision.
The Daily Mail is not complacent about
Press standards. Concern is genuine
and widespread. Indeed, the fact that
such a Bill — so badly drafted and so
illiberal — has got this far is in many
ways the most disquieting testimony to
public unease - as reflected through
politics.
But, if the tribunes of free speech at the
Palace of: jWestihinstfV also cherishthe
freedom of the written word, they will
not seek to impose on journalists
statutory shackles they would never
wear themselves.
This botched Bill must be killed* And
-newspapers, instead of heaving a sigh
| of relief, m ust rededicate themselves to |
tthat accurate and fair reporting which
is the firm foundatiori of a responsiblei Press and the surest defence against
;legislative assaults upon it; ; A,; ’ ! J i
a-xm
TO THOSE confronted by
it, the clean-up operation
off the coast of Alaska
may seem like a lost
cause. But from the little
fishing ports of Brittany
this week will be sent a
su rp risin g m essage of
hope: Don’t give up.’
Almost exactly 11 years have
passed since the supertanker
Amoco Cadiz snapped in half off
Cap Firiistere, sending what the
French called a maree noir or
black tide surging towards; a
coastline teeming with fish, sea­
birds and plant life.
The oil-spill was six times
worse than the one in Valdez
Bay, and experts prophesied an
ecological apocalypse that would
devastate the region for genera­
tions. But those fear§ have not
been borne out.
'
After little mores than' a decade
French scientists are astounded
by the speed with which nature
has healed her own wounds.
Newly-released studies on the
aftermath of the Amoco Cadiz
disaster will soon be on their
way to Alaska. They may Ije
sca n t con solation in these
despairing early days but! they
testify to the earth’s capacity to
■’ repair damage inflicted by man.
"What we have learned is that
nothing man can dp !to help is
remotely ias effective las ‘ what
nature does for itself,’ : says
Professor Michel Glemarec. an
oceanologist at the University of
Western Brittany.
of hope for
everyone
worried by
our planet’s
The stricken Amoco Cadiz. Above: a Brittany beach, back to normal
has been devoured by time and
tide. The winds and currents
broke up the slick and sent it to
the bottom. Thefe the process of
bio-degradation took over.V
To visit the coast now is to
witness a miracle of natural
regeneration. Almost every spe­
cies of plant, bird and fish has
fought its way back.
Among the worst casualties Of
the spill were the Brittany
seaweed: beds — said to be the
world’s richest. The weed was
harvested and used in every­
th in g from pharm aceutical
drugs to animal fodder. It pro­
vided . prosperity, for thousands
Of workers and their families. ! Botanists believed: the plant’s
delicate growth patterns would
be permanently disrupted. The
opposite happened. The seaweed
not only recovered but helped
speed the organic breakdown of
the oil. Today a multi-million
pound industry flourishes again.'
‘When the oil was first spilled
Nature organised a similar
it punched an enormous hole in
rescue operation for the valuable
the eco-system. Nature doesn’t
shellfish that thrived in the cool,
like having holes and it i went
shallow waters. A much soughtabout filling this one as quickly;
after local variety of edible crab
as it could.
was badly hit by the oil. But its
place was almost immediately
‘The bottom-level fauna: that
taken by other hardier crabs i
died was replaced by substitute,
who! kept the life-cycle turning. ^
or, what we call “opportunistic”,
fauna better adapted to the new
IN
PARIS
Now the originai erahs\
conditions. It got the cycle, going
are coming back and the'
again and within three years the
original faun a was com ing
again; tourists .fill the quayside
fishermen are making as
been wiser, they say, to have left
back."
:.
cafes, eating local oysters and
nature entirely alone: “One thirig
much money as before.
lobster, and children play on
we did: wrong was to bulldoze
The parallels betweeri the
Tens of thousands of birds —!
beaches the colour of egg yolks.
the salt marshes,’ says Laubier.
* Amdco CMtt2:
the Exxon
including rare varieties of gull;
-It would have been better to
Valdez disasters are compelling.
and cormorant — perished when!
‘As a long-term problem
leave the natural vegetation
Both were the result of human
the
oil engulfed their feedirig
there to break up the oil.’
it’s over,’ says Lucien Laufailure, both happened at the
grounds.
It was; feared they
same time of year and in similar,
bier,. c h ie f s c ie n tific
■ Others' are not so sure. ‘We
would not return to the old
weather, and both afflicted “areas
managed to collect about half
\
adviser to the French
nesting :grounds — but today
where the population is depen­
the oil that was spilled,' says: the'/Skies over Brittany are again
G o v e rn m e n t’s M a rin e
dent for its livelihood on the sea. ‘
Professor
Glemarec.
‘That
was
noisy with circling seabirds:
Research Establishment,
clearly the right thing to do. I
‘K lpoked as though the sea
which
has
sent
a
huge
don’t
believe
too
many
mistakes
had been coated with tarmac,’
were made. We gave nature a
dossier of alm o st a
said Jules Legendre, former dep­
hand and it didthe rest.’ -,
uty mayor of Portsall, the; Brit­
d ecad e’s research to
tany port closest to the siriking.
If you explore the rocky inlets:
■ Alaska.
‘I remember thinking, that’s the
of the Cap Firiistere coast you
Will the miracle of Brittany
end of everything, nothing will
Some French experts even
can still find toughened nuggets
repeat itself along the stricken
ever live out there again.? The
believe the hum an clean-up
of oil clinging to a shore that
coast of southern Alaska?
fishermen felt the same. :They
operation — a gigantic project
was 1orice inches deep in the
i Some American scientists an d :
talked of nothing but ruin- But
involving thousands of troops,
stuff. These are the last remind­
coriservationists are convinced
today fishing boats are chugging
ships, planes arid bulldozers —
ers of a spill that remains the
that the current predictions are
in and out of Portsall harbour . was a mistake. It would have
world’s worst. Everything else
an underestimate of the devasta­
tion which they believe is.inevi-;;
table. The physical and climatic '
differences between Alaska and': !
Brittariy are acknowledged by;the French scientists but they:;
{believe th a t th e Americans':
; should draw comfort from theirSays a spokesw om an
PRINCE
C h a r le s
fieeiv changed is that
extend a hand to be
evidence.
receiving a kiss on the
for . Debrett's, the eti­
la d ies ,do n ot n o w
sh a k en -. T h e :tiaiid
Attached to the scientific data
cheek from Dame Kiri
q u ette e x p e r ts . 'It's
have tb curtsey1 'or
m u st
b e ; g rip p ed
is' a possibly more 1pragmatic5i
te Kanawa at a charity
b e c o m in g
blurred,
g e n tle m e n ' h a ve to * ’ lightly, never Squeezed
piede
of advice for the'Alaskans;;
gala. Prince Edward
thoujjK, w here youri-. m ake a d e e p b o w ; dr Stroked.
r
— get your compensation claim ;
ger members o f the
h a v in g
h is
hand
froiri the Waist. A brief '
Excited h o sts often
in early! The Brittany villages :
pumped and >his back : Royal Family a r e c o n
nod j from the neck "is
-forget this rule. A fe w
have yet to see a centime in
slapped by colleagues., \ cerned. Their friends
acceptable.
.■?"■
.
y
ea
rs
a
g
o
,
i
P
rin
cess
damages despite, a court judg­
at. 1'the'' prem iere . ..of/ fo r g e t p ro to co l and
But the 'haiids Off'
ment five years ago that the
A sp ects Of Love. '
i kiss or shake ha'nds. "
rule is still em phasised .D ian a w a s p h o to ­
Amoco Oil Company, was respon- i ‘
whatever" happened
/ ‘That: should be kept •in the etiquette guide graphed w ith a look of
astonishm
ent
on'
her
sible'
for the spul.
H
to the ruling that R o y-. [ for:: private m eetings. ' B u ckingham P a la ce
als m u st n ever be, I in public; they should • sen d s to local, council-. face and the; guiding
<’
■
Last
month
a
court
fixed'
the
;
hand of her h ost :firmly
to u c h e d
in ptiblic^ ! bow and w ait until1the io r s s and organisers of
amount at £70million. Both sides !
on the srha|i of her
Royal greets th em /
u n le s s
th e y
first
royal visits. The only
are appealing and the battle may
back.
U ‘
' One item o f royal “time?: a Royal can be
extend a hand ? ‘Offi­
last for years. It iiiay be the last
Etiquette that has just
cially it stiH applies,'
touched is w hen they
IAN BROW N
lesson Cf the: disaster that natui«: ‘
works faster than lawyfers.
R e s u lt
N ature’s
clean-up
from WILLIAM
LANGLEY
C o m fo rt
It’s still
PAGE T
Daily Mail, Friday, April'21',. 1989
sssssss
m m m
mm
m m m m m rn
.■i>iy.s.- y: :':<'.*'
l t l® ll l® ! l® ! i§ i
«
mssmmm
:
ass
FRANCES MORRELL:
Not so disiikeable
A WOMAN reviewing two books
by women on misogyny has
drawn up a list of successful
women men love to hate, and
another, smaller list of those they
love to love.
Why women should think they
know what kind of women men
either love or hate I do not know. I
went through Nicola Tyrer’s lists
and found myself in considerable
disagreement. She lists the women
men hate as Pamela Stephenson,
Edwina Currie, Kate Adie, Julie
B u rchill, .F ay Weldon, Esther
Rantzen..Germaine ■ Greer, Frances
Morrell, Anna Raeburn and Lady
Porter.
The women men love are Sue
Lawley, F elicity Kendal, Mary
Archer, Virginia Bottomley and
Jilly Cooper.
I .have met most of these women
and none of them do I hate or love.
But for the- record, those I like
rather-than..dislike:among, those I
am- supposed to hate are Edwina
Currie, Germaine-Greer,-Julie Burchill, .Frances Morrell and Anna
.Raeburn. Among. those I am sup­
posed to lOve, I would not care to
spend too long an evening with
Felicity Kendal (too coy), Mary,
Archer (too fragrant) and Virginia
Bottomley (too smug).
I agree in not fancying Pamela
Stephenson, Esther Rantzen and
Lady Porter, and I agree in liking
Sue Lawley and Jilly Cooper. As for
Kate Adie and Fay Weldon, both of
whom I am supposed to hate, I
have no views, although I expect I
would find them more irritating
than they were worth.
■mmm
mmm
mmm
m m m m
wmm
FELICITY m m A L : Too coy
W
HEN ail is - said
■and done, we know
how., and . why 95
football fans' died ■
’on th e H illsb o r-.
ough terraces in Sheffield.. ■
-
S M K M m H i!
The judicial
fill in many
attribute partial
viduals and organisations. - B ut we
already know, except those who do not’:want to know, the true nature and
cause of the - tragedy, The Liverpool
supporters who died were crushed and:',
suffocated to death by Liverpool sup­
porters who lived.
In the final judgment, .each man must
be held responsible for his own actions..
Each and every man who arrived late,
each and every man who arrived drunk,
each and every man who became angry
and violent outside the gates, who
In the arms of the law — one young fan is carried off
vented his fury upon the
police, who demanded to
on good historical
be let in, each and every be shunned. The dead fearing,
grounds, the fans. m an
w ho swarm ed; deserve no less.'
The perimeter fencing
The police may or may
through when the gates:
were opened, each and not have been wrong to was not put up for fun,
every man who rushed open those gates; the Foot­ but because of previous
down the tunnel on to the ball Association may or hooliganism among fans.
terraces, each and every1 may not have been wrong
it was not the police
man who pressed his body to allocate tickets as it who were drunk, but the
forward and downward, did.
fans. It was not the FA
made his due contribution
which was rioting, but the
to the slaughter.
fans.
We have all been moved
it was not the fence
by the grief of Liverpool, .. It. may or may not have which caused the deathly .BRITAIN’S departure
from Hongkong in-'June.
the singing of Abide With been wrong to have safety crush. It was the fans.
.-1997 is fast becoming one
Me, th e flow ers and .barricades against ' which The grief of Liverpool of the shabbiest episodes
wreaths and scarves at men, women and children
Anfield and at Hillsbor­ were squashed into their has expressed itself, and so in our -imperial history.
has the anger. But the,
ough.
, death agonies.
We had-.good -legal title
grief conceals the guilt, and
possession, and could
We can understand the
But the police did not and the anger shields the have bargained to secure a
reluctance of the team to create the terrible situa­ shame.
decent
deal from China.
play again too soon.
tion, itself threatening
Liverpool must now We should have given the
We can understand, too, death, outside. the gates. ask
itself, whether Liver-' ■six‘million people who live
the anger that desperately The football fans did that.
there, all by choice, some
seeks somebody else to The FA took the decision pool ’ football killed its 'protection aigainst Chinese
blame. But let hypocrisy it did to avoid trouble, dead
rule by setting up in
-advance a dem ocratic,
assembly and government.
We should have allayed
much anxiety by giving,
at the very- least, full
British citizenship to all
em p lo y ee s and
exemployees of the Hong­
kong governm ent and
police. Canada :ahd 'Aus­
tralia open their arms to
i SEE th a t Barbara Castle,, now
THE latest d rag to be' injected
H ongkong em ig ra n ts
78, .Is to ■ retire from the Euro­
into animals is designed to make
while
we close our doors
pean Parliament n ex t month.
pigs eat m o r e,. s o .. that their
in their faces.
She is the b est Prime Minister
already huge appetites becom e
.Confidence, in -the.future
Labour never had.
even more prodigious and they
of the colony is beginning
g et heavier and fatter and more
She is t o Labour w hat Mrs
to filter. The flight from
.profitable m ore quickly - and.
Thatcher is to the Tories. S h e­
the colony has begun.
cheaply than- e v e r .:.
lia s always been clear in her
Britain is running away
convictions and the w ay she has
Our agricultu re m in istries
from its responsibilities. It
expressed them.
approve and develop th ese prac­
is preparing to scuttle the
tices. Our finance departments
Had Harold Wilson backed her
colony^ It is a sorry busi­
spend public m oney on them.
forcefully w hen sh e took on the
n e ss
in d e e d .
M rs
We subsidise farmers to drug
trade unions in her 'In Place of
Thatcher,
who went to
.their animals before they sell
S trife'; Labour's su b seq u en t
War over the Falklands,
them to u s to eat. W e must be
(d isaste rs m ight Have b een
should have a hard think
mad. ' , _ avoided.
about what her Govern­
ment is up to.
Evm
tfaz high­
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ithe Yellow1
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PAGE 9
Daily Mail, Friday. April 21,1989
m ac
Parliament by
*
MR KINNOCK was unusually
rude to Mrs Thatcher yester­
day. He did himself no good
thereby; did her no harm. She
didn’t even lose her temper.
f
Tory MPs minded to rebel against her
plans to introduce identity cards for
football fans w ill now doubtless
hesitate, perhaps think again. They
may not like her plans. They certainly
don’t like to hear her m otives
gratuitously impugned.
Mr Kinnock asked her how, in the
aftermath of that terrible tragedy at
Hillsborough, she could ‘put the
safety of others second to her own
pride.’ Expressed like that, how on
earth could anyone do so?
The connection between identity cards
and football safety may not be
blindingly obvious to him — or even
to me, for that matter. Nonetheless, it
must be present in her mind and
must explain her determination.
He launched his attack by describing her
plans as ‘an offence against commonserise and an offence against common
decency.’ Against decency? She may
be mistaken, but hardly indecently so.
As described by her, her plans sound far
from oppressive. They enable many
things, compel nothing.
If
'It's your wife, Mr Pinkerton - her new £250 limit cheque card has arrived..
Painful
way to
break
COUNCILLOR Molly
Morgan made a painful
break with protocol whenthe Queen came to
Swansea yesterday — she
fell and snapped a wrist
and ankle.
When the Queen heard of
the accident she came over
and remained to see
71-year-old Mrs Morgan
into an ambulance.
Moments later, officials on
their way to a civic
luncheon were involved in
a three-car collision.
G iro b a n k b id
THE Alliance & Leicester
Building Society got the
Government’s go-ahead to
bid for Girobank arid has
offered £130million for the
Post Office offshoot.
M u rd e r c h a rg e
LISA Birch and Graham
Walsh, both 17, and a girl
of 16 were charged with
murdering Catherine
Winter, 17, who plunged
from flats at Beeches
Drive, Norfolk Park,
Sheffield, where Birch and
Walsh live.
B ra v e trio
TWO pensioner brothers
fought off raiders wielding
shotguns as their
69-year-old sister climbed
through their bungalow
window to get help in
Renny’s Lane, Durham.
In th e d rin k
FOUR children aged from
12 to 14 will be questioned
by police about a whisky
and lager drinking binge
after one fell in the River
Cherwell at Spiceball Park,
Banbury, Oxfordshire.
COLIN
WELCH
‘GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT’ PLAN
W orst record
Tough action on
Mr Kinnock accused her of undermining
the Taylor inquiry. By pressing ahead
with legislation, she would make the
whole question of identity cards ‘off
limits’ to Lord Justice Taylor.
She regards herself, by contrast, as doing
the Lord Justice a great service, giving
him a helping hand. Whatever he
recommends, if acceptable, can be
swiftly incoiporated in her Football
Spectators Bill.
If all-seat stadia are thought to be, the
answer, well, they too can be incorpo­
rated in the Bill. No Bill, however,
according to Mrs Thatcher, no way of
imposing all-seat stadia.
The Bill-will be there waiting, so to speak,
a ‘vehicle’ ready for Taylor to board
with his luggage. Whoever opposes it
will bear, in her view, a heavy
responsibility.
They will have decided to do nothing for
another 12 months about a ghastly
problem which has been with us for
two decades or more. It has cost nearly
300 lives so far. Our record is the
worst in the developed world.
She was, agreed, a mite unfair to Mr
Kinnock, accusing him by implication
of seeking to do nothing at all. Mr
Kignock crossly retorted that no-one
^was in favour of doing nothing. It was
effective action he wanted.
That is precisely what Mrs Thatcher
thinks she is offering him; that, and
perhaps more to come. The rift
between them was complete.
The Labour uproar was stupendous. At
one point, the Speaker ordered Mr
Andrew Faulds (Lab: Warley E) to
contain himself — no easy task. Like
Walt Whitman, he is large,, he con­
tains multitudes — or rather fails
noisily to contain them.
area of the law where the problem is
the same.
‘We are not dealing with the
criminal law here. Here we are
talking about two parties, one of
It would mean that if a complaint is whom has a notorious difficulty about
made against a solicitor by a client or proving his point.
‘In the civil law judgments are made
another lawyer he would have to show
the action he., took was not on the balance of probabilities rather
Members of the profession that
discriminatory, the committee said than beyond reasonable doubt which
accused of race discrimination yesterday.
the crimina,l law demands.’
Complaints about racial discrimina­
will instead be judged guilty
It argued that industrial tribunals
already reversed the burden of tion again st solicitors could be
u n til th ey show th ey are had
brought by clients, fellow lawyers,
proof in a similar way.
innocent.
‘It has been introduced to tribunals articled clerks and law students seek­
The controversial proposal by the because of the difficulty of proof,’ said ing employment.
The decision, w hich could in
Law Society’s race relations commit­ committee secretary Jonathan Gold­
extreme cases result in solicitors being
tee is expected to be rubber-stamped smith.
‘It should be extended to every other struck off, is bound to cause a storm.
by its ruling council in a week’s time,
Yesterday it was attacked as
‘disgraceful and deplorable’
by Tory MP and barrister
Mr Ivor Stanbrook.
‘Of all people, lawyers
should be the last to reverse
the test, that a man is
in n o cen t u n til proved
guilty,’ he said.
‘From solicitors and indeed
barristers I would expect the
strongest possible resistance
The docum ent, called
LABOUR
le a d e r s
to the loss of one of our
By STEPHEN BATES
Parents in Partnership,
most fundamental freedoms.’
borrowed a line from the
[ Education Correspondent |
foreshadows
the
rest
of
Government and opted
R esearch la stin g more
the party’s long-awaited
yesterday to give parents to attend school evenings education policy.
than two years found that
only one per cen t of
a greater say in their and concerts regularly
This is finally due to be
B ritain ’s 50,000 solicitors
children’s schools.
and buy their children published
next
month.
cam e from the eth n ic
to encourage
In return, they want presents
m inorities, about 600 in
such as paints,
It is 'expected to come
parents to sign a contract learning,
total.
out broadly in favour of
on their children’s good paper, puzzles and books.
Committee vice-chairman
behaviour in school.
The idea is part of other Government policies,
Hilda Amoo-Gottfried said:
first stage in the including the principles of
Parents would agree to the
a
national
curriculum
,
‘Lawyers should be setting
party’s major rethink of
equip and clothe their its
higher standards of behav­
education policies, testing of children, local
children properly, encour­ published
m anagement of schools
iour.
yesterday.
age them to read, check
and th e appraisal Of
‘They should be stamping
their homework regularly,
teachers.
out racism.’
Favour
be more ‘selective’ in the
E ducation Secretary
amount of television they
Labour promised that K en n eth Baker com ­
watch, and ensure they parents
would
be
given
mented: ‘It has taken the
get a good night’s sleep.
more information about Labour Party a long time
The contract system , their children’s education to wake up to the impor­
BUSINESSMEN are paying'
for three-year-old Vikki
which is already being and have better access to tant role of parents in
tried out in some schools teachers, and acknowl­ education.
Charlton, who has a rare
and which local Labour edged that parents have a
liver complaint, to visit Dis‘I welcom e Labour’s
neyworld in Florida. Vikki,
authorities are going to be right to information about
encouraged to adopt, their schools’ performance, conversion to a greater
of West Thorpe, Newcastle
voice for parents.’
would also require parents including exam results.
upon Tyne, will go with her
mother and brother.
SOLICITORS are set to
reverse the centuries-old
maxim of English law
th a t a person is innocent
until proven guilty.
By ANTHONY DORAN
Home Affairs Correspondent
from Tories’
Disney delight
B est avoided
Later, Mrs T mused sadly that education
is often regarded as the answer to
every problem. Yet look at these
university teachers, presumably highly
educated, yet now conspiring to
deprive their students of the advan­
tages they themselves had enjoyed!
The day had started in Ulster. Mr
M ichael Colvin (Con: Romsey &
Waterside) was concerned to promote
tourism there. He sensibly suggested
that accommodation grants would be
much better spread evenly among a
hundred little pubs than lumped
together on one huge, impersonal,
300-bedroom hotel.
People who go to that lovely and
predominantly peaceful Province will
find, perhaps to their surprise, the
natives notably kindly, friendly and
generous, as James Kilfedder (Ulster
Popular Unionist: N. Down) said.
Certain subjects, however, like huge
hotels and huge clergymen, are in
Ulster best avoided.
Daily Mail, Friday, April 2 1 ,198£
PAGE 10
in
Peking power bid
F ront MICHAEL LEESE in Peking
STUDENT protesters could
soon be on th e m arch
throughout China.
D em on stration s th a t began in
Peking have already spread to 11
other major cities including Shanghai.
And the plan is to coordinate them
over the whole country.
Communist Party. Rumours that Chairman
Deng Xiao Ping is near death have set off a
fight for control between the liberals and
the hard-liners.
‘T H E Y A R E B E IN G
U SE D TO HELP
W IN C O N T R O L ’
B ut Western observers believe the free­
dom-seeking protesters braving baton blows
from police are being used themselves as a
weapon in a power struggle within the
A UN official said; ‘There is a power
vacuum. When Chairman Mao became ill
there was the Gang of Four. When they fell
from grace Deng was ready. This time we
can see no obvious leader waiting in the
wings. Student unrest is being exploited to
try to force things to a head and bring
greater liberalisation to Chinese society.’
In Peking a 23-year-old student
teacher said: 'Deng promised many
reforms when he came to power but
nothing serious has happened.
‘The people are impatient for
change. We should have a far
greater say in how to run our lives
rather than have the party tell how
to behave.’
One result of Deng’s minor slack­
ening of control has been the growth
of a black market. Dealers are
allowed to peddle their wares openly
in the streets and in the capital
draw many customers by offering
goods, such as clothing, that are
only slig h tly superior to th at
available at state stalls.
HALFPRICEPHONE
ATCURRYS
APPROVED
[or connection
to telecommunication
systems specified in
the instructions for
use subject to tb ft
conditions set oul
in them
A la rm
This relaxation of regulations in a
previously tightly controlled society
has brought ever greater calls for
reform and confronted the authori­
ties with problems similar to those
experienced by Russia’s President
Gorbachev.
'
Amid growing alarm from .Peking
officials, students yesterday again
paraded their defiance by resuming
their march only 24 hours after
being beaten up in a brutal charge
by armed police.
Hundreds of banner-waving dem­
onstrators made their way through
pouring rain along Changon thor­
oughfare — it means Eternal Peace
— chanting: ‘Democracy is not
wrong’.
•‘Poison’
gas used
at
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ORVALU
H IG H EST QUALITY, LO W EST PR IC ES G U A R A N T IE D
MOSCOW: Soviet troops were
accused yesterday of using
poison gas to put down a
v io le n t d e m o n str a tio n in
Georgia where 20 people died.
D e p u tie s to th e n ew
p a rlia m en t in sisted th a t
se c u r ity fo rc es used an
unknown chem ical gas on
n ation alists in th e capital,
Tbilisi.
But a Soviet Foreign Ministry
spokesman, Yuri Gremitskykh,
denied the claims, saying: ‘It
would be unwarranted to talk
about gas.’
The newspaper Moscow News
said 14 woman were among
those who died. Yuri Museychuk, an expert on chemical
poisoning, told the, paper
women were more susceptible to
chemical toxification.
5 3 a re h eld in
H itle r protests
BONN: West German police arrested
53 people and seized weapons
yesterday on the 100th anniversary
of Adolf Hitler’s birth.
Police in Hamburg arrested 41
Turks armed with machetes who
were hunting for neo-Nazis. Three
youths who painted swastikas on
train seats were also detained.
N ine L eft-w ingers, carrying
weapons and CS gas and searching
for facists, were arrested iii West
■Berlin. Pears of neo-Nazi attacks led
police nationwide to boost patrols
around Jew ish b uildin gs and
cemeteries, but the centenary was
largely ignored.
FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT OF THE YEAR
DIRHOT
P U R G A firS
m m m
I
i
X
i
X
SHE splashed, elaborately coiffed
and smiling radiantly, through
lots of wet extraviaganzas and she
did for the swimsuit what Lana
Turner did for the sweater, and
now Esther Williams is in Macy’s
in New York trying to do it for
the swimsuit all over again.
Esther Williams? She’s 65 but she still
swims for 20 minutes every day and the
star of such moist epics as Dangerous
When Wet and Million Dollar Mermaid
has such an enduring recognition-factor
— known to 94 per cent of women over
35 and 62 per cent under 35 — that
Misty Swimwear has assigned her to a
vital mission: to ‘get women back in the
water.’
She has designed a range of nearly 100
swimsuits intended for the more mature
woman, the middle-aged baby-boomer
whose sense of taste and discretion has
outgrown the more revealing trends in
waterwear and who now wants less
exposure aiid more suit, something more
functional than daring. ‘Afterkhaving
kids, the waist goes,’ she confides.
Her suits, she is saying, launching
them at Macy’s, are Contoured 'to hold
you in’ and combine style with purpose.
‘Do you realise that 88 per cent of the
women who buy swimsuits never get
wet?’ says a shocked Esther Williams,
who used to be wet for eight hours a day.
‘I don’t have any suits that are tricky to
wear.’
She was an Olympic contender for the
1940 games but they were cancelled
because of the War and so, after top
billing at the Aquacade at the Golden
Gate Exposition in San Francisco, she
accepted the overtures of Hollywood. She
had to kiss Mickey Rooney under water
in her first film but it didn’t deter her. ‘I
can’t act, I can’t dance, I can’t sing,’ she
once said, but, like Johnny Weissmuller,
she swam her way to stardom.
She swam, she calculates. 1,250 miles
making 26 films. Iii Neptune Goddess she
played a swimsuit designer and now, 36
years later, life is following art. Out of
water she has always had an instinct for.
business — restaurants, service stations,
property — and the Esther Williams
swimsuits are a natural extension of her.
other enterprise, Esther Williams Swim­
ming Pools. She sells 20,000 a year. Last
one in is a rotten consumer.
£
THE American Geophysical Union
w e n t to consolingly-tandlocked Utah
to g e t the n e w s that, a s a result of
global warming, th e lev el o f the
world's o ce a n s is rising by a tw elfth
o f an inch a year, about double the
rate sc ien tists had previously e s ti­
m ated. 'W e've g o t se v er e problems,'
sa y s a glaciologist w ith th e U.S.
geological survey. 'It's taken a long
tim e to g e t people's attention, but it
is happening now .'
DONALD TRUMP, who hasn’t been in a
decent feud for weeks, has finally
unburdened himself of long-simmering
animosity towards fellow hotelier Leona
Helmsley, calling her ‘a disgrace to
humanity.’ In a letter detailing her
shortcomings, he tells her: ‘When God
created Leona, the world received no
favours.’ In another letter to her ailing
husband, Harry Helmsley, Truriip offers
his sympathy to ‘my friend and a
once-great and respected man’ for being
‘virtually destroyed’ by his wife. Thanks,
Donald. How thoughtful. What could
provoke Trump to such abuse? Would
you believe a dispute over a piece of
property in Atlantic City?
IN th e continued blending o f the
cultures, Russian-made w heat-rye
bread, flow n in daily from M oscow ,
is about to be offered by a N ew
York bakery chain at £ 3 a loaf,
possibly th e first tim e it h as ever
been sold w ithout the p resen ce o f a
queue.
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Are you w ell-p laced to d e a l w ith th e im p e n d in g
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Y O U R SELF
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|l t ||
ifcpt
SU C C EED
.
DM13
|
19 out of 20 payphones now work.
(And we’re working on the other one.)
Last Autumn, 90% of the payphones
in Britain worked.
Tbday, over 95%are working (96.5% to
be exact). Yet we’re still not satisfied.
We’ll continue to install new payphones at the rate of 400 a month. (There
are currents 86,000 all over Britain.)
We’ll be making more and more
For example, our engineers will now
phones tough enough to beat the vandals.
specify whether they will call in the morning : !
And we’ll be improving the ability of or afternoon, so you don’t have to wait in
our payphones to automatically tell us when
all day
they are full or out of order.
We won’t be totally happy with our
Of course, this is only one of the areas service until you are.
|
in which we are improving our service to you.
So you can be sure we’re giving it 100%.
\
British
:
T ELECOM
I t ’s y o u w e a n s w e r t o
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
PAGE 13
smm.
wmm
ro&m&A&'&ss
wSx
X'X'i-M'l-l'M
-l'X*
SpSs&i&SS*:
mm.
You know you shouldn’t
really sunbathe, but as
S-i-K&
S
illlls
that won’t stop you.
: A
ill
j /j fc
p g l i |j |
\^...
NY chap who writes a safe tanning
guide has got the British public
pretty well psyched.
Skin care experts tell us that ‘safe'
and ‘tanning’ are a contradiction in
terms and urge the beauty-conscious to stay out of
the sun altogether. Anthony Harris agrees — but
swft
figures mad dogs and Englishwomen are going to
fling themselves beneath the midday sun regardless.
And the little extra he hopes we will pop into the
beach bag along with a bevy of sun-blocks, barrier
creams and big straw hats this year is The Safe Tan
Book, whose blurb promises ‘a glorious tan with
minimum risk’ and helps you sort out your factor 15s
from your basic frying oil.
SITTING TARGET: Lying or fittin g under a hot sun is much more dangerous than moving about, warns Dr Anthony Harris
it- comes as no surprise
that behind th e cover
be considered the' most for themselves and their
illustration of a mahogavulnerable sections of the, babies. But like children,
. ny-skinned blonde the
population
are the ones the pregnant can dehy-,
book carries a prominent
who benefit most from a drate rapidly, so exposure
health warning. Yet it was
must be monitored.
!
few good rays.
the horrifying sight of just
A good reason to lose:
‘Sunlight is essential for
such a figure — in fact
growth; and children may weight is that you will be'
fifteen mahogany-coloured
come up with a few point­ on mountains may be be left uncovered if the less likely to bum if your
German womeii on a
ers
th
a
t
may
surprise
cool,
the
atmosphere
is
sun
is diffuse,’ he says. skin is not overstretched,
Minorcan beach — that
convinced Dr Harris this people. That lying still is thinner and you are often Translation: not much to for which rea,d overex­
more dangerous than above urban pollution, so fear under B ritish or posed to the sun. The
controversial book just
moving about under a hot the sun may be 20 times Scandinavian skies, but book gives a chart of ideal
had to be written.
sun, for example. ‘Run­ as stron g as in the reach for the sun-block if ‘tanning weights’, which
ning about without pro­ valleys.’ With snow the you are tak in g your seem to favour the lean
tection playing beach ball effect is increased even youngsters to the Mediter­ and fit. But the best
“It is irresponsible for for the same amount of more, so skiiers need to ranean or more tropical reason, to diet may be the
time as lying directly in take their sun-block to' the climes.
anyone to say that tan­
unpleasant fact that cellu­
Nothing relieves problem dry skin
lite — all those orangening is completely safe — the sun is much, much slopes and also should
Sunbathing
is
useful
less
hazardous.’
remember to moisturise for pregnant women too, peel bits of us we MOST
that is why my guide
faster than New Vaseline Dermacare.
carries a disclaimer,’ he
hope to disguise with a
However, when it comes before bedtime,
he says, as it helps them suntan
told me. ‘But there is no to skiing, the reverse can
—
just
doesn’t
It works instantly: softening rough­
Surprisingly, Dr Harris
the vital vitamin brown properly.-,
way people are going to apply. ‘Although the air believes those who might provide
D
bone-building
material
stay out of the sun, and
ness and cracks, smoothing away scaling
the hazards of too much
sun are explained on
and easing dryness and redness.
Despite all the advice,
almost every page. If I can
Dr Harris is forced to
keiep even six or seven
That's because it has the unique
conclude that the English
people from burning up it
rose
was
never
meant
to
wfll be worthwhile.’
moisturising
properties of Petroleum Jelly
• Change position often, even in
. available in department stores).
be a deeper shade than a
moderate sun.
iDr Harris believes in
• Limit first and secon d day exposure
pretty
pale
peach.
- widely recognised as the single most
saying the bad news: for
• Use a sun protection product
to 20 minutes, le s s if the rays are
T h is, I am afraid,
la$t. Having got past the
appropriate for your skin type. You
intense.
effective treatment for dry skin.
* :!s>
brings him to a pretty sad
health warning, you are
may find it useful to g e t professional
• Start building, up your sun exposure
conclusion: ‘Perhaps the
advised that ‘the suri can
skin-typing and a sun factor
in th e early mornings and late
Vaseline Dermacare was developed
safest time to, sunbathe is
help give you a fitter,
prescription from cosm etics experts,
evenings, w hen sun is le ss intense.
when it is just that little
more attra ctiv e body,
even if you later opt for le ss expensive
by leading dermatologists.
bit too cold to lie out with
• Only w hen tan starts to develop,
strong bones and healthy
products. This service is free at Clarins
only a bathing costume,
after tw o to four days, can you risk
tefeth.’ We are told it can
and
Clinique
counters
in
department
i It's perfume-free. It's nonon.* So forget the Costa
sw itching to a low er-factor product
help build protection
stores.
sm erald a — Skegnessagainst minor infections,
which will promote faster bronzing.
greasy. And it's ideal
•
U
se
go
od
sunglasses.
here
we
come.
is j essential for the well­
• Remember that both sea breezes
being of eyes, cleanses
• Give extra protection to sensitive! \
and the sw e a t factor can delude you
The Safe Tan Book by
for use anywhere
impurities from your body
areas tike lips and nipples (for which
into thinking th e sun is le ss strong
Anthony H arris, Spherei
by m aking you sw eat
sun block in touch-stick form Is
than it really is.
Books £2.99.
you have problem
healthily, and relaxes you
as you lie under it.
j dry skin. Vaseline
A
m
hy
A n th ea Gerrie
Trust
Vaseline Dermacare
to treat your
Fitter
How to get a ‘healthy’ tan
Peach
I Collapse
ilt is not till you get to’
the end of the book that
he depresses you with the
facts that the sun can
bring on eye damage,
a c c e le r a te d
a g e in g ,
increased incidence of skin
cancer — and that’s with­
out the dangers of heat
strokes, exhaustion and
cramps, dealt with in a
separate chapter.
An expert on skin bio­
chemistry, Dr Harris has
r v How near
• j we are to
the cure...
depends on you.
L E U K A E M IA
RESEARCH FUND
43 Great Ormond Street,
London WCIN3JJ 01-405 0101
TolsnlatT Bnutchei Uuso jh out Britain
Dermacare. Just
the sound of it
WHEN you are a little
girl a chair can be a
fortress. Especially the
Jkind with a straight back
to hide behind and an
unusual rest to one side
to brace your size 11 feet.Candia Lutyens played
in just such a chair at her
g ra n d m oth er’s hom e.
There were two, one either
side of the fireplace. Both
mysteriously called Napo­
leon chairs after a paint­
ing of the Emperor.
They had been made by
her architect grandfather,
Sir Edwin Lutyens, who
created New Delhi and
epitomised all that was
well crafted about British
country houses — and the
furniture inside them.
After Sir Edwin died in
1944 his style went out of
fashion. ‘My grandfather’s
Candia; Keeping the faith
Work, in fact anything
remotely colonial, became
distasteful,’ said Candia.
But Candia kept the
faith. She thought Sir
Edwin was ‘the greatest
English architect we have
produced since Wren.’
Candia herself never
considered becoming an
architect. She studied eco­
nomics and now works for
an investment bank.
‘But I remembered my'
favourite chairs and how
Comfortable they were.and
realised I must have one.’
Using Sir Edwin’s origi­
nal sketches she decided to
copy the chair, although
it took nearly three years
to find the right Cotswold
craftsmen.
Once she had it. she was
so in love with its bold
Thirties looks she realised
she couldn't stop there.
She formed a company
and now the furniture
long out of fashion has
started to sell. Today
there’s a waiting list of up
to six months for furni­
ture costing around £1,500
DIANA HUTCHINSON
E I liiilM
RLLILF FOR
mm& m
wm mm
love is.
makes you feel
j better.
Vaseline
DERMA
/Vaseline
DERMACARE
CKE AM
. . whsn your daydreams
turn to su h i drum s.
5 3 5 7 * 1933‘- «
T
Syndicate
New Vaseline Dermacare.
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Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
Diana to
join the
marriage
healers
PAGE 15
DOCTORS and nurses were
yesterday given back the right to
care for a brain-damaged baby
whom a judge had said should be
‘treated to die/
But they can only help the four-month-old girl
end her life peacefully — for she is beyond any
medical aid, the Appeal Court was told.
Last Friday, High Court judge Mr Justice Ward
caused uproar when he
ruled in Leeds that doc­
tors should not give anttS
biotics to the child —
known only as Baby C —
if she developed an infec­
tio n , nor feed her
intravenously.
Yesterday, Master of
the Rolls Lord Donaldson
said the Appeal Court
believed the decision that
th e child sh ould be
allowed to die peacefully
was correct.
By RICHARD KAY
Royal Correspondent
CARING Princess Diana is
to become patron of Relate,
th e ren a m ed M a rria g e
Guidance Council — and
wants to be more than just a
figurehead.
In her most challenging and
potentially most rewarding role
yet, she has indicated her
readiness to help counsel
couples facing divorce.
It is a year sin ce the
Princess, whose own parents
split up when she was seven,
was first introduced to Relate’s
work to stem Britain's spirall­
ing divorce rate. She had
previously turned down a
request to be patron.
Removed
Delighted
Lord Justice
Nicholls
Lord Ju stice
Balcombe
must
die with
say appeal judges
But everyone, including
Mr Justice Ward, agreed
the wording ‘treat to die’
was wrong, and the
phrase had been removed
from the order.
It now stated that the
baby should be treated in
such a way that she
could ‘end her life and
die peacefully with the greatest dignity
and in the least pain, suffering and
distress.’ But Lord Donaldson, sitting with
Lord Justice Balcombe and Lord Justice
Nicholls, said before people attacked the
High Court decision, they should have
found out the facts.
*Baby C is dying ;and nothing the court
can do, nothing the doctors can do,
nothing known; to medical science can
alter that fact," he added.
‘The problem of how to treat the
terminally ill is ;as old as life itself.
Doctors and nurses have to confront it
frequently, but it is never easy.'
There had been public comment that
the baby should have undergone an
operation sometimes carried out on child­
ren with her condition. The operation had
in fact been carried out. He described the
court’s decision as an awesome respons-
But she was impressed with
Relate’s work, joined a coun­
selling session, and consoled a
woman with such sympathy
that the charity was impressed
with her.
Last night director Mr David
French said: ‘We are delighted
that the Princess of Wales has
agreed to become our patron.
‘She would make a good
counsellor. We look forward
with great pleasure to her
future involvement.’
’
Relate executive Zelda WestMeads said: ‘She can instinc­
tively make people relax and is
able to draw them out.
A member of the Princess’s
household said she was able to
identify closely with the plight
of the thousands of families
whose lives are shattered by
divorce, and ‘feels privileged to
be able to help.’
m m m
Master of Rolls
Lord Donaldson
yesterday’s hearing, John Smeaton, gen­
eral secretary of the Society for the
Protection of Unborn Children, said: ‘We
are trem endously relieved th a t the
ibility. It was the saddest case imaginable^ ■! “treated to die" ruling has been changed
An appeal against the original order was
and that the Appeal Court removed the
brought by the Official Solicitor. Mr
direction that this baby need not be fed.
David Venables, who has been made the
baby’s legal guardian.
‘Food and drink are a basic human
right, however disabled someone might be.
Mr Venables’s counsel said the solicitor
The
law makes no distinction between the
wanted to allay fears that the hospital
handicapped and non-handicapped.’
was actively treating the child — by
starving her and giving drug overdoses —
A spokesman for Mencap, the campaign­
to bring about her death. This was
ers for the mentally handicapped, said:
emphatically denied.
‘With decisions as difficult and controver­
Baby C was bom two days before
sial as this, it is quite wrong that any one
Christmas and made a ward of court
individual should have to cany the
because it was thought her mother could
burden.
not cope. It was not known then that she
was suffering from hydrocephalus —
‘Mental handicap on its own should
swelling of the brain which causes severe
never be grounds for denying treatment
mental and physical disabilities. After
which would otherwise be appropriate.’
Daily Mail Reporter
Driver
dies as
trains
collide
By OLGA CRAIG
A TRAIN driver jumped to
his death seconds before his
locomotive ran into the back
of a goods train yesterday.
The accident happened at
Holton Heath station, near
Poole, Dorset.
The engine, travelling from
Wool to Bournemouth, hit the
11.45am Wool to E astleigh
freight train.
The dead man was 47-yearold Ronald Clive Brooker, of
Bournemouth.
A married man, he has
worked for BR for 28 years —
the last 13 as a driver.
. Mr Brooker’s body was found
50 yards from the smash,
where he had dived to escape
being crushed.
Derailed
The driver and guard of the
freight train were unhurt.
Both trains were derailed,
b lo c k in g
th e
m a in
Bournemouth to Weymouth
line, which was electrified last
year.
A BR sp ok esm an , who
confirmed that an inquiry has
been launched, said last night
there was no question of either
train being; on the wrong
track.
•Both trains were due to use
that stretch; of line.’ he said.
‘Something obviously went
wrong but we won’t know
what until the Inquiry. We
have no details yet about the
lights situation.'
The rail death toll since last
December now stands at 43.
“120 U.S. o ffic e s w ith in
th e hour, w ith o n e call.
H ow are
you g o in g to d o it? ”
mm
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PAGE 16
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21; 1989
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Pamella
By LYNDA
LEE-POTTER
'DURING three years in
Britain, Pamella Bordes had
a series of relationships with
a number of rich and
influential men.
Pamella Bordes: ‘Unskilled beginner* who claims she is an accomplished horsewoman
They included sportsmen,
businessmen, bankers and newspaper
editors. In some cases, the relationships
were sexual. In others they were
courtships alone and sometimes just
friendships.
The point for Pamella in every case was to
secure a permanent liaison, preferably
through marriage, which would get her out
of the call-girl scene, enabling her to break
from the network of international Mr Fixit
Adnan Khashoggi and establish herself as a
glamorous society figure w ithin the London
establishment.
She was nothing if not assiduous in the way
she set about it, establishing a ‘hitlist* of
men she hoped to capture. It was compiled
with the help of friends and contacts. ‘Is
so-and-so married?,’ she would ask. If the
answer was ‘Yes’ the next questions would
be: ‘What is his wife like? Are they happy
together? Do they go out alone? And do you
think he would like me?’ Unless the answers
were completely in the negative the hunt
would begin.
‘I like to get photographs of the men and
look at them for a long tim e to find the man
within,’ she says. ‘Then I look them up in
Who’s Who, do more research about their
interests and try to take up those interests
myself. I always want to be the same as my
man. If he rides, then I ride. If he shoots,
then I shoot. If he likes the ballet, then I
take up the ballet.’
Pamella likes to think of herself as an
intellectual with wide-ranging artistic and
literary knowledge. In fact, she swiftly
changes the subject the m inute a real
conversation begins if anyone present
appears to be an authority on it.
She has at least learned to do this. In her
early days in London she was so self
confident she would talk about anything like
an expert while others laughed behind her
back.
Pamella was thorough in her research and
rarely contacted a man in whom she was
interested without having gone into his
background in some depth.
Sometimes she arranged for men like Marc
Burca or Carlo Colombotti, with whom she
had platonic friendships of convenience, to
introduce her. B ut frequently she was bold
enough to simply bump irito her victim at a
nightclub, restaurant or a party — knowing
full well from her research where his usual
haunts were — and just start a
;conversation.
She was adroit at flattering them. ‘They just
love compliments. It’s so easy to flatter
them,’ she says. ‘You just tell them how
good-looking they are or how brilliant or
powerful they are and they adore it.’
B ut nothing lasted for long. The clever men
saw through her techniques swiftly. The less
clever succumbed only to find that, as the
relationship progressed, she became more
and more selfish arid demanding.
To move from whore to courtesan to society
lady has been the aim of adventuresses
through the ages. History tells us many
succeeded. Pamella Bordes tried to join
them. But she failed.
my
______
PAMELLA BORDES is fascinated by jockeys. For
her, the Turf was a bridge between the two worlds
of international wheeler-dealing and exclusive
British society. At the races she could transfer
frpm one to the other with ease.
She made a point of going racing as often as possible in France
and Britain. Sometimes friends took her, other times she went
alone,
Pamella made her approaches to top jockeys using the blatant
flattery and wide-eyed admira•
tion she had tried on so many who is the world’s richest rider.
other men. She was seen in the Pamella admits setting out to
paddock and winners circle as capture him with hopes of per­
suading him into marriage.
much as possible.
When they met in the London
She claims to be a great
horsewoman but, in truth, does n igh tclu b Tramp there was
much
flirting.
not show much experience on
horseback.
She told him how much she
his ride in the Dubai
Jonathan Evans, a member of enjoyed
Cup. ‘I was at Newmarket and
Captain Mark Phillips's eques­ you
were
trian team, describes her as -an she said. wonderful in that race,’
unskilled beginner. But this does
Cauthen’s answer astonished
not stop her talking about rae:
her, ‘I’m going to Dubai for a
and bloodstock like an owner.
holiday,’ he said. ‘Everything’s
paid for. Do you want to come?’
Pamella explains: ‘Steve rides
for owners there and they are
always sucking up to the jockeys.
I knew it would be terrific and
Over the years Pamella
tently tried to get friends and decided to go with him.
admirers to back her in some sort
‘I asked him where he was
of breeding business. Wall S treet staying
that night. He said: “I
in vestm en t banker N icholas
don’t have anywhere but I’ll
Forstmann was one she asked for probably
go to the Dorchester.” I
help.
told him he could stay with me if
David Sullivan, publisher of the he liked.
newspaper Sunday Sport, took
‘We shared a bed but I was
her to his stud farm after she scared Carlo (Carlo Colombotti,
asked him for a commission on never a lover but a kind friend in
Stud fees for his horses. PameSIa whose house she was a guest)
was still working on the plan up would be angry if he knew I’d
to the time she fled B ritain last brought somebody back.’
month.
‘Steve understood my nervous­
R elation sh ip s w ith jockeys ness. He’s ever so sweet, like a
would continue to figure in her child. He is adorable. I really fell
life whatever other distractions for him. We were together all the
there were.
next day.
But one horseman obsessed her
‘He took me to lunch at
above all others. He was Ken­
Siangan’s and we talked about his
tucky Kid Steve Cauthen, the weight problem. I told him I
young British-based American would take over his diet. It’s a
Richest
Steve Cauthen: ‘I was obsessed with him*
subject I know a great deal
about.'
Cauthen was going to Dubai
Within 48 hours. But Pamella
didn’t have a visa for the Arab
state and without the Khashoggi
organisation behind her was
unable to get one at short notice.
Gauthen flew off alone.
Left behind in London, she says
she became ‘obsessive’ about him.
‘I think if I could have got that
visa, we would have had a
permanent love affair because he
really is the one man I truly
loved above all others,’ she says.
Innocence
‘I was determined to get really
close to him so I became fanati­
cal in my interest in horses. I
read everything I could, studied
the pedigree of horses from cards:
I went to all the race meetirigs.'
‘While Steve was away, I kept
asking everybody I knew all
about him. I tried to find out
everything there was to know, i
knew he was the love I had to
have.
‘I'd have done anything for
him. I was overwhelmed by his
innocence and modesty. He kept
encouraging me by not discour­
aging me.
‘If I saw him in a nightclub,
he’d ask me to dance. We kissed,
that’s all. He held himself back
from me. It drove me crazy.
‘In the end we just drifted
apart and I was no closer to
Steve.
‘I was still obsessed with him
and read everything I could
about him but every overture I
made was never accepted or
rejected. He kept a dignified
d is ta n c e
w ith o u t
b ein g
unfriendly.
‘I became terribly jealous. Steve
lives in a cottage in the grounds
of a breeder and owner called Bill
Gredley. One night in Tramp I
saw him come in with a girl. To
my horror, I saw it was Gredley’s
nanny. I could hardly believe it.
She was so ordinary. I got very
angry at the thought of a girl
like this hanging on tp his arm.
‘When he saw me he left her
and came over to talk but her
fangs came out. She was mad
With rage when she saw me. He
came over three times to ask me
to dance but still left with her.
‘My yearning for Steve went
on. At Ascot I contrived to bump
into him and he introduced me
, to his father.
‘I purposely used to dress in
really horsey clothes whenever
there was a chance of meeting
him but he eluded me all the
time. I simply could not get my
hands on him.
‘I’ve often thought that if only
I’d been able to visit Dubai, we
would have got it togethfer and
started going out.
‘My whole life could have been
different.’
PAGE 18
Daily Mail. Friday, April 21,1989
A N D R E W M E lL . H E L D
W H IC H
a
PAMELLA BORDES
up’ Andrew Neil, the editor
the Sunday Times, in
London nightclub Tramp.
She is very proud of how she did i t
‘He was in a group arguing passion­
ately about politics,’ she says. ‘His
companion was a Sri Lankan girl. I
thought:: -“That’s interesting. •.■-He-s;
with an Eastern woman.’”:,:
Pamella ■waited. ‘Sooner or later' ishe’li -go.
to the loo. Then I’ll move,5 she cMciilated.:
When the woman left the table Pameila crossed the
room, slid into her chair and whispered fa Neil’s ear:
‘I find you very attractive.’- :
‘I think it hit him like a bomb,’ she says. ‘This
beautiful girl coining over and telling him that. He
really believes that he has no looks. He believes he’s
: ugly. But to me he had the look" of. power.. He looks
like-Nero and I was‘madly attracted to him.’
F a tefu l
The problem for Neil was getting her phone number
for at that moment ■ the Sri Lankan girl returned.
■Introductions were'made and Pamella discovered she
--and the girl, whose name was Renuka, had a friend in
.common.
‘What a small world,’ said Pamella. ‘Look,I’ve just"
done a Cordon Bleu course. I’m going to have a. dinner
party and you must come.’ Renuka pointed to Neil - and said: ‘He’ll have to come with me.’ Pamella.
thought to herself: ‘Got him.’
She wrote her telephone number on a piece of paper.
Immediately Neil snatched it, saying: ‘I’ll take that.’
Some time after that fateful
received a
said
P a m e lla
voice with its
Scots
brogue. ‘Do you remember me? It’s
Jaguar drew up -outside
Andrew Neil.’ He said he had been
in Aspen, Colorado, and S k
He was very much the
'whether' she’d- like to
five-star editor, she says. Over the
meet him for lunch on his return.
a t a p o lo to u r n a m e n t w it h A n d r e w N e il: ‘H e s a id I lo o k e d l i k e A v a G a r d n e r *
told her about Neil. ‘You’ve really h it
the jackpot this time.’
On Monday
bouquet
class at
and
to send it to Neil,
she heard
how he had shown
.flowers to
colleagues a t work and
isted about
crazy girl who" sent
To :
w ^to^confess: ‘It was-the flowers
Pamella was self-obsessed i
think Trelford was falling
for her but cynical enough to — __
he might be behaving so outrageously
to annoy or enrage Andrew Neil. She
weekend a major story had broken
Pamella laughingly accepted. ‘You
looked across a t her escort, read his
and all the way to the restaurant Neil
sound American,’ she told him. ‘No,
face
and knew a t once th a t Trelford
barking orders to executives over
just Transatlantic,’ said Neil, who ■was
was succeeding. For amusement she
the"
Carphone:A
cynic
might
have
when working- in the U.S. had
began to encourage him.
why> however, 'as his paper
acquired a reverence for th a t nation’s .wondered
wasn’t coming out for another six
Trelford told her about his recent
days by which time the news would
trip to Russia and about the book by
; ‘He .loved
be
distinctly
old.
'
he was
the-chess master Gary Kasparov he’d
says Pamella. ‘The truth
'. T hat Thursday
to see bought for the Observer. Kasparov
is he’d rather be- American than
Swan.
Lake
at
was comings'to ^Britain and Trelford
All
the
sue near a mm order. A call
Scottish/ A date was arranged for the
quality papers . said he’d introduce him to pamella.
through from Beirut. ‘I was . , editors of the :
' " ing .Sunday. Delighted at her
were there.
The couple openly exchanged -tele­
impressed,’ says Paroella. ‘It
Pamella rushed to tell her
phone numbers.
sheer power.’
Neil had m ade.it clear he wanted
Carlo Colombotti her-news.'
Famella to look stunning and. she had ; After all, Pamella thought, Andrew
chosen an orange suit by Ungaro — a
It -was, after all, a moment - of
and-she weren’t lovers. But w hen Neil
considerable trium ph. ' True, she’d
gift from an Arab boyfriend — an d- saw.-what
happening, she says, he
known, powerful men in the past but
got her hairdresser to plait her hair almost choked oni his food.
in a single braid down, her -back.
th a t had mostly been for money- or
business.
At Fonteyecchio in Earl’s Court, a
At the drinks party beforehand a
This', was different. .Here was.-the
restaurant Neil uses a : lot, -they
small man ■ hurried- over to Famella.. .
.editor of the Sunday Times, one of • ordered pasta and talked about Aspen
‘Hello,’ he. said. ‘Haven’t w e .:met;.
and New York.
'
. '
th e world’s most powerful newspa­
before?’
,
... . : , -Outside the restaurant he and
pers, asking her for a date. An ■
Asth
e
'
white';
wine
flowed
-they
a furious, row. She says
Pamella
smiled.
It
was
she
.corniest Famella "
.brilliant man who was, it
started
holding
hands.
He
asked
her
‘How dare ■ you talk to
line in the book. He told her he was he
soon, to head " R upert
to
the
ballet
with
him
.-the
following
srd. He’s going to. try
the editor of th e Observer newspaper.
i’s entire European TV operaThursday.
B
ut
could'
she-go
back-to
•go.
She remembers-thinking: ‘This-m an- and use you against me.’
he had entree' to- the most
fais flat.- nearby just to check his
thinks he’s so dashing b u t he’s, really . They rowed'’ all the way back to
powerful corridors in the land.
diary?
just
a. little .pixie.’ ■
■
- Neil’s flat-b u t once there
3-re they.-made
At 39 he was a leading i
, not
'She' remembers
ui>. He suggested she stay
stay the night
Donald
Trelford’s
-wife,
she
-noted/:
- of the Establishment he <
. but
- ■ fla t, in.
and
in
th
e
early
hours
of
was ‘quite impressive. A very strong,
of the-new consensus-hating meritoc­
There were
says
Pamella,
they
became
lovers,
woman.’
racy forging & modern Britain. Best
and plants in.
was th e sta rt of w hat was to' be a
of all, he was unmarried.
wrong location.
loo walls ■ After th e ballet the editors went to'-- passionate, -turbulent affair. .
a restaurant in Covent Garden. ; plastered.with pictures' of girls.
. For the girl who had Clawed and
.:. Oyer th e ensuing weeks the rela• ■ : an-‘ego trip,’.. Famella
whored her way from -obscurity in
' ' Trelford,' who was..seated .to:Pamel- :
In d ia th e p o ssib ilities for social
la’s
left
with
.He#
opposite,
startedta"
fre"
advancement and respectability were
The couple went for a walk, ;
talking to her m a rather obvious •
Ms
dizzying-;
anii,. through St James’s Park,
w ay..‘The moment you 'wafted in to "
he -dropped.: her .off an. Park Lane
. T hat Sunday, Famella'« "
th e room,1' she claims he
pillowcases which she says
where she met a girlfriend.
"
"it “M y. God,' w hat a
C aused. by th e A u stra lia n h a ir .
- - -Wow,’ said the friend when. Pamella
restorer' he Used. He would video films
Pictures
Lovely
the TV for her. Once he said:
taped Bhowani Junction. Ava
Gardner is in it and she reminds me
of you.’
Both seemed to have been very
happy a t this time. Although one is
inclined to smile cynicallly when
Bordes talks of love, she
laving a lpvely time
If not actually in love with him, she
was certainly in love with the idea of
being the girlfriend of a great
editor with all its
fringe benefits. And she
began to plan marriage.
Furtherm ore, Neil - was delighted
with her. She looked wonderful, she
had a stunning wardrobe, she was the
perfect accessory. He really liked me,
she says ruefully today.
He clearly did. Neil was kind and
generous, buying her gifts .and paying
for- her elocution lessons; He was
solicitous to .her comfort and did
anything he could to make life better
- ‘It was all because he was really in
love with me,’ sh e ' says. ‘He told me
he loved me. .We used to v
wake, very
morning and say “I love' you
I love
you.’
They went to David Frost’s garden
party. .The U.S. Ambassador was
there, - along with millionaire race­
horse . owner Robert gangster, TV
presenter Robin Day and composer
Andrew Lloyd Webber.
SDP leader David Owen.was there
too.' He told her: ‘I’ve heard-all about
you. You’re much : p rettier. than
Andrew told me.’ . . .
.
■ The girl- from nowhere had really
stxnveo.
' Before; going to the parties — and
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
H ie first was With a; Brazilian who
had been ah earlier lover.
For the second trip, last August, she
says, she booked herself into the
Plaza Athene where she ‘just hap­
pened to bump into’ her former flame
Ahmed Gadaff A1 Diam.
So the girlfriend of the editor of the
British Sunday newspaper which had
brilliantly exposed Libyan-funded ter­
rorism in the West spent the weekend
with ope of Colonel Gaddafi’s most
senior intelligence chiefs. A1 Diam
was also Gaddafi's cousin.
y
Pamella’s justifies these two weekends this way: ‘I wanted to- play a
little psychological gam e w ith
Andrew. It always adds an element of
mystery. It’s important to have that
■ With men and keep them intrigued
and interested.’ : .
Window
On the other Hand, it may simply
have been work. She was running
short of funds.
there was a constant round of them
— she says Neil would tell her what
to wear. He also told her: ‘I want you
to refer to me always as “My
boyfriend Andrew Neil.” Always say
that, he said. “And I’ll call you my
girlfriend Pamella Bordes.”
‘He insisted we do that.’ says
Pamella. !He said I wasn't acknow­
ledging him enough, Every few min­
utes <he’d ask: “Tell me you love me.”
He was so insecure.’
All this time Trelford, the rival
editor, was still paying court and
Pamella could not resist encouraging
him.
Neither editor had any idea about
Pamella’s past. Both accepted her
story that she was a well-connected
Indian socialite from an important
family. Neither journalistic instinct
nor natural curiosity led them to
make any critical examination of
these claims.
When she got back on the Monday,
she says, Neil’s first words to her
were: ‘How was Paris?’
‘I thought “God, I’ve been caught.” I
said: “How do you know?” He said: “I;
know everything about you.” ’
js
It was to be the final pferiodi
between them of screaming rows an#
tearful reconciliations.
mm
Patnella with Donald Trel£ord: ‘You’ve snookered us all,’ he wrote
The relationship between them had;
reached the point of ho return and
on November 7 she received a letter'
from his solicitors. In matter-of-fact
language, it documented how she had
destroyed £2,000 worth of his clothes;'
twice threw bricks through his win­
dows, made death threats, circulated
stories to damage his reputation and
delivered ‘by hand’ dog excrement in
a package. It said an injunction
would be served against her if she
made any further contact.
Uneasy
Like any new lovers, Neil and
Pamella spent hours exploring each
other’s past. But while he told her all
about his ordinary Scottish back­
ground, his grammar school educa­
tion and family's joy at their son
getting to university, he seemed more going to be one of the top men in
interested in probing his own history Britain,’ she told him.
for her than finding out about hers.
This, she admits, is something
Perhaps he was uneasy about the Trelford did not really want to hear.
talk of servants, large houses and a
string of polo ponies which she Both men helped move Pamella into
conjured up for him. But his talk of the top strata of London life.
his past gave her a very good Insight
All the people she met she set out to
into his weaknesses and insecurities.
make an impression on. She put their
names
and numbers into her book
With Trelford it was different. He
talked about himself and his journal­ and called on some of them subse­
istic coups. But he also probed again quently to aid her social climbing.
and again about Neil, his newspaper
Trelford enjoyed the game. A
rival.
snooker devotee, he sent Pamella a
Pamella swiftly weighed up the . book on the sport inscribed ‘To
mechanics of both men’s egos. Neil, Pamella. who has snookered us all.’
she says, was the senior editor, There was a book oh chess too. The
running a big and suceesful newspa­ inscription: ‘To Pamella, a queen
per and destined ; for even bigger amongst pawns.’
things when Sky TV was launched.
Frequent phone calls, she says, were
‘He was supremely confident profes­ followed by flowers and gifts — a gold
sionally but very unsure socially,’ she pen, a bangle. These she had no
hesitation in showing to Neil. ‘Look
says. ■
what Donald has given me,’ she said.
‘He’s adorable but so silly.’ Sternly,
Neil would demand she send them
back.
. Trelford flaunted Pamella, taking
Trelford, she noted, was exactly the
opposite. Dapper and self confident in her to parties in such media watering
holes
as the Garrick Club and the
any social gathering, he nevertheless
was envious of Neil’s professional American Bar at the Savoy.
success. ‘He realised Andrew was the
‘He made sure we were seen,’ she
bigger editor,’ she says.
: says. ‘He used to say: “Neil will hear
about
this within 24 hours.” Not
Since in any relationship she always
seeks to dominate, she played the surprisingly, there were ferocious
weakness of each man against the rows between Neil and Pamella. He
other. She told Neil how suave and once screamed at her that he could
sophisticated Trelford was. ‘Andrew forgive her anything but going out
wore cheapish looking suits without with Trelford.
style and I told him so,’ she recalls.
Despite, or maybe because of, TrelShe says she made a mutual ford’s attentions the relationship
agreement with Neil. She would between Pamella and Neil flourished.
improve his social graces and give More importantly, through Neil, she
him more confidence in high society was meeting some of the most
while he would seek to broaden her prominent names in Britain. ,
intellectual outlook so she;could meet
He took her to dinner at the home ,
important men on equal terras.
of a prominent religious figure. Lord
At the same time, she says, she told Sainsbury was there too but it was
Trelford how fast Neil’s career was Neil, she says, who dominated the
progressing upward. ‘He really is conversation.
Dapper
Today,:Pamella says almost trium­
phantly: ‘I made him cry a few times.
I could always do that. But he made
me cry too. We’re both veryemotional.’
Last September, after yet another
violent row, she threw bricks through
Neil’s flat window.
The letter was a fittingly squalid
epitaph to a six-month affair.
‘Everywhere he goes he takes over,’
Says Pamella. ‘He’s a brilliant conver­
sationalist in public but so insecure
in private.’
Khashoggi’s world seemed a million
years away.
Neil took her to meet Rupert and
Anna Murdoch at a restaurant in
Jermyn Street. He took her to
Arianna Stassinopoulos’s publishing
party at Lord Weidenfeld’s.
.’Andrew sneered about Arianna:
“She is one of those girls famous for
being famous.” Then Arianna came
over and said to Andrew: “I don’t
usually say this but my husband has
asked me to tell you your girlfriend is
one of the most beautiful women he
has ever seen.” ’
Neil, says Pamella, was in seventh
heaven.
The rows over Panlella’s friendship
with Trelford were by now becoming
almost daily events.
Ballet
Later came the first of many
reconciliations. But from that day on
Neil never left her alone in the flat.
The way Pamella tells it, it was
about this time they started talking
about marriage and children. Neil
had great plans for a child. He
wanted it to be bom in America, the
country he worshipped, so it would
Wive automatic citizenship;
At this point, however, something
happened which provides another
glimpse into the disturbed Bordes
psyche. She discovered she was pregnant by a previous lover, a ballet
dancer.
Without telling Neil, she had an
abortion one Saturday.
That night she went out with him
to the restaurant Rue St Jacques to
celebrate his birthday.
A few days later he had a birthday
party. Murdoch was there, so were
Robin Day, TV presenter Melvyn
Bragg, film director Michael Winner
and his actress girlfriend Jenny
Seagrove.
. -He continued her social education,
taking her to the Cartier polo
tournam ent and Wimbledon. He
helped her start a cookery business,
paying for ads in the magazines
Vogue and Harpers, and arranged for
her to prepare an office lunch. He
also helped her find a flat in Pimlico.
‘He’d pick me up around 8 on his
way home from work,’ die recalls.
‘He’d often come early while I was in
the bath and go through all my
letters. He was so jealous.’
At Neil’s flat one day, while he was
at work, Pam ella activated his
answ ering m achine. From th e
m essages she concluded he had
started seeing another woman.
If anything, the passionate affair
between the editor and the call girl,
proves the formidable, primeval force
of sexuality. It also shows how thin i:
the veneer of success and sophistica­
tion is and how near Pamella came to
destroying a seemingly shrewd, emi­
nent and clever man.
In a scene of sublime irony the
woman whose life had been devoted to
duplicity went, in her own words,
‘crazy with jealousy.’
‘I rang him and screamed down the
phone: “You’re two-timing me. I’m
going to teach you a lesson you'll
never forget.” I scribbled messages all
over his mirrors in lipstick, four-letter
words. I chopped up •' his suits. I
smashed his crockery. I took his
scotch and poured it down the sink.’
Neil of course, had every reason to
be jealous. For the self-destruct
button in Pamella had been pushed
once again.
Awesomely scheming and shrewd,
she is also capable of self-lacerating
stupidity. Despite the cachet and
security Neil could offer her she
risked everything by spending two
secret weekends in Paris.
Today, delivering her best actress
lines, she says: ‘I feel betrayed,
cheated and humiliated. I’d given him
my love from the bottom of my
heart.’
Her words reveal more than any­
thing her supreme ability to deceive
herself. Blessed or damned by a total
lack of insight into herself, she
accuses almost everybody of having r
betrayed her when in feet she has
betrayed herself.
As a tangential footnote, it is worth
recording that Pamella says her
relationship with Trelford became
even stronger after the break-up with
Neil.
'
Just before Christmas he took her
for dinner at La Tame Claire. He
gave her a Cartier handbag. She gave
him some brass shirt-stiffeners from
Turnbull and Asser.
‘We were never lovers/ she says. ‘We
just used each other in our own ways
to manipulate Andrew.
‘It’s funny. When Donald and I
meet we do nothing but talk about
Andrew. We’re both obsessed with
him/
T H E PA M E L L A
STORY CONTINUES
T OMORROW
I
Five speed gearboxes are stan­
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And, another first for Fiesta, you
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Standard equipment in the LX
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The best thing in your life?
Is he four years old, the image of his
Because it has a longer wheelbase
the new Fiesta remains a compact
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If you’ve got a small boy like that,
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the biggest passenger compartment
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litre High Compression Swirl engine
The new Ford Fiesta.
The technical stories.
may never have been offered in a
small car. Like the electrically heated
windscreen for fast de-icing, electric
front windows and central locking.
And, of course, you’ve got all the
service and parts back up that comes
with owning a Ford. Not to mention
the Extra Cover Optional Warranty to
make you feel even more secure.
Further information.
Also, the new Fiestas have big­
which is 10% more powerful than be­
For more details of the whole
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But, in spite of its inner .space,
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new Fiesta is the best small
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*Ford test figures.
The next best thing in your life?
The new Ford Fiesta. <<l^>
-+
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
PAGE 21
N1
4E S C A P E C L A U S E S ’ N O T E N O U G H , R U L E L A W L O R D S
M l air crash
families
sue jet firms
in America
l lPSft
Homebuyers win cash
fight over valuations
HOMEBUYERS who
stood to lose thousands
because of negligent
mortgage valuations won
a legal victory yesterday.
Five law lords ruled in two
separate cases th at damages
should be paid because valuers
had failed to exercise reasonable
skill and care.
The rulings give new protection to
people who rely solely on a building
society valuation when buying property
instead of having a separate survey.
Building societies and surveyors act­
ing for them will not be able in future
to automatically escape possible claims
Daily Mail Reporter
by adding a clause disclaiming liability
to their reports. In the first appeal, the
law lords upheld a £4,379 damages
award made by Norwich County Court
in April 1986 to a woman whose
bedroom chimney flue collapsed.
The fault could have been checked in
minutes when carrying out a valuation
for an Abbey National mortgage, they
said. In the other case, the law lords
reinstated a £12,000 damages award —
cancelled by the Court of Appeal — to
a couple whose home, bought with a
council loan, later proved unsaleable
because of subsidence.
Lord Templeman said there was ‘great
pressure’ on buyers to rely on mortgage
valuations. Many people could not
afford a second valuation and placed
their trust in building societies, local
authorities and valuers they appointed.
‘It is not fair and reasonable for
building societies and valuers to agree
together to impose on purchasers the
risk of loss arising as a result of
incompetence or carelessness on the
part of valuers,’ he said.
Both buyers won their cases in spite
of express clauses disclaiming liability
for the accuracy of the valuations —
one in a standard building society form
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SKONA
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Then, true to peres­
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Cameron, which employs
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The 156 award-winners
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A rdtaraig Salm on, of,
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;
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law lords held that the disclaimers were
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Terms Act 1977.
O F F L IC E N C E
By D A V ID NORRIS
fljf f
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Lawsuits have been filed
in th e U .S. ag a in st
Boeing, the aircraft man­
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Electric of America, part
owner of the firm that
made the 737’s engine.
But there is to be no
legal action against Brit­
ish Midland, which owned
the Belfast-bound plane
that crashed at Kegworth,
Leicestershire, in January
killing 47 people.
Belfast solicitor Aidan
Canavan, spokesman for
the 75 lawyers involved,
said Boeing and General
Electric had declined to
negotiate in an effort to
avoid a court battle.
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PAGE 23
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
No time
to wed ?
MAIL DIARY
Alex: He's lucky in love
Talk to us, law
lords tell Tiny
WITHOUT fanfare the Law Lords
made an epochal order yesterday.
faces cross-examination, a prospect he has
always dreaded and avoided.
The action stems from Lonrho’s sending copies of
the leaked Department of Trade and Industry
into the £615 million Harrods takeover to the
‘Tiny’ Rowland to swear an affidavit on report
five law lords who were hearing an appeal by
which, for the first time in his stormy Lonrho to force publication by Trade Secretary
business career as a constant litigant, he Lord Young — which Lord Keith of Kinkel stated
was a contempt of court.
Rowland, 71, born Roland Fuhrhop of
German-Dutch parentage, has never before
given an affidavit and has always sidestep­
ped being placed on the spot. At the annual
general meetings he has never uttered a
word, relying on his £408,000-a-year chair­
man, former Tory MP Sir Edward du Cann,
to parry questions.
But now Tiny — who has a £240 million
stake in Lonrho — can expect a call from
the Judicial Committee of the House of
Lords, which convenes in a modest room
under the Victoria Tower with views of the
river, to present himself on May 22. Lonrho,
valued at £1.6 billion, says the sending of
the report was ‘a secretarial error’.
If he is found guilty of contempt, Tiny
may find himself jailed under the 1803 Act.During the last war he was forced to live asan alien on the Isle of Man, where his
German father was detained. Tiny, who
previously was put in Barlinnie jail in
Glasgow, tells friends defiantly: ‘I am not
Roland Rowland: His Tiny hand is forced at last
afraid of British jails.’
I can reveal that they require Lonrho chief
“AN UNADULTERATED
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IN
A fresh
Field. . .
A CONTENTED new
mother again, after put­
ting tem pestuous tim e s,
with macho man Burt
R eynolds behind her,
actress Sally Field has
received one of the great
honours of th e film
industry.
She has been voted on to
the international jury for
the Cannes Film Festival
next month.
Oscar-winning Sally, 42,
married producer Alan
Griesman after walking
out on Reynolds, and they
have a one-year-old son,
Sam. She has two teenage
sons from her marriage to
her childhood sweetheart
Steve Craig.
1
Her next movie, Punch­
line — which she co­
produced and in which
she co-stars with Tom
Hanks — is about to be
released. She plays a
m other of three who
becomes a stand-up comic!.
^
~
MANY hearts were broken
when the sparky young
actress Samantha Bond got
engaged — and 1 can
reveal that the lucky man
she will marry is her fellow
thespian Alexander
Hanson.
Touted as one of the
hottest new names in
town, after she played
Beatrice opposite Kenneth
Branagh in Much Ado
About Nothing last
summer, redheaded
Samantha, 26, is hoping to
tie the knot this year.
'But they are both so busy,
I don't know when they
will find the time to get
mmm married,' says one who is
hoping for an invitation.
M8&
Samantha, daughter of
m ssm
actor Philip Bond — who
found fame in The Onedin
Line — and TV producer
Pat Sandys, is off to Japan
and Taiwan next week, to
mm&m film
a BBC blockbuster
called The Ginger Tree.
Set at the turn of the
century, it is a
controversial tale of a
Scottish lass (played by
Samantha) who becomes
pregnant by a Japanese
general, a terrible scandal
in those days.
Samantha: S h e's going East
Picture: Neville Marriner 1 'I'm going out there for
two months — I have had
all my injections!' says
Samantha. When she
comes back, she will find
Alex in the tender care of
THE crucial question of whether Citibank Savings will the Chichester Festival
be willing to renew its six-year sponsorship of world' company, preparing to go
three-day event champion Virginia Leng, will be one of on with Dorothy Tutin in A
the main talking points at a dinner the bankers will be Little Night Music.
Banking on Ginny
giving for her at Lucknam
Park country house hotel
after she competes in the
cross-cou n try a t th e
nearby Badminton trials
next month.
Ginny won Badminton
in 1985 and has two
horses, Griffin and Master
Craftsman, entered this
year. Citibank’s executives
will be hoping that shenotches up another vic­
tory for their £100,000-ayear sponsorship, which
runs out at the end of
next year. .
SHE may no longer
be a Minister, but
Edwina Currie still
leaves most of her
G o v ern m en t co l­
leagues st a ndi ng
when it comes to the
fine details of public
relations. Attending,
as MP for South
Derbyshire, a recep­
tion
for
the
announcement that
Toyota had chosen
Derby for its new car
plant, she made a
point of wearing red
. . . after discovering
that this was Toyota’s company colour.
HORNES SALE
tem pted?
The H om es
Great Spring Sale
is now on.
S a lly Jury service,
''
YEARS after computer wizard Sir
Clive Sinclair's silliest invention, the
V J v v s . C 5, bit the dust, a few remaining
relics of the electric pedal car are
proving difficult to dislodge from the
streets of London.
Hampstead Garden Suburb health club owner Philip Davis
has ten .of the contraptions, on which he places
advertising hoardings for his business. The C 5s are then
parked on top of cars, which are themselves parked in
eye-catching positions all over the area.
Despite an outcry from conservationists, the local
authority, Camden Council, says that as long as the cars
are taxed, there is nothing it can do to stop the awful
Sinclairmobiles sprouting all over the place.
It
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PAGE 24.
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21;1989
Daily Mail,"Friday; April 21,1989
T H E
i
H E A R T ^ -[F T IN G
E Q U E l_ v T & T
’ S IC K E N IN G
P IC T U R E ^ ^ Q F
’S U F H E R J N ^
R Q Jj
PAGE 25
g
||
A L IV E !
TOUCH CONTROL
Special Report by STEPHEN OLDFIELD
in
h e ll of H illsb o ro u g h , m illio n s of u s sim p ly
gave th e m u p fo r dead.
So horrific were the newspaper pictures of Debbie
Routledgeand Lisa Riding crushed and clawing against
the wire at the bottom of the tragic terrace ‘cage’ that it
seemed inconceivable they had survived.
mmm
iS iS iS *
B ut, incredibly, th ey lived. A nd yesterday, in one of th e few uplifting
m om ents to em erge fro m th e tragedy, the-19-year-old secretaries were
re u n ite d w ith th e message: ‘W e grieve fo r those who died or lost loved ones,
b u t we are very m u ch alive.’
• • -
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Flashback: Debbie and Lisa trapped against the w ire
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to a fan who fell
THE first of the Hillsborough
victims was buried yesterday
— and Gary Church’s soccer
idols were there to mourn
him.
Liverpool piayer-m anager
Kenriy D alglish came w ith
team members John Aldridge,
John Barnes, Gary Ablett and
Bay Houghton.
They joined 500 family and
friends of the 19-year-old joiner
for a funeral service at Christ
Church, Waterloo, Liverpool.
On .topjof Gary's coffin, bome
by h is 21 -yearrold brother
. David and three friends, was a
football-shaped wreath of red
and white carnations from Liv­
erpool PC.
. And at th e cem etery in
nearby Thornton where Gary
was buiied lay a floral tribute'
of painful poignancy. -
M essage
CAPACITY
Debbie said: ‘It's a strange feeling, when you know so many people all over the
country think you’re dead. -We just had to let people know we were.safe. But those
pictures! Seeing yourself in your hour of agony brings all the painful and terrible
memories back. It’s like a horror film rolling over and. over again.’
'
■
The friends from Walton, Liverpool, who
have been season ticket holders at Liverpool’s
Anfield ground for: five years, arrived at
Hillsborough 90 minutes before kick-off to
avoid the'crowds and get.a'gpod.viewfrom the
front of the Leppings Lane end.;
Debbie said the enclosure was virtually
empty until 20 minutes before the match
started — then it suddenly filled to bursting.
‘Next minute, there was an almighty push
and’ we couldn’t move. We breathed in, but
couldn’t breathe out. They were not breaths —
just gasps when you needed gulps of air.’
: It was a pillow made up Of
flowers, signed by the seven
friends who had gone to the
match with him. Their message
was: ‘We all brought you back
in our hearts.’
With the 200-seat church
packed, the service was relayed
by loudspeaker to mourners
outside.
.T h e vicar, the Rev. Ray
■Hutchinson, used his sermon to
voice Merseyside's pain and
anger at recent controversy
about Hillsborough.
'The message of caring-and/of
wanting to share your burden
. of grief has been sadly marred
by insensitive, distasteful and
badly-timed remarks,’ he said.
'But on Merseyside, the mes­
sage ‘is loud and clear and all
the stronger: Our city again
has to show its resilience to yet
more pain and suffering.’ Ald­
Last tribute: From left, Ablett, Dalglish, Aldridge and Barnes
ridge, Gary’s favourite player,
. read the second lesson, from
Romans: ‘As it is written, for
thy sake we are killed all the
day long; we are accounted as
sheep for the slaughter.’
Gary, of Doric Street, Seaforth, Liverpool, had once been
a Cub Scout and choir member
at the church.
Before leaving for the service,
. his family played his favourite
song , Pink Floyd’s Shine On
Crazy -Diamond, and left his
Kop season ticket on the man­
telpiece where it lay open on
voucher 16 — admittance to'what should. have been Sun: day’s match against Arsenal.
After the church service, one
of Gary’s sisters, 17-year-old
Tracey, collapsed.
John:Barnes said later: ‘I had
been feeling Ibad all week in the
b uild-up to th is, th e first
funeral. But strangely, I now
' feel better having been to „it.
We just wanted to be here to
pay our respects to a very loyal
fan.’ The players, he said, .had
arranged so-that there would be
at least two of them at every,
victim ’s funeral. Five more
funerals are due to take place
today. ‘We intend to go to every
single one, no matter where it
takes place in the land.’
Meanwhile, police are refusing
to return Hillsborough victims’
clothing and effects to bereaved
relatives.
The decision is distressing
families and making them feel
as if the 95 who died are being
treated like criminals, Liverpool
social services ch ief David
Mason said yesterday.
But West-Midlands^ Assistant
Chief Constable Mervyn Jones,
one of the senior officers
involved in the judicial inquiry,
said: ‘It is important to retain
these belongings. They could
help us identify where people,
were in the ground. They will
be photographed and returned
as soon as possible.’
Screaming
Lisa recalled: ‘We started screaming:“let'us
out, let us out,” but the police-said we ;
couldn’t. Three lads got over the fence and the
police pushed them back again. Eventually, I•just thought “this is it — . I ’m going to die.’”
Debbie blacked out for several minutes
before being woken by two Liverpool fans
slapping her face. But she was still trapped
inside the cage.
She was pulled out by supporters and a
policeman, and rushed to hospital — where it
was found she had suffered severe bruising to
her kidneys, ribs and hips and a crushed arm
nerve.
Lisa, of Walton Village, was helped to. safety
by another fan, whose identity — or fate —
she never discovered. She suffered neck and
internal injuries a,nd was paralysed from the
waist down for 24 hours. .
As the friends were laid on the pitch; among
scores of other casualties, they:.witnessed; the
desperate battle to save the dying and injured.
‘The police could have done more,’ said
Debbie, of Neston Street, Walton. ‘I , feel so
angry. They looked as panicked as us. ;I could
see it on their faces. We cried for help and
they turned, away, ignoring us because they
did not know what else to do.
Tearing
‘Five minutes into the crush, about, eight
fans got out on to the pitch and started
.tearing at the railings.'They were tugging at
the barrier, desperate to save people. But
policemen warned them that, if they didn’t get
off, they would be arrested.’
:
After thinking deeply about their ordeal —
and how they could have been among the 95
fans who died — the girls believe the tragic
Cup.semi-final match should be replayed. Butthey will only ever again watch football from
Liverpool’s Kop, where they feel safe.
On Sunday, after being released from
hospital, they joined thousands of other fans
in a poignant pilgrimage to Anfield to lay
wreaths.
The girls said :‘The people at Hillsborough
were there because they wanted to see
Liverpool Football Club battle for their
Wembley place. If they don’t play bn, the
victims will have died for nothing. Ninety-five
lives will have been lost in vain. The match
will be a tribute to them.’
Anfield fences come down — Back Page
Debbie Routledge (left) and Lisa Riding: 'It's like watching a horror film '
POLICE are to interview
every fan who feels that
he, or she : can help
■ establish exactly what
happened at Hillsbor. ough as part of Lord
Justice Taylor’s inquiry
. into the disaster;
■ Officers will also talk to
stadium officials, police
who were on duty and
emergency service staff.
This will mean taking
many thousands of state­
ments and is likely to
By PETER BURDEN
make the in qu iry the
biggest of its :-type in
B ritain . An estim ated
54,000 fans were either- in
or outside the stadium,
th ou gh : n one w ill be
obliged to be interviewed.
Last night West -Mid­
lands C hief C onstable
Geoffrey Dear, who is
rep ortin g d irectly to
inquiry chairm an Lord
justice Taylor, was final­
ising plans for a task
force of more than 150
officers to carry out the
interviews.
Today West Midlands
police will explain how
people can give informa­
tion, probably releasing
special telephone num ­
bers. '
■r-. "
The inquiry is expected
to attract such a mass of
information that details
will be fed into computers. The inquiry will exam­
ine how the South York­
shire force planned the
policing of the match and
every decision taken by'
officers; on the-day.
Three cities w ill come
to a stop at 3.06pm
tomorrow, precisely a
week after the Hillsbor. ough disaster..
The people of Liverpool,
Nottingham and Sheffield
— a combined population
of around two million —
axe being-asked to observe
one minute’s silence.
BBC1
PICK OF THE DAY
ARENA
Douglas Walton and Katharine Hepburn:
a turbulent reign (BBC 1, 1.50)
•N o t in colour.
*(T) T e le te x t s u b title s P. 888.
6.0
6.30
6.55
8.55
9.0
9.20
10.0
CEEFAX AM.
THE FLINTSTONES: Cartoon (rpt.).
WEATHER. 7.0 BREAKFAST TIME.
REGIONAL NEWS AND WEATHER.
NEWS; WEATHER; OPEN AIR.
KILROY! Mixed Marriages.
NEWS; WEATHER; DR KILDARE: Duet
10.25
10.50
10.55
11.0
12.0
for One Hand (rpt.).
PLAYBUS: The Play Tent Stop (rpt.).
STOPPIT AND TIDYUP (rpt.).
FIVE TO ELEVEN, with Leonard Fenton.
NEWS; WEATHER; OPEN AIR (contd.).
NEWS; WEATHER; SNOOKER: Round
Tw o of the Embassy World Professional
Championship.
12.55 REGIONAL NEWS AND WEATHER.
1.0 NEWS; WEATHER.
1.30 NEIGHBOURS: A fun day at the beach
turns into a disaster for Jane, Scott and
Mike.
1.50 FILM*: Mary of Scotland (1936). Kathar­
ine Hepburn stars as the ill-fated Queen
of Scots in a drama tracing her turbulent
reign, her rivalry w ith Elizabeth I
(Florence Eldridge), her love affair with
Bothwell (Fredric March) and her final
martyrdom.
3.50 LAUREL AND HARDY: Cartoon (rpt.).
4.0 CATERPILLAR TRAIL: A park full of
wildlife, the plant world from the tropics
to the desert and a journey back in time.
4.15 MYSTERIOUS CITIES OF GOLD (rpt.).
4 3 5 KNOCK KNOCK: Quiz.
5.0 NEWSROUND.
5.10 ALIENS IN THE FAMILY (T): Bond is in
BBC 2 , 9 .3 0: H ere's a quirky en ch an tm en t:
T he O ther Graham G reene, directed by
N igel Finch, is a g e n tle s p o o f o n th e
standard d ocum entary form , but I ca n 't tell
you w h y w ith o u t sp oilin g th e surprise. It
w a s m ade w ith th e M aster's c o -o p era tio n
and its su b ject, th e d op p elgan ger or 'other
self' w h ich th e author claim s h a s haunted
him virtually sin c e babyhood (he appears
t o h a v e an u n c a n n y m e m o r y a b o u t
g o in g s -o n in h is o w n pram), really s e e m s
to h a ve e x iste d and probably still d o e s .
Mr Finch — if n o t, perhaps, Mr G reene —
m a k es m uch u se o f officially appointed
biographer Norman Sherry, an affable
acad em ic w h o h as d o g g e d G reen e's f o o t ­
s t e p s 'from Liberia to Haiti — I h a ve y e t to
g o to S aigon ' a s k ee n ly a s th e man
G reene refers to a s 'th e Other'. W hy n ot
ask G reene h im self ab ou t th e Other?
B eca u se th e g reat man n ever g iv e s
in te rv iew s. Mr Finch h as t o m ake d o w ith
sig h tin g s, e y e - w it n e s s reports, fa scin a tin g
old h o m e m o v ie s and a g en u in e s h o t, in
c lo s e -u p , o f th e real G reen e's hands.
BBC2
2.20
5.30
danger (rpt.).
5.35
6.0
; 6.30
7.0
NEIGHBOURS (rpt.).
NEWS; WEATHER.
REGIONAL NEWS MAGAZINES.
WOGAN, with guests Diana Ross and
Tom Jones.
6.0
7.20
7.35
7.35 EVERY SECOND COUNTS: Comedy
> 8.10
quiz hosted by Paul Daniels.
DYNASTY (T): Virginia Reels. Safcjle uses
Dex to reach Blake. Adam gets his
comeuppance for taking advantage of
Virginia. And Fallon realises Zorelli
knows more than he has been letting on.
8.0
8.30
9.0 NEWS; REGIONAL NEWS; WEATHER.
9.30 JHE JUSTICE GAME (T): Rossi delves
deeper into the Sadowski case and fol­
lows up a clue from the dead man's flat.
Denis Lawson stars with Diana Quick,
Michael Kitchen and Lorna Heilbron.
10.20 THE FATAL ATTRACTION OF ADOLF
HITLER (T): See Pick of the Day.
11.50 FILM: Downhill Racer (1969). See Pick
of the Day.
1.30 WEATHER. 1.35 CLOSE.
As BBC 1 except: W ales: 1 2 .4 0 News
of Wales, Weather, Close. S c o tla n d : 1 0 .5 0 a m
Dotaman. 12 .0 News; Weather; Conference 89. 1 0 .2 0
The Beechgrove Garden. 1 0 .5 0 Action Replay. 1 1 .0
The Fatal Attraction of Adolf Hitler. 11.30 Elvis in
Aloha from Hawaii. 1 .2 0 Weather, Close. N orthern
Ireland: 5 .3 5 Inside Ulster. 6 .3 0 Neighbours. 6 .5 8
Inside Ulster Update. 1 1 .5 0 Rugby. 1 2 .2 5 Film:
Downhill Racer. 1 .5 5 Close.
BBC REGIONS:
9.0
BBC 1, 1 0.20 : Longer and m ore layered
than T u e sd a y 's effort from T h am es, th is
cen ten a ry profile, introduced by historian
C hristopher A n d rew , a s s e m b le s p reviously
u n s e e n f o o t a g e an d i n t e r v ie w e e s . A
scholarly p ie c e , but I fe e l little th e w iser.
THE LATE SHOW
BBC 2 , 11.15: A fin e w e e k celeb ratin g th e
ch a n n el's 2 5 th birthday c lim a x es w ith a
cracker on its in n ovative c o v e r a g e o f jazz
in 1 9 6 4 -6 5 . A ndy Sheppard in trod u ces
clip s w h ich in clu d e Duke Ellington, T h e­
loniu s M onk, S o n n y Rollins and Tgbby
H a y es . . . unm issable!
DOWNHILL RACER
.
BBC 1, 11.50: M ichael R itchie's p acy 1 9 6 9
film ab ou t an imaginary w in te r O lym pics
h as th e fro sty ring o f truth — w ith Robert
R edford (doing m uch o f his o w n skiing)
and 'coa ch ' G ene H ackm an in fin e form .
Elizabeth Cowley
1 0 .5
Provision for Hearing-Impaired
Children. 10 .25 Look, Look and Look
Again. 10 .45 Storytime. 1 1 .0 Living
Decisions. 1 1 .2 5 The Geography Proramme. 11 .45 Mindstretchers.. 11.50
Miicro Mindstretchers. 12 .0 Job Bank.
1 2 .2 0 Media File. 12.55 Scene. 1.25
Pinny's House. 1 .3 0 Philomena. 1.4 0
Walrus. 2 .0 News; Weather; You and
Me.
WEEKEND OUTLOOK: Previews of
Open University programmes (rpt.).
SNOOKER: Round 2 of the Embassy
W o rld Professional Championship in
Sheffield (3 .0 and 3 .5 0 News; Weather).
THE KING OF INSTRUMENTS: The
organs in Ottobeuren Abbey in Bavaria.
FILM*: If s Only Money (1962). Jerry
Lewis is a T V repair man whose dream
of being a private detective comes true;
25 YEARS OF BBC 2: A look back.
BILKO*: Bilko and the C olonel's
Secretary (rpt.).
THE. GAP: Life at a motorway service
station (regions vary).
GARDENERS' WORLD: Geoff Hamilton
and Anne Swithinbank are joined at
Barnsdale by Victorian Kitchen Garden
expert Harry Dodson, who casts a criti­
cal eye over the vegetable plot.
RORY BREMNER: Comedy and impres­
sions with John Bird, Steve Nallon, Enn
Reitel and Steve Brown.
ARENA: See Pick of the Day.
9.30
10.30 NEWSNIGHT.
11.15 THE LATE SHOW: See Pick of the Day.
12.15 WEATHERVIEW.
12.20 SNOOKER: The latest from Sheffield.
1.55 CLOSE.
BBC REGIONS: As BBC 2 except: W ales: 5 .3 0 25
Years of BBC 2. 5 .4 5 Film: The Geisha Boy. 7 .1 5 The
Flying Doctors. 8 .0 Public Account. S c o tla n d : 8.0
Left, Right and Centre: Conference Report. N o rth e rn
Ireland: 1 0 .2 5 a m Ceefax. 8 .0 Northern Light. E ast:
8 .0 Heirs and Graces. M id la n d s: 8 .0 Public or
Private? L e e d s a n d M a n c h e ste r: 8 .0 After Hillsbor­
ough. N e w c a stle : 8 .0 Townscape. S o u th a m p to n : 8.0
South on Two. Plym o uth : 8 .0 Secret Nature. B ristol:
8 .0 West on Two.
6.0
9.55
10.0
10.40
12.10
12.30
SCHOOLS.
12.30 BUSINESS DAILY.
1.0 OPEN AT ONE: Management.
1.30 OPEN MIND: Operi College interview
ssriss.
2.0 SESAME STREET, with Richard Pryor.
FILM*: All Through the Night (1942).
C o m edy-thriller starring
Humphrey
Bogart as a Broadway gambler involved
in murder.
FIFTEEN-TO-ONE: Quiz.
4.30
5.0 THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES*.
5.30 HARD NEWS (rpt.).
6.0 WAGON TRAIN*: The Mary Halstead
Story, starring Agnes Moorehead.
9.0
9.30
10.0
reviews V . S. Naipaul's A Turn in the
South.
THE THATCHER FACTOR: An English­
wom an Abroad. An analysis o f Mrs
Thatcher's role and influence on the
world stage.
ALL MUCK AND MAGIC? (T): How to
make insecticides, an effective mulch
and a dry stone wall.
CHEERS (T): Please, M r Postman. Sam
discovers Rebecca's Achilles heel.
ROSEANNE: Bridge O ver Troubled
Sonny."Roseanne tries to cure Crystal of
an obsession:
10.30 CLIVE ANDERSON
11.20
12.35
TALKS
GRANADA REPORTS.
TELL THE TRUTH: With Fred Dinenage.
GRANADA REPORTS.
THE YOUNG DOCTORS: Erica inadver­
4.0
4.5
4.20 JIMMY CRICKET S JOKE MACHINE:
4.30
4.45
5.10
Guests are Duggie Brown, Geoff Capes
and John Conten.
GRIM TALES (T): The Spirit In The
Bottle, with Rik Mayall.
FUN HOUSE: Game show.
HOME AND AWAY: Ailsa seems to
have more time for Fisher's problems
than Alf's.
5.40 NEWS (T); GRANADA REPORTS.
6.30 KICK OFF: Football magazine with Elton
Welsby.
7.0 CHANNEL 4 NEWS (T); WEATHER.
7.55 BOOK CHOICE (T): Colin Thubron
8.0
most of retirement years and Clement
Freud's culinary world trip. (10.55 News,
11 .55 Granada Reports).
RAINBOW: (rpt.).
TAKE THE HIGH ROAD: W ho took the
money at the croft and why?
tently gives crucial information to the
Keoghs' lawyer.
THE MOOMINS (rpt.).
WINDFALLS: Animation.
12.0 THE PARLIAMENT PROGRAMME.
2.30
TV-am. 9.25 KEYNOTES.
GRANADA REPORTS.
THE TIME...THE PLACE...
THIS MORNING: How to make the
1.0 NEWS; GRANADA REPORTS.
1.30 GRANADA REPORTS: THE WEEK IN
VIEW. Arts and entertainment news.
2.0 FALCON CREST: Chain Reaction. Kit
2.55
3.0
3.25
3 30
6.0 THE CHANNEL FOUR DAILY.
9.25
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy: a
comedy classic (C4, 11.20)
comes to Tony's defence.
CHANNEL 4
6.55 OPEN UNIVERSITY (ends 7 .2 0).
9.0 PAGES FROM CEEFAX.
9.45 DAYTIME ON TWO: Update Europe.
2.15
GRANADA
THE FATAL ATTRACTION
OF ADOLF HITLER
BACK:
Guests include Rita Rudner.
FILM*: Sons of the Desert (1933). Laurel
and Hardy classic, the first in a season of
Leslie Halliw ell's favourite 'Golden
Oldies' screened as a tribute to the late
film historian.
FILM*: Duck Soup (1 9 3 3 ). Anarchic
Marx Brothers comedy. 1.50 CLOSE.
CHANNEL 4 WALES: 6 .0 C4 Daily. 9 .0 A Site Better
Off. 9 .3 0 Ysgolion. 1 2 .0 Egwyl. 1 2 .1 0 Pobol Y Cwm.
1 2 .3 0 Newyddion. 1 2 .3 5 Briwsion. 1.0 The Parliament
Programme. 1 .3 0 Business Daily. 2 .0 Nature In
FocuS. 2 .3 0 Man And Music. 3 .3 0 Sound Off The
Beaten Track. 4 .3 0 Fifteen To One. 5 .0 Lost In Space.
6 .0 Newyddion. 6 .1 5 Terra X. 6 .4 0 Pobol Y Cwm. 7.0
Amser Chwarae. 7 .3 0 Hafod Henri. 8 .0 Yr Arwr A’i
Faes. 8 .3 0 Newyddion. 8 .5 5 Y Byd Ar Bedwar. 9 .3 0
Snwcer O Sheffield. 1 0 .0 As Channel 4.
7.0 THROUGH THE KEYHOLE: Judi Spiers,
Chris Tarrant arid Sue Lloyd try to guess
the identity of the celebrities who own
the homes that Loyd Grossman visits.
7.30 FLYING LADY (T): As far as Jean
Bradley is concerned her husband Harry
and Ivor Griffiths are both tarred with the
same brush.
8.30 SURGICAL SPIRIT (T): The Locum, star­
ring Nichola McAuliffe, Duncan Preston
and Marji Campi. Sheila Sabatini lets her
firm opinions about anaesthetists be
known to all.
9.0 LONDON'S BURNING (T): Plans made
for an open day for local children are
swept aside when Blue Watch is under
siege at Blackwall fire station (rpt.).
10.0 NEWS AT TEN.
10.30 GRANADA REPORTS.
10.35 SLEDGE HAMMER: A gang of s ilv e rthieves steal Hammer's gun.
11.5 FILM: The Detective (1968). A detective
investigating a brutal murder uncovers
corruption within the city government.
Starring Frank Sinatra, Lee Remick and
Jacqueline Bisset.
1.0 THE JAMES WHALE RADIO SHOW;
News.
2.0 WORLD MUSIC VIDEO AWARDS,
include performances from many top
international artists; N ews.
NIGHT BEAT: The Power Hour.
4.0
5.0 MORNING NEWS.
BORDER
YORKSHIRE
SCOTTISH
TYNE TEES
GRAMPIAN
CENTRAL
6.0 TV-am . 9.25 Keynotes.
9.55 Calendar News. 10.0
As Granada. 12.30 Take
The High Road. 1.0 News;
Calendar News. 1.25 Help
Yourself. 1.30 Film*: The
Devil On Horseback. 3.0
Tell The Truth. 3.25 Calen­
dar News. 3.30 A Country
Practice. 4.0 As Granada.
5.10 Home And Away.
5.40 News.
6.0 Calendar.
6.30 Hollywood Sports.
7.0 Through The
TV-am. 9 .2 5 Keynotes.
Scotland Today. 1 0 .0 As
Granada. 1 2 .3 0 Portrait Of A
Legend. 1 .0 News; Scotland
Today. 1.3 0 Top Club. 2 .0
Falcon Crest. 3 .0 Tell The
Truth. 3 .2 5 Scotland Today.
3 .3 0 Sons And Daughters. 4 .0
As Granada. 5 .5 5 Scotland
Today. 6 .3 0 Take The High
Road. 7.0 As Granada. 9 .0
London’s Burning. 1 0 .0 News
At Ten. 1 0 .3 0 Scotland
Today. 1 0 .40 Scotsport Extra
Time. 1 1 . 1 0 Conference
Reports. 1 1.40 Prisoner: Cell
Block H. 1 2 . 3 0 Worlds
Beyond. 1.0 As Granada.
HTV
TV-am. 9 .2 5 Keynotes.
Border News. 1 0 .0 As
Granada. 1 2 .3 0 Dining In
France. 1.0 News. 1.3 0 Gar­
dening Time. 2 .0 A Country
Practice. 3 .0 Tell The Truth.
3 .2 5 Border News. 3 .3 0 The
Young Doctors. 4 .0 As Gran­
a d a. 6 .0 Lookaround Friday.
6 .3 0 Take The High Road.
7.0 Through The Keyhole.
7.30, As Granada. 1 0 .30 Bor­
der News. 1 0 .3 5 The Best
Place In The World. 1 1 .5
Conference Reports. 1 1 .3 5
Film: Devil’s Daughter. 1 .0
The James Whale Radio
Show. 2 .0 As Granada.
6 .0 TV Am. 9 .2 5 Keynotes.
9 .5 5 Regional News. 1 0 .0 As
Granada. 1 2 .3 0 Take The
High Road. 1.0 News; Region­
al News. 1 .25 Lookaround.
I . 3 0 A Nation Of Animal
Lovers. 2 .0 The Bill. 3 .0 Tell
The Truth. 3 . 2 5 Regional
News. 3 .3 0 Sons And Daugh­
ters. 4 .0 As Granada. 5 .4 0
News; Northern Life. 7 .0 As
Granada. 1 0 .3 0 Regional
News. 1 0 .3 5 Sledge Hammer.
I I . 5 Film: The Detective. 1.0
TV-am. 9 .2 5 Keynotes.
Grampian News. 1 0 .0 As
Granada. 1 2 .3 0 Duty Free.
1 .0 News;' Grampian News.
1 .3 0 Gardening Time. 2 .0
The Bill. 3 .0 Tell The Truth.
3 .2 5 Grampian News. 3 .3 0
Sons And Daughters. 4 .0 As
Granada. 5 .5 5 North Tonight.
6 .3 0 Top Club. 7 .0 As Gran­
ada. 1 0 .0 News At Ten. 10-30
Grampian News; Reflections.
1 0 . 3 5 Conference Report.
1 1 .5 Crossfire. 1 1 .3 5 Crime
Story. 1 2 .3 5 9 To 5. 1 .0
James Whale Radio Show.
2 .0 World Music Awards 1989.
4 .0 Night Beat. 5 .0 News.
TV-am. 9 .2 5 Keynotes.
Central News. 1 0 . 0 As
Granada. 1 2 .3 0 Take The
High Road. 1.0 News. 1 .2 0
Central News. 1 .3 0 Heart Of
The Country. 2 .0 The Bill.
3 .0 Tell The Truth. 3 .2 5
Central News. 3 . 3 0 The
Young Doctors. 4 .0 As Gran­
ada. 5 .1 0 Central Post. 5 .4 0
News. 6 .3 5 Home And Away.
7 .0 As Granada. 1 0 .3 0 Cen­
tral News! 1 0 .3 5 Central
Weekend. 1 2 .5 Critae Story.
1 .0
James Whale Radio
Show. 2 .0 Film: The Long
Riders. 3 -5 5 The Concert.
4 .5 0 Felix The Cat. 5.0 News.
TV-am. 9 .2 5 Keynotes.
HTV News. 1 0 .0 As
Granada. 1 2 .3 0 Take The
High Road. 1 .0 News; HTV
News. 1 .3 0 Mary. 2 .0 The
Bill. 3 .0 Tell The Truth. 3 .2 5
HTV News. 3 ,3 0 Sons And
Daughters. 4 .0 As Granada.
5 .5 5 Wales At Six. 7 .0 As
Granada. 1 0 .0 News At Ten.
1 0 .3 0 HTV News. 1 0 .3 5 Tosh.
1 1 .3 5 Kojak. 1 2 .3 0 Cinemattractions. 1 .0 The James
Whale Radio Show. 2 .0 Film:
The Devil’s Brigade. 4 . 2 0
Family Affairs. 4 .5 0 Jobfinder. 5 .0 Morning News.
Rolling Thunder. An officer returns
home after eight years of physical and
mental torture in a POW camp. Star­
ring William Devane.
NEW S: Half-hour news on the hour,
every hour. Plus: 6 .0 a m News. 6 .3 0
Business Channel. 9 .3 0 Morning Maga­
zine. 1 1 .3 0 Our World. 1 2 .3 0 NBC
Today. 2 .3 0 Beyond 2000. 3 .3 0 Good
Health. 4 .3 0 Our World. 5 .3 0 Beyond
2000. 6 .3 0 Wild West End. 7 .3 0 The
Reporters. 8 . 3 0 Frank Bough. 9 .3 0
Newsline. 1 0 .3 0 The Reporters. 1 1 .3 0
NBC Nightly News. 1 2 .30 Wild West
End. 1.30 Newsline. 2 .3 0 Frank Bough.
3 .3 0 The Reporters. 4 .3 0 Beyond 2000.
5 .3 0 Entertainment Tonight.
TV-am. 9 .2 5 Keynotes.
Ulster Newstime. 1 0 .0 As
Granada. 1 2 .3 0 Take The
High Road. 1.0 News: Ulster
Newstime. 1 .3 0 Gardening
Time. 2 .0 The Bill. 3 .0 Tell
The Truth. 3 .2 5 Ulster News­
time. 3 .3 0 Sons And Daugh­
ters. 4 .0 As Granada. (5.0 Six
Tonight. 6 .3 0 Sportsbeat. 7.0
As Granada. 1 0 .3 0 Ulster
Newstime. 1 0 .3 5 Married.
With Children. 1 1.0 Witness.
11.5 Film: The Detective. 1.0
James Whale Show. 2 . 0
World Music Awards. 4 . 0 '
Night Beat. 5 .0 News.
6 .0
9 .5 5
EIRE
TV ONE: 2 .5 The Pallisers.
3 .0 Live At Three. 4 .0 Sons
And Daughters. 4 . 3 0 The
Stars Look Down. 5 .3 0 The
Sullivans. 6 .0 Angelus; News.
6 .3 0 people In Need. 9 .0
News. 9 .3 0 People In Need
(contd.). 2 .0 News; Close.
TV TWO: 2 .3 0 Bosco. 3 .0
Dempsey’s Den. 6 .0 Jo-Maxi.
6 .3 0 Home And Away. 7 .0
Nuacht; Cursai. 7 .3 0 Cover
Story. 8 .0 News; Sportsworld.
9 .0 Mr President. 9 .3 0 Film:
Mamie. 1 1.55 Close.
7.30
8.30
9.0
10.0
10.30
10.35
10.40
12.0
1.0
2.0
4.0
• - 5 .0
Keyhole.
Flying Lady.
Surgical Spirit.
London's Burning.
News A t Ten.
Calendar-News.
Hollywood Sports
Update.
Film: The Spy
Killer.
Kojak.
The James Whale
Radio Show.
World Music
Awards.
The Wrong Note.
Morning News-. •
6 .0
9 .5 5
The James Whale Radio
Show. 2 . 0 World Music
Awards. 4 .0 Night Beat. 5 .0
Morning News.
6 .0
9 .5 5
6 .0
9 .5 5
SKY SATELLITE CHANNELS
CHANNEL: 5 .3 0 a m Business Channel.
6 .0 DJ Kat Show. 8 . 3 0 Panel Pot
Pourri. 1 0.0 The Sullivans. 1 0 .3 0 Sky
By Day. 1 1 .3 0 A Problem Shared. 1 2 .0
Another World. 1 .0 General Hospital.
2 .0 As The World Turns. 3 .0 Loving.
3 .3 0 Family Affair. 4 .0 Countdown. 5 .0
The Young Doctors. 5 .3 0 Three’s Com­
pany. 6 .0 Star Search. 7 .0 Sale Of The
Century. 7 .3 0 Bring ’Em Back Alive.
8 .3 0 Film: Sky Riders. 1 0.30 Jameson
Tonight. 1 1 .3 0 Police Story. 1 2 .3 0
Landscape Channel Programmes.
EUROSPORT: 1 0 .30 am Motor Sport
News. 1 1 .0 Surfer Magazine. 1 1 .3 0
Tennis. 1.3 0 Australian Rules Football.
3 . 3 0 Ice Hockey. 4 . 3 0 Review. 6 .0
Volleyball. 7 .0 Major League Baseball.
8 .0 Tennis. 9 .0 Motor Cycling. 10 .0 Ice
Hockey.
M OV IES: 4 .0 p m Little Norse Prince*
Valiant. Animated story about the
exciting adventures of a young boy who
is son of the Sun. 6 .0 Ladyhawke.
Haunting adventure of cursed medieval
lovers. Starring Matthew Broderick. 8 .0
Our Winning Season. A competitive
high school boy struggles to attain his
athletic scholarship. An early role for
modern-day heart-throb Dennis Quaid.
10.0 Aliens. Sci-fi story follows astro­
nauts who become the victims of a
galactic horror which, feeds off, flesh.
Starring' Sigourney Weaver. 1 2 .2 0
6 .0
9 .5 5
ULSTER
6 .0
9 .5 5
The neighbourhood watch
WHAT do U lric S treet, Camberwell;
G e o rg ia n a S tr e e t, C a m d e n T ow n;
Albion S quare, Stepney; an d now
C ardross S treet, H am m ersm ith, have
in common?
Easy-peasy. They are all London purlieus that
have been scrutinised on television for changing
social patterns, the end of a way of life, the old
inhabitants being driven Out by the new. When
I add that the first of these studies went out in
I960 and the latest only last night, you might
agree that nothing is quite so enduring as,the
end of the London street as we know it.
Indeed, John Pitman seemed rather surprised
to discover in his 4 0 M i n u t e s essay (BBC 2),
the gratifying — or dismaying — thing is how
obligingly it accommodates itself to the upsand-downs and comings-and-goings of our
times. Cardross Street was a well-chosen
specimen: a street of 87 little London terrace
houses, two rooms upstairs, two down, most of
which had been occupied until quite recently
P H IL IP PURSER'S
TELEVISION REVIEW
by working-class tenants. Some of the old
hands Were still there, and ‘old’ was the
operative adjective. They are getting on, and as
they go their places are taken by newcomers.
Residents now include a theatrical designer, a
recording tycoon, a public relations man and, to
offer the ultimate contrast to old Charlie next
door, a young male ballet dancer called Bruce.
Ah, but Bruce helps Charlie across the road to
the pub, and took him a drink and a cake at
Christmas. Charlie thinks he’s a lovely boy.
‘Have you ever been to the ballet, Charlie?’
Pitman wanted to know. No, he hadn’t, Charlie
had to admit. He was sure it was very nice if
you liked that sort o f . thing, but wouldn’t
appeal to everyone, would it? I suppose that
kind of question was a bit patronising, as was
coaxing the information from Harry and
Gladys’s businesswoman neighbour that she
had bought the freehold of their house to
ensure the remainder of their years would be
untroubled by pressures to get out.
But this was a genuinely kind deed, if also, as
the lady admitted, a good investment in the
long term. Real neighbourliness still survived in
Cardross Street, and the sympathetic Pitman
would have been failing in his survey not to
bring it out.
What had been lost was the continuity of
family life. What was damaging the street more
than all the gentrification and ripping out and
tarting up was the dearth of children to grow
up in it. More than anything, the natives were
puzzled by the compulsion of young couples to
move somewhere bigger as soon as babies came.
In the old days one house might have had six
or eight children. Now the whole street only
had four.
People’s entire lives used to be spent there.
Now it was just a staging post. ‘When they
leave, it’s in a hearse,’ said one. perceptive
newcomer. ‘We leave in a removal van,’
□ THE news in C h a n n e l F o u r D a ily is tolerably
expansive by breakfast-time standards, but'do
the bits between the news have to be so bitty?
I waited for the Box Office segment yesterday
because they promised an appreciation of
Daphne du Maurier. It turned out to comprise
a list of three of her stories filmed by
Hitchcock, the title of one other book and a
fragment from the interview with her publisher
. that had gone out in full the previous night.
Whereupon they got down to real culture, a
new horror film and the usual pulp music.
!RADIO!
RADIO 1
1053kHz/285m
I T089kHz/275m:
VHF: 98.99
RADIO 2
909kHz/330m: 693kHz/433m
990 kHz/303m: VHF: 88-90.2
I
London Region VHF: 104.8MHz
A d ria n J o h n . 6 .3 0
B r u n o B rookes. 9 .3 0
S im o n B a te s . 1 2 .3 0
N ew sb e at. 1 2 .4 5 G a r y D avies.
3 .0 S te v e W rig h t. 5 .3 0 N ew s­
b e a t. 5 . 4 5 S in g le d O u t. 7 .0
J e f f Y o u n g ’s B ig B e a t. 9 .0 I n
C o n c e r t . 1 0 .0 F r id a y R o ck
S h o w . 1 2 .0 M a r y . W h ite h o u s e
E x p e r i e n c e . 1 2 .3 0 R a n k i n g
M iss P.
5
^
B il l R e n n e l l s . 5 . 3 0
C h r is S t u a r t . 7 .3 0
D e re k J a m e so n . 9 .3 0
K e n B r u c e . 1 1 .0 J im m y
Y o u n g . 1 .5 D av id J a c o b s . 2 .0
G lo r ia H u n n ifo rd . 3 .3 0 A d ria n
Love. 5 .5 J o h n D u n n . 7 .0
M em ories of Y ou. 7 .3 0 F rid a y
N ig h t is M u sic N ig h t. 9 .3 0
N ig e l O g d e n . 1 0 .0 G o ld e n
Y e a rs . 1 0 .3 0 H in g e a n d
B ra c k e t. 1 1 .0 A n g ela R ip p o n .
1 .0 N ig h trid e . 3 .0 A L ittle
N ig h t M usic.
4
^
a
(S = Stereo)
W O R L D S E R V IC E
(6 4 8 k H z /4 6 3 m )
GIANT
BOOK OF CRYPTIC
CROSSWORDS
255 p ages of puzzles
reprinted from the
Daily Mail
F ro m a ll le a d in g n e w s a g e n ts .
* *
O r direct from
Associated N ewspapers pic, Publications
D epartm ent ( CC ), Room 4, C arm elite
House, London EC4Y OJA.
Price £3.45 (inc. postage/handling).
Tel. orders (Access. B’card): 04428
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f
O p e n U n iv e rs ity
only) . 6 . 5 5
N ew s. 7 .0 B erlioz,
B ra h m s, H a n d e l, M en d elsso h n ,
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M e n d e l s s o h n , H a y d n , B e e t­
h o v e n , K le m p e re r, M a h le r,
R e g e r (S). 1 2 .1 5 B B C C o n c e rt
O r c h e s tr a (S). 1 .0 N ew s. 1 .5
C h a m b e r M u sic. (S). 2 .0 D u tc h
C h a m b e r M u sic (S). 2 .4 0 M arx ,
W a lte rs, E lg a r (S). 3 .5 B o ro d in
S tr in g Q u a r te t (S). 4 .1 5 J o h n ­
son , F r a n c k (S). 4 .5 0 D v o rak ,
M a r tin u (S). 5 .4 5 S t a n G etz .
6 .1 5 T h e W o rk s. 7 .0 N ew s. 7 .5
T h ir d E a r. 7 .3 0 P lay : F a it h
H ealer. 9 .1 0 G lin k a , P ro k o fiev ,
S c r ia b in (S). 1 1 .5 G laz u n o v ,
T a n e y e v (S). 1 2 .0 News.
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RADIO 4
LW: 198kHz/1515m: MW:
720kHz/417m: 756kHz/397m:
774kHz/388m:
VHF: 92.4-94.8; 97.1
S h ip p in g . 6 .0 N ew s;
,33 W e a t h e r ,
6 .1 0
F a rm in g .
6 .2 5
P r a y e r (S). 6 . 3 0 T o d ay . 9 .0
N ew s. 9 .5 D e s e rt I s la n d D iscs
(S). 9 .4 5 F eed b a ck . 1 0 .0 News;
S p e c ia l A s s ig n m e n t. 1 0 .3 0
S to ry . 1 0 .4 5 S e rv ic e (S); News;
ju d g e s in th e D ock. 1 1 .4 7
T r e a s u re Is la n d s . 1 2 .0 News;
Y o u a n d Y o u rs. 1 2 .2 5 F ood
P ro g ra m m e . 1 .0 W o rld a t O ne.
I . 4 0 A rc h e rs . 2 . 0 W o m a n ’s
H o u r. 3 . 0 R ag g e d T ro u s e re d
P h ila n th r o p is ts (S). 4 .0 N ew s.
4 .5
E x p e rie n c e d
E n g lis h
H o u s e k e e p e r. 4 .3 0 K a le id o ­
sco p e (S). 5 .0 P M . 6 .0 F in a n ­
c ia l R e p o rt. 6 .3 0 G o in g P laces.
7 .0 N ew s. 7 .5 A rc h e rs. 7 .2 0
P ic k o f t h e W e ek (S). 8 .5 A ny
Q u e stio n s. 8 .5 0 L aw in A ctio n .
9 .1 5 P h il S m ith . 9 . 3 0 L e tte r
fro m A m erica. 9 .4 5 K a le id o ­
sco p e (S) . 1 0 . 1 5 B ook a t
B ed tim e . 1 0 .3 0 W o rld T o n ig h t.
I I . 0 P a r lia m e n t. 1 1 .1 5 F in a n ­
c ial W o rld . 1 1 .3 5 W eek E n d in g
(S). 1 2 .0 N ew s,
5
C C
W ALES
J...in just 10 minutes! 1
■
0 C
6
S C O T L A N D ( 8 1 0 k H z /3 7 0 m ) :
6 .0 A s R a d io 4. 6 .1 0 F a r m ­
i n g .6 .3 0 G o o d M o rn in g . 9 .3
H e a d O n (S); 1 0 .3 0 M e a s u r e of
S c o ts (S). 1 1 . 3 M a c G r e g o r .
1 2 .0 N ew s. 1 2 .2 T ra v e l. 1 2 .3 0
C o rrid o rs o f P o w er. 1 .0 N ew s.
1 .3 0 J im m y M a c k (S). 3 .3 A r t
S u t t e r (S). 5 .0 G ood E v e n in g .
6 .0 N ew s. 6 .1 5 F a r m in g . 6 .3 0
T a le s o f th e L o c h . 6 .4 0 W eek ly
R e p o rt. 7 .2 A bove th e B elt.
7 .3 0
L a u g h te r L in e s . 8 .0
C o u n tr y C o r n e r (S). 1 0 .0 N ew s.
1 0 .1 0 F e r r ie (S). 1 1 .0 N ew s.
1 2 .3 3 - 1 2 .4 3 S h ip p in g .
i
I
RADIO 3
1197kHz/251m
I 1215kHz/247m:
VHF:-90.2-32.4;J94.8 j
(8 8 2 k H z /3 4 0 m ):
4 .0
As R a d io 2. 6 . 2 5 M a ld w y n
P op e. 7 .0 W eek d ay . 8 .3 3 R o y
N oble. 1 0 .3 0 H y w el G w y rifry n .
1 2 .2 /L a n d m a r k . 1 2 .3 0 M e e t
fo r L u n c h . 1 .4 5 B e st o f W ales.
2 .3 0 A la n D a u lb y . 4 .0 F o u r - '
F iv e-S ix . 6 -0 A s R a d io 4. 6 .3 0
N otes. 6 .4 5 G r a s s R o o ts. 7 .0
N ew s. 7 .5 A s R a d io 4. 9 .4 5
C a tc h p h r a s e 1. 9 .5 0 . C a t c h p h r a s e 2. 9 .5 5 S p o rts d e s k . 1 0 .
N ew s. 1 0 .2 - 4 .0 a m A s R a d io 2.
U LSTER ( 1 3 4 1 k H z /2 2 4 m ): 4 .0
As R a d io 2. 6 .3 0 D a y b r e a k .
6 .4 0 F a r m G a te . 6 .5 5 T h o u g h t
fo r th e D ay . 7 .0 G ood M o rn ­
in g . 8 . 3 5
S p o rts d e s k . 8 .4 0
M o rn in g E x tr a . 9 . 3 0 G e r r y
A n d erso n . 1 0 .3 0 J o h n B e n n e tt.
1 2 .3 T a lk B ac k . 1 .0 N ew sb re a k . 1. 3 0 B u s in e s s N ew s;
S p o rts d e s k . 1 .3 5 G eo rg e Jo n e s.
2 .3 0 W a lte r Love. 4 .2 . F r a n c e s
o n F rid a y . 5 .0 P M . 5 .3 0 B u s i­
n ess T o d ay . 5 .3 5 S p o rt. 5 .4 0
78 R e v s P e r M in u te . 5 . 5 5
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A s R a d io 2. 9 .4 5 B o tto m L in e
(S). 1 1 .0 E le v e n T o n ig h t; N ew s.
1 1 .5 - 4 .0 a m A s R a d io 2.
LU X EM BOU RG (M W 1 4 4 0 k H z
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PAGE 28
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
The charming ghost who’s
cheery rather than eerie!
Da (PG): Cannons Haymarket, Tottenham Court Rd, Chelsea.,
G R IEV IN G son is am ong pallbearers ta k in g his
fa th e r th ro u g h th e cem etery w hen h e ’s startledby a solicitous m u rm u r in h is ear, slightly
m uffled by th e coffin: ‘N ot too heavy for you,
am I?’
Family portrait: Martin S h een and Barnard H ughes a s so n and father in Da
, Typical query from one of life’s contented losers, a
professional gardener of whom his resigned wife claimed
that, if he got run over by a car, he’d thank its driver for
the lift.
Just when you thought it unsafe to venture into the
cinema for fear of brutal­
ity, horror, pretentious
boredom or- general grotti­
ness, along comes a film to
charm, touch and reassure
you that entertainment
with heart and wit is still
there for the finding.
Don’t be misled by that
eerie opening sam ple.
‘Ghost’ can be another
name for memories too
vivid and precious to die.
And Da (Barnard Hughes)
is very much alive in the
head of his foster son,
Charlie (Martin Sheen).
This
Logical
Irelan d ’s b est livin g
playwright, Hugh Leon­
ard, adapted Da from his
autobiographical book and
subsequent stage success.
Fanciful yet essentially
serious, it is especially
strong and shrewd on the
p iq u a n t re la tio n sh ip
between elderly father and
middle-aged son, a parent
himself but forever Junior
to Dad:
Back from America for
the funeral, writer Charlie
recalls his adoptive par­
ents. We’re living in his
imagination: Da sits there
in his favourite chair,
long-dead mother (Doreen
Hepburn) toustles and
nags, and every so often
Charlie meets himself as a
child. The man thinks the
boy a graceless prig, while
the lad is disappointed
that his later self has not
done better in life.
For a while, time is
abolished — different gen­
erations of the same per­
son can share events. But
it is all logical in its way.
on Sky
Terror
The
SKYMOVIES
EUROSPORT
T in M e n ,
I t a l ia n G r a n d P r ix ,
S u n d a y 8pm .
S u n d a y 9pm .
b lo c k b u s te r h it,
T in
M e n ’ s ta rrin g
D a n n y de V ito is ju s t o ne o f th e g r e a tfilm s w e ’l l
A m ongst
th e
m any
iP iiiS
h o u rs
Made on location at the
seaside resort of Dalkey,
the film puts flesh on the
p lay’s scenic bones to
evoke small-town Ireland
while avoiding the stereo­
typed Ireland For Tourists
style. Constantly funny
and wise, though not oversentimental, it’s a gentle
memoir of growing up.
And it’s also a family
portrait of the title char­
acter, beautifully played
by B arnard H ughes:
cussed, comical, intensely
human, the liveliest ghost
you ’ll ever encounter.
mmmm
mmmi
o f s p o rtin g
a c tio n th a t E u ro s p o rt o ffers th is w eekend, w e ’l l
be s h o w in g th is w eeken d . O u r S u n d a y lin e -u p
be b rin g in g y o u f u l l a n d u n r iv a lle d co verag e
als o inc lu d es T o B e O r N o tT o B e ] ‘S h o rt C irc u it)
o f th e It a lia n G r a n d P r ix p lu s th e U .S. M o t o r ­
‘J u m p in ’ J a c k F la s h ’ a n d ‘R a is in g A r iz o n a ’.
c y c lin g G r a n d P rix .
l l l |g
S k y dishes a re n o w a v a ila b le f r o m £ 1 9 9
Twaddle: Bill Pullman in
Serpent and the Rainbow
Six New Channels. Films, Disney, Sport, News, Arts and Entertainment.
TELEVISION
M t£
mmmmm
*
"4
Sunk: Yang Un in Daughter of the Nile
Hughes and Sheen, well
supported by everyone else
in volved, perform an
actors’ duet to treasure.
I feel sorry for anyone
failing to identify with at
lgast some of the people,
em otions and attitudes
caught by Da; obviously
they’ve missed something.
Do not miss the film.
The Serpent and the Rain­
bow (IS): Cannons Panton
St, Baker St and Chelsea.
AM ERICAN m edical
r e s e a r c h e r D e n n is
Alan has h it on a
d y n a m ite s lim m in g
regime.
No sooner does he set
spoon to the vichyssoise
than a decomposing hand
surfaces to meet it. Sec­
onds later, his cool hostess
turns into a homicidal
harpy, lunging across the
floral centrepiece intent
on in flictin g grievous
bodily harm with a steak
knife. Seldom has a meal
included so many induce­
ments to diet.
Dennis (Bill Pullman)
has just returned from
Haiti with the secret of
‘Zombiefication’, sought
by a pharmaceutical com­
pany wanting a potent
a n aesthetic. S in ce the
powdered essence of seatoad and exhumed corpses
leaves subjects conscious
of pain while apparently
dead, the product might
not catch on.
By now you’ll guess that
we are talking about the
latest horror twaddle, or
‘terror’ twaddle, to use the
makers’ preferred term for
the genre.
Inspired by a recent
factual if flashy book of
the same title, director
Wes Craven, of Nightmare
on Elm Street, offers tor­
ture — ‘J u st a n ail
through the scrotum’ is
the hero’s airy dismissal of
a fraught interview with
H a iti’s chief of secret
police — and a battery of
nauseating special effects.
Even addicts of this sick
and sorry comer of mass-!
audience exploitation may
find Serpent hard to love.
It’s no nastier than most,
but more incoherent than
normal.
Craven’s central charac­
ter, fighting off voodoo
and Baby Doc Duvalier’s
minions, suffers real and
im aginary black magic
manifestations, plus the
Victorian horror favourite
of premature burial. It’s
hard to sort out which is
which.
Fastidious souls can save
themselves the trouble by
staying away.
Daughter of the Nile
(PG): Renoir.______
IT takes all sorts: lead­
ing Taiwanese director
H o u H s ia o - h s ie n ’s
en try into films was
inspired, he explains,
by one starrin g Judy
Geeson.
Daughter — the title
comes from a comic strip
on which the heroine is
hooked — may have lost
something in translation.*
Subtitles and all, it defies
one to understand quite or
even approximately why
its characters are shooting
at each other, getting
shot, and so on.
Petty
A girl whose father may
be a cop, or possibly a
gangster, has a brother
who is definitely a burglar
and petty gang leader.
From there on in, you’re
on your own, for all I can
supply by way of a road
map.
Something must have
been lost. As it reaches us,
Daughter of the Nile’s sole
distinction is that it runs
for under an hour and a
half and seems to go on
for days.
MORE FILMS AND VIDEOS: PAGE 30 i
M ID D LE TAR As defined by H .M . Government
Warning: SM OKING W H EN PREG NANT CA N INJURE
YOUR BABY A N D CAUSE PREM ATURE BIRTH
Health Departments’ Chief Medical Officers
PAGE 30
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
A film that’s had people dancing iii the aisles
after two hours in puppet
Hanussen’s company, one
understood the feeling.
liammen
Odeon
Haymarket.
NOT even Klaus Maria
Brandauer’s magnetism
can do much for this
lia n d so m e l y-rno tin ted
blend of faction and
p o litica l allegory, set
during the Nazi rise in
Germany.
H u n garian d irector
1st van Szabo tours the
■peridd at the Heels of
Hanussen. a World. War
One soldier whose head
injuries, followed .by., hypnotisiii therapy, leave him
with the .'gift ■ of clairvoy­
ance.
■i
f, . •.
Horn on the Same day ais
/Hitler, he has some of the
same charisma, and hav­
ing forecast the future
leader’s election as Chan­
cellor,' is courted then
destroyed by the regime.
B erlin's betw een-thew ars decad en ce : and
despair is: . evoked with
style and lavish visual
detail. But like its mixture
r.
j
B ra n d a u e r: M a g n e tic
of named and th in lyd isguised m em bers of
H itler’s thuggish court,
the work is a bit of a
muddle.
Them es and explana­
tions of the making of the
Third Reich are suggested
yet never worked out.
Brandauer’s prevailing
expression is glum, and
(Shocqlat (15): Clielsea
)■.
j Cinema. }
BKST of th is w eek’s
clutch of foreign films,
-though it has little to
beat. Much , is said about
the tension and empathy
between colonists arid the
colonised, iih a leisurely,
closely-observed study . of
daily life in the French
Caineroons. before inde­
pendence in the Fifties.
If you enjoy careful
/6onju'r,ing-.up /o f atm o­
sphere and places, \ Claire
Denis's debut, after work­
ing as assistant.direetor to
the likes Of Wim' Wenders,
is worth attention.
C hild actress C ecile
Dycasse is excellent as a
d is tr ic t! com m issioner’s
daughter, unsure whether
the black houseman who
introduces her to the
delights oi live-ant sand­
wiches :is - friend. ‘ servant
or enemy.
:%-m-m
AVBTM
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Partners in crime: P h il Collins and
Julie Walters star in Buster
ITS re lea se la st year, co m p le te
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But an y o n e
c a tc h in g
up
w ith
B U S T E R ( 1 5 , V e s t r o n , r e n t a l ) is
lik e ly t o
e n jo y
a fre e w h e e lin g ,
ru e fu l l e s s e n t h a t c rim e d o e s rio t
p a y , w h ile w o h d e rin g w h y s o m a n y
p e o p le g o t h o t u n d e r t h e c o lla r.
P h il C d lliris , m a k i n g h i s f il m d e b u t
in t h e t i t l e r o l e o f B u s t e r E d w a r d s ,
p l a y s a C o c k n e y m i n o r v illa in o u t o f
h i s d e p t h ,w h e n
The
B ig O n e ,
a n i b u s h i n g a r i d p l u n d e r i n g a m a il
t r a i n , a c t u a l l y c o m e s o f f . In f a c t i t ’s
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£ 1 9 m ill io r i i n t o d a y ' s m o n e y , m a d e
th e m ta r g e t^ fo r o th e r c rim in a ls a s
w e ll a s a m a s s iv e p o lic e o p e r a tio n ,
w ith
m a tc h in g
s e n te n c e s
w hen
th e y w e re c a u g h t.
I f t h i s iv e r s i o n , s t r o n g o n C o m e d y
and hum an
re la tio n s h ip s , s k a te s
o v e r th e , v io le n c e in v o lv e d , it a ls o
d e s t r o y s t h e 'g r e a t ' t e a m ' s g l a m o u r
a s ic e -c o o l ra id e rs . T h e y r e g is te r a s
c lo s e r to K e y s to n e C ro o k s.
Blackmail
C o llin s a n d J u l i e W a l t e r s , a s h i s
p u t-u p o n ' w ife ,
w o n 't w in
any
re c r u its t o c ririie a s a s h o r t c u t to
t h e g 6 o d l i f e , b u t t h e f il m d o e s
e v o k e th e S ix tie s a n d o n e o f th e
d e c a d e ’s m o s t s t a r t l i n g e v e n t s .
□ FA N S
o f o ff-th e -w a ll
com edy
w ith
o u tra g e o u s
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and
w ic k e d o n e -lin e rs w o u ld b e c ra zy
to
m is s- D a n
A y k ro y d
in
THE
C O U C H T R IP
(1 9 8 8 ,
1 5 , V irg in
V is io n , re n ta l).
A y k ro y d p la y s a w ily w h ite - C o lla r
c r o o k , p o s in g a s m e n ta lly d is tu r b e d
t o b e h e ld in h o s p ita l ra th e r th a n
p ris o n .; B u t th e n a fe u d w ith a
d o c to r; f o r c e s ;h im : t o e s c a p e , f le e ­
i n g t o C a l if o r n ia a n d s u c c e s s u n d e r
f a ls e c o lo u r s a s a ra d io p h o n e - in
s h o w 's ta m e p s y c h ia tr is t.
W a lte r M a tth a u : c o - s ta r s a s a
g e n u in e m e n ta l; p a tie n t b la c k m a ilin g
crime that
t h e s u p p o s e d ^ s h r in k '. T h e w h o l e
t h i n g ' s w i l d , r i b a l d a n d s lic k .
□ S T IL L t h e y c o m e , t h e n e w l a b e l s , ’
l a t e s t b e in g a C h a n n e l 5 o f f s h o o t
c a lle d D a n g e r Z o n e . T h e th e rtie is
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a r d B u r t o n , R o g e r M o o re > D a v i d
N i v e n , T e lly S a v a l a s a m o n g t h e
a l l - s t e r c a s t o f a: W o r l d W a r T w o
s p e c t a c u l a r a b o u t A llie d p r i s o n e r s
c a u g h t u p in a N a z i t r e a s u r e - h u n t .
□ E R O T IC r o m a n c e , p l u s a n i n s i d ­
e r ' s v i e w o f a f il m b e i n g m a d e ,
g i v e s d o u b l e a p p e a l t o A M A N IN
LOVE
( 1 9 8 8 , 18> V i r g i n V i s i o n ,
re n ta l). G re ta S c a c c h i, t y p e c a s t a s a
y o u n g a c tre s s , is J a n e , p ic k e d fo r a
s u p p o r t i n g r o l e in a m o v i e s t a r r i n g
a n A m e ric a n , p la y e d b y P e te r C o y ­
o t e - T h e y f a ll f o r e a c h o t h e r , a s n a g
b e in g t h a t c e l e b r ity S t e v e is m a r ­
rie d t o a s o p h is tic a te d , s u s p ic io u s
f e l l o w A m e r i c a n ( J a m i e L e e C u r tis ) .
□ TH O SE
s u ffe rin g
w ith d ra w a l
s y m p t o m s a f t e r t h i s m o n t h ' s f in a l
e p is o d e o n C h a n n e l 4 c a n fin d
s o l a c e iri v i n t a g e m o m e n t s f r o m
H IL L S T R E E T B L U E S ( C h a n n e l 5 ,
£ 9 .9 9 ) . V o lu m e F o u r is f r o m t h e
d a y s w h e n M ic h a e l C o n ra d w a s
s t i l l c l o s i n g ro ll c a l l w i t h ' L e t ' s b e
c a r e f u l o u t t h e r e ', a n d i t s b r a c e o f
e p is o d e s
in c lu d e s
one
of my
f a v o u rite c h a r a c te r s . C a p ta in F r e e ­
dom .
SHAUN U SH ER
Daify Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
-PAGE 31
*-'K’Z:&
The rebirth o f a classic. David Lean's
Lawrence of Arabia charges back to
the screen in all its uncut glory. Right:
Peter O'Toole a s the desert hero.
IR DAVID Lean, B rita in ’s leading film director, is
celebrating. And h e h a s good cause. H is m ost fam ous film,
Law rence of Arabia^ is soon to be re-released in B rita in a fte r
27 years, in a new, extended version — in fact, th e original
version th a t L ean in tended cinem a-goers to se e .
; Over a candle-lit dinner in his luxurious Thameside home. Sir David, 81, told
of his joy and bitterness at .what has happened to Lawrence.:;
The film is already proving a hit on its second release in the United States after 30
minutes of film were replaced under the guidance of Lean, who had not even realised
the cuts had been made in the first place. The culprit was hot Columbia, the
Hollywood studio that distributed the film, but the producer Sarri Spiegel, now dead,
who ap p a ren tly also
deceived Lean about the
scale of revenues from the
original release in 1962.
*1 o n ly foun d ou t
recently that he’d cut all
this material out of the receipts so a t the time I ately. So they re-stuck
film,’ said Sir David.
every join very lovingly,
just didn’t know.
‘W hen I d iscovered
‘Later Sam came to me and did a wonderful job.
what had happened I felt and said "We can make a
‘And they said the posi­
sick at heart, i knew little money now when it tive print was going to be
about six minutes was comes out on television”, better than the original.
coming out, but when you arid he suggested cuts — The focus was going to be
think that the man you well I didn’t realise he’d that much better. You see,
were working with had, already cut out a lot.’
what happened was they
without saying a word to
printed on the latest film
Recently, American film stock which has far less
you, taken half an hour
archivist Robert Harris grain than in the old days
out of a film ...
decided he liked the film so it looks just wonderful.
so much that he arranged Very, very heady.’
for it to be restored.
Sir David is full of
"I never knew while he
'He’s been ju stified ,’ praise for Columbia, the
j»as alive. It was shown at said Sir David. ‘It’s been studio which owns the
its full length when it an enormous success in film, for releasing it again
first came out. It stayed the States. I mean, $lmil- after 27 years.
the right length fbr about lion in three cinemas in
And that decision has
tw o weeks, and then, three weeks!’
paid off. Lawrence of Ara­
unbeknown to me, they
It was no easy task to bia is being shown in 70
Started cutting it.
re-assemble the original millimetre at 22 cinemas
• ‘The Queen and the version. The missing foot­ in America. ’
Duke of Edinburgh came age had to be tracked
fo see it. They saw the full down in various places.
version. All these years
‘I don’t know exactly
went by and I didn’t
cannot get a seat
realise what had hap­ where they found it all. I at ‘You
the Ziegfeid, one of the
think a lot of it was in the
pened. Nobody told me.
three
biggest
cinemas in
laboratories. They’ve put
■ ‘To find out, you’d have the new version through New York — a 1,200to go to the cinema and digital recording and then seater — and people who
jvatch your own work on to a six-track Dolby go at 10 am every day are
finding that all seats for
:every night and I don’t do and it Sounds good.
the 1 pm show are bought.
that. Anyway I was all
“
They
had
one
surviving
‘And it’s coining money,
.over the world then, mak­
track, the marrying track a 27-year-old. film! it’s
in g Dr Zhivago.’
—
dialogue,
music
and
caught
on. Not one critic’s
Sam Spiegel told Lean effects all on one track — com plained
about the
lh a t the film was not a so
it
was
very
difficult
to
length.
’ success- except in some cut and put back without
‘Young people A- by
■major cities. ‘I had the making any jumps:in the
w hich 1 m ean anyone
same percentage of the sound, but they did it.
under 30 — are going to
profits as he had, and he
‘The MGM labs took see it, and they don’t
persuaded me that it was
a flop. And of course when really special care, . but realise what a film like
you’re told by the pro­ when they p u t the nega­ this looks like on a big
ducer that it’s not doing tive on the p rin te r,. it screen.’
>»ell . . . You don’t see the started rippling immediIt’s not only a genera­
tion of American, and
.soon European, youth who
are experiencing a Lean
masterpiece in its .original
form .for the first time..
A jubilant: Sir David
talked of plans to show his
acclaimed Dr Zhivago in
Russia*':-where it has been-'
banned since it was made.
‘I th in k it’s wonderful
.if th e R u s s ia n s see
.Zhivago a t ■ last. I hope
they like it.: Obviously it
f its in w ith ■ g la sn o st.':
They asked me over b u t
■I’m too busy w ith; my
next film’ . . . an adapta­
tion of Joseph Conrad’s
» D a v id Lean
Nostromo. - ■-
by ARNE WILSON
19-9 ®
Duck feather and down 12 Tog duvets
with slight marks and imperfections,
PILLO
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S
W A R N IN G : A lthough w e have alm ost £ 100,000
w o rth o f th e above q u ite and p illo w s o u r
experience o ve r the last 5 years tells us they go
very cutckht
■‘When I
' discovered
.what they
'had 'done'" to'
my film, I'
felt sick ■■.
at heart.'
But.now it, .looks-so....
wonderful*.-.
■
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HARROGATE, HAWORTH, YOIRK, LEEDS
^ K E F IE L D .H U a D E R S F IE L D jM ^ L E Y W L L ,M ir. HARROGATE
Pajif Mail, Friday, April'2 f ,1989. '
PAGE 32
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.GAR service a n d re p a ir te c h Inicians are being ‘fined ’ if m o to r­
ists’ com plaints a b o u t p o o r w o r k im an sh ip a re fo u n d to be correct.
It’s the new approach at National
.Autocare, Britain’s largest organisation
!for fast-fit replacement safety parts, car
'servicing and MoT testing.
I For good workmanship and customer
!courtesy, mechanics, technicians and
Autocare white-collar staff are receiving
Iup to £ 1,000 a month in bonuses — but
1it’s a two-way deal.
If a member of staff is found to foe
!responsible for a complaint, lie’s ‘fined’.
IAs a condition of employment he suffers
the -company’s cash loss, which is
deducted from his pay.
Courtesy
At 50 National Autocare centres —
planned to be 80 by the end of this year
— the customer is king.
Car mechanics and technicians are
taking great pains to please customers,
particularly women m otorists, with
old-world courtesy, attention to detail,
reassurance, reliability and service skills.
The biggest losers are high-street main
dealer garages. For highly skilled work­
shop staff are being lured to a new way
of life, in which they are ‘paid for
displaying their skills'.
f ‘It’s part of our move into the
(Nineties,’ boasts Paul Clarke, retail,
product manager of National Tyres and
National Autocare, who have 430 outlets.
‘Good staff is the key to good service
The look is Italian.
The engineering is German
The price is
a w eek?
by MICHAEL KEMP
and it’s so easy to lure them over, when
they see our approach,' says Paul, who
believes motorists should be able to
.watch work being done on their cars. ‘It 1
gives confidence.
‘Motorists want attention and' quality.
■ So we’re changing the car servicing
scene to give on-time, convenient, reli­
able attention at fixed prices, with a
no-quibb'e guarantee,’ adds Paul, whose
-business turned over £143million last
year, serving 1.43millidn motorists.
National guarantees to replace its tyres
— made by Dunlop SP — at any time if
a fault is found. Puncture repairs are
free for the life of a tyre.
Car repairs and servicing are guaran­
teed. If necessary. National re-does work
with new parts and gives a 10 per cent
cash refund — deducted from the
mechanic’s pay.
It’s better than any union deal.
BRIEFLY)
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Top names for the Lister
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A dozen of Europe’s richest men have ordered the new
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VOLKSWAGEN Audi has
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cost exhaust purifying
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Fuel injection and com­
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Comments by Martyn Goff
1
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(4 D e ad P ool
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Chart com piled by Screen
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Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
PAGE 33
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PAGE 34
D aih rjV laftF ^
(BM SS
DAILY MAIL, ISIORTHCLIFFE HOUSE LONDON EC4Y OJA
Don’t blame the poor police
WHY : is it that whenever
anything goes wrong it is
always someone else’s fault?
If the police hadn’t opened
the gates at Hillsborough on
Saturday there would have
been trouble outside, and they
would still have been blamed
for not opening them.
Whatever anyone says, it was
out-and-out hooliganism for so
many so-called ‘fans’ to turn
up without tickets and try to
force their way in.
They shouldn’t have been
there in the first place.
1
JESSIE MURRAY,
Nottingham Road,
Ilkeston,
Derbyshire.
. . . W hile there are clearly
questions to be answered with
.regard to decisions taken by
both the Football Association
and South Yorkshire Police,
surely those Liverpool support-'
ers who entered the ground
without tickets should search
th eir consciences and ask
themselves whether such a
tragedy m ight have been
avoided if they had not.
DAVID A. LAWSON,
D oe’s M eadow Road,
Bromborough, M erseyside.
Bad old dafs
AS AN Impartial observer, I
feel it would be wrong to heap
blame oti any policeman, or
the football authorities. Had
they not opened the gates and
someone had been crushed
ou tside the ground, there’
would have been an outcry.
The police could not win.
While I acciept that the
hooligan elem ent was nob
directly involved on this occa­
Brian Cloughs will be on hand
to give them a good hiding. ;
KITTY HALE,
Monkridge Court,
Gosforth, N ew castle.
. .. Could I thank Keith Water­
house for his article on Hills­
borough.
His sensitivity and under­
standing are in sharp contrast
to almost everything else I
have read. No pontificating, no
simplistic solutions, no recrim­
inations, just a genuine sym­
pathy with the football sup­
porters of Merseyside.
R. STRONACH,
Belvidere Road,
W allasey, M erseyside.
The stru gg le fo r s a f e ty — b u t a s M e rsey sid e m ourns, th e recrim inations begin
sion, I feel that the behaviour
of supporters over the last few
years, Liverpool being no
exception, has been, the reason
why the clubs have had to
erect all these barriers. If
people behaved in a civilised
manner there would have been
no need for the barriers.
F. HOWELL,
Birchwood Lane,
Storridge, Worcs.
Picture restraint
MANY newspapers published
photographs of those awful
minutes during which so many
people died.
One can n ot im agin e the
agony such pictures must have
caused the already devastated
and grief-stricken relatives,
seeing loved ones exposed in
such a terrible manner.
The Mail published a mov­
ing, sensitive account without
once resorting to sensational­
ism. You are to be congratu­
lated for your compassion and
restraint.
(Miss) K. KOWIN,
Spencer Road,
Harrow,
Middlesex.
...O n e wonders how many
more tragedies have to occur
before this hysteria-provoking
game called football is banned
completely.
R. A. COBB,
Pilton Road,
North Luffenham,
Rutland.
...C o n g ra tu la tio n s to Mail
sports writer Jeff Powell for
his excellent piece on Hillsbor­
ough. One only hopes that all
he says will be taken to heart
by the FA. They must be seen
to have a conscience.
K. HARVEY,
The Crossway,
Mottingfiam,
London.
Finger of guilt
...D u ring the past 25 years
football has generated a great THE media have been quick to
deal of money. Players, man-, point accusing fingers at both
agers and playing areas have police and football officials,
but I would emphasise that
all benefited considerably.
the barriers were erected to
Little has been done for the combat hooligans.
rank and file supporters on the
I trust these football fanatics
terraces. If complete seating
were obligatory throughout the around the country will accept
a
of the blame for
grounds, sim ilar tragedies theproportion
deaths.
might be avoided.
„
A. W. GRAY,
Crescent Gardens,
Eastcote, Middlesex.
N .L .A . GIBBS,
Grange Road,
Shanklin,
Isle of Wight.
...W ould you please convey
our d e e p e st sy m p a th y ,
thoughts and prayers to the
families and friends of the
dead aiid injured?
THE blame for Saturday’s
I am sure I speak for many,
shocking disaster must surely in Sheffield who wish the
be laid at the door of the people of Liverpool to know
original hooligans who were that we are thinking of them
the cause of the barriers to in their hour of darkness.
being erected in the first
(Mrs) M .N. BURROWS
place.
and family,
Perhaps the next time ‘fans*
Truswelt Avenue,
invade pitches a few dozen
Crookes, Sheffield.
Gall for Clough
WEST
*05
VA 1 0 7 5 3
♦AKQ5 2
*8
EAST
+ A 87 2
VKQ J
♦ J 6
4AJ54
YOU are West, declarer in Tt, and
North leads the +K, which you
obviously win in dummy. How do
you plan the play from there?
THIS is quite a difficult one, and
if you get it right first time, you’re
becoming an excellent declarer.
With only 12 apparent and likely
tricks, you are going to have to
rely on a squeeze or a dummy
reversal.
The' dummy reversal, which
means ruffing in the hand with
longer trumps, is clearly the best
option; but for this you need the
trumps to break 3-2. If they don’t
your only hope is that North holds
the king of spades as well as the
queen of clubs and you can then
squeeze him.
You play the VK immediately and
if both opponents follow, you then ruff a club and return to dummy’s
*Q. If opponents follow again with
trumps, you ruff another club, back
to dummy with
and ruff the last
club.
Again back to dummy via the 4A
and draw the last trump discarding
•your *Q before running your dia­
monds. (If East started with five
diamonds and the ♦K , he will be
squeezed when the last trump is
played:) If trumps break 5-0 or 4-1,
you have to resort to the squeeze.
You draw trumps and cash your
diamonds, On the last diamond,
North will be squeezed if he holds
the 4 k as well as +Q.
PETER DONOVAN
i
•isln n D
a
»
'
i
t w
iT C m m
a
aiRD* V ;f
|TCA>,
.
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beusedto purchase B&Q SiftVouchers.
PAGE 35
Daily Mail, Friday; April 2 1 ,1 3 8 9
t
M
■
a e s k o F te x iM
—
c F in a n c e -
I
£
I
<Bg9ggBB5B»RM
iW
M
HW
W
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BBM
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£5. It’s not even the price of a decent taxi ride.
But that’s just how flexible our flexible finance
can be on a brand new Maestro Surf,
There aren’t many cars around that not only
don’t cost the earth, but also give you the chance to
see some of it as well.
And that applies to all the Maestro
v,. . ^ . kW range, including 1,000 free air miles
on each and every one of them.
Just think, £ 5 a d a / for reclining front seats,
head restraints, heated rear window and to top it all
MAESTRO SURF
36 Months
5.3% PAF
Cash Price*
£6755.00
Deposit (30%)
2026.50
Amount of credit
4728.50
Total amount payable
7516.06
Monthly payments"
Daily equivalent'
152.21
5.00
ll).b %
APR
"MAESTRO S U R F CASH PRICE £ 6 7 5 5 . INCLUDES ESTIMATED C O S T O F DELIVERY, NU M BE R P tA T E S A N D 1 2 M O N T H S H R O A D T A K PRICE C O R R E C T A T T IM E O F G OING .T O PRE SS ? S UBJE CT T 0 : VEHICLE AVAILABILITY CREDIT AVAILABLE TO ANYONE AGED 1 8 O R OVER T HROUGH AUSTIN ROVER FINANCE LTD. IC C S~A~ZaZ : C*0 SHIRLEY. SOLIHULL.
W E ST MIDLANDS B 9 0 3B H . T HE SE FINANCE PLANS ARE NOT AVAILABLE THROUGH THE EMPLOYEE PURCHASE PLAN. PLANS APPLY TO VEHICLES REGISTERED BETWEEN THE 1ST O F APRIL AND 3 0 T H JU N E 1 9 8 9 . " A N ADMINISTRATION FEE O F £ 1 0 IS ADDED TO THE FIRST PAYMENT. tB A S E D ON THE TOTAL U C \ r - . »
EXCLUDING D E P O S IT
PAGE 36
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
GAME5 -D A Y 5
20 11
A LUXURY cruise can be yours
to look forward to if you are a
winner of the holiday prize this
week. With a guest, you’ll sail in
style from Venice and visit Dub­
rovnik, Ctnfu and other fascinat­
ing ports of call, all thanks to
Summer Casino.
Mystery prize winners will each
be rewarded with a 35 mm com­
pact camera with zoom lens and
automatic focus. There are lots of
cash prizes to be won too, starting
"at an encouraging £25 and rising
to an enticing £10,000.
Game .4 Winners
—
Page 33
HOW TO CLAIM
CHECK that you have used only the numbers published in
the Daily Mail for Game 5. If you have been able to scratch
off all your numbers or reveal FOUR flaying cards or
symbols of the same kind (as shown on the back of pottr
game card) using only the published numbers, telephone the
Summer Casino Ctaimline on 01-819 6070 between 10am and
4pm. Claims for Game 5 cannot be accepted after 4pm
next Monday. Make sure you have gear card with you when
you adL
• HAVE y o u re v ealed a C oncorde sym b o l y e t? H y o u ca n correctly
reveal fou r an y w h er e on your card, y o u can ta k e part in th e free,
d raw after G am e 2 4 . The w in ner w ill b e in vited t o ta k e a party o f
frien d s and relation s aboard. C oncord e fo r a su p er d ay o u t.
TH
E
CR
ON your game card there are
24 different games (Game 1,:
Game 2, Game 3 etc). Each
game Is completely separate
and lasts six days. This week
we are playing Game 5.
Each day the Daily Mail
publishes Summer Casino
numbers. Today’s are printed
on the left. If you have any
of the published numbers on
your card for Game 5,
scratch off the gold panel
BENEATH the number. If, by
the end of the week, you
can scratch off all your
numbers for 6ame 5, you can
claim for Ct0,000.
But it doesn't stop there,
because there are many more
to win. —As
you
. i t
«_«»_ »------»
o f* eacn pumsBai
you wilt reveal a
» r o o r symbol.
Correethrreveaf FOUR of a
kind fas shown on the back
of your Summer Casino card}
in any one week and you can
claim for a great prize.
A F IR S T p rise o f £10 and tw o: run ners-up p rises o f £5 w ill
be aw arded to th e senders o f th e fir s t th ree correct solutions
checked. Solu tio n s to: D aily M eal P rise C rossw ords, PO B ox
2, C entral W ay, F ettham , M iddlesex, TW 14 0TG . Y ou can
send tod ay’s so lu tion in. th e sam e envelope a s tom orrow *s,
E ntries m a y be su lm itte d b y second-class p o st. E nvelopes
m u st be postm a rked no la te r th a n M onday.
ACROSS
1 Take away when said N a m e .................
to have been removed from A d d ress ....................
the rails (7)
5 Make foul pass (6)
9 Advertise the opening
as an unstuffy offering (7)
10 Waves to one on the
outside (7)
11 Tip off to go quietly in
extremity (3)
12 Observation taking in
a bit of enclosed space (11)
13 The man in the banger
not demanding much money
1 4 Trays need to be pro­
vided for working at a desk,
maybe (9)
16 Study tree by the sea
shortly to become rooted (9)
17 Make it difficult to see
the rest one mile behind (5).
1 9 Creep to VIPs if trans­
fer is likely (11)
2 2 Place to put up a
name if elected (3)
2 3 Finished with every­
thing that offers protection
at work (7)
2 4 Finish a bottle at the
girl’s thrash (7)
2 6 Like a swallow of a
cocktail one abandoned (6)
2 7 Stormy rains in dry
passage (7)
l a m
HOW TO PLAY
TELEPHONE YOUR ORDER OH 0t«387 3313
THE silver-plated cut­
lery in today’s offer is
maide by Viners and
guaranteed for ten
years.
Each piece is silver
;3g plated in S heffield
”
and
you can choose
KINGS
between three classic
patterns — K ings,
Bead and Du Barry.
OUBARRY
A seven-piece place
se ttin g of a tab le
knife and fork, a des­
sert knife, fork and
spoon, a soup spoon
and a teaspoon costs
just £22.95.
You can make con­
siderable savings if
you buy a mahogany
coloured wooden can­
~P ost to: Mail Silver Plated Cutlery
teen.
These are avail­
Offer, PO Box 32, London NW1 2RP.
able in the following
Please sen d me:
choices: 44 pieces — 6
... place setting(s) at £ 2 2 .9 5 per
x 7-piece place set­
setting.
tings plus two tables­
poons — at £99.95;
___ 44-p iece canteen(s) at £ 99 .9 5
each.
60 pieces — 8 x
6 0 - p i e c e c a n t e e n ( s > a t £159-95
7-piece place settings
each.
plus four tablespoons
— at £159.95;
...... 76-p iece ca n teen s) a t £ 1 8 9.95
each.
76 pieces — 8 x
T ic k c h o ic e o f p a tte r n : K in g s
;
7-piece place settings
B ead
; Du B a r r y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
plus four tablespoons
and eight fish knives
N A M E ............................... ........................
and forks — at
A DDRESS.
....................... .
£189.95.
All prices include
delivery to your door.
I e n c lo se my c r o s s e d ch eq u e
• You can telephone
No-...-.-................... payable to Daily
Mall for
or debit my I your order by giving
ccess/V isa
A
|-num ber. A Call
_ ccess/V
„ isa account by
01-387
Card No.....................................................
No—.......................................... |} 3313 (24 hours a day,
Tel N o...................................... ................ [ seven days a week).
—
VMS
rI
I
: No. 8000
- ............... ..................
I
L
PLEASE allow 28 days for delivery from receipt of order. If not satisfied,
money will be refunded if item is returned within 14 days of receipt. Price
includes VAT and delivery. Inquiries to 01-388 8111. Please write name
and address on back of cheque. Please do not send cash.
Offer applies to Great Britain and Northern Ireland only and is subject to
availability, which is finite. Daily Mail Ltd., Registered Office, Carmelite
House, London EC4Y OJA. Registered No. 1160542 England.
■ ■ mm
YOUR DAILY STARS
AQUARIUS
PISCES
ARIES
TAURUS
GEMINI
CANCER
LEO
VIRGO
U8RA
SCORPIO
SAGITTARIUS
CAPRICORN
0898100207
0898100208
0898100209'
0898100210
0898100 211
0898100212
FRED BASSET by GRAHAM
(
But we’re a bifc A
I short on mountains J
An evening stroll
y that’s nob proper exerris£ )
I along the street and A for a Pyrenean twunbai n J
(
---- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
M
--- - —
.
,0 A„ p--- »l HH—
N q around tens
ft
^
&JL
.... m
r~ ^
i,.
I
! ARIES (M ar 2 1 -A p r 20) Every­
one is likely, to feel isolated or'
alone from time to time. Right
now you may feet slightly let down, but
only because you have be&t at the centre
of things for so long. You have everyi to live for.
. TAURUS (A p r 21-M ay 21) Cur; rent developments in your solar
■ chart indicate that there are
new professional roads to travel and new
lands. to conquer. Today's influences
really do indicate that you are standing
on the brink of an exciting new phase.
i GEMINI (M ay 2 2 -June 21) How­
ever accommodating you are,
others will still want you to
give even more ground. Actually, any
compromise must take into account the
fact that you have upped your demands
in recent weeks.
; CANCER ( J u n e 2 2 - J u ly 23)
; Other people have already
played their trump cards, so it
is up to you to make the next move.
Mars, is an ally at the moment, so you
can be confident that decisive action will
produce the consequence^ you desire.
m
LEO {Ju ly 24-A ug 23) A number
if; of
planets seem set to oppose
one another with the result
that both personally and professionally
you must become decidedly more dis­
cerning about where and how you use
your energy.
LIBRA (S e p t ?24-O ct 23) You
ought now to be back on form
1ana ready to astound everyone1
with your creativity and zest for life. Yet
be aware that today's Sun-Moon angle
obliges you to deal with the nitty-gritty
of your financial commitments and
expenditure.
(Lontfoncojleafepfoce08^S
Allcollef>org«38f>perminuteftoofc,25*>perfnimtftoH-peoVACcdlboxservice.
a
CD
<?>
•^SCORPIO (O ct 24-N ov 22) On a
personal level you appear to
S § Q L /ih a v e got yourself into* a rather
complex and unusual situation. The indi­
cations are positive, so don't worry on
that score. However, do foster goodwill
wherever you can.
>'SAGITTARIUS (N ov 23-D ec 22)
Pluto is still occupying a sensi.
: tive region of your chart and it
is worth remembering that the main
danger lies in dwelling in the past. At all
costs focus on immediate day-to-day
affairs.
BUMPER Fred Basset 2 5 th A nniversary book still available direct from M ail N ewspapers pic. Publications
Departm ent, Room 4, Carmelite House, London EC4Y O JA. Price £ 2 .5 0 plus 5 0 p p o st and packing.
MASTER QUIZ IS ON PAGE 39
AND FACTFILE IS ON PAGE 38
THE YUPPIES b y ANNIE TEMPEST
WE HAVE EVERYTHINGONTHE MENU TODAY.
SIR.
Solution to Prize
Crossword No 7997
ACROSS: 6 Larger th a n life. 9
S c r a p e . 1 0 R e m o te l y . 11
P ro g re s s . 13 R a c k e t. 15
C la u s e . 1 7 C la m m y . 1 9
S u n d e r. 2 0 R e s e ttle . 22
S ta n d o u t. 2 4 Im p o s e . 2 6
From tim e t o tim e .
DOW N: 1 E lec tric g u ita r. 2
A ria. 3 S e v e re . 4 Balm oral. 5
B lo t. 7 T h r u s t . 8 F a ls e
e y e l a s h e s . 1 2 G ra n d . 1 4
C o m e t. 1 6 S a r d o n i c . 1 8
W rith e . 21 Sailor. 2 3 N am e.
2 5 Pail.
0898100301
0898100302
0898100 20^
0898100304
0898100305
0898100206
Charted by the
Dally Maxi astrologer
NICHOLAS CAMPION
i A S p j l VIRGO (A ug 2 4 -S ep t 23) The
past few days have been mentally and physically exhausting,
largely thanks to Mercury, planet of the
K things have started to fall apart,
the problem is almost certainly a lack of
real communication or commonsense.
UPDATED EVERY WEEKDAY. FRIDAY -SUNDAY PREVIEW FOR THE WEEK T O COME.
Thousand* of p eo p le listen fo K ale Fairchild's datly pred'CJions, Phone your star sign now!
DOWN
1 Harsh doctor one
detected in unusual acts (7)
2 Pricei quoted when
adapting a j beggarly enter­
tainment (10,5)
3 Pudding direction lost
in the past (3)
»
4 There’s a certain
amount of heat in the
empty room (5)
5 Broken up by having
the players taken away? (9)
6 Opening attack to cap­
ture the Royal Society (5)
7 Trained slaves fash­
ioned miraculous fobd for all
(6,3,6)
8 Profoundly protective
of a saint in the church (6)
1 2 Cover a bit of a riot in
the Mediterranean (5)
14 Simon Cole’s new ver­
sion might give the reader
pause (9)
15 Pound raised in one
turn — very good! (5)
16 One takes a prisoner to
be officer or follower (6)
18 It’s been raised to sup­
port a call to prayer (7)
2 0 Scheme to finish last
works (5)
21
Bay to be admitted
(5)
2 5 A bad actor can’t fin­
ish an exclamation (3)
ERS CUTLERY
SO I SEE...
ITfe DIS&USTIN<5- BRINS- ME A CieAH
ONE!
^ ■^ K C A P R iC O R N (D ec 23-Jan 20) It
r E i J j R may indeed be some time
before major differences are
ironed out. So why not alter your tack
and realise that opposing points of view
and lifestyles are providing just the
stimulation you need to refresh and
renew your life.
{AQUARIUS , (Ja n 21-Feb 19)
1 Most people will be on the
(defensive to one degree or
another, even if this manifests as bellig­
erence. What is now . required is a
substantial readiness to give as well as
to take. After all, it takes two to tango.
i
a>
z
507
PISCES (Feb 20-M ar 20) Recent
developments have left others
' —- — < unable or unwilling to make
firm commitments. However, this is no
reason why you should put your own
plans on liold or give up a treasured
ambition.
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
atm finish
d drawers
a kitchen
j
WfkaiMWH
When you spend
£ 2 5 0 or more
' "V ->
—
s.y.
js>saa
AHthese units
current price £2119.81
wmmsmm
£
m
1
0
6
0
Appliances not included
in this offer.
o ;m t
s fists
I
Ik
OR MORE
m-im
O ur C urrent
P ric e £ 79 .9 9
mm
BASEMIT
n$E UNIT
O ur C urrent
P ric e £ 8 4 .9 9
P ric e £ 89.99
Out Current
RMIRE
•ASEWIT
O ur C urrent
Pric e £ 99 .9 9
Hl-LtRE
BASEMIT
SCOan
DRAWERLINE
BISEUBIT
ffl-UNE
O ur C urrent
Our C urrent
O ur C urre nt.
P ric e £ I1 9 .9 9 P rice £ 139.99 P ric e £ 179.99
O ur C urrent
P ric e £ 9 9 .9 9
O u r Current
O u r C urrent
O ur C urrent
O ur Current
P ric e £ 1 0 9 .9 9 P ric e £11 9.99 P ric e £ 12 9.99 P ric e £ 159.99
1000am
DRAWERLIKE
BASEVNIT
600ma PAN
3 DRAWER
BASEUNIT
Our C urrent
O ur C urrent
Price £ 1 7 9 .9 9 P rice £ 17 9.99
BKIHt
HUM
WU-OUT
PtfU-09?
O ur C urrent
O ur C urrent
Price £ 1 5 9 .9 9 P ric e £ 1 8 9 .9 9
NOiW
come*
RHMI
il-SNAPEIHI
LINEC0RKR
909x980
(L-SKAPE) R!
LINECORKER
O ur C urrent
P rice £11 9.99
O u r C urrent
Price £ 164.99
Our C urrent
Price £ 219.99
O ur C urrent
Price £139.99
O ur C urrent
O ar C urrent
O ur C urrent
P rice £ 1 7 4 .9 9 P ric e £ 19 9.99 P rice £ 12 9.99
£01.49
DRAW
ER
LINESINK
DRAWERLINE
CORNER
SNiJN
DRAWERLINE
CORKER
9Mx9w
DRAWERUK
COMER
DRAWERUNE
SINK
tOOOnn
DRAWERHUE
CORNER
5vOrhd
HI-LIKE
GLASS
lOWflm
HI-LINE
GLASS
SSOnm
STANDARD
LARDER
SOOaa
STDPULL
OiTTLARDER
TAIL
LARDER
PULL-OUT
O ur C urrent
Our Current
O urC u rren t
O urC u rren t
O urC u rren t
O urC urrent
O urC u rren t
Our C urrent
O urC u rren t
O urC urrent
O urC u rren t
O urC u rren t
P ric e 0 5 9 .9 9 P ric e £ 13 9.99 P rice £59 9.99 P rice £ 2 4 9 .9 9 P rice £ 17 9.99 P rice £ 13 9.99 P ric e £ 14 9.99 Pric e .L1 99 .9 9 P ric e £ 1 7 9 :9 9 P ric e £ 3 8 9 .9 9 f rice £ 19 9.99 P ric e £ 39 9.99
£v
STANMR9
wauiuir
O u rC u tre n l
P ric e £ 9 9 .9 9
£99.39
9.99
em am r
O ur C urrent
P rice £ 8 9 .9 9
SfAMMv
m u UNIT
STAMAR9
WRUtHHT
O ur C urre nt
O ur C urrent
P rice £ 1 2 9 .9 9 P ric e £ 1 4 9 .9 9
STANDARD
MU GLASS
STANDARD
NALLGLASS
TAIL
MULUNtT
O urC urrent
P ric e £94 .9 9
O urC urrent
P rice £159:99
Our C urrent
P ric e £ 8 9 .9 9
M il
muwnr
O i« C urrent
•Price £ 9 4 .9 9
OPEN
STDFRIDGE/
FREEZERUNIT
Dur Current
P n c e £ l« 9 .9 9
O urC u rren t
Price £ 19 9.99
O ur C itr rent
P ric e £ 9 9 .9 9
O u r C urrent
P rice £ 339.99
O ur C urrent
Price £ 199.99
TAUWAU
TAuaAU
mlcuss
WHtSRACt
O urC u rren t
Price £49.99
END
VPIN
fNOSASE
O urC u rren t
P rice £59 .9 9
O urC u rren t
P rice £ 99.99
O ur C urren}
P ric e £ 74 .9 9
O ur C urrent
P ric e.£59.99
O ur C urre nt
P ric e £ 5 9 .9 9
smr
£64.99
flKiwn
WALLMIT
Our C urrent
P ric e £ 79 .9 9
O u r Current
P ric e £ 84 .9 9
O tn C urrent
Price £74.99
O u t C urrent
P rice £154.99
£04.99
ml
m i
OOOaa
nUCORNEfi
000x000
(L-$fftPE)
MOan
TALI
lOOOaa
TAIL
MUXMIT
iHLUNIT
WALL UNIT
GLASSM il
TAUCORNER
HAUSHT
BASSIMff
O urC u rren t
O urC u rren t
O urC urrent
O ur'C unsnJ
O ur C urre nt
O ufG urrerrt
O ur C a rte r*
O urC u rren t
O u rC u rre tft
P ric e £ 1 0 9 .9 9 P ric e £ 1 1 9 :9 9 P ric e £10 9.99 P ric e £15 9.99 P ric e £ 1 3 9 .9 9 P ric e £ 159.99 P r r c e £ m 9 9 P ric e £ 199.'99 P ri« !£ 1 .7 S .9 9
W tU ttH T
STANDARD
OPENEND
WIT
O ur C urrent
P ric e £ 159.99
O urC u rren t
P ric e £44 .9 9
CTPMTO
stum
IF YOU DON ’T WANT TO FIT IT YOURSELF - WE WILL DO IT FOR YOU.
• All prices quoted are for kitchen units only *This offer does not include electrical appliances. Most bulky products are sold in carry home packs for easy sefrassemfciyJAD offers subject to being unsold.-
SUPERSTORES
OPEN UNTIL 8 ”
MONDAY-SATURDAY
& Every Bank Holiday
►
Sunday 9am-6pmt
JUSTASK
E
U D M lfl
r H H HV I 1
HOMECARE
A
LOWEST
PRICES
GUARANTEED
If you find anything you’ve purchased
from Texas on sale cheaper elsewhere,
we’ll refund the difference.
FORYOUR NEARESTTEXAS STORE PHONE01200 0200
TOE RETAILDIVISION OF LADBROKE GROUP PLC•
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
■KUV.V 11M .M f
SS.‘.‘SS.\
ra m
2 BED DET BUNGALOWS at £ 6 7 ,0 0 0
Benyoii Grove is an exclusive cul-de-sac development of 28
detached bungalows, all with a garage, situated just a short walk
from the Herlington Shopping, Community and Health Centres.
It is also close to the Gity Centre and the Queensgate Shopping
Complex. A superb specification includes luxury oak fitted
kitchen with oven & hob, custom-built fitted wardrobes,
gas central heating, and garage.
iP
m
Sales O ffice open Saturday & Sunday, 11.30-5.30
Tel: (0733) 370218
BEAVER HOUSE, NORTHERN ROAD,
SUDBURY, SUFFOLK. TEL: (0787) 76241
Award Winning Homes
in delightful Devon
Our superb new homes are achieving ever greater
popularity with people looking forward to an enjoyable new
life in the beautiful West Country. As Housebuilder of the
Year in 1988 that comes as no surprise, and you’ll find a
wealth of features plus quality in every detail in our
bungalows at The Chase and Winslake Meadow, and the
houses and bungalows at Saxon Heights. In fact, we’re.sure
you’ll be delighted by the views b o lt inside and out,
The Chase, Okehamptoin 3 bed. det. bungalows from
£103,000, Tel. (0837) 3804
Winslake Meadow, Tedbum St. M ary 2 bed. semi-det.
. bungalows from £84,000.3 bed. det. bungalows from
£122,500, Tel, (0647ft) 876
Saxon Heights, Tavistock 3 bed. det. bungalows from
,. £110,000.4 bed. det. houses from £165,000.
Tel, (0822) 617614 '
A CLOSER LOOK WILL
TELL YOU A CALA HOME
IS NO ORDINARY HOME.
Choose from a tremendous
range of homes built to high
specifications on-pleasant sites
in
or
around • attractive
Lincolnshire Market towns.
★ Personalised Design
Service
★ Homes for retirement or
. 1st timers
★ Prices from £ 4 5 ,9 9 5
Homes built by local builders
who are proud of their reputation
as quality craftsmen.
You don’t have to be a surveyor or an architect to tell the
difference between a CALA home and an ordinary home. It hits you
right off.
First, yoas^e a beautifully designed property in a betterthan-average location.
Second, you can tell by the specification that a CALA is
definitely no ordinary honrie because we include extras that the
competition charge extra for.
Third, no matter what size of CALA home you view, you get a
sense of space and airiness. There are only as many rooms as the home will
sensibly accommodate. These arejust a few of the things that make the
difference. There are plenty more.
. However, the price may come as a shock. Because we don't ask any more
for a Caia home than they do for an ordinary home. The proof is in visiting any CALA
Send fo r
your
brochure
n o w to :
HughBourn
DevefopmentsLtd.
Louth Road, Wragby
WWragby STD 0 6 7 3 858831
WRINGT0N.
NR BRISTOL.
d e t a c h e d H o u s e in
. a ttr a c tiv e M en d ip vil­
lage. L a rg e lu x u r y f it­
te d k i t c h e n , 2 n e w
b a th ro o m s ,
L a rg e
L ounge, D in in g room ,
F u ll G a s F ired C e n tra l
H e a tin g , M ain s D ra in ­
age, G arag e, L a rg e G a r­
den s, (B risto l 10 M iles
B a th 21 miles). Exc
d ec o rativ e o rd e r T /O .
showhome.
-
£159,000
Tel: Wrington
(0934) 862368.
Vacant possession.
.Our V.I.P HOMEBUYER CARO is a real bon us for the house
purchaser. It entitles the holder to a substantial
benefits package which includesa subsidised mortgage
rate or part exchange opportunity, plus much more.
You'll want to know more! Visit one of the $ales
' Offices listed below.
Alford
HOMES
A PROWTING COMPANY
Sarah’s View at Padstow, a beautiful
fishing village offers:
• Coastal Views • 2 and 3 Bedrooms
• Full Gas CentralHeating
• Money Saving Moving Package
Inspection visits can be arranged.
Selling agents: G.A. Property Services
telephone Truro (0872) 77451 or Gribble
Booth & Taylor, Tel: (0752) 847151.
W i G G I NS
HOMES
Wiggins 24 hr hotline, Fareham (0329) 282832.
CALA
E X E T E R 12 M IL E S
(2 M IL E S N E W A 3 0 )
Fascinating period property
for full, restoration in 2 '/j
acres.' Beautifully secluded
in a 'sheltered ^valley, this
pretty
thatched
cottagc
■offers a unique opportunity
for. those seeking; a quiet
country home, with further
seopc to establish attractive
gardens Within an area o f
stream bordered grounds.
Paddock and
woodland.
Auction (unless sold) 2nd
June. R e p lv Stags, 11, East Street,
Okebampton (0827) 3258’ <
- : R e f:C 6 m
OXFORDSHIRE
Chipping Norton
4 Bedroom Luxury
detached houses
from £164,000
Tel: (0608) 41489 -'
llam -6pm daily
C ala H o m es L im ite d
*Telford, Shrops—Heritage Park 3 & 4 Bed. Det. Houses—From £79,000 Tel: 09S2 641472
*Droitwich. WOrcs--Yew Trees 3 & 4 Bed. Houses—From £85.000 Tel: 090S 77S0S6 ,
Witchffrrd, Cambs-Briery Fields 5 Bed. Det. Houses-From fi 142,500 Tel: 0223 460258
Eton Place, Steeple Bumpstead, Nr Haverhill 1, 2 & 3 Bed. Cottages—From £59.000 Tel: 0223 4602S8
Hengrove, Bristol—Beechmount Court 2 Bed. Flats—Prices T.BATel: 02712 711 413 (Estate Agents)
*PaUlton Bristol, Avon—Ashmans Gate 3 Bed. Det. Houses—From £99,750 Tel: 0761 412499
*Bumham On Sea, Somerset—Westfield 2. 3 & 4 Bed. Det. Houses^-From £69,950 Tel: 0278 792103
;.
B A R R A T T
B a m m W e s i M id la n d s Li m ite d
•Midland Ho u s e . N e w Road.
H a le s o w e n . 0 2 1- 5 8 5 56 05 .
BEST VALUE IN T h e S o u t h
o f E n g la n d . F r o m £61,000.
1 & 2 b e d ro o m e d , t r a d i ­
ti o n a ll y b u i l t h o u s e s w ith
C e n tra l h e a tin g /c a rp e ts .
W e ll la n d s c a p e d d e v e lo p ­
m e n t b e tw e e n N ew F o r e s t
a n d beaches. S how m od­
els o p e n d a ily . T e l (0590)
7 60 3 3 o r (0425) 611144 o r
(0590) 71230 (2 4 h rs).
EXM OUTH, DEVON. D e t
b u n g a lo w i n p r im e c o r n e r
p o s itio n . Q u i e t r e s id e n tia l;
PENNINE FRINGE
a re a .- P a n o r a m ic s e a &>
e s t u a r y v ie w s .' C o m p r is ­
BAMFORD/ROCHDALE
in g ‘ re c e p tio ri -Hall, L Outstanding Architech designed.
s h a jp e d l o u n g e / d i n e r ^ 2
Stone built 4 ,Bedroom Residence.
d b le b e d s , b a th r o o m ,
1 acre mature grounds in prime
k i t c h e n , ' la r g e loft,- s u i t ­
[‘locality
Luxuriously appointed
a b l e f o r c o n v e r s io n . G g e,
‘ throughout
p a tio , w ell la id b u t g d n s
Enquiries to
s u r r o u n d i n g t h e p r o p e r ty .
N o C h a i n . £105,000. T e l
m RYDER & DUTTON
(0395) 266117 E v es.
0 61 -6 4 3 -9 6 1 7
YORK CITY -CENTRE. 3 b e d
m o d s e m i , d e t h o u s e . AcKETTERING TOWN CENTRE. M A R K E T
DRAYTON
co m , e x c e lle n t c o n d i tio n .
S u p e r 3 bed d e t b u n g a ­
S hropshire, sem i D et hse in
L r g e f i t k it . 27.’ b r ic k g g e.
low . L r g e In g e , s e p d in in g
ru ra l situ atio n approx Vk
A t t r a c t i v e g d n s . \£ 6 4 ,0 0 0 .
r m . . F G C H . Q u i e t p o s i­
MD 3 /4 b e d rm , L g e L n g e ,
o n o . T e l (0904) ; 638170 or
tio n . L o v e ly g d n . 2 g g e ’s.
k it / d i n i n g r m , m a s t e r b ed
(02404) 4748
>
10 m i n s 'S t n : - 1 h r L o n ­
rm , P u ll C .H ., d b le g g e,’
WESTSHORE,
P a rk H om es
d o n . £162,500 o n o . T e l
L g e G d n , p l e a s a n t view s,
fr o m £24,000. (0229) 42195
(0536) 515036
£100,000. (0630) 4077.
WE CAN HELP YOU OPEN THE
DOOR TO A NEW CALA HOME
;
.^Chard, Somerset—Lord Leaze 3 & 4 Bed. Det. Houses—From £79,950 Tel: 0460 67448 ______
Vita Road, Portsmouth—Alexandra Mews 1 & 2 Bed. Apartments and 3 Bed. Townhouses—From £87,500 :
;
Tel: 070S 671063
i ______
*Billingshurst, West Sussex—Chiirchfields 2 & 3 Bed. Cottages—From £87,500 Tel: 040381 3254
♦SH0WH0MES
FROM THE GUINNESS BOOK OF RECORDS
THE S/M/UIEST HOOFED/MAMMAL IN THE WORLD
fS THE R0Y A L ANTELOPE (N E O T R A G U S P Y G M A C U 3 )
Of WEST A F R IC A , STANDING A /MERE 10 -12 ih
( 2 5 0 - 3 0 0 t u r n ) A T THE SHOULDER.
LIVING ON ROCK/
OUTCROPS A N D
GORGES IN SOUTHERN
/1N0 EASTERN A F R IC A ,T U I
KUPSPRINGER (OREOTRAGUS
O RCOTRAGUS) IS THE O NLY
HOOFED A N I M A L THAT
H A B IT U A L L Y W A L K S ON
TIPTOE, HELPING IT TO
M A I N T A IN A F IR M GRIP
ON STEEP CUFFS.
Drawn by DICK MILLINGTON
THE ONLY AQUATIC /MEMBER OF THE ANTELOPE
F A M IL Y IS THE S ITATUN GA ( T R A G U A P H U 3
S P E K H ) W HICH SPENDS /MOST OF THE DAY
HIDOEN IN THE REED SWfl/MPS OF CENTRAL
rtND WESTERN AF R IC A . T 6 ESCAPE
DETECTION IT WILL SUB/MERGE UNTIE
ONLY THE T IP OF ITS NOSTRILS SHOW
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
PAGE 39
PHOTOSETTING
Now is the time to buy
a new Laing home —
and here’s where to find it.
S M Y T H H O R N E L IM IT E D
require:
SMALL OFFSET INSTALLATION/
SERVICE ENGINEERS/
DEMONSTRATORS
AFVI o r G e s t e t n e r e x p e r i e n c e p r e f e r a b l e .
Localfy based, car, pension fund, expenses.
Applicants must be self-motivated and experienced in dealing with
management in relation to duties outlined above.
A clean driving licence and good health record needed. Wages
commensurate with experience: Electrical knowledge an advantage.
In London and the Southeast... From Cambridge to the Dorset coast...
From studio apartments to family-sized homes, there’s a new Laing home
just w aiting fo r you. Call us now, or com e and see us.
BERKSHIRE
CROWTHORNE HeathUnkePmk
£89,950-£229,950 (0344)779018
WOKINGHAM • Glebe Park
£69,950-£209,950 (0734)774274
CAMBRIDGESHIRE
CAMBRIDGE ■ York Place
£64,995 -£81,500
(0277)261626
DORSET
BR1DPORT -Chesil Court
£54,450
(0308)421230
ESSEX
CHAFFORD HUNDRED BsexPlace
£59,995 -£ 6 9 ,9 9 5 (0375) 373547
DAGENHAM •De Sutton Court
£65,995 - £94,995
01 590 6071
GRAYS GenoaQuey
£62,000 - £92,000 (0375)373547
HALSTEAD • Greenwoods
£86,500-£144,000 (0277)261626
LOUGHTON •Maple Gate
£79,995
01 502 3185
THURROCK Watts Wood
£68,000 - £140,000 (0375 )373547
WITHAM -The Mailings
£63,500 -£ 6 5 ,5 0 0
(0277)261626
HAMPSHIRE
GOSPORT-St Matthew's Court
TUNBRIDGE WELLS The Goodwins
£68,950 - £73,000. (0293)544844
£49,950-£61,950
(0705)510855 LONDON
HAYLING ISLAND •South Lea
ACTON - Westcott Park
£5 6 ,7 50-£82,950
(0705)461702 £64,950 - £89,950
01992 5264
LOCKS HEATH ■ Priory Park
BECKTON ■ Tollgate Square
£68,950-£125,250 (04895)84739 £79,950 - £140,000
01474 6013
TOTTON -Bartley Meadows
o r 01511 1761
£56,450-£110,950 (0703)871994 BURNT OAK -Deansbrook
HERTFORDSHIRE
£71,500-£120,000
01951 5741
COLINDALE •Colindale Gardens
BUSHEY ■ Trumpet Glade
£65,000 -£1 0 5 ,0 0 0
01 205 7904
I only 3 bed house
£120,000
019502200 ENFIELD ■ Heathfields
CHESHUNT ■ Hotspur Wood
Prices to be announced 01440 7313
£81,995-£179,995
(0992)34994 HILLINGDON ■ West Quay Village
Prices to be announced (0344)860161
HATFIELD ■ De Havilland Wood
£ 7 4 ,500-£139395 (07072)71044 ISLINGTON • The Grove
£79,950 - £195,000
01 704 7936
ST ALBANS ■ Sandringham Court
£70,495-£86,995
(0727)44684
or 01704 7873
MILLWALL •Island Square
KENT .
£64,950-£129,950
01 538 4178
ERITH ■ Riverstone Court
or 01 9879528
I property remaining (0322)88436
MITCHAM • TheHamiltons
DAIiTFORD ■ Prior}1Meadows
£59,950-£110,000
016850352
£62,500-£97,000
(0322)88436
M oraN G U A M (b t!j)el Irinn
GRAVESEND • TbeHoplands
£118,950—£152,000
01857 0259
£ 4 7950-£89,950
(0474)333851
orO l 8571929
STONE -Saxon Park
£59,995-£71,000
(0322)845025
Write# TefepAcw. Servicfi Manager, Mr Vic Cranfiefd
SMYTH HORNE LIMITED
2 Pegamoid Road, Edmonton. London N18 2LW
Tel: 01-830 6391
NEASDEN •Harp Island Village
From £69,495
012081666
ROYAL DOCKS ■ St Edwards
£ 59,950-£109,950
014730504
or 01473 0574
SOi THGATI:' ■ Bounieside
£100,000-£127,000 01886 4444
WEMBLEY -Sudbury Meadows
£59,000-£121,000
01904 0093
WEST DRAYTON ■ The Hawthorns
£ 7 M 5 0 -£118,950 (0895)444564
WIMBLEDON • ThePelhams
£78,500-£102,000
01685 0352
OXFORDSHIRE
UTTLEMORE Sandford Heights
£79,950-£129,950 (0865)748454
SURREY
HACKBRIDGE Carshalton Meadows
£66,950-£110,000
01669 8119
REIGATE • WarenneCourt
£134,995
(0737)221341
CUTTING & CREASING
EXPERIENCED BOBST MINDER
r e q u i r e d f o r d o u b le d a y
s h i f t w o rk . C o m p e titiv e
w a g e s a n d o v e r tim e p lu s
o t h e r b e n e f its . A p p ly to
E a g le P r e s s o f H e r s h a m .
T e l W a lto n o n T h a m e s
(0932) 241SS5.
CAMERA OPERATORS
CAMERA OPERATOR, p l a n n e r/p la te m a k e r re q u ire d
b y c o m m e r c ia l p r i n t e r i n
S t r e a t h a m . T e l 0 1 -7 6 4
7722.
JUNIOR
OPPORTUNITIES
JUNIOR PRINTER £6,500 u p ­
w a rd s
m in im u m
6
m o n th s e x p e rie n c e on
A M 1250/A M 1250 A S C
M A C H IN E S t o jo in s m a ll
i n t e r n a l p r i n t d e p a r tm e n t
in c e n tra l L o n d o n . T el
B o b H ill o n 01-637 0471
LITHOGRAPHIC
JOSS PRESS
We care and it shows
Have
th e
f o llo w in g
vacancies available
* G uillotine Operator
* Platem aker
* Camera Operator
* Rota Print Operator
* Letter P ress,P la ten . ;
with
small
Offset
knowledge
G2A Details correct at time of going to press.
Tel M r Best on :
01-560 5325
ANNE PLEASE d a t e a r r i v a l
S o u t h F a r m H o u s e U p to n
L o v e ll W a r m in s te r . Y o u r
lo v in g f r ie n d Christopher
0
‘CASTLE M EW S' • TH E BUTTS •W EST LONDON
3 & 4 bed TOwri Houses. Prices from £199,950. T el: 0 1 - 8 4 7 4 2 7 1
PU B U C NOTICES
BOTTOMLEY
nee
D ONBAVAND
ANNI E
B O T T O M LEY
nee
DONBAVAND (w id o w ) L a te
o f K in g s fie ld H o m e
H o ld e n S t r e e t , A sfato n U n d e r - L y n e d ie d T h e r e
o n t h e 7 t h A u g u s t 1988
( E s ta te a b o u t £1,000)
C OOPER
D A V ID
JO H N
McKENZtE COOPER L a t e o f
4 B r a d le y V iew , N e ls o n
d ie d T h e r e o n t h e 1 2 th
O c to b e r 1987 ( E s ta te
£ ib o u t £1,500)
COWE ROBERT SPEERS COWE
L a te o f F l a t 7, 6 6 t i p p e r
P a r k R o a d , B r o u g h to n ,
S a lf o r d d ie d T h e r e o n t h e
1 4 th N o v e m b e r 1988 (E s ­
t a t e a b o u t £3,500)
ROBERTS DAVJD DONNELLY
(ors ROBERTS) L a t e o f
S p rin g fie ld
H o u se,
S p r in g f ie ld R o a d , W ig a n
d ie d a t W ig a n o n t h e 5 th
Ja n u a ry
1989 ( E s ta te
a b o u t £4,000)
HODGKINS
CLAUDE
HODGKINS L a t e o f F a i r h o lm e , B a r k h o u s e R o a d ,
M a n c h e s t e r d ie d T h e r e
o n t h e 1 7 th A p r il 1988
( E s ta te a b o u t £2,000)
ROY nee DELDAY AGNES
SIMPSON SMITH ROY nee
DELDAY (w id o w ) L a te o f 2
E d a l R o a d , M o ss le y H ill,
L iv e rp o o l d ie d a t L iv e r-'
pool o n th e 21st D ecem ­
b e r 1988 ( E s ta te a b o u t
£50,000)
T h e k in
o f th e ab ove
n a m e d a r e re q u e ste d to '
a p p ly t o T h e S o lic ito r ,
D uchy
of L a n c a s te r
O ffic e , L o n d o n W C 2E
7 E Q , f a i lin g w h ic h t h e
D u c h y S o lic ito r m a y t a k e
s te p s to a d m i n s t e r t h e
e s ta te
of th e ab o v e
nam ed.
'PELHAM HEIGHTS’ • BOOKHAM LEATHERHEAD • SURREY
4 bed detached. Prices fr6m £173,500. T el: ( 0 3 7 2 ) 52 8 11
D
0
'GLYNDEBOURNE PLA CE' • FETCHAM LEATHERHEAD • SURREY
5 bed detached homes. Prices from £312,500. T e h < 0 3 7 2 ) 3 7 6 6 3 3
'AUDLEYCOURT' • WALTON-ON-THAMES SURREY
2 bedTdwn Houses. Prices from £99,950. T el: ( 0 9 3 2 ) 8 4 6 6 3 6
'STRATFIELD H OU SE1
|H A N T S
1 & 2 bed Apartments. Prices from £61,250.
T el: ( 0 2 5 2 ) 3 1 9 4 4 5
'SA D LERS R IS E ' * HAWLEY • HANTS
3bed from £125,950,4 bed from £169,950,
5 bed from £290,OOO.Te!: (0 2 7 6 ) 6 0 0 2 4 3
'TU D O R PLA CE' • HURST
WOKINGHAM • BERKS
4 bed from £205,000,5 bed from £320,000.
T eh ( 0 3 4 4 ) 7 7 6 7 6 0
1 'WATERMILL C O P S E ' • L1NDFORD
j N r. BORDON • HANTS
4 bed dfetached homes. Prices from £145,000
T e l: ( 0 4 2 0 3 ) 3 3 3 3
'W EYSIDE M EW S' - ADDLESTONE
SURREY
3
□
O
4 bed detached homes. Priced £179,950
Tfel: ( 0 3 4 4 ) 7 7 6 7 6 0
0
'LO RN EPA RK ' TUNBRIDGE WELLS
KENT
5 bed detached homes. Prices from
£285,000. Tel: (0 8 9 2 ) 511211
‘GALLY HILL PARK ' *CROOKHAM
VILLAGE • FLEET • HANTS
3 bed from £127,000.4 bed from £165,000.
T el: (0 2 5 2 ) 8 1 1 3 2 3
P r ic e s c o r r e c t a t tim e o f g o in g to p r e s s
m a r t in G r a n t H o m e s
SHANKLIN, ISLE OF WIGHT
A u n iq u e n ew c o n v e rs io n d e v e lo p m e n t by
MOODBECK LTD. C o m p risin g 12 a b s o lu te ly s tu n ­
n in g in te rio r designed a p a r tm e n ts of u ltim a te q u a lity
a n d c h a ra c te r P e rfe c t fo r re tire m e n t, c o u n tr y ho m e
o r p e r m a n e n t living, e a c h f la t is in d iv id u a lly a w ork
of a r t. M ost w ith 2 bedroom s, 2 b ath ro o m s, several
w ith p riv a te g a rd e n s o r p atio s, a ll w ith P oggenpohl
K itc h e n s a n d Jacu z zis. L u x u rio u sly ric h c a rp e ts
th r o u g h o u t a n d to p q u a lity d rapes. O th e r fe a tu re s
in c lu d e a s a u n a , m a rb le e n tr a n c e h all, in d e p en d en t.
CH , co m m u n a l wooded g a rd e n s, e n try p h o n e s e tu r i-
£ 90,000 up to £ 165,000
for the M y furnished show flat
OPEN HOUSE this Sunday 23 APRIL 10 am - 4 pm.
Te! CHRISTIE MATTHEWS (0983) 811044
F o r c o lo u r b r o c h u r e
EAST CUMBRIA, V illa g e h s e
2 d b le b e d s i t r m , k i t / d i n ­
e r , b a t h r m , y a r d o u th s e s .
G d n , p a r k i n g N S h e a tin g .
Im m ac
£ 4 9 ,7 5 0
NO
C H A IN Tel:(07683) 61632
TAUNTON OUTSKIRTS. 2
g r o u n d flo o r & 2 1 s t f lo o r
p u rp o s e b u ilt fla ts u n d e r
c o n s tr u c tio n . C lo s e to M 5
a c c e s s a n d to w n c e n tr e ;
F r o m £65.500. F o r d e ta ils
ter <0823) 337791 or (0823)
412138
TAUNTON VALE. H d e t a c h e d
S to n e b a m s , c o n v e r te d t o
p r o v id e 3 /4 b e d c h a r a c t e r
a c c o m m o d a t i o n . L o v e ly
o p e n s e t t i n g . O .I .R .O .
£158,000 & £185,000. F u l l
d e ta ils a v a ila b le . T e l
<0823) 337791 O f f ic e T e l
(0823) 412138 H o m e
MASTER QUIZ
1 To w hich sport does ‘aerial
;pingpong* facetiously refer?
2 W hich Am erican singer
was given th e nam e The
Velvet Fog?
3 Who wrote Vile Bodies and
Scoop?
4 Who were th e Am erican
WAVES o f the war?
5 Is a chiliad a group o f one,
tw o or three thousand?
6 Who woii the 1989 Little woods Cup Tnan-of-the-matc.fi
award?
A N SW E R S
& |6 n o o fd6!N 9 p u e s n o m
a u Q g a o s /u e s A oua& rauig
j a » ) u n |O A
u a iu o /v \
u A |9 A 3
g
jo ;
p e jd o o o v
*
'3 U U O £
q fin eA A
ja y y
z
I ie q jo o j s a |r u u e j ie i is n y i
O'CONNOR THO M AS (ors
JOHN O'CONNOR) l a te o f
23 L in c o ln R o a d , L a n c a s ­
t e r d ie d a t L a n c a s t e r o n
t h e 1s t F e b r u a r y 1989
( E s ta te a b o u t £27,500)
T h e k in o f th e abo v e
n a m e d a r e r e q u e s t e d to
a p p ly to T h e S o lic ito r ,
D uchy
of L a n c a s te r
O ffic e , L a n c a s t e r P la c e ,
S tra n d , L o n d o n W C 2E
7 E D , F a i l i n g w h ic h t h e
D u c h y S o lic ito r m a y t a k e
s te p s to a d m i n i s t e r t h e
e s ta te .
Quick delivery
*AII mokes, most
models
*Not persona!
imports
For
new cors
ond vons ring:
m o ta fjle l td
LEASE, HP, CONTRACT HIRE
c a r s o r c o m m e r c ia l, p l a n t
a n d m a c h in e ry . B e st
ra te s. C E N T U R Y L E A S ­
IN G . T e l 051 709 8080
(o p e n 7 d a y s )
Hounslow, Middx
2
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i n f o r m e d . 01-928 4446.
HELL 300, 380 a n d
410
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a n d c o n d i tio n s f o r r i g h t
p e r s o n . C o n ta c t F r a z e r o n
01-251 3437
PRODUCTION ASSISTANT RE
QUIRED.by L i th o S p e e d to
h a n d l e c o lo u r m a g a z in e
o r ig i n a ti o n a n d c u s to m e r
c o n ta c t. T e l M r R . N u d d
01-739 0269
SCANNER OPERATOR a n d
c o lo u r p r o o f e r r e q u i r e d
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SCANNER OPERATOR r e ­
q u ir e d b y C o n d o r L ith o .
B ro m le y
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H e ll
D C 360, d a y s p lu s r e g u l a r
o t. A ll i n h o u s e w o rk .
N G A a d v ise d . T e l 01 -46 4
2177.
SORM Z WITH A lc o lo u r &
C P C M in d e r re q u ire d ,
a ls o G T O 2 co l m in d e r .
T e l M ilt o n K e y n e s (0908)
666000
TRACK ORIGINATION r e ­
q u i r e e x p e r ie n c e d f in a l
f ilm p l a n n e r s 2 f o r . n i g h t
s h i f t / l f o r d a y s h if t. U n ­
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E x c e ll e n t r a te s , o v e r tim e
+ B U PA . C o n ta c t M a rk
L o c k e t. 01-577 6040.
EXPERIENCED ALL r o u n d e r
A P L /2 0 2 K e y b o a r d / R e a d ­
in g 4 - l l p m s h i f t i n T w i­
ckenham . M anagem ent
o p p o r t u n i t y f o r a m b iti o u s
p e r s o n . A lso D a y R e a d e r
1 0 -5 p m , m u s t h a v e a d
s e t t i n g e x p e r ie n c e . E x c e l­
l e n t r a t e s o n b o th v a c a n ­
cies, c a ll D a v e C a b le o n
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ERATOR r e q u i r e d a t p r o ­
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tio n s , p e n s io n s c h e m e ,
s ic k p a y , p r i v a t e h e a l t h
s c h e m e . P a g e m a k e u p ex ­
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w o u ld b e a n
a d v a n ta g e . T e l M ilto n
K e y n e s (0908) 613453.
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t o t a k e a n d i m p le m e n t
d e t a il e d b r ie f s f o r a v a r i ­
e ty o f s e ttin g a n d a r t ­
w o r k jo b s . M a u r ic e T u r n ­
e r, T h e S e t t i n g R o o m ,
T e l 01- 6 3 6 2014
KEYBOARD OPERATOR f o r
A M C O M P E D I T S y s te m
(P C i n p u t ) w o u ld r e t r a i n
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N G A a d v ise d . T e l E p p in g
(0378) 78717 M r G re e n .
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CONTACT PERSON r e q u i r e d .
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H a ll 01-403 7040
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HOUSE ACCOUNT REP. A b le
t o t a k e a n d im p le m e n t
d e ta ile d b r ie f s f o r a v a r i­
e t y o f s e tt in g a n d a r t ­
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T e le p h o n e W a lto n - O n T h a m e s 247671.
TRAINEE SALES P e r s o n r e ­
q u ir e d f o r L ith o - O r ig in a tio n co m p an y . S o m e ex­
p e r ie n c e p r e f e r r e d . G o o d
p r o s p e c ts w ith p r o g r e s ­
s iv e c o m p a n y . H e a t h r o w
a r e a . T e l 01-848 4S77
SILKSCREEN PRINTERS
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p r i n t e r , m u s t b e f u ll y
c o n v e r s a n t w ith a ll a s ­
p e c ts o f t h e tr a d e , f o r
L o n d o n N . I . a r e a . T e l:
01-607 1720.
WAREHOUSE
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so n re q u ire d f o r p r in t e r s
i n E 1 5 . T e l 01-519 0425
PRINT FINISHER REQUIRED f o r
d /d s h i f t w ith e x p o#
g u illo tin e , f o ld in g m a ­
c h in e s o r a u t o s titc h in g
lin e s . T e l: (06285) 2 9 74 2 /3.
FIRST CLASS 4 COLOUR
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m o n e y p a i d . T e l; B r e n ­
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C O N TEM PO RA R Y LITHO
SMALL
FREEHOLD
PLATES LTD r e q u i r e ..
PRINTERS/St a t i o n e r s f o r
n ig h t s h if t p la n n e r a n d a
s a le i n S .E . L o n d o n
n ig h t s h if t s c a n n e r o p er­
£165,000. P l u s s.a.v . G e n *
a t o r f a m i l i a r w ith H e ll
u i n e p e o p le o n ly s h o u l d
Cp340 C P 350 C P410 sc a n ­
te le p h o n e : 01- 703 2682.
n e r s . N e a r L o n d o n B r id g e
S ta t io n .4 n i g h t s , s a la r y
EQUIPMENT FOR S A U
MACHINE ROOM
n e g o tia b le . N G A a d v ise d .
BERTHOLD DIATRONIC SYS*
T e l R o b e r t < 5 o d ley o r
TEM. 2 M F T 4000 K e y ­
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b o a r d s , 1 T P U 3608 & 3 00
DUE TO FURTHER EXPANSION
f o n ts . C o n t a c t D a v e o r
t e c h n i k o f B e r k h a m s te d ,
K e n 061 228 1905.
o n e o f t h e c o u n t r ie s le a d ­
COMPUTE DIATRONIC t y p e ­
in g tr a d e re p ro h o u ses
s
e t t i n g s y s t e m f o r s a le .
with 'experience of
r e q u i r e 2 f u l l y e x p e r i­
P h o n e 01-940 7640.
e n c e d 4 c o l o u r U tb o f in a l
programatic guillotines, 1TEK D1GITEK T y p e s e tte r . M
f ilm p la n n e r s . T e l T e r r y
m o n t h s o ld . 30 f o n ts .
W a lk e r , o n (0442) 871117.
folding machines and
£6,300. T e l 10708) 7 60776
EXP GTO m in d e r f o r s m a ll
LINOTRON 202N a n d 202W ,
collating machines.
p r i n t e r s , C r a y f o r d , K e n t.
im m e d d e l. C a n d e liv e r
G o o d r a t e s & c o n d ,' o / t
a n d i n s ta ll. V .g .c. T ^ |
a v a il. T e l: <0322) 523289^
SW4 area.
<0462) 37222
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Tel
M
r
Heady
on
2 5 -3 5 y e a r s o ld t o h e l p
EQUIPMENT WANTED
b u s y f in a n c ia l c o m p a n y
in
S E 16. £20k+. N G A
MCS POWERV4EW 10 and/OT
a d v is e d . T e l 01-237 4618
10 /1 0 0 f r o n t e n d . W ill
EXPD PROOFER d / d a y s .
c o lle c t.. T e l (0272) 698667
H a c k n e y . T e l 01-249 4044. EXP CORD 64 m i n d e r f o r
MACHINERY FOR SA1J
EXPERIENCED AB DICK o r
d a y w o r k p l u s O /T . S m a ll
S m a ll O ffse t P r in te r re ­
i n h o u s e p r i n t d iv is io n o f DAINIPPON G L123 p r o o f
q u i r e d f o r q u ic k p r i n t e r s
la rg e c o m p a n y i n E14.
p re s s . C h o ic e o f 2 1 9 8 3 /4 .
T e l 01-987 5349
in H o rsh a m , W e st S u sse x
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(30 m in . T r a i n r id e f r o m EXPERIENCED GTO M i n d e r
t a i l s B o x 7 8 3 , D a ily M a il
L o n d o n ) G ood ra te s ,
r e q u i r e d S E 1 8 . T e l 01-316
C la ss ifie d . L o n d o n E C 4 Y
f r ie n d ly te a m . T e le p h o n e 2028 a n d q u o te r e f e r e n c e
O JA .
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90S
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e r 4 y r s o ld w ith f u l l S c a n
EXPERIENCED GTO MINDER, s m a l l o f f s e t m i n d e r , a b l e
G r a p h i c s e rv ic e r e c o rd , 3
r e q u i r e d to w o r k in
to co m p o se fo r p r in te r s in
d is c d r iv e s . T e l (0 4 8 1 )
H a n g e r L a n e , g o o d w a g e s ., W e s t E n d . G o o d s a l a r y Sc
2 6052 C o n t a c t B . W a lla c e
R i n g M r G u y 01-965 9563,
O/t. T e l: 01-437 6536.
o r D . M a p le y
F IN IS H E R
REQUIRED
01-622 2411
CAR
fe ltn e t
P h ones
ONLY
* H A N D S FR EE
M O B IL E
i
PHONES
NOVATEl SE1€CT € TAGS ;£199
MOTOROLA 4500X £ TACS....£225
CLEARTONE 8000X...
..£275
.NEC 11AE TAGS..............„ ..£ 2 4 9
W T tm 5 T O 0 X U A C $ ....£ 2 9 9
MOBfRA AUTOLINE
....£349
£199
TRANSPORTABIES
O R FR O M s
MOTOROLA4500X...................£349
MOTOROLA 5090X...................£399
PANASONIC C50..................... .£499
£ 2 .5 0
PORTABLES
NEC 9A ETACS..,
...............£699
MOTOROLA 3500X £IAC$ 1599
MITSU8M MJ3
.............:tS 9 9
ALL Prices exclude VAT and
Network charges
per week
L IN E S O P E N
M O N -F R I
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-6.00 p m ,
N A T IO N A L C A R P H O N E S A N D C O M M U N IC A T IO N S
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TO CALL ON REQUEST
German
hike puts
pain in
Footsie
MARKET REPORT
By Geoff Foster
ALMOST £7bn was wiped
from share values at one
sta g e as th e sp ec tr e of
higher interest rates sent
investors scurrying for cover.
A totally unexpected Vi point
rise in West Germany's dis­
count and. Lombard rates to
4.5pc and 6.5pc respectively,
prompted double-figure falls.
Hard on the heels of worry­
ing news that UK bank lend­
ing in March had soared by
£ 8 bn a g a in st a forecast
• COURTAULDS proved resil­
ient at 31454p, up 1p. Brokers
James Capel have been advis­
ing clients to buy and there is a
shortage of stock in the mar­
ket. Kerry Packer is thought to
have sold his remaining shares
in the company, but vague
takeover stories linger. ICI has
been mentioned.
increase of £5.6bn, the West
German move exacerbated
fears of further pressure on
sterling, forcing a fresh lpc
rise in interest rates to 14pc.
The dockers’ call for a strike
ballot, estimates that closing
the Brent oil field could add
£800m to the UK’s current
account deficit and an early 20
point decline on Wall Street
also gave the bears further
cause for celebration.
The Footsie stood more than
33 points down at its lowest
(4pm) before rallying to finish
22.6 points lower at 2,064.4.
Dealers expect the mood to
remain extrem ely nervous
ahead of next Wednesday’s
crucial UK trade figures. Any
further deterioration in the
deficit, analyts say, will almost
certainly mean dearer credit.
D algety rose 6p to 356p on
talk that Robert Holmes &
Court was trying to add to his
5.2pe stake.
Another story doing the
rounds was that Goodm an
Fielder Wattie will move on
Dalgety as soon as it completes
the sale of its 29.9pc in Ranks
Hovis Macdougall.
Better-than-expected profits
boosted Etam which rose 9p to
165p. Many feel Etam is vul­
nerable to a takeover. Sears
has expressed interest in the
past.
Dixons lost 4p to 146p in
sym pathy w ith A m stra d 's
profits warning and reports of
4m Next shares trying to find
a home left them 4y2p lower at
147p: W H Sm ith fell 7p to
284p as Warburg S ecu rities
‘fine tuned’ its current year
• ROBERT FLEMING tips
Tomkins, 2p easier at 236p. It
does not agree with pessimistic
views about the industrial sec­
tor and is going for 15pc
earnings growth. It believes
current year profits should top
£61 '/an and forecasts £73%m
for next, boosted by its Murray
Ohio operations.
pre-tax profits forecast —
down to £83m from £85m —
after a closer look at the
company’s Do-It-All DIV busi­
ness.
W hitbread ‘A' rose 7p to
366p on a buy recommendation
from County NatWest W oodMac. The broker says that if
the MMC report’s recommen­
dations are im plem ented,
Whitbread will choose to be a
retailer and not a brewer.
It believes that Heineken,
which currently provides 40pc
of ‘Whitbread Brewing’, will
buy the business at a likely
£350m.
Vague reports th at the
planned subsidiary sale had
run into trouble depressed FKI
Babcock 7p to 163p.
Laird closed lp easier at 268p,
after 276p. Speculation was
intense after-hours that the
company has sold its loss-mak­
ing Metro-Cammell Weymann
subsidiary to GEC-Alsthom.
Base rate gloom Dishes
sweeten
can be overdone pressure
on Sugar
A V IN G been u n s e t­
tled by th e d isa p ­
p o in tin g m oney s u p ­
p ly f i g u r e s i n t h e
m o r n in g , t h e s to c k
m a rk e t w as a ll too re ad y to
su cc u m b to m o m e n ta ry p a n ic
w h e n t h e a f t e r n o o n ’s n e w s
cam e t h a t th e B u n d e sb a n k h a d
ra ise d in te re s t ra te s by a V2pc.
Higher interest rates for both
in tern al and external reasons
seemed to be in prospect.
Dealers calmed down a bit later — and
they were certainly right to do so. The
possibility of a German rise has in fact
been touted from time to time in recent
weeks though no one expected it quite so
soon.
Com fort range
Sterling stood up reasonably well to th e.
news- when it came, ending a fraction
higher against the dollar and managing
to keep the fall against the Deutschemark
to 2 pfennigs.
On the all important trade index, the
pound stood at 95.4 which is reckoned to
be well within what the City calls a
Chancellor’s ‘comfort range’ of 93 to 98.
So that — at any rate for the moment
— brings the focus back to those money
supply figures. The day will eventually
come (perhaps) when the economic statis­
tics all point unequivocally in one
direction. But not yet, it seems.
The broader measures of the money
supply were disheartening. Banks and
A ndrew
A lex an d er
building societies appear to have lent a
further £8bn in March as against £4.7bn
in February. The market had been
expecting a figure of about £5bn. There is ,
the consolation that quite a chunk of this
was accounted for by quarterly interest
charges. Nevertheless the figures remain
too high.
MO (which measures cash and the
banks’ balances at the Bank of England)
was however a different story. It rose by
0.5pc in March. When adjustments are
made for exceptional factors, including
the Post Office’s temporary large holding
of cash during the postal dispute in
September, the picture that emerges is a
bright one.
Over the last six months MO has been
rising at ah annual rate of only 0.5pc. On
a three month basis, the annual rate is in
the other direction: minus 3.5pc. The
Chancellor’s MO target for the current
financial year is 1 to 5pc.
But which measures of money should
we use? The broader measure of money
supply looked reliable until restrictions on
credit were eased. MO is the only one for
which the Chancellor has set a target.
MO is also the preferred measure of Sir
Alan Walters, the Prime Minister’s per­
sonal economic advisor.
If he is right — and he usually has
been — then the squeeze would seem to
Slow down
dealers tell Walker
BRENT WALKER’S George
Walker showed the fruits of
his deal-making yesterday
with doubled 1988 pre-tax
profits of £41.7m, earnings
up 49pc, and dividends 37pc
to lip .
Fine, said dealers, hoisting
BW 8p to 371p, but please
George, give the deals a rest
until your debts come down. .
They are down, says Walker,
p ictured . From £900m to
£665m or 107pc of shareholders
funds (boosted by a timely
revaluation of assets to £7 a
share). BW has a stu tely
capped £483m of debt at 9pc.
But George Walker’s eyes
still light up on seeing a deal.
He covets Marina Development
and holds1lOpc of TV-am. One
day curbs on buying TV sta­
tions will lift, leaving him ‘in a
fairly prime position to make
an acquisition’.
Expected profits of £12m
reassure him about his dear-
g|p
looking £180m W hyte &
Mackay buy from Lonrho. Its
four wine chateaux are valued
at £95m. But will buyers
agree?
W ell-chosen developments
(Brighton Marina,; London’s
Trocadero) brighten BW ’s
fu tu re. K itcat & A itken’s
Bruce Jones sees the shares
reaching 425p — if George can
resist going one deal too far.
BRIAN O’CONNOR
be working. The relationship between MO
and inflation has certainly been quite
close in recent years. In any case we still
have to bear in mind that the final
tightening of the screw, in the form of
hoisting base rate to 13pc, did not come
until November 25 last year.
Given the normal lags, it is only about
now that the effects should start to show
up clearly.
Sadly the picture remains mixed. But
the latest retail figures and some (but not
all) reports on the housing markets
suggest that the squeeze is making itself
felt.
The Chancellor of course has not been
helped by the bad oil news. Tuesday
night’s explosion on that North Sea
platform has helped push up oil prices
further and may add . £800m to the
current account deficit on the balance of
payments.
Nervous w atch ers
It would be wrong however to get too
excited about that. The official forecast is
of a £14.5bn deficit for the year; £800m is
not critical.
As for .the retail price index, crude oil
accounts for only 25pc of prices at the
pump. Inflation, according to brokers
Phillips & Drew, will still peak at around
8.3pc iri July this year.
Yesterday’s mixture of good and
bad news will inevitably leave the
markets watching the next set of
trade figures nervously. But there
is nothing in yesterday’s statistics
to indicate that higher interest
rates are inevitable.
a AH, THE wonders of stockbroking analysis. Where else
would a survey of Next suggest we ‘accumulate progessively,’
and then proclaim ‘In the fullness of time this Achilles heel
also will be steeped in the protective waters of the video age.’
What can it all mean? Postcards, please, to Robert Snaith at
brokers Strauss Turnbull.
UROTHMANS INTERNATIONAL and Philip Morris are to
co-operate in selling both companies’ cigarettes in the UK
Rothmans have 9pc of the UK market with their Dunhill,
Peter Stuyvesant and Rothmans brands. Philip Morris
(Marlboro and, Raffles) have 5pc. They hope that together
they will sell more:
□ NEVER mind closures and redundancies, City salaries are
still growing faster than inflation. So say Jonathan Wren,
the recruitment consultants. In the year to March, salaries of
fund managers rose 30pc to £44,626 at age 30, while equity
analysts and salespeople got £30,142, a rise of 22pc. Eurobond
salesmen and traders have been hit by a 20pc fall in pay
offered for new jobs, while general back-office staff are also
suffering. New vacancies are up 62pc on last year.
______
more design problems. UBS
Phillips & Drew expects profits
of just £100m for the year to
June. Only last September sup­
porters forecast £184m.
The 2000's late arrivals force
Amstrad to cut margins by
supplying free software. Build­
ing computers on a shoestring
research budget gets harder all
the time.
But satellite dish production
has reached 50,000 a month
and a heavy TV campaign starts
soon. Sell the shares above
100p, say sceptics.
TIM FREEBORN
Buy-out
for BES
is pure
Brent shutdown pleasure
sets oil soaring
CRUDE oil future prices
surged past $25 a barrel in
New York last night amid
fears about the shutdown of
the Brent field’s Cormorant
platform.
It was the highest price
since January 1986. It will
take three or four days to
assess damage to the platform.
If it has sustained structural
damage, short-term crude
prices could rise further.
Oil industry sources are
optimistic that the damage is
limited and that high prices
will not last. Brent crude for
immediate delivery finished at
$22 in London and the June
price was $20.25.
Analysts expect a fall to
about $18 at the year end as
strong demand persuades
OPEC to increase output.
A four to six week shutdown
of the Brent system could add
£800m to Britain’s current
balance of payments deficit
this year, Energy Secretary
Cecil Parkinson told the Com­
mons.
JAPANESE securities giant
Nomura approached Alan
Bond to buy half his 20pe
holding in Lonrho, says his
London spokesman,
But ‘the conditions were
unacceptable’ — Nomura did
not offer enough — though
Bond is showing a £62m loss
on his stake. Lonrho has no
comment on Bond’s claim
that he has been talking to
Tiny Rowland about a seat
on the board.
The financially-pressed Aus­
sie would need to become a
director in order to take into
account a 20pc share of
Lonrho’s profits.
T ro u b led b ro k e r’s
client n am es sold Bond refuses Nomura
CLIENTS of hammered stockbroker E J Collins will be
dismayed to learn that, like any tuppenny-ha'penny mail order
trader, a list of their names has been sold, and they will
shortly be receiving letters touting for their business.
This down-market move is part of the efforts by liquidator
David Morgan of Spicer & Oppenheim to raise cash for the
troubled broking business. He got, it is said, £6,000 for the
list.
Flogging names would have been unthinkable in the days*
when stockbroking had some dignity. It comes as quite a
shock to clients who last year had to sign elaborate legal
customer agreement forms' with their brokers.
The buyer is UK & General, a former licensed dealer, which
employs some veterans from the old Over-The-Counter
share-pushing industry.
Chairman Brain Hershon says he will try to help clients
unravel problems left by the collapse of Collins. Many may
prefer not to deal, however, with a company which came by
their names in such a way.
MICHAEL WALTERS
A SECOND profit warning
in
tw o
m o n th s
sen t
A m strad's sh a re s crashing
22 p to 119p a s brokers
lopped £ 2 5 m o ff fo r e c a sts.
Chairman Alan Sugar says
more technical problems have
co st another three months'
sales of his 2000 range of
business PCs. So they will
reach Europe a year late and
virtually obsolete.
This time Amstrad is blaming
new software for the hiccup,
but brokers say it has run into
NICK GILBERT
COMPANY N E W S
ETAM: Pin 4.9p mkg 6.6p (6p).
Pre-tax pft £17.5m(£17.9m) yr to
Jan.
LIBERTY : Fin lOp mkg 12.6p
(10.6p). Pre-tax pft £6.5m (£5.8m)
yr to Jan. Three for two scrip.
MARLEY: Pays £7m for NZ plas­
tics moulder.
ICI: Sells Canadian sulphur busi­
ness.
M ICRO FO C U S: No divs. Pre-tax
pft £3.1m(£1.6m) yr to Jan.
PLEASURE WORLD h as cer­
tainly lived up to its nam e
for in v esto rs w h o bought
sh a res at 145p each under
a
B u s in e s s
E x p a n sio n
S c h e m e issu e by Electra
and G uidehouse ju st over
th ree years ago.
: It is now on the receiving end
of an £11.5m agreed bid from
RKF Group which takes each
Pleasureworld share out at
400p — more than enough to
make up for the disappointment
of having to repay tax on the
BES shares.
Alongside a successful Ameri­
can style theme park between
Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft,
Pleasureworld has 26 acres
with outline planning permis­
sion for leisure development. In
February, 8.8 acres were sold
to Tesco.
The group also has a licence
from Sea Life Centre to build
and run indoor marine life
centres with restaurants and
shops. It will open one at
Hunstanton in June, with more
to follow.
■ FRESH fo o d distributor
A lb ert Fisher turn ed in
another sparkling se t of Feb­
ruary interims, up 43p c to
£19.9m , but the shares shed
!4p to 90'Ap. Paper used for
takeovers has hit the price,
which reached 151p preCrash. Chairman Tony Millar
sa ys future deals will be pure
cash. Expect £45m for the
year.
PAGE 41
.faijy Mag Friday, April2 1 .198S
r a v
f
11
B R E N T m L K E R ’S
D R IV E
ltn r %
1 9 8 8
&M
1987£M
T u rn over
4 1 .7
P r o fit b e f o r e t a x
(fully •
diluted)
4 1 .0 5
603.6
y et another record year was achieved by the Group in 1988' with turnover increasing by
JL82 per cent to £128.9 million and profit before tax by 100 per cent to £41.7 million.
Earnings per share on a &liy diluted basis have increased by 49 per cent to 41.05 pence per
share and shareholders’ funds to £603-6 million and are represented by an asset base of
excellent quality. Assets per share on a pro-forma and fally diluted basis are now seven
. pounds. The Directors are recommending a final dividend o f 7 pence per share bringing the
total for she year to 11 pence per share, an increase of 37.5 per cent on iast year.
A major policy decision was made to pursue a strategy of diversification within the
leisure and leisure-related sectors to improve the quality of the Croup’s earnings and broaden
its trading and asset'base. In pursuit of this policy, we acquired two long established brewery
businesses,.!. W. Cameron and Co. Limited and Tollemache & CobboW Breweries limited.
Taking in to account the 386 public houses we acquired earlier in the: year, and various
disposals, we how haw a total of 1,087 public houses. We also acquired Whyte & Mackay
Distillers Limited. Additionally as part of our diversification we acquired a chain of U9
licensed betting offices in London and the South East. ■ ■ ■ .
As a further development of this strategy we have recently made a number of disposals,
included in these was the sale of our five casinos in the north of England and of Crodrfords
in London, 100 tenanted ptiblichouses in London and 52 managed public houses in Yorkshire,
Tceside, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire..
'
.
.
(u n au d ited )
% CHANGE
7 0 .9
+ 8 2 %
20.8
+ 100%
2 7 .5 0 p
l i p
S h a r e h o ld e r s f u n d s
1988
8p
+ 4 9 %
+37.5%
+
165%
We have also made several smaller disposals which, combined with those already
mentioned, have reduced our gearing substantially as well as showing a significant surplus
over booh values. This programme of rationalisation w ill continue through 1989 and we
expect to make further strategic disposals which we anticipate w ill further reduce our gearing
. significantly.
During the.year we acquired Elstree Film Studios. With our interests in the film industry
combined with our property development expertise, we were able to submit plans, which
contain greatly improved studio facilities, together with a certain amount of commercial
development. The acquisition of Elstree Studios and our 10 per cent interest in TV-am has
enabled us to build Goldcrest into a fully integrated Media Group.
In Le Touquet we entered into a joint venture with Declan Kelly Group pic to develop
the residential land to provide approximately 1,100 homes.
It is our intention to maintain our strategy of constant improvement of the base of our
core activities and their profitability. We shall, accordingly, continue to take advantage of every
opportunity that presents itself to rationalise the structure of the Group, improve liquidity and
in so doing, produce a stronger net asset base.
Full details of the Group’s activities are recorded in our Annual Report & Accounts
: which w ill be available from: The Company Secretary, The Brent Walker Group PLC,
Knightsbridge House, 197 Knightsbridge, London SW-7 1RB.
\W THEBRENTWALKER@R@UPPLC
WORKING FOR PLEASURE
«>
PAGE 42;
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1589
ADDRESS; New. C arm elite House, C arm elite Street, London EC4Y OJA, TEL: 01-606 1234
BRITSSH
STOCKS
Con 2’/ a......27%.
War3fc.;....38%
Tre 9 9 6.;.94'31
Tre 8%.....9 1 %
Tre 5’/* ......66’19
Tre 5 89 ..97*,.
Tre 8Y*.......96%
Tre 99 . ,.96,53I
Boss
•*„
-\a
-” 35
•,9IJ
-*18
-«35
f in a n c e
SUPER MARKETEER
Joh n
Fletcher is checking out of his
Budgens. group in the wake of
an equally surprising £ 138m bid
by Scottish rival Wm Low.
All th e talk w a s th at Fletcher,
pictured, m igh t join th e n e w I s o s ­
c e l e s £ 1 .7 3 b n bid for G atew ay
w h ic h h e failed to buy la st year.
W arburgs is backing b oth th e
G a tew a y and W m L ow d ea ls.
*1 have had no discussions,’ says
Fletcher, w hose Budgens options plus
golden handshake could top £3m. And
David Smith of Isosceles w as quick to
dampen rumours that either Fletcher or
Pail! Highett-Smith of Safeway group
Argyll were likely recruits.
Low and Budgens look a good fit —
one north, one south, similar sales and
margins. But fading bid hopes sent Low
tumbling 31 p to 258p with its share
Offer valuing Budgens, w hose shares
IS ;
M il
m-x-SW
A
if llt l
.
•oared 29p to 152p, at 159p. There is a
cash alternative of 154p.
Low is paying 15.5 tim es Budgens
•imirags so Philip Dorgan of Goldman
Sachs reckons Fletcher has won a good
deal for his shareholders. Low's lOpc
Bhareholder Sir Ron Brierley backs the
'Low .announced 'pre-tax profits up
80pc to £8.2m in the half year to
March 3 with earnings per share a
quarter better at 10.09p and an interim
dividend of 2.1 p against 1.833p.
IMeanwhile Gateway obtained a High
Court injunction against four of its
executives who are supporting Isosce­
les-'' hostile bid.
t h e ex parte injunction prevents
Roger Reason, Peter Fisher, Bob Willet
and Richard Quinton from 'disclosing
confidential information' on Gateway to
Isosceles' and from involving them­
selves 'in any business other than as
permitted by their contracts of employ-
m mm
Abbey
280*
-3
AlexAlex...£15’/« +»„
Bk S c o t
96
B a r c l a y s 437
-7
Britannic 380*
-1
Br &-Com...-..201
*4
Brown Ship..347
ComU 370V -2/r
First N at
234
-2
Gen Acc 936*
-3
Gerrard
267
Goode Drnt..128
GPG...............43
GRE
202* +’/»
GT............... 182
Hambros
230
-2
HeathCE
453
-1
HogaGard...146
HK Shang ...49xc
King&Shax...133
Kleinwort....306*
:Leg&Gen..317’/ /
Lloyds
339*
Lon & Man..275*
MAI........... 88 V
Midland
437'
Morgan Gr..285*
NatWest ... 584*
Pearl
394*
Prov Fin......322*
Pru
177 V
Refuge
451*
Rothschld ....195
Ryl 8k S c 382
Royal Ins ....409*
Rutland
45*
Schfoders.,.955*
Sedgwick ...235*
Smith Br
127
-4
Stan Chart..513*
-5
Sun All
1101 +2
S unlrfe
893*
-2
TSB
.106’/2 -2Vi
Union Dis 485
Warburg SG.326
-2
W estpac 240
Willis F . 224*
-3
DNBUSTIMALS
Booker
443* +4
Borthwick
40
-1
Bowater 482*
-8
Bowthorpe...189 +1
Bramall
600
Brammer .-...258*
-3
Bridon
186’/i* ■ZVz
Br Aero
558* -17
Br Airways 187’/i -8’/j
Br Gas
177 -3’/*
Br Mohair ...205*
Br Steel
82'/* ■! '/
Br Syphon....158
Br Tefecm....262 -T/t
Br Vita
249*
-2
N Brown
171
Bryant
109*
-6
Budgen
151 +19
Bund
145*
-5
Cable 8<W...489
-6
Cadbury.....341*
-7
Campari 281*
-4
Capelnd. 181
-1
Carlton C ...8 6 5 -14
Chmbrin P....223
-4
Channe!T....163
-2
Charter C 490 -11
Chil!ington....149 +2
Chloride
47’/t -1ft
Church C
115
Cliffrd A
261*
-2
Coalite.
392
Coats Viy.....159
Coloroll
162
Cookson...311’/s -1%
F Cooper ....164*
C o s a l t . . ..242
-i
Costaih ......310* -12
Countryside .266 ' -3
Courtauld 313
-Yt
CowieT
133 +5
C r o d a 199
-3
D&G
.....425* -14
Dalgety ..',...356* +6
Davtes&N.....835
Davis G..;.....180 +2
Davy Corp ...232
-3
Dawson
202
-5
De La Rue ...332
-6
Delta
312* -5tt
Dobson Pk... 96%
-1
Doug RM 311 +1
Dowtv
245 -11
ElecMach 71*
EHis&Ev
191
Eng China ....515 -10
Erith
J......93*
-2
Eurotherm 323xc
-4
Eurotunnel ...826 -22
Evered
122
-3
Evode
189
Expamet.....196*
FK! Bab........160 -10’/*
Fenner
175a
-’/*
Ferranti
103’/* -2'A
Fine Art
215
-2
FisherA
90’/*
Fisons
300V
Fitch L........ .262
Foseco
284
GEC..... ....230
GEI...... ...119
GKN ..........
..367*
Gateway
187
Gent SR
71*
Gestetner 263
Glaxo
1375* -23
Gleeson
813
Glynwed ...302’/* -9V*
Goldberg....: 176
Hanson .....184% -1 %
Harrft C....161’/*
Hawker
.668
Hazlewood.,249
Heleneri...:.....32
Hepworth...273*
Hestatr,......243
Hickson......232*
Hjaas & H..,373*
Hifv&5.....26ixc
Hiilsdown ....262
Hoga Rob ....127
Hopxinson 7B
AAH
385
ADT
165*
APV
147
AMEC .....428
Aaronson ..,.111
A dwest...;17lV
Alexandra:.....40
Alexon ....... 377
Aid Text......375
Amersham.,493
Amstrad....-117
Appleyard....181
Armstrong..132*
AshleyL
113
A8 Etec....;.397*
AB Foods ....337
AB Ports ....592’
Ass Paper....236
Avon..
604
BAT.
534V *10*/*
B.
....368
BET.
...268
-2
BBA
180'/.' - m
BJCC
..468* -15
BQC
..,.489 , ?B
.,.234 r12
BPB
BSR
58*
-1.
BTR.........381 V -6Vz
Baird W
244
-2
Barratt '..193*
*6
Beecham .::..627
-7
...154 -V/t
1...154,
Berisford . ...159 +2
Beazer ;....185V -12’/*
...425
1173*
Bibby
164 +2
-7
B'woodH.....52*
-1
..220*
-4
Biagden
191*.
-1 Ibstock... .155*
-3
Blue Arrow ,...90
*2 IHingwth.. ...145
.252’/*
-R
BlueC
513* -12
.2 9 7 *
Bodycote 296
-4'
-5
JardineH
169
JohnsonFB..55’/a
Johnson.M ..388
Jourdan T...126*
Kwik-Fit 104*
Laing J
348*
Laird
269*
Laporte
434*
Lee
308*
Lep
169
Lex...............362
Unread
151*
Lister.
136
Lon Inti
215
Lonrho.........329
Lovell ...... .267
Low&Bonar 232"
Lucas.........621*
MB Group....276
MS Inti ......:.144
Magnet..
287
Mang Bze ....261
Marley........156*
Matthews 66*
Maxwell...189V
MeAlpine 357
McKechnie...309
Metal CIs....192*
Pantos
104
Peraamon .64
P e r^
229
Philips L... 1075*
Phoenix T
78
Pilkingtn....240Va
Plessey
251
PollyPeck 311
Portalls ..302*
Powell D......378
Prestwich...118*
RHM
396
RSJ
.454*
RMC
645*
Racal.
389
Raine lnds108V
Rank... ....914
Rly Useful ....645
Reckitt
1124
Redland .......524
Reed Imh....387
Renold...........85
Rentok»l......299*
Reuters
699*
Richardsh 69*
-Robinson T.495*
Rockware ..64 V
R-Royce...182%*
FT-SE 100: 2064.4
... . DOWN 22.6
FT INDEX: 1698.5
DOWN 20.2
LEISURE
mines
A pp ro x im ate to u ris t r a te s
FOR MARKET UPDATE.
FOR BRITISH STEEL
'FOLLOWED'BY
275
TOP TIPS 271
276 .
: BP LINE 277
278
BRITISH TELECOM 273
272 - .
BRITISH GAS 274
.« CONJUNCTION m m CAU10X 0! AREAUSE8SCANDIALEITHER0077 OK3891
For
SHARE BUYS
' SHARE SILLS
MARKET OUTLOOK
EUROTUNNEL
-13
09LS
BP...............281* -2 Yt
Burmah
545*
-4
Calor
384
-4
Charterhl....23%* +%
Cluff
....... 75
-3
Clyde.... 130*
-1
Enterprse...538a
-7
LASMO
447a
-5
Premier
92’/*
*2
Ryl Dutch...3845 +15
-’/* Shell..
399%* -2%
-4’/* Ultramar..:. .302*
-5
-6
PROPERTY
144
-1
-3 Aid Lon
-3 Asda
156
-2
-37 Br Land........367
-8
Brixton^.i...;i384
-5
-4 Cap&Count .395* +3
-1 Chestrfld......845 +2
-7Yt Crest N........209
-1
-5 Gt P o r t 381
*3
. -9 Greycoat
482
*3
-1
-6 Hambro CW .44*
-Vi Hammerson .862 >10
+1 Hanover 0 ...153 +5
-1 Und Sec .....669
-1
-3% LonMerch...1T1
-2
-6’/* Mailer
.108
-3
*5 MEPC..........552
-4
.117
-5
-5 Regalian
-4 Rush8tTom,..375
Scot M et
161
-2
Slough .......323*
-3
Spayhawk ...333
-5
'. __:
AA Corp ...$20% -'/»
AmGold..$69V
-Yt
Blyvoor
303
Meta1rax......:95*
Ropner
134
ConsGdld...1313
-2
-7 C Murch.......104. +2
Meyer....... ...434. -5 Rottomans ....464
Mofins... 224*
Rugby
182*
-7 De Beers..$15V : -%
Morgan C.....258 , -3 Runciman.....366.
Dries....
$9% -’/.
Mowlem..,.:400*
-9 600 Gp........120 +2 Freegold......$7% -1,,
Gopeng
70
MY Hldgs .....8B*
S U ....!.......... 70
Myson..........165
-1 SEET
Harmony. ..£59f^
-Ya
,....121
NEI..........12BV -3% STC
303*
-5 Hartses....~...6i3 -13
Sasitchi ...;..:.275
-8 Kloof
NMW ...........59
...$8"«
Nat Freight...234
SaJvesen......139
-1 NKalg.........14% +1
Neepsend ......52
-1 Scantronic ...140
NBknHill
111 +3
OFSIL........$20% -'/«
Newrthl .....2063 +25 Securgrd......25‘2
Newman T...206
Sec Serv
511 +3 Randftn..:..$55,/2 -1
.71* -1% RTZ ...........520*
-9
Norcros.......326
-4 Senior
Sidlaw.. ..148 +3
Norex
14V*
Normans...<....57 .
Siebe.....:.....453 -12
.J*
Simon ......;.374*
-5
NthnFoods 295X*
Nurdin&P,....179
-1 Sketchleyr....433
A
-2 WinkelhK...$14%
Ocean T .....315* ' -3 Smith&N. 142%
P&O...........665* -14 Smith DS.....280 -17 ZCI, .;........25
Parkfield
359
.
Smiths 302Yz* -4Yr
Paters6n2...3l3*
-1 Spirax ......238*
-.1
Pentland ........93
-2 ^aveley ......175 . -2 Daily MI A....£57
Daily Htail SHARECALI
tntlThom 790
Utd News ....417
-5
-’/*
-5
-6
-2
-14
-13
-1
-17
-16
-20
-1
-V/t
AkJ-Lyons....444 +1
Anglia TV...268*
-1
Bass
;.....918
-4
Boddington.164*
-3
Buimer;........167
-1
Central TV..750*
Christies 906* -6
Chrysalis
210
Elders IXL....124 +2
Grampian
70
Granada
364 *13
Grand Met..554a
-5
Greenall
287
*6
Guinness ....456* *7
HTV....;......111*
Highland".....224*
-5
LWT..;
.190* +1
Ladbroke...546Vii -Yi
Mecca Leis ..167
-4
Queens M...123* -3
Savoy
863*
Scot«New...269
-7
Scot TV .....419* +2
TSW
77*
TV-am
203 +1
TVS
331
Thames TV..442
Trustbse ...285'/* -4Y»
Vaux ...........284
*5
Whitbread ...366 +7'
Wolv&Dud...4l7
-7
YbrkS TV.....284 +2
Youngs
530
Zeiters'. ..161
-4
A U S T R A U A ............„....$2 .1 1
A U STR iA .................21 .S S sch
BELGIUM
___.........6 5 .7 0 f
C A N A D A .................___ $ 2 .0 0
DENMARK..................... 1 2.2 2K r
______ 1 .1 7 1 0 P u n t
EIRE
FRANCE............................. 1 0 .5 5 f
W GERMANY
3.1 2D m
GREECE.....
.......263-OODr
HOLLAND...................3 .5 2 5 g
ITALY.
...............23 00 .0 0 L
J A P A N .................. 2 2 3 .5 0 y en
M ALTA ..................... .£ 0 .5 6 6
N ZEALAND..................$ 2 .7 7
NORW AY
.............1 1 .3 9 K r
PORTUGAL
...2 5 7 .0 0 e sc
S AFRICA................... 4.7 0 R a n d
S P A IN ................. . _ . 1 9 2 .50 p m
SW EDEN
10.73K r
SW ITZERLAND........... 2.7351
u ;s ........;:;.........:..;:..i$ 1 .6 9 7 5
¥UGOSLAVjA...132S5.<5i}Dns
FOR AMIACTION ACTION FROMTHEDAILYMAIL CITYTEAM'
9398100270
0898100279
0898100
Steetley
41V
Stormgrd
20
Suter
205*
TN..,.......202’/**
TACE
251
TIG p
430*
Tarmac
290
Tate & L . . . .240
Taylor W....598*
ThornEMI 668
Tilbury
453*
Tomkins
237
Toota!
127%
Tottenham .118*
TozerK....117V
TrafHse....379'/a
Trans Dev ..242*
Travis Perk ..240
U n i g a t e . .356
Unilever
537*
Unilvr NV...3712
UtdBis..
323
UtdSctfc.....178
Vivat.....
70
Vickers
175*
Volex
...430
Wardle S ....374*
WeHcome....486
Wellman........48
Westland 144
Whessoe 141
Wilms Hd.259V
Wimpey...276V
Wolseley 273
Yale Valor....336
York Cham ..352
STORES
Argyll
....187
ASDA...;... ..145
Austin Reed .391
Bentalls ......202*
Body Shop...490
8oots.......... 277.
Burton.
205
Dixons
145%.
Dunhill
279
Erhpire.
191
Etam...
164
Finlay J...:....108
Gieves
172
GUS A.......1034
Iceland.......340*
Kingfisher ....286
Kwik Save ...425
Liberty.... ».1175
Maries &S ...164
Menzies.......339
Next
147
Photo-Me ... 435
RatnefS
211
Sainsbury..230%
Saars
120%Smith WH....2B3
Storehouse ..169
Tesco.
166*
WardWhite..257
-2
-4%
+7
-1
+8
+2
+6
-2
+5
+20
-2
-1
-4%
-2
-4
+%
-3
-8
-3
-1%
-8
--3
-2%
-1
-1
+5
-1 %
-1
-1
-%
-10
-1
-1%
-1
-9
+1
t Dealings suspended
a Ex-rights issue
* Ex-dividend
kc Ex-capitaUsation
issue
(Acct dealings ezid
May 5. P ay May 15.)
C O M lV IO D !T IE S
Cash $2095.0. Three months:
$2057.5.
LEAD: Cash £359.0. Three months: £361.5.
ZINC: Cash $1615.0. Three months: $1547.5.
COPPER: A Cash £1766.0. Three months:
£1714.5.
PLATINUM: Cash £320.45 per troy oz, up
i.«5.:
NOBLE: *£324.50 up 1.70.
SILVER: 337.90p per troy oz, up 1.25.
GOLD: $383.0 per troy oz, down 0.75.
GOLD COINS (Domestlc):*New Sovereigns:
£52.875,Knigeirands: £224.0.
RUBBER: NO IRSS May 6S.25 per kilo,
down 0.75.
LONDON POTATO FUTURES: (APR)
£136.80, up 3.30.
STERLING INDEX:- 95.4pc.
•ex VAT.
ALUM INIUM :
■ LIVELY property co m ­
mm m m mm
CESS
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DUKE McKENZIE . . . worried about big-fight billing’
-%
+2
-1
-1
-5
t r u s t s '.
Abingwrth ..:280
Alliances :.....983*
AngOseas ..254*
BritArrow...115*
Br Assets....77%
Candover....663*
Edinlnv
184
Electra
268%
Ensigns
.82*
Fleming M ..204*
For & Col... 133%
Globe
167
GT Man....;..182
Hendrsn A...790
Ihv Cap.;......406
Ivory& S.....140
LonAmVnt 56
M&G .........303
Murray V./..329*
Pearson......707*
Robeco
294
Scot Airier... 104
:-xW:w!
pany Helical Bar look s at
2,0 00 deals each year,
.but MD.Mike Slade, w ho
on e year paid himself
o v er £1 m , s e e m s to
know.-which to pick. INet
'assets per share' nearly
trebled- to 301p at 31
January, and 4 50 p looks
likely next tim e. Profits
doubled to £15.1 m and
: t h e . .dividend is S.8p
(3.4p) b u t. in terest fears'
.'left/., th e', shares dow n
16p at 30Sp.
'A D V E R T IS E M E N T
NOTICE IS- HEREBY
GIVEN that the Annual
General Meeting of St
Andrew’s Life FriendlySociety will be held at 100
Temple St, Bristol in the
County of Avon, on Mon­
day, 8th May 1989 at 12.30
pm to be immediately fol­
lowed by the Annual-Gen­
eral Meeting of St Andrew’s
Annuity Friendly Society.
Copies of the agenda for
each meeting may. be
obtained by application to
the Secretary, S t Andrew’s
Friendly. Societies, 100
Temple Street, Bristol: BS3
6EA.
at the top
Report by PETER MOSS
DUKE McKENZIE is starting to worry again, this
tim e because, of the big- names he will- dominate
when; he defends his world -flyweight title -at"
Wembley on June 7.
He was so jittery when he was due to risk his title
last January that he had the date postponed until
March .. then stopped his American opponent Tony
de Luca in four rounds. This time he tops the bill at
the 10,000 capacity hall despite the appearance there
of Lloyd Honeyghan in
his first fight since losing
his world title and of
Gary Mason attempting
to win the European
heavyweight crown.
Mcltenzie :said: ‘Hope-.'
fu lly people w ill be
looking at the others and HEROL GRAHAM won
that will take the pres­ a crucial battle outside
the ring while preparing
sure away. from -me.'
for the biggest fight of
his life at London’s Royal
U n b e a te n
Albert Hall on May 10.
Such modesty may not.
He has waited seven
be ty p ica l of world years
a world title
champions, but it works chancefor
and is determined
for Croydon’s McKenzie the build-up
his WBA
who is unbeaten in 23 ch a m p io n shfor
fig h t
fights as a pro after an against Mike ipMcCalium
am ateur career which goes like clockwork.
included a run of eight
So he resisted pressure
defeats.
to set up a training camp
He said: ‘I only went in away
from his Sheffield
for boxing because my
and has moved to a
brothers were in it and home
friend’s house on the
because ' my father told outskirts
of the city.
me not to.’
‘This is the best pos­
He does not yet know sible
environm ent for
the name of his Wembley me,’ said
Graham, who is
opponent but says: ‘My to give £2,000
of his purse
.aim' 'now is to set a to th e H illsb
British record by win-r Disaster Fund. orou gh
ning eight or nine world
title fights.'
JOHN BURTON
Graham wins
home rule
Bruins out to spoil
Durham’s dream
ICE HOCKEY By PAUL NEWMAN
AYR
BBiUINS ' have
shocked the toe hockey
w orld
by
becom ing
Scotland's sole represen­
tatives in this weekend's
Hemeken Championship
finals at. Wembley Arena.
The W est Coast side
will fly the Scottish flag
in front of Capacity audi­
en ces against Durham
Wasps, Whitley Warriors
and Nottingham Panthers
after th e m ost open
play-off series in the. fiveyear history of the event.
Biggest surprise from'
the quarter-finals was the
elimination of Scottish
-giant's IMurrayfield.Racers,
who .will miss out on. the
two-day festival for the
firsft time since the- sport
returned tb Wembley. .
' IWuirayfield were beatenin the. play-offs tw ice .by
Ayr, who finished sixth in .
the final Premier Division
.table.. Inspired by Ameri'can Danny'Shea, Ayr are -
coming good at the right
time.
Coach Rocky Saganiuk
said: 'Earlier in the season
our aim was to qualify for
the play-offs. We have
su rp a ssed
th a t
by
reaching Wembley and
now w e intend to win it.'
If Ayr are to succeed
they must beat England's
o u ts ta n d in g
te a m ,
Durham, in tomorrow's
second semi-final. The
Wasps have' already wow
the Heineken League,
Norwich Union and Castle
Eden Cups this season
and are looking to
become the first side in
th e modern era to complete a grand slam.
W h it le y
m eet
Nottingham in the other
sem i-final. I ex p e ct
Durham to overcome the
Ayr challenge and beat
Whitley in an all North
East final on Sunday to
com p lete : their clean
sweep. - ■
Daily Mai), Friday, April 21,1989
PAGF 43
m
m
mm
AFTER nearly 30 years riding-winners
in Britain, Tony Kimberley, 46, has
moved operations to South Africa.
: In recent years he has been No. 2
jocfcey for M idaati Stoute .- and an--;
important ’work rider responsible for
the education of Classic winners such
as Shergar and Shahrastani.
His wife, Penny, and sons Darren
and Paul, hare remained behind in
Newmarket and Tony is expected to
rejoin them , when the South African
season is over.
O THE stream-lined racing colours
introduced by Wa^ne Lukas in Amer­
ica . m adei their - B ritish - d eb ut, at
Folkestone the other day.
The Skin-tight IsilfeS w
wmi %
Richard Q uinn when he powered
home Paul- Cole’s first winner of the
season Diamond Princess.
% .toad Hiem ;specially made. ,»P by an
Old. lady.’in Norwich,'’ said:.Henry Pousonby, whose Shefford Bloodstock syndi­
cate owns the ifiily. “Most o f tm f imrses
will cairy them as they may .save a
length or so in a race.’
Champion’s
three-tinier
AROUND a hundred folk, including
former Champion Jockey Boh Davies
And TV pundit Derek Thompson,
attended a triple christening at the
home of Boh Champion On Sunday.
:N ot Only was Bob’s six-months-old
daughter Henrietta Camilla dipped in
to e font, so -were M s two step-daugh­
ters Natalie,
and-M e^piSia,. 5.:; :
The occasion was also used as a
house-wanning ,party to celebrate Bob
and Ms seeond wife Dee’s move from
Bury St. Edmunds to Newmarket’s
Hamilton Road. : :
; 'Tiiesr'^ iibrase is called Becher’s which
strikes a n odd chord in this predomi­
nantly Flat strongtoold.
/
jg
HUSBAND WiUle and Maureen; on their w edding day - now they are preparing for their first child
man
GOOD luck to Sheik, Mohammed’s
a s s is ta n t ra c in g m a n a g er M ikey
HeatonrElIis who -takes, part in i Sun­
day’s London Marathon in his wheelchair.
r
Mikey, who was paralysed from the
chest down following a fall at Hun­
tington seven years ago, hopes to beat
the three hour barrier.
He is raising upwards of £50.000 to
enable two-year-old spina bifida victim
Joe Myers, to attend the Peto Institute
iri Hungary.
Running
Contributions (up to April 29) should
be sent to the Michael Heaton-Ellis
Marathon Fund, Keepers. House,. Kennett, Nr Newmarket; Suffolk CBS
7QX.
Good luck also to Lamboum-based
jump jockey Stuart Shilston who is
running in the race on behalf of the
Jessica Charles-Jones Fund. She is the
girl jockey who was paralysed after a
fall at Southwell in September.
LESTER P1GGOTT is to be a ;
grandfather.
His daughter. Maureen, 28,
w ho m arried N ew m a rk et
tr a in e r W illie 'Haggals six
weeks ago, is now w eanng the
happy sm ile of an expectant
mother.
great •Cheltenham S o ld Cup
winner Silver Buck.;
Maureen, the elder of two
Piggott daughters, ran her
parents’ Eve; Lodge stables; for
three m onths last year while
her m o th s 1 was in hospital
after suffering a bad fell on
the gallops. S h e did a very
good job; ;
H e a lth y
T he baby is due at Christ­
m as a n d t h is n ew s has,
brought g r e a t: happiness to
Lester a n d his wife Susan who
; have had more than their fair
share; of yidssittides- ih the
past two years.
Maureen said / Yes, I am
having a baby at the end of
th e year. I have ho preference
for a boy or a girl a s long as
th e child is healthy.’
P«<i<e
Old Harrovian ;Willie, alsb
28, who is % fine cricket and
squash player, also belongs: to
a -racing dynasty.
Both his parents, who are
divorced; are prominent own­
ers. And h is m other,, Mrs.
Christine Feather, owned th at
Lesfelr
still'in prison at
the time.
Lester^s pride in his daugh­
ter was very visible at her
wedding on March 4th.
: He was all smiles in the
church and a t the reception
fo r :500 guests afterwards.
The Queen
meets Hern
THE QUEEN, who learned of the
Hillsborough tragedy while racing at
Newbury, made a point of going down
to the paddock before the John Porter
Stakes on Saturday.
:
,
There, in company .with her racing
manager Lord Carnarvon, d ie greeted
her trainer Dick Hern who is being
displaced from her West Hsley stables
in November.
His runner Unfuwain, a daughter of
the Queen's Height of Fashion, did his
stuff in grand style in the race and
looks set for a successful season.
Nashwan is still the three-year-old
for whom the yard entertains , the
greatest Classic hopes.
LOSE WEIGHT
TH O SE
w ho
b ack ed
KeiTera for the 1,000 Guin­
eas following fier i brilliant
Cherry Hinton win over,
A ld b b u rrie (se c o n d - t o
E seonse. this week) should
search for their, voucher s. "
Sheikh Mohammed’s filly
whose form tailed off badly
last .. season, is.sparkling;, a thome. .
’ She may well go f
for the big race ’ and join,
stable -eompanioh ’Miisica.l
Bliss who *:has; also; pleased
trainer JBehasS StoMte.
breath as WfQk' JBstate and ;
Brush Aside I would not be
at all surprised to see him
figure in th e Glassies later on ;
in ■feeseason.;: .-;:i
Pass the Peace won her
-■■at
Thirsk
iri'
the
isix
fuiiong
: inent qf th e ,win. Tohy IV’es
was at his .cheekiest and sp'riB&fc' TMs-forar-year-old,, 1,00 0 . oiiineas itrial. at Newr ;
;, jl's^ y pbrikney will not have who m issed lalst/i seasdh-. bury with .ease., Trained by i
known that he had a race. through injury when he was anoaief
:'-tiaSied‘! iby Oli-vfter-s Douieh,, , Michael BeU, this gemiine .
..Folldw hjm. ,
fllly 'is, '.now' 6-1 for'; the .
hfflted in and is clearly going
•.*i Four Trix ;would ha-^e/gons, --■ t e i ^ e ahfind.-ihitHfi leading
clajkie. Tlie form lo<*s rOcb
very close in the: Scottish1. sprints- -this- year, -fte.was well isolid to me^>!
"Intierrteii
-Grand . N ation al •ihiit.i for '
at-five furlongs, too, so
seeoaii,; ilasti ffie: minimum ; trip> should'
John ^©Bsden.,, iwberifteS d s u t iyI tg is the;
"':M!
!-"!w
the first iiaspe:this '■■■t present no prohlem. < ,,;,-.
some mise tesrsfe.fnsra^ David i gfence
■' Thie ::iaC:i that r- -sh^:' hiis -;rey
•
•
eigfittyear-».ld
.-■;haa
Old Vic w«s well backed in' :l clearly
; O'Brien 'wlirai.,;'l3e ,look over ■attempted; a 1trip leiootely
trained on is in her
,;,as ■
SffeDSf'
Irish.,' long 1as' fbur miles, h u t.the;
favour, and her ,preparation.,
string at W e lumping'.-of,. !:-appeared
'
'has
he^:iHihed
;to perfection.:
to
'have;
no
diffi*.
■ this year. One of j2*-‘fiis§jE; to ; eiilty in handling I t ;As ./he;;: ; Bpitihey<J'was -well directed ,
At siround 3..45pm on May 4 '
appear was liivfelj?' Ooelniey :’goes- <033 any ground he could, :viixsa. winning by no fewer
we may, all he ;soratchiiig!:Our.
.•WHO made .'his- defeat in .tWe, -. -stall .have- -a i race o r ,jtwo.-., in th ^ " 1^ tengthsrfrttn previ„iheads and, wflnijpriiig- why ,we„
; Chatham, Maiden i •euaran- • ;-ihiltt;,;>',
M
'did'n'’t ' ' o b v i o u s by
teed Stakes at Folkestone on oh when
N -abeelD aricer tprbvided 5 '• W &Uj/ CJeral is‘ini the Derby. ; - backing: her5'
Monday, fie .beat Just 'nrree
was - double her present :
■
And'
While
he;
has
not,,
yet-.
new
boy
Alee
>
Scott
-with
his
by a length, but that was 110
..w,
representation , of the true seconds winner, on :Saturday; been mentioned in the same ..’odds,
THE HEALTHY WAY!
Going for weight loss- but scared offeilure?
You’ll find the Kan-Slim programme
enjoyable, achieveable and practical
forkkigtOTnuse.
;
Peai-Snn combines Bran
Tablets rich in natural
fibre with the Bran-Slim
lis a n o v m a m
Diet-Plan, an important
USKUNDS
. Hueprint for Healthy
Weight Loss.
Bian-Slim helps curt)
cafcrie-controUed diet
plan.
F p r q N e w W o r ld o f
e q j^
. , .
M
a im a t conjunction tuilh the
fh sx-S h m ca kw controlled Diet
—
Flam.
PAGE 44
^ all^M a|I^F rid ay^A g rH ^1 ^3 8
RACEMAIL
All the top tips
ROBIN GOODFEltOW'S DOUBLE:-Higfoer Hamili (Beveriey» nap.
3.45} and Peer Prince (Plumpton, 5.0)
GIMCRACK’S DOUBLE:—Higher Hamiil {Beveriey, 3.45) and Rmgmore
(Beverley, nap, 4.15)
CAPTAIN HEATH'S TRIO:-Beverley: 3.15 TORKABAR (nap), Plump­
ton: 3.0 Welsh Oak (nb), 4.0 New Halen
FORMCAST SPECIAL BET:-Higher Hamili (Beveriey, 3.451
NORTHERNER'S NAP:—Beau Benz (Beveriey, 4.15)
TORKABAR-(Beveriefc 3.15)
£1 win
___ _
Hamili can
star here
SINCE the extensive drainage
Although she stayed on well!
operation undertaken at Bev­ to be fifth in a similar race at!
erley three years ago, the draw Brighton last week, that form:
has not had the overwhelming does not look as good as!
influence it used to have on Higher Hamill’s at Ayr nine'
five furlong races.
days ago.
But a far-side (high number)
F ailed
starting position still confers a
considerable advantage in
The Tinkler colt’s strong
sprints and there must be a finish there failed by inches to!
ood ch an ce for HIGHER get him to the winner. Great
IAMILL (nap, 3.45) in today's Service, and the third. Corpo­
Filey Maiden Option Stakes.
rate Member, who is drawn
Nigel Tinkler’s colt will set towards the stands side today,
off with only three rivals was a length back on 91b more
between him and the favourite favourable terms.
rail, and two of them have
Outstanding over jumps is
never raced before.
Peer Prince (next best, 5.0) in
So, experienced as he is after the Norton SDX British Red
two outings, he should out­ Cross N ovices H urdle a t ;
point both and probably has Plumpton.
most to fear from Walk In The
This four-year-old has been
Woods, who comes from the beaten twice since winning his!
stall against the far rail.
first two races but was a close1
Even with a concession of second to Nomadic way at
81b, however, this filly is likely Ascot in November and is not
to find my choice too strong .opposed by anything near that
for her in the late stages.
class here.
__
g
RACEMAIL'S Robin Goodfellow (Jack Millan) landed a
13-1 double yesterday w ith Jinga (nap, 9-4 ) and Shmame
(100-30), w hile CAPTAIN HEATH (Colin Mackenzie) had
his second successive nap w ith Shaadi (5-2), following
Sabotage (7-4). Craven, our N ew m arket correspondent,
had his third straight winning nap w ith Shaadi, following
Sabotage and Brushed Aside. FORMCAST (Nigel Taylor)
found Nordic Brave (12-1) and Rothco (6-1) at Pontefract.
Racing Editor Brian Giles reeled o ff four winners for
RACEDIAL w ith Directly (11-2), Shaadi (5-2), Comic Talent
15-6} and greyhound French Breton (5-4). Nigel Taylor
weighed in w ith W est Tip.
Cougar......................
R
Cream And G reen..... B
Cree Dancer................ K
Creeager..:.....;...... ....... R
Crown Justice......
.R
F lat
ABC
Doris Giri...................
Dove House Hospice..
D unstar...... .................
B
B 4.45 First Bom.... ................
R 4.45 Flood M a rk .................
H 2. If) For N othing................
B 2.18 Forever Diamonds.....
B 3 48 Get On Geraghty........
B 2.18 Golden M achine........
B 4.45 G reat Aspect...............
H 4.48 Gym crak Gold............
R 2.45 Hanover Street........
R 2,ft> Hicklam M illie...........
R :i!5 Higher Ham ill............
B 4.15 Hispanic.......................
R 2.45 Holme Hale.................
R 2.4b H ortondale..................
..B 4.45 In September........
,.B 3.15 Indian S e t .........:......
R 4.1b Kirkman's Kamp........
R 4.15 K nights S ecret...........
R :ii5 Legin...................
R 345 Linda's F irs t..............
B 4.15 Luckv H um bug.........
R 2.45 Luckv S tra w ...............
B 2.15 Magic Im age.... .........
R -4.45 M bulwa........................
-Miss Petella................
B
,,R 3.45 Morgan The Moon....
..B 3.45 M usca M y th ..............
R 3.45 M vlordm ayor.............
B
B
...B
.. R
...R
R
R
R
R
...R
R
R
R
R
...B
R
B
R
R
R
B
B
...B
R
R
...R
...R
R
B — Beverley
Ack Va Vite.................
Afriyd..........................
Aitcb. N Bee.................
A lam dar......................
Alibi W arning............
Alveiev..........................
A uthorship..........;......
Averax.........................
Ayodessa.............'.........
6 Grade..............
.......
B atu P a h a t.................
Beau Benz...................
Beehive Boy................
Biblical.........................
Blyton L ad -...............
Bright H our.... .......
Bright-One...............
Britannia Bell............
Broctune G re v...........
Burslem Beau.............
Butlers W harf............
Cadford Balarma....
Calahonda Bav...........
Capital B uilder..........
Cedar R u n ........:.........
Closed Shop.................
Corporate M em ber....
Corsee...........................
4 45
2,15
2 45
4.15
2 15
3,45
3,15
2 45
3 45
2 45
4 15
4.15
2 45
2 15
315
4.15
245
3.45
3.45
345
4.45
4.45
X 15
4.4t>
2 15
3.15
2.15
2:45
3 45
315
215
2.45
4,4.*>
3.15
4,45
2.45
S.4t>
2.15
No Subm ission............ K 4.45
N orm hurst.................... R 4.18
N orthern Rocket......... R 3.45
O -la -le............ ............. R 2,lt>
Oakes D ay .................... R 2.15'
O n My M e rit......... ..... R 4.48
O rchard's P e t.............. . R 2.15
Pai Avion..................... ,.R 3.15
P attaya G irl................. R 2.15
Polar Region............... R 4.15
Rapid Lad...................... ..B 4.15
Kingm ore..................... ..B 4.15
Kise Over...................... . B 4.45
Sandhurst Lass........... R 2.45
S h ifn a l......................... R 3.15
S ilent Ring.................. R 3.18
Silk D ynasty............... R 4.45
Sky Fighter................. R 3.45
Solo A rtist................... R 4.18
South Cross................. R 3.15
S ta r M oon................... R 4.48
Steppev Lane.............. R 4.15
S u m a n .......................... R 2.48
2.45
T he Footm an............:. R 2.18
Thou Feeal.................. R 3.4ft.
Torkabar...................... R 3.ti>
Two Moons.................. R 4.48
Vinton Va..................... R 4.15
Walk in The Woods... R 3.45
W arthill G irl.............. ..B 2.15
Who Gives A Donald. R 3.45
3.45
W ine Cellar.................
Wing of Freedom ....... ..B 3.15
You Sure...................... ..B 2.4.*>
R
Yuno W hy...................
4.4b
Ned's Aura....... ...........
N ews review
THE COMPLETE
R A C I N G S E R V IC E
FOR THE FOLLOWING
SERVICES PHONE
0898* 222 +
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Plus C ourse News - Latest Shows
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UPDATE
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M oney Talks - Sum m ary
o fT ip sters
(Colls barged 39 per 3 seconds peal,
12 seconds off peafc)
a VAGUELY NOBLE, one Of
the top sires of the last 20
years, has died at Gainseway
Farm in Kentucky. He was
24.
, Winner of the 1968 Prix de
L’Arc de Triomphe, in which
he beat the Epsom Derby
winner Sir Ivor, Vaguely
Noble has sired 62 stakes
w in n e rs, in c lu d in g ten
champions, notably Dahlia,
Empery, Estrapade, Exceller
and Lemhi Gold.
□ NORTHERN ■ trainer Harry
Wharton, 62, collapsed and
died in the parade ring at
Pontefract yesterday. Among
the. Best horses he trained was
Burrough Hill Lad, in the
jum per’s early days, and Inishpour.
By CAPTAIN HEATH
(Colin Mackenzie)
SHAADI claimed some nota­
ble scalps when winning the
C harles H eidsieck C ham ­
pagne Graven Stakes yester­
day and was made a top
priced 4-1 favourite (Swift
L e isu re ) fo r th e 2,000
Guineas.
O ther bookm akers were
more impressed with his
workmanlike 2% lengths vic­
tory over Exboume with
Hills offering a miserly 5-2.
Exboume, who stuck on well
ROBIN GOODFELLOW
W arth ill G irl
G y m cra k Gold
P a r A vion
HIGHER HAMILL (n a p )
R in g m o re
H isp an ic
FIVE-YEAR
J o c k e y s : M Birch 38, 6 Duffield 22, T
Ives 21, W Ryan 20, D Nichalls 17, N Connorton 15, R Cochrane 15, K Darley 14, M
Hills 11, J Lowe II, W R Swinburn II.
2.15
2.45
3.15
3.45
4.15
4.45
stakes his claim
2,000 Classic
when headed, was backed from
12-1 to 8-1 with Corals after'
the race when trainer Guy
Harwood confirmed him as a
runner. Saratogan, who runs
tomorrow in Ireland, has
drifted to 5-1.
Shaadi appeared to take his,
tim e in the rain-softened
ground to assert his superiori­
ty but at the winning post he
was going away.
‘He’s still a bit of a baby at
the moment* said w inning
trainer Michael Stoute, who
G IM C R A C K
2. IS K n ig h ts S e c re t
2.45 G y m c r a k G o ld
3.15 T o r k a b a r
3.45 H ig h e r H a m ili (n b )
4.15 R I N G M O R E (n a p )
has won three of the last four
runnings of the Craven. ‘He
battled really well and I was
pleased with him.
‘He lost his rhythm a bit in
the soft ground. But he’s
growing up and will improve
for that.'
A1 Hareb was ‘never going at
any stage', according to jockeyWillie Carson.
It seems very likely that
Nashwan (now only 14-1) will
be the Dick Hern representa­
tive in the colts' classic:
The C esarew itch is the
long-term objective of Jinga,
who outstayed his rivals for a
resounding seven-length suc­
cess in the Remy Martin
Cognac Handicap.
Lady Herries, who trains
Jinga for her mother, Lavinia
the Duchess of Norfolk, said
Sheriff’s Star, with whom she
won last year’s Great Voltigeur
at York and the King Edward
VII Stakes at Ascot, would be
reappearing in the Jockey
Club Stakes.
8 (21) 6I26I0 R A C E M A IL (B ) 18 (C & D B F ) A Tryin 5-9-7 ..
............5Cauthen •zs
KEY to dll-in-o-line cord: Rocecord num­
horse lost ran; C — course winner (differ­
ber; drow; six-figure form to sixth place,
e n t d ista n ce), D — d isto n c e w inner.
plus S - slipped up, R - refused, F - fell,
C&D — co u rse an d d is ta n c e winner.
P - pulled up, C — carried out; horse's
BF — beaten favourite; troiner, age and
nam e, B — blinkers, H — hood, V — visor;
w eight; jockey; a n d F o rm ca st ratin g
Daytim er — th e num ber o f days since
(Racemail’s private handicap).
4.45 H is p a n ic
RECORD
T ra in ers: M H Easterby 24, H Cecil 22, R
Hollinshead 15, C Brittain ! 3, M W Easterby
12, M S to u te 12, R W hitaker 12, M
Camacho 10, G Harwoad 10, H Thomson
Jones 10, C Tharnton 10.
PRINC IPA L M EETIN G . GOING: G ood to Soft. STALLS: In sid e. DRAW ADVAN­
TAGE: 5f - lm , h ig h n u m b e rs p r e f e r r e d . All r a c e s SIS.
2
4 5 “
F |L E Y
m a id e n
a u c tio n
g u a r a n t e e d
S W E E P S T A K E S ( 2 - Y - O ) £ 2 , 2 0 0 ( £ 1 , 5 1 0 . 0 0 ) Si ( 1 8 )
1(12)
NORTHERN ROCKET J Leigh 9-0 ................................... J H Brown ' 2 (3)
63 CORPORATE MEMBER 9 SMuldoon 8-11................ .A Culhane (3) 67
3(13)
0 CORSEE 9 M W Eosterby 8-H ......................
B Raymond —
4(16)
HANOVER STREET SMuldoon 8-8.................................... K Hodgson 5(14)
0 DORIS GIRL 20 W Pearce 8-6...................................................D Nicholls $ (7)
0 ALIBI WARNING 22 J8erry 8-5.................... ............................ J Carroll 65
.
7 (4)
U0 BURSLEM BEAU 14 C Tinkler 8-5........................................... MBirch
2
1 5 “
W I T H E R N S E A H A N D I C A P £ 3 ,0 0 0
8 (9)
CLOSED SHOP M Morley 8-3................................................ M Roberts
9 (5)
SKY FIGHTER Copt. J Wilson 8-3..:................. ....................... K Darley .
a d d e d (£ 2 ,7 8 4 .0 0 ) 7 f 1 1 0 y d s ( 1 9 )
10 (15)
52 HIGHER HAMILL 9 N Tinkler 8-2...,........... .......................... G Duffield 07$
1 (5) 0/00300-AITCH N'BEE 183 (V)(D2) Lady Herries 6-9-10 ... . .
Tlves 67
MWood ~
11 (8)
WHO GIVES A DONALD C Tinkler 8-2 ..:.................
2 (2)
424623- NED'S AURA 210 (C&D) M Naughton 4-9-10..
K Fallon ii
12 (6)
EIRE LEATH-SCEAL M Brittain 7-13............................. ...A Munro (5) ~
3 (8) 623513- KNIGHTS SECRET 168 (CD4) M H Eosterby 8-9-9. .
M Birch 65
13(17)
MYLORDMAYOR Ronold Thompson 7-13............................R P Elliott
DNicholls 70
4 (4) 1200-00 CALAHONDA BAY 7 !D) N Bycroft 4-9-2.................
14 0 )
HICKLAM MILLIE P C alv er7 -ll.......................................... H Carlisle
5 (19) 00020-0 CREAM AND GREEN 6 (D) K White 5-8-12.......
R Wernham 65
15 (2)
0 LINDA'S FIRST 18 J Wharton 7-11...........................................A Proud
6 (7) 0-30435 THE FOOTMAN 2 R Stubbs 7-8-11....................
,
" S Whitworth 1665(10)
THOU FEEAL M W Eosterby 7-8............................................... J Carter 7 (3)
5185-05 ORCHARD'S PET 11(D) (B) W Turner 3-8-9.
TSBrake (71 67
17(18)
5WALK IN THE WOODS 8 CCyzer 7-8..........
SDawson 64
8 (10)
0 4 4 -ALVELEY 265 JEtherington 4-8-8......................
G Forster(7) 18 (ID
3 WINE CELLAR 9 M H Easterby 7*8.....................
JLowe 73
9 (14) 120142- B GRADE 193 J Bolding 4-8-8..............
M Fry 70
P ro b a b le SP: 5*2 Higher Homill, 7-2 Wine Cellar, 11*2 Corporate Member, 13-2 Alibi
10 (18) 0405-04 WARTHILL GIRL 7 MBrittoin 4-8-7 .................
MWigham 71
Warning, 8 Walk In The Woods, 10 Doris Girl.
FAVOURITES: 2 3 2 0 0 3 1.
11 (15) 342106/ ALAMDAR 668 R Stubbs 7-8-7............. .............
....... J H Brown 1988: Time To Go Home 2 8 0 (A Culhone) 7-2 fov R Hollinshead 19 ron.
12 (1) 200000- GET ON GERAGHTY 193 SMuldoon 5-8-0................. P McGurk (7) 76
I
'I H JG H ER H AM ILL h a d a le n g th to
13(13) 500000- LUCKY STRAW 174 K Stone 4-7-11..................
J Lowe 76
14(12) 50000-PATTAYA GIRL 238 B Morgan 4-7-10................................
GCarter - I G O O D F E L L O W ' S G U I D E I s p a r e o v e r C o r p o r a te M e m b e r w h e n
th e y w ere p la c e d o n h e a v y g o in g a t
15(11) 0000/0 HORTONDALE 22 (V) R Holder 4-7-9.............
.............
A y r n in e d a y s ag o a n d is 91b b e tte r in w ith t h a t a n im a l. H ig h e r H a m iil is
16 (16)
250660- CROWN JUSTICE 193 (D2) Mrs N Mocouley 5-7-7
A Proud 76.
17 (17) 430500- OAKES DAY 178 Don Enrico Inciso 4-7-7......................
Kim Tinkler 978
also m u c h th e m o re f a v o u ra b ly d ra w n ....a lo n g sid e C o rp o ra te M e m b e r’s
u n r a c e d s ta b le -m a te H a n o v e r S t r e e t , f o r w h o m m a r k e t s u p p o r t w o u ld be
18 (9) 00004-4 INDIAN SET 13 P Howling 5-7-7..................
N Gwilliams (7) 77
19 (6) 00000-4 O-LA-LE 23 W Brooks 5-7-7
S Dawson s ig n ific a n t. A lib i W a rn in g , tr a in e d b y th e s e a s o n ’s o u ts ta n d in g p ro d u c e r of
P ro b a b le SP: 7-2 Knight's Secret, 4 Get On Geroghty, 6 Worthiil Girt, 8 N ed's Auro
tw o -y ea r-o ld w in n e rs , sh o w ed u p to -b e y o n d h a lf w a y in th e B ro ck lesb y b u t is
Aitch N' Bee, 10 Indion Set, B Grode, 12 Lucky Strow.
FAVOURITES: 0 0 0 0 1 01.'
n o t to o w ell d ra w n . W a lk In T h e W o o d s , w h o h a s th e b e s t o f t h e d ra w , m a d e
1988: Jocqui Joy 5 7 2 (Dona Mellor) 7-2 fav J Berry 24 ran.
good la te p ro g re s s in to f if th in a c o n te s t o f th i s s o r t a t B r ig h to n la s t w eek.
W in e C e lla r 's b e s t w o rk i n a n e v e n t lik e th i s a t R ip o n n in e d a y s ag o w as
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,
i A itc h N ’B e e w ill b e w ell s u ite d by
d
o n e v ery la te a n d th is m o re te s tin g c o u rs e w ill h e lp h er.
G O O D F E L L O W S G U I D E | th i s s tif f c o u r s e a n d lik es a good c u t
......... ....................................
u n d e rfo o t. K n ig h ts S e c r e t h a r d l y
e v e r r u n s a b a d rac e. T h e F o o tm a n h a s g e n e ra lly ra c e d o v e r lo n g e r d is ta n c e s
4
1 5 " H O RN SEA
M E R E
H A N D I C A P £ 4 ,0 0 0 a d d e d
b u t w as h a m p e re d in t h e la s t fu rlo n g a n d looked u n lu c k y n o t to be p la c e d a t
^
( £ 3 /3 9 2 .0 0 ) l m 2 f ( 1 5 )
le a s t in a w ell-co n te sted h a n d ic a p o v e r th e P o n te f r a c t m ile o n W e d n esd ay . B
1 (13)
12/64- BUTLERS WHARF 346 M Morley 4-10-0...............
M Roberts 65
G ra d e h a s r a n m o s tly o v e r s h o r te r d is ta n c e s b u t is lik ely to a p p r e c ia te th e
R Wernham 2 (3) 1126/6*0 GREAT ASPECT 24 K White 5*9-9...................
e x t r a a n d goes w ell o n m u d . W A R T H IL L G IR L'S s u c c e sse s h a v e a ll b e e n o v e r
3 (6) 2005-06 BRITANNIA BELL 6 M Brittain 4-9-7..................................... MWigham 70
s p r in t d is ta n c e s . B u t s h e k e p t o n to f in is h n o t f a r b e h in d t h e p laced h o rs e s in
4 (5) 30600-0 STEPPEY LANE 7 WHaigh 4-9-6............................
NDay76
tw o s e v e n -fu rlo n g r a c e s la s t b a c k e n d a n d c o n firm e d h e r s ta m in a w h e n
5(10) 020640-BRIGHT*ONE 183 R Whitoker 4-8-11................................. K Bradshaw 72.
r u n n in g o n s tro n g ly in to f o u r th p la c e in a c o m p e titiv e e v e n t o f th i s s o r t a t
6 (4) 5634-00 SOLO ARTIST 14 (B) i Motthews 4-8-9 ..........................Paul Eddery 74
T h ir s k l a s t w eek.
7 (14) 142000- CREEAGER 172 J Wharton 7-8-9...................
H Carlisle 70
8 (1) 00040-0 VINTON VA 25 Copt. J Wilson 4-8-6...........................................K Darley #73
BEVERLEY TRACK FACTS — Right-hand oval o f 1m 3 f with 2 f run-in. An extension
9 (2) 00023-0 BEAU BENZ 21 (CfirDD2) M H Eosterby 5-8-5 .........................M Birch 75
10 (7) 044661- NORMHURST 186 C Tinkler 3-8-3..... ...................‘ ................ G Duffield 70
provides th e 5 f track, which is uphill an d very testing o n so ft ground.
11 (9) 530362- FOR NOTHING 200 J Glover 4-8-3................................. Dean McKeown 77
12 (12) 050230- RAPID LAD 193 (C&D7C3) J Speoring 11-8-0............
..S Dawson 74
13 (15! 2/00050- FLOOD MARK 315 (D) R Hodges 5-7-12..............................
MFry 70
14 (11) 40000-0 POLAR REGION 25 SMuldoon 3-7-8...............
...JLowe 77
15 (8) 25336-0 RINGMORE 22 J Porkes 7-7-7............................................ J Fortune (7) 74
Mm* ”
(2-Y-Q) £1,700 added (£1,576.00) Si 0 6)
P ro b a b le SP: 11-4 Beau Benz, 7*2 Butlers Wharf, 9-2 Sola Artist, 13-2 Great Aspect, 8
1 (1)
BEEHIVE BOY C Tinkler 8-11....................................................M Birch Ringmore, 10 Steppey lone, 12 Vinton Vo.
FAVOURITES: 1 0 0 1 0 2 1.
2(14)
.4 DUNSTAR 16 M Brittoin 8-H ....................................................MWigham 1988: Beau Benz 4 9 1 (M Birch) 9-4 fav M H Easterby 19 ran.
3
(7)
0 FOREVER DIAMONDS 9 JS Wilson 8 - U
...................... M Roberts i11.~miiTTTiim11itii. .n.i..Tir. .nr i.n - - B rita n n ia B ell n e v e r th r e a te n e d th e
4 (12)
0 GYMCRAK GOLD 20 (B) M H Eosterby 8-11.................... G Duffield G O O D F E L L O W ' S G U i O E I le a d e rs a t T h ir s k la s t w eek b u t k e p t
5(15)
5 LEGIN 16 N Tinkler 8-11......................................
Julie Bowker (5) —
;
^ iy - ;-i •- .i;. r;v,viv
o n to b e s ix th in t h a t 1 2 -fu rlo n g
i 6
(2)
MAGIC IMAGE M Eflerby 8-1 ......... ................................... ... S Morris
c o n te st. P re v io u s ly re s tr ic te d to a m ile a t m o st, s h e o b v io u sly w ill n o t fa il f o r
7 (8)
SUMAH Mrs N Mocouley 8-11............................................................ ...... .......
w a n t o f s ta m in a a n d is w ell s u ite d b y p le n ty o f g iv e in th e g r o u n d . B e a u
8 (4)
26 TENDERLOIN 7 N Tinkler 8-11.......................
Kim Tinkler #78
''B e n z, w in n e r o f th i s ra c e 12 m o n th s ago, w ill h a v e b e n e fite d fro m h is r u n a t
9
(9)
6 AYODESSA 23 Ronold Thompson 8-6...................................... R P Elliot? —
D o n c a s te r la s t m o n th . R a p id L ad h a s 10 c o u rs e su cce sses to h is c re d it, sev en
10(10)
BIBLICAL KStoneS-6..........................................
Wendy Carter —
o f th e m o v e r th i s tr ip , b u t is a t h is b e s t o n f a s te r g oing. RIN G M O RE p ro v ed
.............. TSprake(7) 11(16)
0 CAOFORD BALARINA 25 WTurner8-6
‘d u r in g h is ju m p in g c a m p a ig n t h a t m u d s u its h im a n d h e r a n f a r b e t te r t h a n
12(13)
0 CREE DANCER 27 D Chopmon 8-6.............................
SWood(S) f in a l p la tin g s s u g g e s t w h e n e ig th in a D o n c a s te r M a r c h h a n d ic a p o v e r th is
13
(5)
FIRSTBORN A Potts 8*6;
WHood 14(11)
MUSCAMYTH M H Eosterby 8-6..................
KHodgson d is ta n c e . I n a h o p eless p o s itio n h a lfw a y u p th e s tr a ig h t, h e th e n c a m e
15
(6)
0 SANDHURST LASS 9 M W Eosterby 8-6......
DNicholls th r o u g h v e ry s tro n g ly a n d m ig h t h a v e b ee n p la c e d w ith a n e a r lie r m ove.
16
(3)
YOU SURE W Turner 8-6....,...................................................... RMcGhin P ro b a b le SP: 5-2 Tenderloin, 7-2 Forever Diamonds, 5 Gymcrak Gold, 7 Ayadessa, 9
Dunstar, 12 Legin.
FAVOURITES: 3 1 0 1 1 0 1 .
1988: Bold Gamble 2 8 11 (R P Elliott) 5-2 fav Ronald Thompson 18 ran.
~
............. ” " "
i F o r e v e r D ia m o n d s w as in -b e tte r
I G O O D F E L L O W S G U i O E I c o m p a n y w h e n s ta r t in g slow ly a n d
1 (3)
4 - AFRIYD 220 M Sroute9-0................................................ ;.W R Swinburn 70
i .-m■■ V r r r .i.vm m v r ; m - ••vr•-■— M viw.v•■! f a ilin g to g e t in to c o n te n tio n f ir s t
2(10)
00- AUTHORSHIP 168 W Musson 9-0....................
...M W igham tim e o u t a n d im p ro v e m e n t m a y b e e x p e c te d . GYM CRA K GOLD, a p p a r e n tly
3(13)
AVERAX M Jarvis 9-0..............................................................B Raymond b e t te r fa n c ie d t h a t s ta b le -m a te M u s c a M y th , also co m es d o w n in class a f t e r
4(19)
04- BLYTON LAD 213 J Balding 9-0............................................ SHorsfall 70
m a k in g a ta r d y s t a r t o n h is d e b u t a n d re p re s e n ts a y a rd w h o se ju v e n ile s, a r e
5 (15) 04530- CAPITAL BUILDER 244 G Moore 9-0
DeanMCKeown 69
m o re fo rw a rd t h a n u s u a l. T e n d e r lo in , a f a i r s ix th i n a m a id e n s ’r a c e a t
6 (2)
COUGAR C Thornton 9-0....................................................... J Bleasdale —
T h ir s k la s t w eek, h a d e a r lie r r u n u p in a N ew castle c o n te s t lik e to d a y ’s b u t is
; 7(17)
HISPANIC H Cecil 9-0..................
SCaufhen a m o n g th e le a s t fa v o u ra b ly d ra w n . H is s ta b le a lso se n d s o u t L e g in , w h o
8 (I)
55- HOLME HALE 181 J Tree 9-0......................................................... MHills #78
s ta r te d slow ly a n d w as n e v e r in c o n te n tio n , i n c o m p a n y w ith D u n s ta r, i n a
9(16)
03- MBULWA 218 G Wragg 9-0......................
Paul Eddery 43
H a m ilto n s e lle r tw o w eeks ago. B u t th e g o in g th e n w as b a d e n o u g h to e x c u se
J 10(12)
3 MORGAN THE MOON 13 M Bell 9-0....
TQuinn a n y fa ilu r e a n d th o se tw o a r e d ra w n n e a r t h e fa v o u re d f a r rail,. A y o d e s s a ,
11 (9)
2- NO SUBMISSION 218 C Nelson 9-0. .......................................... J Reid 77
w ho show ed lip fo r a lo n g w ay in b e tte r c la ss in h e r in tro d u c to ry rac e, is
12 (11)
40-ON MY MERIT TO F Lee 9-0 ;
.........................
SPerks 67
fro m t h e y a r d w h ic h w o n th i s p riz e a y e a r ago.
13 (14) 4650-20 SILK DYNASTY 8(B ) M Francis 9-0.................................... JWilliams 75
14 (5) STAR MOON N Bycroft 9-0............................................ ....... J Carter 15 (8
0400-YUNO WHY 209 J Etherington 9-0 ...............................
K Darley 70
16 (18)
03- ACK VA VITE 190 M Stoute 8-11 .............. ....................... G Carter
70
17 (6)
0 - IN SEPTEMBER 172 J Spearing 8-11 ................................... DNicholls 1 ,(1 )
00BRIGHT HOUR 4 D Chopmon 4-9-10...:;..............
...SWebslw 18 (7)
RISE OVER K White 8-11........................
R Wernham 2 (3)
50 CEDAR RUN 8 R Simpson 6-9-10.......................
M Gallagher (5) —
19 (4)
0 - TWO MOONS 218 C Thornton 8-11..........................................G Duffield 3 (8)
6-0 KIRKMAN'S KAMP 20 P Colver 4-9-10...................
...............S Perks P ro b a b le SP: Evens Hisponic, 3 Afriyd, 6 Holme Hole, 8 Mbulwo, 10 Morgon The
4 (2) 32040/0 LUCKY HUMBUG 20 W Pearce 6-9-10
............................DNicholls Moon
FA V O U R IT ES:-------13 3.
5 (15)
533-5 PAR AVION 7 CCyzer 4 - 9 - 1 0 ............... ...... .....J Murray (7) 74
1988: Floming Heir 3 9 0 (GBoxter}11 -2 B W Hills 18 ron.
6 (4)
0 SHIFNAL 22 A James 4-9-10.............
JW illiams ____ _____ i A friy d seem s th e b e t te r fa n c ie d of
7 (9)
4 /5 3 5 -SOUTH CROSS 19? G Moore 4-9-10........
Dean McKeown 70
G O O D F E L L O W S G U !O E
| M ic h a e l S to u te ’s p a ir . G re e n o n h is
g (6)
623-2TORKABAR 20 (BF) R Holder 4-9-10
...
SCaullien #78
............... .* o n ly f ir s t-s e a s o n o u tin g , h e h a s b een
9 (7)
0BROCTUNE GREY20 Mrs G Reveley 5-9-7..........Tracy Wentworth (7) w o rk in g m o re lik e a ra c e h o rse . H IS P A N IC , H e n r y C ec il's o n ly r u n n e r to d a y ,
10 (5)
DOVE HOUSE HOSPICE ABrown5-9-7
.......
MBirch 11 (II) 60/2200- GOLDEN MACHINE 302 M W Easterby 4-9-7...:..................M Roberts 72
h a s d o n e e n o u g h o n th e g allo p s to s u g g e s t h e c a n m a k e a w in n in g s ta r t.
12(10) 0000-06 MISS PETELLA 16 C Booth 4-9-7......
Paul Johnson (7)
H o lm e H a le w as c le a rly b e a te n o n b o th h is o u tin g s a t tw o y e a rs b u t
13 (13) 2455/3-0 WING OF FREEDOM 20 A James 5-9-7
..........
G C arter
im p ro v ed o n th e seco n d a n d h a s p o te n tia l. M b u lw a w as n e v e r f a r o ff th e
14 (14)
000-363 SILENT RING 9 S Norton 3-8-5.......
......................... JLow e 62
u s e fu l w in n e r L a n c h e s te r w h e n t h i r d a t Y a r m o u th in th e s e c o n d o f h is tw o
15 (12) 006-43 BATU PAHAT 18 W Turner 3-8-2.......
T Sprake (7) 69
ra c e s a s a ju v e n ile a n d h a s a p p a r e n tly m a tu r e d c o n s id e ra b ly . N o
P ro b a b le SP: 6-4 Torkobar, 5 South Cross, 6 Silent Ring, 8 Por Avion, Batu Pahat, 12
S u b m is s io n , fro m a n in - f o r m s ta b le , fa ile d b y o n ly a n e c k a t B r ig h to n in
Wing of Freedom.
FAVOURITES: 1 1 1 0 2 2 1.
S e p te m b e r o n h is o n ly 1988 a p p e a r a n c e , a n d t h i r d .C a rm a g n o le , h a s w o n a
1988: Horreek 3 8 5 (G Boxter) 6-4 fay P Cole 13 ran.
m a id e n s ’ ra c e th i s seaso n .
l PA,S A V,0NI h a d p le n ty to do a t th e
NEW M ARKET (C rav e n ) - Z15 T he F o o tm a n . 3.4S C losed Shop. 4.15 B u tlers
G O O D F C . L . L . O W S C 3i_>iO E j w e ig h ts w h e n a c re d ita b le f if th in a
W harf. 4.45 A friyd.
■ ii'.vr■• iir■•v.Vi-1-• • rr••■rm - ■ ■ii-rlr.m . • r.rr•• .I c o m p e titiv e tw o -m ile h a n d ic a p a t
. N O R T H E R N E R .-- 2.15 In d ian S et (mb). 3.J5 Tarkabas-. 3.45 Alibi W a rn in g . 4.15
N e w b u ry la s t w eek. S oiatls C r o s s h a s y e t to a t te m p t m o re t h a n 12 f u rlo n g s
BEAU BENZ (n a p ).
b u t sh o w e d a b ility in f a i r co m p a n y w h e n t r a in e d by G u y H a rw o o d in 1988.
T o rk a & ar s ta y e d o n w ell fo r s e c o n d p la c e in a D o n c a s te r ra c e lik e th i s la s t
BLINKERED (OR VISORED) FIRST TIAAE: 2.15 Aitch N'Bee, Hortondale. 2.45 Gymcrak
m o n th a n d sh o u ld b e s u ite d b y t h e e x t r a 313 y a rd s.
Gold. 4.45 Silk' Dynasty
I
9 4 5 " SCARBOROUGH SPA SELLING STAKES
(
4 4 5 —■LECONFIELD MAIDEN GUARANTEED
SWEEPSTAKES (3-Y-O) £2,200 (£1,510.00) 1m
100yds (19)
3 1 5 “ BRIDLINGTON BAY MAIDEN STAKES £2,000
w added (£1,716.00) 2m 40yds (15)
V"
PAGE45
Daily Mail, Friday. April 21,1989
West Tip hunts
his way home
0898 300 401
0898 300 400
■ 6am o nw a rd s;
:
‘ - u p to the minute previews, selections and results. .
Listen throughout the day to informed commentary.
In conjunction with Audiotext PLC. 5p per 8 seconds peak. 12 seconds off peak
□ WEST TiP, who beat all bar
Little Polveir in the Grand
National twelve days ago, out­
classed fifteen opponents in
the Howard E, Perry Hunters’
Chase at Cheltenham.
‘It seemed a bit like pot
hunting but I felt entitled to.
bring him for this because he
is as well qualified as any of
them’, said trainer Michael
Oliver.
In fact the Droitwich trainer
attributes West Tip’s revival to
the hunting he has been doing.
T O P T R A IN E R : J F fitc h -H e y e s . T O P J O C K E Y : R G o ld s te in .
P lu m p to n
•
00 —
4 • WW
ROBIN GOODFELLOW
2.30 F is h in g
S n ac k
3.00 N ic k y 's
Joy
3.30 J a y e ll's D r e a m
i
4.00 N e w H a le n
I
4.30 L o c k w o o d P r in c e
I
5.00 P e e r p r in c e (n b )
0
o n — NORTON TELECOM RENTALS
L .
SELLING HANDICAP HURDLE £1,200
added (£1,254) 2m (19)
1
2
232214 TURN FOR TH'BETTER (D) (B )(B F ) J Ffitch
Heyes 6-11-10..................................... Penny Ffitch-Heyes
106F50 C A R P E T C APERS (C D ) J Ffitch-Heyes 5-11-5
Dale Mckeown
3
6030-2 # F U N N Y SARAH (B ) M Tompkins 5-11-2
S Smith Eccles
• 4
00P600 G O L D E N W O O D (B ) Miss L Bower 6-10-12
M Furlong
8
1B0P56 SEATO N G IR L (D ) R Frost 5-10-8
J Frost
42-2045 B A Y T I NO J Long 6-10-4..................
R Rowell
P3F5 P IC AR IB O P Jones 4-10-2.........................M Kinane
300000 BRA NSTOW N SUN SET P Butler 5-10-2
9
10
S McKeever(7)
LAU R A 'S D R E A M (B ) P Rodford 6-10-2 ,.W lrvine(4)
KING SW O O D R E S O P A L (D ) AMoore 5-10-2
5
6
7
60/6-P0P
050052
J Clarke(7)
.11
500 L'ENCHERE GGracey 4-10-2.................. DGallagher
12 P00-630 C H U R C H STA R (V ) J Bridger 5-10-1
Rachel Bridger(7)
R Dennis
13
0/000-PP F L Y B IR O P Bowden 6-10-1...........
14 00-0506 A N O T H E R SEASON AMoore 5-10-1
G M oore
15 PP4103 F IS H IN G S M A C K (D ) BByford6-10-1
M rT M o o re
.D T e g g
16
0PP T IC K L E M E P IN K P Howling 4-10-1 ...
17 00P0-0P A R R O W K N IG H T (B ) J White 5-10-1....
..K Burke
18 006045 BIDS TO N M IL L (B ) R Bennett 4-10-1...
1 19 052-4P0 UPHAM QUEEN H O'Neill 6-10-1........ ..C Llewellyn
P r o b a b le SP: 11-4 Carpet Capers, 4 Turn for Th' Better, 11-2
Funny Sarah, 6 Fishing Smack, 7 Kingswood Resopal, 10 Baytino.
3
1
0 0 — BRENT WALKER HANDICAP CHASE
£4,000 added (£3,132) 2m 4 f( 12)
550624 # W E L S H O A K (D ) D Gandolfa 9-11-12
S Smith Eccles
2
336314 K IT T IN G E R (D ) (B F ) AndrewTurnell8-U-6
D MuStOW(7)
3 61515-4 L IN E O F G O L D (D ) C Weedan 7-10-12..Peter Hobbs
4
32S13P M IS T E R B U T L E R P Janes 10-10-11
M Kinane
5 0-230PP IR O N B IL L Y -R Frost 1010-8............................ J Frost
6 344-3P5 F O R E S T D A L E (D ) C Wates 11-1CK
H Davies
7 223231 F O U R S P O R T (C ) (D ) J Ffitch-Heyes 7-10-7
M r P Verling(4)
8 115-2F0 C E N T A U R SONG (C ) H O'Neill 9-10-5 ...R Dunwoody
’ 9 30PP61 N IC K Y 'S J O Y (51b e x )(C D ) P Hedger 13-10-2
D Morris
10 224422 K E L L Y 'S B O Y ( B ) ( D ) NGaselee 9-10-0 A Adams(4)
11 FP0U1/- B A D HAB ITS (D ) G Enright 9-10-0..:......... ...M P e rre tt
12 0-3P654 T H E SO M AC (C D ) E Savage 12-10-0......:.C Llewellyn
P r o b a b le S P: 5-2 Welsh Ook, 7-2 Kittinger, 4 Four Sport, 6
Nicky's Jay, 8 Centour Song, 12 Mister Butler, 14 Forestdole.
3
0 0 — NORTON TELECOM AMATEUR
RIDERS HANDICAP HURDLE £1,500.
added (£1,716) 2m 4f (20)
1-15325 9 B R A V E D E F E N D E R (C ) N Henderson 5-12-0
R White(7)
0421-26 IN H E R IT (C D ) R Curtis-7-11-9 ...... D Benneyworth(7)
143330 R O S T R E A M E R C Brovery.6-11-8....... ...P HackingM)
1.1P6-40 M O O R L A N D L A D Y P Hedger 7-11-0
13233F
•
M A N H A T T A N B O Y (C )
Miss Z Davison(7)
J Ffitch-Heyes 7-10-13
P V erling(4)
H A S T Y G A M B L E A Moore 9-10-12
G Upton(4)
D E V IL 'S R U N K Boiley 6-10-11.................... A T o ry (7 )
J A Y E L L S D R E A M P Hobbs 7-10-10
P 0 'R eilly(7)
K IN G S W O O D K IT C H E N S J Long 9-10-9
P Clarke
A L T R A F A N G Horwood 6-10-9 Miss A Harwood(7)
H J A N I P Butler 8-10-7............................ H Finnegan(7)
R A N D O M W IN D N Mitchell 8-10-5
C Farrell(7)
M R M A J IN T Y Mrs H Fullerton 5-10-1
E Bailey(7)
S C Y LLA 'S C H IP N Wheeler 7-10-1
N Wheeler (7)
M A W D L Y N G A T E Mrs V .Teol 10-0
R T e a l(7 )
P E N S IO N E R P A T C H J Gifford 7-10-0.....T Grantham
X Y L O P H O N E ’ MissLBower7-10-0
C Burnett-Wells(7)
DVerC 0(7)
18 POOF00 R IS IN G S O V E R E IG N J Porish 11-10-0
214-0P0
W
A
T
E
R
S
ID
E
LO
D
G
E
M
Fetherston-Godley
6-10-0
19
M Arm ytage
__ PPP0PP- M A R IN E R S D R E A M NMitchell8-10-0...CMaude(7)
20
. P r o b a b le S P: 4 Devil's Run, 5 Brave Defender, 13-2 M anhattan
6
.
D e n o te s be st h a n d ic a p p e d hors e.
L .H . cou rse . G O IN G : G ood to F ir m . A ll races S IS.
F5U06P
7 000-640
8 34B400
9 0-UBU46
10 341450
11 0/020/12 4-PF6P0
13 120006
14 U/F0-643
15 530/0616 50Q-F00
17 0-F0060
Bay, 7 Mariners Dream, 8 Rostreamer, TO inherit, Jayells Dream.
ALFRED
McALPINE
HOMES'
MAIDEN CHASE £2,500 added (£2,055)
2m (15)
BIBS F O L L Y P Rodtord 8-11-3................P McLaughlin
C A L A M IT Y J O E AndrewTumell 6 -U -3 ....... L Harvey
C L E A N IN G UP D Gondolfo 7 -H -3 ............
SMcNeill
C R IC K L E W O O D CHRIS AndrewTum ell 7-11-3
D Must0w(7)
5
0P0406 E V E S H A M B U T C H E R S J Bennett 7 -1 1-3....S Shilston
; 6 0002F-F H E L L O R O C K Y Miss ESneyd 8-11-3
M r T Smith
; 7
442222 # N E W H A L E N A Jomes8-l 1-3.........
E T iern e y(7)
1 8
303P3P;0 K SON M Bolton 10-11-3...............................B Powell
i 9 F5PU00 R E D F E S C U E J Bridger 7 -1 1 -3 ..................... M Furlong
10 0-0PPPF S H A M U S O 'R A P ID Y R Bennett 6-11-3 .D G allagher
11 P00P-06 T A R A l US P H e d je r 8 0 1 -3 ............................M Richards
12 056640 T H E C O B A L T U N IT B Byford 10-11-3
M rT M o o re
13 U /4 0 3 /-P JO A N A D D IS O N G Enright 8-10-12
M Perrett
14
60-00 C O O L SEASON J White 5-10-10....... ........... ..A Jones
15
000-F N A U G H T Y N IC K Y K Bishop 5-10-5.................. S Earle
P r o b a b le S P : 1-2 N ew Holen, 7-2 O K Son, 10 Cricklewood
Chris, 14 Toroius, 20 Cleoning Up, 2 5 Eveshom Butchers.
ones
b e a t , w a r n s M a n s e ll
A 200,000 crow d w ill
acclaim Nigel Mansell in
S u n d a y ’s S a n M a rin o
Grand Prix at Imola, but
the British driver main­
tains; ‘They will be here to
see Ferrari, not me.’
Mansell's victory in Brazil
last month has fired enthusi­
asm phenomenal even by
Italian and Ferrari stan­
dards.
Yet as he leaned on the pit
wall yesterday, ’ Mansell said:
‘The true perspective is that
anyone driving for Ferrari
would get the same recep-
From DERICK ALLSOP
in Imola
tion. It’s sensational here.
Gerhard Berger and I are
the drivers but most, if not
all, credit must go to Ferrari
and their incredible history.
‘I was lucky in Rio, I admit
that. I did my job and won
the race, yes, but it’s the
team that is so magical in
Italy. That’s why it’s so nice
to be one of the drivers and
part of the team.’
Despite Mansell’s modesty,
the fact is that his part in
the team effort has raised
expectations. Some 30,000
' 1 00/P /-P
1 2 P0060P
3
FPP30P
. 4
0066
MCALPINE CONSTRUCTION
4 •w0 V0 — ALFRED
NOVICES' CHASE (HANDICAP) £2,000
added (£1,761) 3m If (15)
’
414410 L O C K W O O D P R IN C E R Frost 6-11-10.............J Frost
2505-2P M O NSO O N P Jones 8-11-3................
.......M Kinane
2314B4 # R A L E IG H G A Z E L L E W Turner 7 -1 1 -1 .P Holley(4)
0040-23 ISAAC N E W T O N (B F ) N Henderson 11-10-11
J Railton(4)
5 P-F51FP W O N T BE G O N E LO NG N Henderson 7-10-8
M Bowlby
6
32421P J O S E Y W A L E S B S m art7-10-7
RDuhWoody
7
5-P5P0P D R U M G O N N E L L Y (B ) P Bawden 8-10-6..B Wright
8 3/0PP-PP R E D D O W N H Haynes 11-10-5..........M rG O x le y ,
9
3F4323 M A R T IA L C O M M A N D E R G Enright 9-10-2
M P errett
10 34-60F5 W H IT E R IV E R G R O V E P Habbs 9-10-1 ..Peter Hobbs
11 S2-F50F SEA C H A L L E N G E R R Ledger 8-10-1 ... M r N Ledger
12 6P1000 R H O D E IS L A N D R E D A M a a r e 6 -1 0 -0
G M oore
13
FF06FQ D U N A R U N N A B Farsey 8 -10-0 ............
D Te g g
14
F35P55 R E G A L S ANTA P Butler 9 -1 0-0
S M cK eever(7)
15
0005F5 Z A B A R U C C I N Mitchell 7-10-0........................B Pow ell:
P r o b a b le S P: J M a rtia l Com m ander, 9-2 Lockwood Prince, 5 ;
W ont Be Gone Lang, 11-2 Raleigh Gazelle, 7 lsaoc New ton.
1
2
3
4
5
1
0 0 — NORTON S D X BRITISH RED CROSS
NOVICES' HURDLE £1,600 added
(£1,132) 2m (18)
G Pritchard-Gardan 4-11-8
S Smith Eccles
2
0 3 4 H Q U A I D 'O R S A Y (C D ) F O 'M ahany 4-11-8...M Kinane
3
00-142 A F F A IR E D E C O E U R (D ) J Ffitch-Heyes 5-11-2
Penny Ffitch-Heyes
4
0-0210 F L E E T W O O D LASS (D ) J Ffitch-Heyes 5-11-2
Dale Mckeown
5
00-SP C L IN T NA G O O LA N B Byfard 5-11-1 ......M r T Moore
'6
0 C O IN A G E R Johnson Houghton 6 -H -l
M r G Johnson Houghton(7)
R Dennis
P F O X Y S W O O D (B ) P Bawden 8-11-1
P-0 G U N R U L E Andrew Turnell 5-11-1....
541-03P S M A R T S L A V E Miss L Bower 6-11-1.. ....M Furlong
H Davies
P T O W E R S ID E C W otes6-l 1-1...... ......
0 E A S T E R N E V E N IN G J Long 4-10-10
M rs J Poulton(7)
M ISS C R A G G ' Mrs V Teol 6-10-10....................0 Morris
P O M R S G U N N E R W Kemp 7-10-10 .........SM cK eever(7)
456 N O IR E S M A L L P Hedger 7-10-10.............. M R ichards
45 R O Y A L N A T IV E J Spearing 6-10-10 ................ A Webb
60 S O L IT A R Y R E A P E R (B F ) Miss B Sonders 4-10-10
I Shoemark(4)
V IR G IN IA S P E T J Long 6-10-10
Leesa Long(7)
OP G O L D C O L L A R A Moore 4-10-5 Candy M orris(4)
P r o b a b le S P : ?-4 Peer Prince, 9-2 Affoire de Coeur, Solitory
J
N E W M A R K E T : (C r a v e n ) — 2.30 F U N N Y
5.00 P e e r P rin c e .
S A R A H (n a p ),
□ KRISTIS GIRL booked' her ticket for Chester
when winning by four lengths in the Tote
Placepot Maiden Auction Stakes at Pontefract
yesterday. The filly, who was returned at 20-1,,
was backed by a Tote client who had £250 each1
way and another £100 each way resulting in the
:machine dividend being reduced drastically to a:
3-1 win and a; meagre 1-10 a place.
OO — KELT CONDITIONAL JOCKEYS 'S'
H'CAP H'DLE (£1,044) 3m (11)
. .1
2
3
R O B IN G O O D F E L L O W
2.30 Iris h G e n e r a l
4.00 P U ra M o n e y
3.00 G e n a ir
4.30 N e w K in g s g ro v e
3.30 D e liu s
5.00 T a c tic o
5.30 S chiehalliO n
R -H C o u rs e . G O IN G : G ood.
T o p jo c ke ys : C G r a n t 24, P T u c k 20, N D o u g h ty 13.
T o p tr a in e r s : G R ic h a rd s 28, D e n y s S m ith 15, J E d w a r d s 15.
.•
1
2
000P0 A C H IL T IB U IE W Crawford 5-10-12
Ger Lyons
P030- C H A N G E T H E N A M E P Blockley 6-10-12
M Hammond
3 4 0 5 /0 0 - G R E E N S PU R C Porker 7-10-12.................... ..S Tu rn er
0020-R0 IR IS H G E N E R A L JEdwords7-10-12.....
T M o rg an
M A N IX TC raig8-10-12......................... M r D P o o le (7 )
..K Ryan (4)
U/40P-R5 M O N K S IM A G E D Moffatt 7-10-12..
7
00000 PARSON'S CROSS W A Stephenson 5-10-12 .C Grant
8
OP RHODBRIDGE G Balding 7-10-12.................. R Guest
9
1-206 •SCOTTISH GOLD J S Wilson 5-10-12........... L Wyer
10
50-4 ST POLINUS R Woodhouse 7-10-12
R Garritty (7)
11 0-05505 BROON'S REEL JLave6-10-7................... M rSLove
12
203-5 CASINO RUN R Fisher 6-10-7 :........................M Dwyer
13
0 CONFIDENT VOTE Mrs G Reveley 5-10-7.... P Niven
14 0PPP5P GREY BUNNY P Uddle 9 - 1 0 - 7 .................... PTuCk
15
IMAMAZED J Johnson 5-10-7.................AGSm ith (7)
16
0- NOTNYERNELLY G Dun 8-10-7................... B Storey
17 3-00506 RED DUSK J Oliver 5-10-7......
..TReed
18
P0 SLATYFORD LANE T Cunningham 8-10-7
S Cunningham (7)
P ro b a b le SP: 9-4 Irish General, 7-2 Scottish Gold, Rhodbridge,
9-2 St Polinus, 6 Casino Run, 8 Change The Name.
4
5
6
3
0 0 — GRILSE RUN FOUR YEAR OLD
HANDICAP HURDLE (£1,744) 2m (12)
1 012221 #BRIGHT AISLE (D) NTinkler 11-10
GMcCourt
2
4213 JUBAIL (DBF) K Morgan 11-7........................ H Davies
3
. 0002 GENAIR <5 Maare 10-9.................... .......M Hammond
4 540140 SONSIE MO (D) Mrs S Bradbume 10-8...... :...R Fahey
5
034 ORIENTAL CHARM D Maffatt 10-3 . ..K Ryan (4)
6
0P34 ASTON COURT D Lee 10-1 ..i................. ....:G Harker
7
F036 MANNA FROM HEAVEN Denys Smith 10-0 .C Grant
8
0000 TOUGH COOKIE R Allan 10^)........... ..........B Storey
9
5P0 FRESH DOMINION D Wintle 10-0............ ...A Carroll
10 003060 RIVER SPIRIT PMonteith 10-0.............. L O'Hara (7)
M Stevens (7).
11
P0660 SOLENT SUN B Stevens 10-0 ....:...
,P M idgley (7)
12 230040 CANESTRELLI P Blockley 10-0....
P ro b a b le SPJ 7-4 Fresh Dominion, 11-4. Bright Aisle, 4 Genair,
11-2 Jubail, 8 Aston Court, Sonsie Mo, 10 Oriental Charm.
,
0 32033 » L E L E V A D O R (D ) D Wintle 10-11-10
..SM ackey
5P4605 SAG ART ARO O N O Brennan 9-11-5 ...Helen Brennan
361035 N E W K IN G S G R O V E ( V X D ) P Monteith 10-11-4
L O 'Hara
4 0 0/53-60 M O U N T H A R V A R D G Barnett 13-11-3
A Leese
5 U0P000 H A Z Y G L E N M Bomes 11-11-2....................... S Turner
6
6350FP M A W B R O O N W Foirgrieve 6 -1 0-1 3................ D B y rn e
7
3FU0F2 BOR EH A M DO W N (C ) NBycroft 10-10-11....R Fahey
8
P66642 C L IP P E R S D R E A M J Jefferson 6 -10-9
Ger Lyons
9 P0030-0 E A S TLA N D S M O N K E Y Mrs Reveley 7-10-8 ...N Smith
10 F43-005 V IC T O R Y B O Y T Cuthbert 11-10-5
Carol Cuthbert
11 U00000 R O Y A L T O W E R P Blockley 5 -1 0 -5
P M idgley
P r o b a b le S P: 9-4 New Kingsgrove, 7-2 Le Levodor, 9-2 Clipp.ers
Dreom , 6 Sogort Aroon, 8 Borehom Down, 10 M o u n t Horvord.
D e n o te s be st h a n d ic a p p e d hors e.
TAY SPRINGER MAIDEN HURDLE
2 • 0 0 — £1,500
added (£1,646) 2m 4f (18)
1120 # P E E R P R IN C E (D )
Reaper, 6 Coinoge,: Fleetwood Loss, 10 Quoi d'Orsoy.
T-shirts bearing his picture
were sold within two days.
M ansell’s expectations are
th a t M arlboro M cLaren
Honda pair Alain Prost and
Ayrton Senna will be the
pace-setters this weekend.
He said: ‘They proved in
testing here last week that
they have the acceleration
ideal for this power circuit.
They were two seconds a lap
quicker than us.
‘I believe that in qualifying,
they will be faster than
everyone. In the race the gap
should not be so big, but
everyone must be looking at
them as the team to beat.’
3 • 0r w0 —
GLENEAGLES HOTEL CHASE £4,000
added (£3,132) 3m (4)
4 • U0 U0 —
GOODFELLOW BLOODSTOCK NOV'
H'CAP C H '(£2,152.50) 2m 4f ( ll)
1 11-F1P2 #DELIUS R Lee:l 1-11-11 ......i
B Dowling
2 22142B SIR JEST (D) W A Stephenson 11-11-8
CG rant
3 44/2PPP POUNENTES (BXC&D) WMcGhie 12-11-5
L O'Hara (7)
4 1460F1 FAIR ECHO (CD) C Porker9-11-3................. BStorey
P ro b a b le S P: 2-5 Delius, 9-4 Sir Jest, 8 Foir Echo, 12 Pounentes.
1 FF102F •BISHOPDALE (D) W A Stephenson 8-12-0 .CGrant
2 P3P311 PURA MONEY(CD) G Richords711-1 Mr P Doyle (4)
3 FF4413 BLACK SPUR (D) CPorker7-10-2.......
BStorey
4 005444 KRISTENSON R Fisher 12-10-0...............M Hammond
5 . 436453 LIGHT TRAVELLER R Borr 9-10-0
G Harker
6 304460 SHESHOONS LAST(D) W McGhie 9-10-0L O'Hara (7)
7 . 0PF421 KAIM PARK Mrs G Reveley 6-10-0.... ............P Niven
: 8 0/5R5-2F PALANQUIN Miss M Benson 7-10-0
.TReed
9
0FP0F NOT SO SHARP J G-en 6-10-0...
M rD Poole(7)
10
5PFU5 HECKLEY CRAG P Blockley 9-10-0 ... J O'Hanlon (7)
11 PP0/PP LOCHARBRIG (B) DMcCaskill 10-10-0
J O'Gorman (4)
P ro b a b le SP: 2 Pura Money, 7-2 Black Spur, 4 Bishopdale, 6
Kristenson, 8 Light Traveller, 10 Kaim Park, 12 Sheshoons Last.
5
0 0 — PERTHSHIRE MEMORIES H'CAP CH'
(for the Kilmany Cup) (£1,716) 2m (9)
1
2
3
F3F223 T A C TIC O (C & D ) W Foirgrieve 7-1 M 2 .: .
G B radley
61031F 9 S O L E N T L A D (D ) B Stevens'6-10-4....M Stevens (7)
012332 G O L D E N F A N C Y (C & D ) C Alexonder 12-10-3
S T u rn e r
4 31P/P0P K E E P D R E A M IN G (D ) D McCoskill 12-10-0
J O'Gorman (4)
5
132P50 IM P E R T A IN (D ) T Cunninghom 9-10-0
S Cunningham (7)
6 P-P0633 D A N C IN G A D M IR A L (D ) K Morgan 9-10-0.H DaVies
7
412433 S T R A IG H T D O W N (D ) Mrs Barker 12-10-0.CHawkins
8
F41515 S ID V IC (D ) R Woodhouse 10-10-0............... C Ryan (7)
9 2014U3 B R U F F A C A D E M Y (D ) R Paisley 8-10-0...J K Kinane
P r o b a b le SP: 5-2 Golden Foncy, 4 ‘ Solent Lod, 11-2 Straight
Down, Toctico, 13-2 Im pertain, 8 Doncing Admirol, 10 Sidvic.
5 • w0 V0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
— FESTIVAL FINALE NH FLAT RACE
M
. 6-Y-O)
A .Y .n ) (£1,226)
(f.1.776 lm 5 f (18)
(4,S5* &
0 A R P A L F O R E V E R R Allan 5-11-6........R G arritty <7)
C W M G W A U N J Edwards 5-11-6............... M r P Fenton
0 ELBAR LAD
S Leadbetter 5-11-6.......... M r J M Dun
0 F R IA R S C R O F T T Craig 6-11-6
M r D Poole (7)
6- •H A W A IIA N P R IN C E J O'Neill 5-11-6 ...R Supple (4)
1 S C H IE H A L L IO N J Jefferson 4-11-2
R Fahey (4)
D E E P C R E E K A Mactoggort 5-11-1
M r D M actaggart (7)
B E N O L IV E R J Etheringtan 4-11-0......... B M cG iff (7)
B LU S H IN G T IM E S GOIdrayd 4-1 l-0...W Stephens (7)
6 K IL M O N D W O O D G Maare 4-11-0 I Callaghan (7)
10
0 L O T H IA N C A P T A IN W Crawford 4-11-0
11
M r C S am plt
L O 'Hara (7)
M IS T E R T U F T IE G Richords 4-11-0.,
~
12
S T urner
2 S Q U IR E L A M B Miss S Hall 4-11-0....
13
P Harte (4)
C AR BIA'S LAST D Lee 4-10-9.......
14
0 D O U B L E DOSE J Johnson 4-10-9.... ...A G S m ith (7)
15
M IG O 'S G IR L G Dun 4-10-9.............. ..Miss J Furness
16
M ISS S W A LLO W R Goldie 4-10-9.........S O'Gorman (4)
17
0 SHE'S A L L T H E R E T Cuthbert 4-10-9 ....N Leach (7)
. 18
P r o b a b le SP: 7-4 Mister Tuftie, 3 Howoiion Prince, Cwm Guan,
5, Squire Lamb, 6 Schiehollion, 8 Ben Oliver, 10 Elbor L a d ..
8
9
□ SIMON SHERWOOD appeared at Chelten­
ham for the1last time as a jockey yesterday and
bowed out in style with two winners, Arctic
Teal and Knighton Lad, who provided him with
a 441-1 double.
It was on this course that Simon’s career
reached its highest peak when he won the Gold
Cup on Desert Orchid and memories were
revived by Knighton Lad, who is a similarshade of grey. But that is the only resemblance’
between him and the best chaser in training.
The reluctant Knighton Lad tried to drop
himself out after only three flights in the
Western Novices Handicap Hurdle but Simon
was standing no nonsense and galvanised the
grey to such an extent that he knew he was
going to beat his 23 rivals as they breasted the
hill a long way from home. Arctic Teal easily
won the Minster Lovell Handicap Hurdle.
"P errett) 4 - 5 fav, 3; 9 rah.(M P ip e ,' :2', Slieve Felim 5 -6 Fav, 3; 3 ran.(J;
Soft
W ellington). 20,, 5.Tote: £3.10, £1,50,-.
-C harlton, Stocksfield). 7, 4.Tote: £2.70, .
Good to Soft PONTEFRACT
: DF: £3.70. CSF: £8.2L
£1.30, £1,10. DF:£10.50. CSF: £14.11. NR:
2 .0 0
(lm If) — GREENWICH PAPIL- 2 .2 0 (5fj — KRISTIS GIRL (A Proud)
! 4 .3 0 (2m Ch’).— OAKGROVE (B
IDwale.
2
0
-1
,
1;
Advance
To
Go
(
T
,
Williams)
;
LON (J Reid) 3 3 -1 , 1; Opening Verse (S
IDowling) 6-1 jt-fav . 1: Jelly Jill 15-2, 2;
1 0 - i, 2; Merryfall (K Fallon) 16-1, 3. 14
‘ 5.10 (2m H ’cap C h ’) — PRIZE ASSET
C authen) 4 - 7 Fav, 2; W eldn aas (B
-H aw k sm o o r 7-1 , 3; 1 6 ran .(R Lee,.
ran.
15-8
fav
F
in
al
S
hot.
(D
H
aydn
(S
Earle)
7
-2
jt-fav
1;
Pukka
Major
(Mr
Raym ond) 9 -1 , 3. 7 . ran. (W Carter,
1 0 -1 , 3. 1 3 ran. (C Nelson, U pper
Presteigne). 7. 2% T o te: £10.60; £3.80,
Jones, Pontypridd). 4, H d. Tote:, £4.10, :
.A Tory) 7 -2 jt-fav 2; Outlaw (D Tegg)
Epsom). %. 4, Tote: £45.60; £5.80, £1.20.
Lam boum ). 4, H d. Tote: £4.10, £1.70,
£2.60, £3.00. D F: £11.10. CSF: £49.91.
£1.10, £4,20, £5.40. D F; £27.80. CSF:
9
-2
3.
8
ran
(P
Hobbs,
M
inehead)
2%,
1%.
D u a l F o r e c a s t : £20.50. C o m p u te r
£2.00, £3.10. DF:£13.60. CSF: £22.72.
.
5 ,0 0 (2m 4f H ’cap H ’dle).— SHARP
£189.43.
Tote: £4.30; £1.60; £1.90; £1.80 DF; £5.00,,)
.S traig h t F orecast: £49.61.
KING (H Davies) 10-1, 1; C opeland Lad
R acep ot (£1 stake): £1,052.70.
CSF: £15.69 T ricast: £50.68.
v
2 .5 0 (lm 2f 'S ’ H ’cap) — FINAL
2 .35 (7f) — GREAT COMMOTION (P at
18-1, 2; W e sse x 8 -1, 3; 13 ran.9-2 F av
SOUND (G Duffield) 9 -2 , 1; My Sw an ,
5.40 (2m F lat).— YOUNG POKEY (A S r
Eddery) 4-1,; 1; Vault (R Cochrane) 8-1,
M onk’s M istake (K M organ, M elton
CHELTENHAM
Good
S o n g (I Johnson) 2 0 -1 , 2; Innovator
Sm ith) 4 -5 fav 1; My Young Man (M r J ‘
. .2; Phountzi (W R S w inbum ) 4 -1 , 3. 21
Mowbray). 4. %.Tote: £18.90, £6.40, £3.20,
Z.15 (2m 4f H ’cap H ’dle) — ARCTIC
(D ean M ckeow n) 5 -2 fav, 3; Sarnia
D urkan) 14-1 2; Rafiki (M r R White)
ran. 15-8 F av Y oung Jazz. (A Scott). 5,
I£2.90. D F: £114.30. CSF: £84.32. Tricast:
TEAL
(S
Sherwood)
12-1,
1;
Abbeydore
Sound (A Shoults) 2 0 -1 , 4. 18 ran. (P
3 3-1 3. 23 ran. (O Sherwood, U pper
nk. Tote: £5.40; £2.20, £2.30, £2.40. DF:
j£623.96. N R: Red Procession, A pril R a in .:
(R Bellamy) 2 5 -1 , 2; Leavenw orth (C
Feilden,
N
ew
m
arket).
Nk,
H
d.
Tote:
' Lam boum ) 5, 12 Tote:. £2.10; £1.40, :
£12.50. CSF: £33.11. NR: Guidobaldo.
“Llewellyn) 1 1-1, 3; Well Covered (G ary
I P lacep o t (£1 stake).— £1,259. 80.
£4.50, £1.50, £6.30, £1.10, £6.00. DF:
£7.30, £33.20 DF: £32.30, CSF: £17.43
• £80.60. CSF: £84.06. T ricast: £248.04. NR: Lyons) 2 5 -1 , 4; 2 8 ran. 8-1 jt-fav s
3 .1 0 (lm ) — SHAADI (W R Sw in­
NRs: Trevaylor, T ipton Times.
r AFTERNOON GREYHOUNDS
Popeswood
a
n
d
B
la
n
to
n
Reserve.
(O
A ttila T h e Honey. W in n er b t. in 3,600 ;
b u m ) 5 -2 Fav, 1; Exboume (P a t Eddery)
6 .10
(2m F lat).— LISALEEN LADY (R 2 .1 9 Pauls Birthday 6-4 fav (2-1 £9.80).
Sherwood, U pper Lam boum ). 6, % Tote:
.3-1, 2; Citidancer (S C authen) 3 -1, 3. 5
gns.
Bellamy) 5-1 1; Ferentino (N Hawke) .. 2.37 J u s t L3 5-2 jt-fa v (1-4 £9.84) 2 .52
£8.80, £2.80, £17.40, £3.00, £7.40. D ual
ran. (M. S toute, Newmarket). 2%,
3.20 (6f H ’cap) — NORDIC BRAVE (A
French Breton 5-4 fav (6-5 £16.41) 3.11
25-1
2;
Fair
A gnes (J R ailton) 20 -1 3.
Forecast:
£755.40.
C
om
puter
S
tra
ig
h
t
Tote: £3.10; £1.60, £2.70. DF; £4.70. CSF:
iM unro) 12-1, 1; S ea Devil (J Lowe) 7-1 , . Forecast: £279.90. T ricast: £3,121.65.
2 4 rani (D Nicholson, Stow-in-th'e-Wdld) : Lee L ees Magpie evens fav (3-5 £7.99).
£9.48. NR: M arkofdistinction.
•2; Lucky Crystal (M Fry) 1 6-1 , 3. 13 :
3 .2 9 A cres Bar 6-4 fav (6-2 £11.05). 3 .49
2%,
3
Tote:
£7.30;
£2.30,
£14.80,
£4.10
DF:
2,50
(2m 4f H ’cap H ’dle) — KNIGH­
ran. 5-2 fav Able M abel. (M B rittain ,
R o g ley M ercia 3-1 (4-2 £9.01). 4 .0 6
.£242.90 CSF: £132.76.
3 .4 0 .(lm 4f h ’cap) — JINGA (T Ives)
TON LAD (S Sherwood) 3 3-1 , 1; The
MavWe Lassie evens fav (3-3 £10.72).
;W arthiil). %, 1%. Tote: £13.60/ £3.70,
9 - 4 Fav, 1; Pokey's Pride (D ale Gibson)
Placepot (£1 stake): £63.30.
Humble Tiller (J Railtoii) 1 4 -1 , 2;
4
.2 2 Lynns Midget 4-1 (4-3 £26.95). 4 .39
£2.10,
£7.90.
D
F:
£27.80.
CSF:
£96.97.
25*1, 2; W hite-W ash (W Carson) 8 -1, 3.
Remittance Man (J Osborne) 8-1 jt-fav,
R ugged L ass 5-2 (1-6 £12.34). 4.5 5
T
ricast:
£1,270.56.
PERTH'
Good
;9 ran. (Lady H erries, Littleham ptori). 7,
3; High Chateau (A Webb) 2 5-1 , 4; 24
DuaKy*
B est 5-4 fav (5-3 £7.31).
/
I
2.30
(2m
H
’dle).—
MRS
PEOPLEATER
3 .5 0 (lm 4f ) - — DIRECTLY (J Wil’3. Tote: £4.00; £1.80, £4.00, £2.90. DF:
ran. 8-1 jt-fav K ab a rta y la r (O Sherwood,1
SELECTIONS
(A Carroll) 1S-2, 1; Nap Majestica 5 -1 ,
•liarns) 1 1-2, 1; Kings Folly (T W illiam s),
£53.20. CSF: £45.98. T ricast: £357.23. NR:
U p p e r; Lam boum ). 2Vz, 3.Tote: £50.20,
BRISTOL — 2.19, Trap 4, Caramanagh
2; Trebonkers 1 6-1, 3; 12 ran. 4-1 F av
2 0 -1 , 2; P ow ys Prince (D ean McKeown)
'F o u r S ta r T h ru s t.
!
£8.40, £4.20, £2.30, £15.00. DF: £1,746.60,
Fox, (6, Sportvig 8oss), 2,37, 2, BallylUskey
C asual P ass (D.: W intle, W estbury-on9 -1 , 3. 11 ran. 11-10 fav N ative F lair. (G
CSF: £419.03. . T ricast: £3,657.12. NR:Girl, (3, Hoytor Whiskey), 2.52, 2, Two Or
4 .1 0 (6f h ’cap) — HAFIR (B Rouse)
:Sevem). 3V 15.Tote: £10.80, £2.80, £3.10.
'B alding, W eyhill). 5, 5. Tote: £9.00,
G aelic Issue.
^
Each, (3, Ktleedv &ond), 3.11, 2, LINDAS
10-1, 1; Knight o f Mercy (A McGione)
j?3.30.. DF:£32.50. CSF: £42.44. NR:
£1.70, £3.60, £2,50. D F: £41.00. CSF:
WISHES (nap), (5; Bollybrock Dingo),: 3.29, 5,;
3 .25 (3m If H ’cap C h’) — DINNY
'14-T, 2; Be My Runner (M R oberts) 8-1,
'Roscoe T h e B rave, P alm House, Solent
\ £93.14.
Gone Coursing, (I, Cooldevone Rose), 3.49,
WALSH (D Tegg) 5 -2 Fav, 1; Zuko (S
3; Yeoman Force (P Cook) 3 3 -1 , 4. 16
Su
n
,
.
P
lain
in
g
Pearl.,
m
f
jh
.
.
I 4.20 (2m 5f 133yds H 'cap) — ROTHKO
1, Riverbank Daisy, (4, 8oUinree Mick), 4.06,
Sherwood) 8 -1, 2; Polyfem us (J W hite)
ran. 3-1 F av A L ittle Precious. (C
i
3
.0
0
(2m
4f
H
’dle).—
PHOTINIA
(R
(D
ean
McKeown)
6
-1
,
1;
Withy
Bank.(M
;
1, Atttomatic Game, (4, Pelisatate), 4.22, 5,
7
2
,
3;
1
0
ran.
(JE
d
w
a
rd
s
,
Benstead, Epsom). lk, 2%. Tote: £12.50,
G arritty ) 5 -1, 1; W oodcraft 1 4-1, 2;
B irch) 11 - 4 fav, 2; Write The Music (J
Flywest Forever, (nb), (I, 8olonce Sheet),
Ross-on-Wye). 3, 8. Tote: £4.40, £1.80,
£2.70, £4.10, £1.90, £9.00. DF:£240.80.
Anbak 5-1, 3; 10 ran. 6-4 F av A lm ar4.39, 6, Deenside Boy, (5, Car Gas), 4.55„
Lowe) 1 4 - 1 , -3 . 15 ran. (G Moore,
£2.20, £1.80. DF:£18.10. CSF: £20.04.
: CSF: £137.70. T ricast: £1,081.36. NR:
reekh <T F a irh u rs t, M idddleham). 3,
3, Knockatee Skippy, ( I , Doctor Feel Good).
' M iddleham). lk, 10. Tote: £7.20, £3.00,
T ricast: £60.87. N R: S h eer Steel.
jW a k a y i............
OXFORD — 1.06, Trap 2, Rockahoola,
n k .T o te : £5.60, £1.40, £3.40, £2.00.
£2.00, £6.70. D F: £11.40. CSF: £25.01.
4 .00
^3m 2f H u n te r Ch’) — WEST TIP DFS19.70. CSF: £62.32 . .
1 4.40 (5f) — CANDY GLEN (N Day)
(6, Tcriog The Lod), 1.22, 3, Look Like Fairy,
T ricast: £221.25. NR: Lake V alentina.
(M r M A rm ytage) 9 -4 fav, 1; Drops
3 3 -1 , 1; One At A Time (K Darley)
(2,
KSowna Love), 1.39, 3, Rajpur Tiger, (4,
■ 3 .30 (3m H ’cap Ch’).— DE PLUVINEL
4 .5 0 (lm ) — COMIC TALENT (L
O'Braridy (M r T S m ith) 100-1, 2; Royal
16-1, 2; Broughton Bay (M Wigham)
Undef The Thumb), 1.55, 3, Keem Avenger,
•(Mr A Costello) 4-1 jt-fav, 1; Bessacarr
D ettori) 5 -6 fav, 1; D issonant (W R yan)
Cedar (Mr T G ran th a m ) 6-1, 3; 16 rah.
(5. ke Cool Sam), 2.11, 5, Dyno Nell, (2, With
133-1, 3. 12 ran. 2-1 F av S h o u t Fore. (C
Boy 4 -1 jt-fav, 2; Tasar 11-2, 3; 10 ran.
5-4, 2; Low Dalby (G Duffield) 16-1, 3.;
Me), 2.26, 1, Oh Girl (nb), (6, Craigmillar),
(M Oliver, Droitwich). 15, !^.Tote: £2.80,
W all, Newmarket). 3, %. Tote: £43.70;
i(G P rest, Newbury). 25, 5-Tote: £3.70,
4 fan. (L C u m ani,'N ew m arket). %, 20.
2.44, 6, HOMESTEAD HERO (nap), (4/
£1.70, £20.20, £1.80. D F: £350.00. CSF:
£5.80, £3.30, £3.50. DF: £166.60. CSF:
i£1.30, £2.60, £2.20. DF: £12.10. CSP:
. Tote: £1.90. D F: £1.20. CSF: £2.10;
Qkuorrymount 8aro), 2.59, 5, Eilys-Tapioca,___
i£159.67. NR: Cantabile..
;£427.87.
i £18.88. T ricast: £79.06. NR; P anegyrist.
(6, Previns Deal), 3.19, 2, Pop Starmaker, (3;
; 4.35 (2m H ’dle) — VOYAGE SANS
5 .2 0 (6f) — SHMAME (I Johnson)
Jackpot: N ot won. Pool of £20,380.46
Mountain Venture), 3.39, 6, Rikasso Kihg,{5,
I
4
.0
0
(2m
C
h’).—
IDA'S
DEUGHT
(B
’
RETOUR
(P
Scudam
ore)
9-4,
1;
Zamil
(E
1
0
0
3
0
fav,
1;
Bollin
G
orgeou
s
(
M
i
carried forw ard to Ascot tomorrow.
Preomble).
i Storey) 1 1-4, 1; Centre Attraction 3-1 ,
•McKinley) 6-1 , 2; Santella Bobkes (M
.B irch) 6 -1 , 2; R obchris (J F ortu n e)
Placepot (£1 stake): £965.30.
.NEWMARKET
racelTn !
[
Ltve Comm ent tries
Re«u/rs
i ||p
Beverley
PefTh
PHmpton
Earty Prices
Ante Post
Darfy H^iltghts
Racff>g Weather ,
|109] (Tio'
h ° 5 i Il06
1147; 148
hoi \ I - •
t-1211
M69f j 166.1 U
Raceview
;■
:
TTMEFORM
m
■
168
--
FtJIX RESULTS
0898 168
■
GREYHOUNDS
BAGS results
Frev. & Eve. Results
London
Provincial
103
102
104
, -
-
■
.
rnmmmm
CaJh d u /frd *1 2Sp per min. cheap rare.
3Sp per
it al/ ocher times inc. VAT. :
N1
PAGE 46
Davies
can fly
the flag
at home
FORMER rugby union
Stars Jonathan Davies
and Paul Moriarty could
m ak e
a trium phant
return to South W ales as
rugby league players fol­
lowing a new sponsor­
ship deal.
The
C o - o p e r a tiv e
Insurance S o c ie ty are
backing the annual Char­
ity Shield match in a
th r e e -y e a r ag re em e n t
w o rth
£ 9 0 ,0 0 0
and
S o u th
W a le s
has
em erged as the place for
a flag waving exercise
this year.
The gam e w ill be
played on August 27
w hen W idnes will m eet
th e winners of the Silk
Cut Challenge Cup final
betw een Wigan and St
Helens.
□ WIDNES T e st star
Tony Myler is poised for
e return in the first
round prem iership tie
against Bradford North­
ern on Sunday. He has
n o t played sin c e he
broke his ankle in Janu­
ary.
Bradford Northern have
rejected a takeover bid
□ TIM STREET, Leigh's
Under 21 international
fo rw a rd ,
a p p e a le d
a g a in st his six -m atch
su sp en sio n la st night.
The Appeals Committee,
after studying video evi­
dence of his dismissal
against York on April 9,
increased the ban to
eight m atches.
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
G A R Y W IL K IN SO N , th e
young snooker player with the
pop star profile, came within a
w h isk e r o f t u r n in g th e
Embassy World Championship
on its head at Sheffield last
night.
The 23-year-old Nottingham­
sh ire player pushed second
favourite Stephen Hendry to the'
By JOHN HENNESSEY
lim it w ith
a t h r illin g |
performance which belied his
inexperience only to lose 10-9.
and decorator from Kirkby in
Hendry, scheduled to meet' Ashby, levelled for the first time
defending champion Steve Davis at 8-8 then again at 9-9 after
in the semi-finals, added one . Hendry had missed a matchfram e to his 6-3 overnight' winning red.
cush ion and then w atched
B u t the 20-year-old Scot,
a gh a st as h is lon g-h aired himself beaten by one frame on
opponent kept coming back.
his la st two v isits to the
Wilkinson, a former painter Crucible, demonstrated his own
Hendry keeps his nerve
as Wilkinson goes close
mms
WILKINSON
thriller >
\
class in the deciding game. He
Opened with a stunning red and
from it built an unbeatable 67 to
set up a second-round clash with
Willie Thome.
‘It’s nice to be involved in a
thrilling match and win for
once,’ said a relieved Hendry
Who paid generous tribute to his
rival. ‘Gary’s safety play was
brilliant and he capitalised on
my mistakes. I felt tlie pressure
as soon as he got to 7-6 and if
he’d won the next frame after
the interval who knows what the
score might have been?’
W ilkinson, who appeared
remarkably cool throughout ,1
admitted his nerves had got to
him at the start. ‘I was all right
until they opened the curtains
and then I felt as though I’d
been punched in the stomach,’
he said.
Clark and
the Swedes
are a tonic
for Jacklin
Diliey
England paceman is
matching Botham in
the recovery stakes
HOWARD CLARK’S
back-to-form 65 in yester­
day’s Madrid Open first
round was welcome news
for European Ryder Cup
captain Tony Jacklin.
And the brilliant eightbelow-par 64s of Jesper
Parnevik and Magnus
Persson, who holed from
191 yards for an albatross
two in a homeward 29.
justified Jacklin’s predic­
tion that a Swede will be
in S ep tem b er’s side
against the Americans.
W ith Cup regulars
Bernhard Langer, Ken
Brown and Sam Torrance
stru g g lin g for form ,
Clark’s depressing start to
the new season was all
the more worrying for
Jacklin.
WATKIN
GOWER OUT
COLD
H Si
By PETER JACKSON
By PETER JOHNSON
DAVID GOWER, wrapped in a
thermal vest and two sweaters,
W ITH TH E n a tio n ’s a tte n tio n riveted on a m ore
began his Ashes summer as just
illu strio us p atien t, G ra h am D illey’s recovery,
another victim of an uncapped
from su rg ery h as gone largely unnoticed.
bowler largely unknown beyond
Wales.
Nottinghamshire were forced to acknowledge it yester­
day when Dilley used one of their own untrustworthy
Steven Watkin, who delivered
Trent Bridge wickets to prove that he, at least, is ready
telephone books as part of his
to take his place in the England team.
winter employment, not only dismissed the England captain but
Dilley’s approach to fast bowling is no less languid
left him wondering whether he
than it was before his winter knee Operation. But his
had made the right decision.
five for 42 - largely responsible for Notts’ all-out 218 came as a reminder that, with the new ball in his hand,
As the Grace Road faithful came
there is no more efficient Englishman.
out of hibernation in fur hats and ■
sheepskins, Gower discovered that
But he has yet to, learn
his extra clothing offered no pro­
how to upstage Ian Botham.
tection against Glamorgan’s front­
Worcester’s rebuilt hero pro­
line pace bowler.
duced another spell of bowl­
Having won the toss and elected
ing which defied not only
to bat, Gower joked about it being
medical opinion but those of
‘far too cold to be in the field.’ It
us who, only a fortnight ago,
was still distinctly chilly when
DILLEY . . . efficient as ever.
could see no prospect of him
W atkin demanded his
ever turning his arm
presence in the middle
with any serious intent.
within the first hour.
A new Botham is begin­
He lasted 14 minutes at
ning to evolve, slower,
the crease and faced 13
more controlled and more TRENT BRIDGE: W orcester (4 pts), w ith nine w k ts intact, trail Notts (2) balls, long enough to
cunning. In 16 overs he by 196 runs.
make one scoring stroke,
probably moved the ball
a m ajestic boundary
First Innings
NOTTS
Fall: 9, 63, 104. 130, 133, 140. 186,
more than anyone off a
m id -w ick et
189, 217
’ th r o u g h
sluggish pitch. He fin­ C Broad b D ille y .............................
before Watkin had him
c B o th a m b D ille y ..
Bowling: D ille y 20.3-0-42-5,
ished with two for 37 and TMRobinson
leg
before.
Newell c H ick b B o th a m .......
R a d f o r d 2 2 - 5 -5 6 - 1 . N e w p o r t
the promise of much bet­ P Johnson c R hodes b D ille y .....
24-2-64-2, B o th am 16-7-37-2, Illin g ­
ter to come.
D Randall n o t o u t ..........................
M alcolm
M a rsh a ll
w o rth 3.1-0-6-0.
F Stephenson Ibw b B o th a m .....
bagged a match haul of
In only the fourth over B French c H ick b D ille y .............
Worcester — First Innings
11 for 89 as West Indies
of his first championship K Evans Ibw b R a d fo rd ................
T Curtis n o t o u t .................. ....
wrapped up the fourG Lord b S ax elb y ............................
spell, Mike Newell was E Hemmings lbw b N e w p o rt.......
K
Saxelby
c
L
ord
b
N
e
w
p
o
rt......
...........
.....
m
atch series ag ain st
R
Illingworth
n
o
t
o
u
t
shocked by the sudden
b D ille y ...........................
Extras I b l
.............. ;...........
India with a 217-run win
pace of one delivery and K Cooper
..............
Extras (lb 13, n b 3 )
in the third Test at
Total (1 w kt 16 o v e rs)..............
edged a catch to slip. The
Total (85.3 o v e rs).......................... 218
Fall: 22
Port-of-Spain yesterday.
look on . Botham’s face
told you he would trea­
sure the moment for a
long time. Notts, needless
to say, did not. From that
m om ent th e y w ere
in serious, escalatin g
Derbyshire v Northants
Middlesex v Yorkshire
Kent v Essex
trouble.
Failing
B ut for 34-year-old"
Yorkshireman Clark, one
of the stars of the Ryder,
victories of 1985 and 1987,
it was a case of many
happy returns to Puerta
de Hierro, where he has
won three times.
His lean start to the
year dates back to the
Hong Kong Open. ‘I had
the title on a plate and
blew it with a closing 73.
which affected me men­
tally,’ he explained.
‘I had a fall-out with
mjf caddie in Tenerife
and, after taking three
weeks off to work on my
game, I then disqualified
myself by failing to sign
for a 79 in last week’s
Cannes Open first round.’
Clark holed a 30ft chip
for an eagle at the 14th
and a 40ft birdie at the
last to be home in 31.
CAN SEVE TAKE
BERNHARD'S EPSON
MATCH PLAYTITLE?
SCOREBOARD
EPSON
GRAND PRIX OF EUROPE
MATGHPLAY CHAMPIONSHIP
4-7 MAY 1989. PRO-AM MAY 3
■
FEATURING SEVE BALLESTEROS 1988
OPEN CHAMPION
■ BERNHARD LANGER, IAN W O O S N A M
A N D OTHER RYDER CUP STARS
■ SUDDEN DEATH MATCHES OVER 18
HOLES ■ £300,00(>PRIZE M ONEY ■ FIRST
PRIZE £50,000 ■ CAR PARKING FREE
■ TICKETS C AN BE PURCHASED AT GATE
Ticket applications to St. Pierre Hotel G o lf
& Country Club, Chepstow, G went. Tel: 0291 625261
ST. PIERRE HOTEL GOLF & COUNTRY
CLUB, CHEPSTOW, GWENT
Champions
DERBY: Northants (4 pts); w ith
eight w k ts standing, trail Derby (1)
by 138 runs.
DERBYSHIRE - First Innings
K Barnett c Ripley b D avis
36
P Bowler b D avis........................
4
B Maher c Ripley b D avis
15
J Morris c Thomas b Robinson. 13
B Roberts c Ripley b T hom as.... 30
S Goldsmith cR ipleyb Robinson 4
R Sharma c Lamb b Thom as
17
P Newman c Lamb b T hom as...
0
A Warner b Capel............................ 17
S Base b D avis............................. 14
O M ortensen not o ut ................. 20
Extras (b 1, lb 3, nb 9).............. 13
Total (72.1 overs)..................... 183
Fall: 10, 51, 74. 98, 103, 127, 127,
148. 148
•
.
The elegant Paul John­
son made 38 before suc­
cumbing to Dilley and
making way for the won­
derfully inelegant Derek
Randall. Randall stuck
around for more than
three hours, making an
unbeaten 73 of the 114
which Notts eked out of
that troubled period.
It was an innings full of
unorthodoxy and g u ts(
ling: D avis .19.1-4-43-4.
and meant that at the T h o Bmow
a s 1 6 -1-53-3. R o b in s o n
close the reigning cham­ 18-6-44-2,
Capel 19-9-39-1.
pions, on 22 for one, had
NORTHANTS — First Innings
the vague feeling they
G Cook n o t ou t ........................... 25
should have been in a W
Larkins c B arnett b Newman 15
much more commanding R Bailey
c Bowler b M ortensen. 1 0
position.
A Lamb not out ..........................
5
Extras ...........
0
For Graeme Hick the,
Total (2 wkts. 30 overs
45
close brought the end to
Fall; 33, 36
24' hours of an xiety.
Lord’s decided, by turning
Hampshire v Somerset
a sympathetic blind eye SOUTHAMPTON:
to their own rules, that h av e s c o r e d 2S5o0m- 4erseta g(3a inpts)
st
he will, after all, be elig­ Hampshire (1)..
ible to play for England
SOMERSET — First Innings
J Cook c M aru b B akker
85
in 1991.
P Roebuck n o t out ..........•
113
The TCCB’s registration J Hardy c Scott b Jefferies
1
yatt Ibw b Jefferies
2
com m ittee ruled that JR W
Bartlett
c
Parks
b
M
aru
5
three matches he played N Burns not o ut ..........
27
for Zimbabwe in 1985-6
Extras (lb 11, w 2, n b 4)...,
17
did not contravene their
Total (4 wkts 94.4 overs)...
250
registration rules.
Fall: 143, 152, 156, 175
CANTERBURY: E s s e x h a v e s c o r e d
9 8 -4 in 32 o v e r s .
E SS E X — F irst I n n in g s
G G o o ch c Cowdrey b K e l l e h e r .
J S t e p h e n s o n c M a r s h b A lley n e
A Lilley n o t o u t ................................
M W a u gh Ibw b E l li s o n ................
P Prichard Ibw b P e n n ..................
D T o p le y n o t o u t ..............................
E xtras (lb 1. w 1, n b 4 ) ..................
T o ta l (4 w k ts 32 o v e r s )....
Fall: 26, 60, 73, 97
32
0
45
4
11
0
3
98
Leicester v Glamorgan
LEIC EST ER: G la m o r g a n (4 p t s ) ,
w it h s e v e n w i c k e t s i n t a c t, trail
L e i c e s t e r (1) b y 152 runs.
LEICESTER — F irst In n in g s
T B o o n c M orris b W a t k i n
11
N Briers c M etson b S m i t h
30
D G o w e r lb w b W a t k i n .................. 4
P W illey b W a t k in ........................... 46
J W h itaker b D e r r ic k ..................... 39
L P o tt e r c D errick b W a t k i n
29
C L e w is b D e r r ic k ................................... 4
P W h it tic a s e c C o tte y b B a r w ic k 21
1
G P a r so n s c M e tso n b W a t k in ...
J A g n e w n o t o u t .........
0
G Ferris c M etson b W a t k in
0
Extras (lb 2, n b 3 ) ..........................
5
T otal (86.3 o v e r s ) ..................... 190
Fall: 16, 25, 69, 116, 142, 158, 183,
189, 190.
B o w lin g : W a tk in
27.3-7-53-6,
B a r w ic k
2 4 -1 2 -3 0 -1 , D e r r ic k
21-4-47-2, S m it h 13-2-49-1, N o r th
1-0-9-0
GLAMORGAN — F irst In n in g s
A B u tch er c W h ittic a s e b L ew is
H M orris c W illey b F e r r is .....
P C o tte y c G ow er b A g n e w
M M aynard n o t o u t
.....
E xtras (lb 1, n b 4 )
19
0
2
12
5
T o ta l (3 w k ts. 20.4 overs)....-.... 38
Fail: 3, 22, 38
LO RD'S: M id d le s e x h a v e s c o r e d
3 6 - 2 in 2 4 .4 o v e r s .
M ID DLESEX - F irst In n in g s
J Carr c S id eb ottom b J a r v i s
0
P D o w n to n c S id eb ottom
b G o u g h 17
M G attin g n o t o u t ...........................
8
M Ram prakash n o t o u t .......
5
E xtras (lb 5 . n b 1 ) ..........
6
T otal ( 2 w k ts, 2 4 . 4 o v e r s )
Fall: 0 2 9
Plus the No's, below for
information throughout
TEST MATCHES/1-DAY INT./
TOURISTS
100
DERBYSHIRE
152
ESSEX
151
GLAMORGAN
164
GLOUCESTERSHIRE
167
HAMPSHIRE
170
KENT
171
LANCASHIRE
172
LEICESTERSHIRE
173
MIDDLESEX
174
NORTHAMPTONSHIRE
175
.NOTTINGHAMSHIRE
176
SOMERSET
177
SURREY
178
SUSSEX
179
WARWICKSHIRE
124
WORCESTERSHIRE
125
YORKSHIRE
126
OXF'DUNIV./MINORCOUN.
180
CAMB. UNIV./SCOTLAND
181
CRICKET INFO. LINE
153
CRICKETWEATHER
r * C0163
•T H IS SERVICE UPDATES
W HILSTY0U LISTEN
36
W arwicks v Lancashire
E DG BA ST O N: W a r w ic k s (4 p t s ) , all
w i c k e t s in t a c t, trail L a n c a sh ire by
2 0 6 runs.
L ANCASH IRE — F irst I n n in g s
G M e n d is c H u m p a g e b S m a l l ... 2 2
G F o w le r c S m ith b M u n t o n
56
A H ayh u rst c H u m p a g e
b M u n to n 10
N Fairbrother lbw b S m i t h .........
4
M W a tk in s o n c H u m p a g e
b S m it h
9
D H u g h e s c M oles b D o n a l d
33
W a sim Akram c a n d b P i e r s o n .. 18
W H e g g n o t o u t ............................... 31
P D eF reitas c H u m p a g e b D o n a ld 11
P A llo tt c L loyd b D o n a l d ...........
5
J S im m o n s b S m a ll .......................... 16
E xtras (b 9 , lb 2 4 , w 4 , n b 7 ) .... 35
T otal ( 8 2 . 4 o v er s)............................ 2 1 4
Fall: 6 2 , 8 6 , 9 1 , 1 0 5 , 1 5 4 , 1 8 0 , 1 8 0 ,
:2 0 5 , 2 1 2 *
B o w lin g : D o n a ld 2 1 - 5 - 5 5 - 3 , S m a ll
2 2 . 4 - 3 - 6 1 - 2 , M u n to n 2 0 - 5 - 6 3 - 2 ,
S m i t h 1 5 - 0 - 3 5 - 2 . P ie r s o n 4 - 2 - 1 2 - 1 .
W a r w ic k s — F irst I n n in g s
A L loyd n o t o u t ...................................
6
A M o le s n o t ou t ..................................
1
Extras (n b 1 ) ..................................
T otal (n o wkt. 5 o v e r s )......................8
THE P A R K S: S u r r e y 4 4 7 - 6 d e c
(W ar d 1 4 5 , G r e ig 1 0 7 n o), O xford
U n iv e r sity
1 5 6 -6 .
FENNERS:
G lo u c e s t e r 2 1 0 - 5 v C am b r id ge
U n iv e r s ity — n o p la y y e s te r d a y .
•
1
The official TCCB service.
MMMWWW/s
Vs
LEEDS LS1 8LB
Calls charged at 25p per min. cheap rate,
3flp per min. at all other times inc. VAT^,
N1
Daily Mail, Friday, April 21,1989
PAGE 47
ITALIAN G I A N T S R U L E S U P R E M E
SAN WOOLDRIDGE
Dream gallery
for Dutch
masters
AS the historic fifth goal went in here on
Wednesday night, like the matador’s
sword driven between a bull’s shoulder
blades, Senor Ramon Mendoza rose to his
feet, embraced Signor Silvio Berlusconi
and said: ‘My congratulations. You have
given European football a new titular
team.’
Such dignity in the face of defeat,
humiliation even, was not without relevance
to an English game as bereft of leadership as
BERLUSCONI . . . charismatic tycoon
a hot-air balloon caught in a
whirlwind. Mendoza is president
message from Berlusconi was
of Real Madrid, Berlusconi his
equally loud and clear: there will
contem porary at AC M ilan.
From JEFF POWELL in Milan
be no Hillsborough here.
Together, they had watched the
It has to be said that the
Italians generate a performance
prospects
of such a tragedy will
the like of which we had not seen he was to th e tra d itio n a l
Lytham and Lancaster . Gate,
since the Spaniards themselves constraints on Italian football,, Liverpool and M anchester, be minimised by the continued
exclusion of English clubs from
held Europe spellbound.
asked: ‘But what about winning: London and Birmingham?
European competiton. They are
As Mendoza handed over the th e L ea g u e? ’ To w h ich
San
Siro,
like
every
major
gearing up in Italy already to
m antle of suprem acy w ith Berlusconi replied: ‘That should
courtly grace, Berlusconi wore come naturally. But even if it stadium; in Italy, is municipal keep followers of our national
property. But Berlusconi, as one team under armed surveillance
the look of a man on the brink of doesn’t, let’s enjoy ourselves.’
of its two principal tenants, was should England qualify to come
fulfilling a lifelong dream.
Out went catennacio defence, ■ not fu lly satisfied w ith the here next summer.
and in came Dutch genius as* 'substantial investm ent being
And behind the diplom atic
Genius
Sacchi fulfilled his part of the made by local and national blandishments
it is clear that the
No, not the winning of the bargain, an Italian team with its government to prepare Milan for Continent is deeply apprehensive
European Cup, much as he multiplicity of talents liberated the 1990 World Cup Finals.
about letting our club supporters
would relish the moment should from the fear of defeat. Now
resume their rampage.
M ilan prevail over S teau a Berlusconi is close to delivering a
Conquest
We w ill have to co n ten t
Bucharest in Barcelona on May stadium fit for football’s princes.
wants his footballers to play ourselves with adm iring the
24. This charism atic tycoon
It would be im possible to inHethe
prowess
of the new super-power
most palatial surround­
nurses aspirations of a higher contrive a more appropriate week
order than those which motivate in which to report back to ings. He wants his brother fans of the European game. Milan
the underwhelmning majority in England that here is a chairman to savour comfort and safety as manager Sacchi volunteered the
"of the season
English football
who, having spent £10 million on well as the exhilarating atmo­ understatement
he said: ‘Winning a match
When Berlusconi assumed con­ Gullit, van Basten and Rijkaard, sphere of Wednesday’s unprece­ when
like
this
5-0
is
quite
diverting.’
dented
conquest
of
Madrid.
trol of Milan two years ago his is in the process of lavishing
new m anager received th is more than twice that amount on
And wha,t Berlusconi wants,
D elight
unusual briefing: ‘Give me a an 80,000-seat am phitheatre
Berlusconi gets. Even if it costs
beautiful football team and I will intended to be as secure as it will him £25 million.
In fact Milan’s own fans went
give us all the perfect setting in be spectacular.
While the fans dedicated their wild - only with delight - and
which to watch them play.’
Is there any chance at all that victory to Liverpool, singing the few Englishmen were able to
Arrigo Sacchi, accustomed as someone might be listening in You’ll Never Walk Alone, the put Sheffield to the back of the
mind for an hour or so.
Unhappily, Gullit is in danger
of missing the final after sustain­
ing cartilage injury in the second
half. But, with or without the
□ SOUTH A M PTO N
w ere
awarded to Forest, said y e s ­
NEWCASTLE m anager Jim
great Rastafarian, win or lose in
terday: 'I don't regret w hat I 'overwhelmed' by an unofficial
Smith w a s fined £5 00 yester­
Barcelona, Berlusconi will be
did.'
happy as long as Milan play with
day for his com m ents to
collection for the Hillsborough
a flourish.
referee Kelvin Morton during
appeal held before W ed n es­
But the United b o ss, n ow
la s t
m o n th 's
gam e
at
day's gam e with Norwich.
He has known all along what
disciplined five tim es by the
Nottingham Forest.
English football learned to such
FA in his career, added: ‘I P roceeds will be added to the
awful cost last weekend: that
official collection at tom or­
think I've been treated fairly
Smith, w ho complained at
there is more to this game than
row 's gam e w ith Wimbledon.
w hen you consider my record.
h a lf-tim e ab ou t a p enalty
winning and banking the money.
Milan president
plans £25m
super-stadium
FA fine Smith £500 for his outburst at ref
Ball sets his goal
for a new game
JASON BALL’S conver­
sion from an Arsenal foot­
baller to an international
rugby player moves a
stage nearer completion
tomorrow.
David Rocastle and Paul
Merson in the same youth
team. But after one sea­
son as a full professional,
the young centre-half was
given a free transfer.
The 20-year-old Swansea
student will be on junior
international duty for
Wales against Scotland at
Neath, having abandoned
hopes of a football career.
‘At the time I felt I
deserved another year,’ he
said. ‘The manager said I
hadn’t fulfilled my poten­
tial. I felt they were a bit
quick to get rid of me.’
Ball’s switch to rugby
began 18 m onths ago
when he changed sports.
As cap tain of W ales
schoolboys, First Division
clubs had queued up to
sign him. He chose Ars­
enal, became an appren­
tice and played alongside
Ball turned to rugby
halfway through last sea­
son after a few matches
for Swansea City. Now
with Neath, he said: ‘Ini­
tially, I took it up to keep,
fit. Now I won’t be happy
until I’ve played for Wales
at the Arms Park.’
B U T C H E R ’S N E W D E A L
ENGLAND defender Terry Butcher is expected to
accept a new contract from Rangers shortly, binding
him to the club for the remainder of his career. Talks
are in their infancy but the 30-year-old Rangers
captain foresees them being concluded satisfactorily.
Butcher, whose current contract has a year to run, has
been a powerful force behind Rangers’ drive for
honours this season. The new deal is seen as a fitting
reward for his determined comeback after a broken leg.
YESTERDAY’S SPORT IN BRIEF
BASEBALL
AMERICAN LGE — NY Yankees
4 Toronto 2; .Oakland 7 S eattle 5:
Baltim ore 6 K an sas 5; Boston 8
Cleveland 4; D etro it 3 M innesota
2: C alifornia 7 C hicago 2; Texas 5
M ilw aukee 1.
CRICKET
THIRD TEST (Port-of-Spain) W'
Indies 3 1 4 and 26 6 (R ichardson
99, K apil Dev 5-58) b t India 150
and 2 13 (M arshall 6-55) b y 217
runs.
GOLF
MADRID OPEN — 1st rnd lead­
ers (GB a n d Ire unless stated): 64,
j p am ev ik (Swe), M Persson
(Swe). 65, H Clark. 67, p Teravainen (US), P B aker, D Cooper, E
Darcy, S B allesteros (Sp). 68, G
B ran d jn r , M Calero (Sp), P
Fowler (Aus). D Lozano (Sp), B
S h eare r (Aus), C Peete (US). 69,
J-M C anizares (Sp), E D u ssart
(Fr), J A nglada (Sp), M Allen (US).
A G arrid o (Sp), V F ernandez
(Arg), M S m ith (US). J v an de
Velde (Fr), U Nilsson (Swe). R
D avis (Aus), R Boxall.
SNOOKER
EMBASSY WORLD CHS HI P
(Sheffield) — 1st md: S H endry
(Sco) b t G W ilkinson (Eng) 10-9.
TENNIS
KIAM CUP (Lugano) — sem i­
finals: USA 2 C an ad a 1. Australa­
sia 3 G B 0 (D, D P a tte n b t K , K
Dewick 6-1, 6-4; J, C Newcombe b t
R , P R an so n 6-2, 6-2; N, J Sowter
b t D, M Tom linson 6-2, 6-4).
ECKERD OPEN (Largo) — 1st md
(US unless stated): T Austin b t H
Cioffi 6-4, 6-3, 2nd rnd; L Ferrando
(It) b t S S loane 6-2, 4-6, 7-5; C
Martinez (Sp) b t L G ildem eister
6-3. 6-0; S Cecchini (It) b t A V ieira
(Bra) 6-2, 6-4; G Sabatini (Arg) b t 1
C ueto (WG) 6-1, 6-1,
JAPAN OPEN — Men, 3rd rnd
(US unless stated); I Lendl (Cz) b t
B S canlon 6-2, 6-4; R M atuszew sk i b t K E v em d en (NZ) 6-4,
6-7, 6-2; S Davis b t A M ansdorf
(Is) 6-7, 7-6, 6-3; N Pereira (Ven) b t
G V an E m b u rg h 5-7, 6-3, 6-1; S
Edberg (Swe) b t M S rejber (Cz)
6-4, 6-4; B Gilbert b t A Ja rry d
(Swe) 6-0, 6-2; J Stoltenberg (Aus)
b t G Layendecker 6-4, 3-6, 6-4; J
McEnroe b t W M a s u r (Aus) 6-2,
6-0. W omen, Qtr-finals: B Cordw ell (NZ) b t E O kam oto (Jap) 7-5,
6-4; K Okamoto (Jap) b t K D ates
(Jap) 7-5, 6-4; E Sm ylie (Aus) b t S
W a s s e r m a n (B el) 7-5, 6-4; A
Minter. (Aus) b t B Nagelsen 7-5,
6- 1.
SWATCH OPEN (Nice) — Men,
2nd md: F Cancellotti (It) b t H
Skoff (Aut) 5-7, 6-4, 6-4; G Ivani­
sevic (Yug) b t H Leconte (Fr) 6-4,
4-6, 6-3; C Pistolesi (It) b t D Perez
(Uru) 6-2, 6-3; F Luna (Sp) b t J
Arrese (Sp) 7-6, 1-6, 7-5.
WOMEN'S CUP T'MENT (Monte
Carlo) — Final: S Graf (WG) b t M
N avratilova (US) 6-3, 6-4.
GREYHOUND HINTS
CASTLEFORD (Whitwood) 7 .3 0 ,
Hambleton Fox, D arren s Delight.
7.41, Jack's Star, C ream C racker.
7.52, Black Delight, A dam ’s Well.
8 .0 3 , Brian's Girl, Flyaw ay Jo h n .
8.1 4, Little Miss, B lack S u n n y .
8 .2 5 , Barbara's Lass, H illto p .
8 .3 6 , Karen's Lass, K ing Kong.
8 .4 7 ,
P e n n y w o rth , C o u n tr y
Cousin. 8 .5 8 , S m u g gler, F ly
Novit. 9.0 9, After Eight, D elight.
9.20, Talk About Maggie, Easy
Going. 9.3 1, Trigger's Pal, Sim ply
Red. 9 .4 2 , K itty w a k e, B la ck
Arrow. 8-53, Flyaway Mike, P en ­
n in e Lad.
SHEFFIELD (Owlerton) All races
at 500m unless stated: 7,30, Matin
Lady, Five S ta r Lady. 7 .4 5 ,
Marie's Fella, M iralee. 8.0, Bonbob Barbie (nap). P u n te r’s Lady.
8.15, Creeveroe Rocket, N ifty
Lad. 8.30, Curryhills Tom, Soviet
Moon. 8 .4 5 , Soda Sam, F r a n k ie
F o u r. 9.01, Reahill April, Come
B ack Jan e. 9 .1 7 (290m), Pond
Jem im a, S h a rp Lomond. 9 .3 4 ,
Vite, New P enny. 9 .5 1 , Commons
S lip p y, H ighw ay Kelly. 1 0 .0 8
(650m), Three Star Pip, LisnakillD asher. 10.25, Pale Percy (NB),
C ro ft M ariner.
TODAY'S ACTION
(7.30 unless stated)
BARCLAYS LEAGUE
Division III
Port Vale v Bristol C.........................
Division IV
Colchester v Carlisle.........................
Stockport v Peterborough..............
Wrexham v Halifax............. ...........
VICTORY SHIELD U -15 INT’L:
E n g lan d v S co tlan d (Old Trafford,
7pm).
SMI RNOFF IRISH LEAGUE:]
L a m e v Cliftonville.
RUGBY UNION — U lster v T he
Cote B asque (R avenhill 6pm).
HOCKEY — English W om en's
Club Finals (Southam pton).
SPEEDWAY — British Lge KO
Cup, 1st md, 2nd leg: Belle Vue
(52) v K in g ’s Lynn (38).
SNOOKER — Embassy World
Professional Ch'ships (Sheffield).
SQUASH — British Junior
Ch’ship (Ilkeston).
on the clubs in
lj
nnworfif
fvan
VV I *1
W
IF YOU ever stu d y th e atten d a n ce figures
a t m ost T h ird an d F o u rth Division.
Football L eague grounds tw o th in g s will
strik e you im m ediately.
The first is that their economics make the
Ethiopian treasury look like Wall Street high-flyers
and the second that the professional game in the
provinces has roughly the same future as Morris
dancing.
Yesterday, behind closed doors in Manchester, the
48 chairmen of these clubs voted to attempt to arrest
this decline by doing
what actors do in hard
tim es: hire p ub licity
agents to sell their
strong points.
The campaign won’t
be in quite such bad
taste as: ‘Come to foot­
ball grounds where you _
don’t get killed,’ but
some su btle allusion
along those lines may be
anticipated. After all,
how can you have
crowd-crushing where
there aren’t any crowds?
Existence
Actually what is bug­
ging the lower divisions
- and they’d convened
yesterday’s meeting long
before the Hillsborough
catastrophe - is that
their very existence is
v u ln e ra b le to two
encroaching forces.
Above them they have
the glitzy First Division
clubs who will abandon
them on the nearest
doorstep when they sail
off in to some Super
League on a tidal wave
of television revenue.
And below them there
are the thrusting nonLeague clubs now creep­
ing into the pools cou­
pons like poisoned ivy.
Bereft of the voting
power to protect them­
selves by thoroughly
understandable undemo­
cratic methods, they are
having to explore other
avenues. These included
inviting me to an eve-ofconference dinner with
a cabal of chairman ‘to
get the picture.’
As gunpowder plots go,
it was definitely more
like a reunion of the
squires from the shires
than some P easan ts’
Revolt.
One, heavily bronzed,
had just returned from
the Austrian ski slopes
and another from the
sun in Majorca. A third
leaves this weekend for
his other place at Vale
de Lobo on the Algarve
and, just in time for
some S tilto n , there
arrived in boisterous
spirits the chairman of
Hereford United whose
hugely-backed horse,
Dixton House, came a
cropper at the first
fence in the Grand
National.
Time
tight
for
those
who
pick
up the
bill
JACK PRATT
Jack, who made his
m oney p u ttin g the
m o torw a y lig h t in g
round the M25 and
practically every other
major thoroughfare you
can think of: ‘Running
a football club is a bit
like owning a racehorse.’
Mike Sinclair, chair­
man of the cabal which
H eroes
is
known as
It was many years the officially
Associate Members’
since I’d met Third and A
dvisory Com m ittee,
Fourth Division football chairman
of York City
d u b chairmen en masse and
man just back
and I could hardly from the
the ski slopes, was
believe such Corinthians less reticent.
still existed.
‘We’re custodians to
To a man their heroes
community,’ he said.
were Ipsw ich Town, the
‘We get 3,000 in the
who’d made it into the ground
but we have
big-time from the lower
who w ant to
divisions and yet still, 50,000
the result. Do you
under the influence of know
that if York have
th e Cobbold fam ily, aknow
good
day on Saturday,
regarded sport, win or the Rowntree
factory
lose, as' a thoroughly has a good working
day
splendid way to enter­ on the Monday ?’
tain your friends on a
Saturday afternoon.
‘Aye, that’s all very
‘Go on, Jack, tell him,’ well,’ said Jack Pratt.
said Norman Rowlinson, ‘We had 25,000 people
out on the streets of
chairman of Crewe.
Mansfield a couple of
‘No, n o,’ murmured seasons ago when we
Jack Pratt, chairman of came home with the
M a n s f ie ld
T o w n . Freight Rovers Trophy.
‘Nobody wants to read Do you know how many
about that.’
people turned up for the
‘Well, they damn well first match of next sea­
ought to know,’ said son? Just over 3,000.’
Norman, ‘so I’m going ta
The message is very
tell him. The fact is that clear.
you want foot­
Jack’s put more than ball toIfcontinue
your
£750,000 out of his own area you’d better in
attend.
pocket into that club to If not, i t is about
to
keep it going. Nobody follow your cinema, your
thanks him . Nobody dance palais, your the­
thanks any of us.’
atre and music hall into
‘I know ,’ m uttered the songs of nostalgia.
,
14
N1.
Dai y Mail, Friday, April 21, 1989
L I V E R P O O L A N D E V E R T O N A G R E E OINJ I N S T A N T A C T I O N
fences
come down
F O L D -A W A Y
IG N O H H
SHEFFIELD WEDNESDAY rejected,
together with every other club, the
ch a n ce to install a ccid en t-p ro o f
safety fen ces.
The type o f fold-aw ay barriers
used in France w ere offered to clubs
four years ago. But th e opportunity
w a s declined and the firm. Guelder
Products of King's Lynn in Norfolk,
w en t out o f business through lack
o f orders.
Managing Director Robert Fraulo
w a tc h e d S atu rd a y's harrow ing
sc e n e s at Hillsborough knowing his
fen ce could have saved many lives.
In 1985 he invited clubs to a
demonstration of the pneumatically
controlled system . None bothered to
attend.
But none o f the clubs w ere
prepared to pay th e £ 15 0 ,0 0 0 instal­
lation co st. From a control point it
w a s possible to open on e gate, a
w hole section o f fencing or the
perimeter. The system w a s secure,
hooligan-resistant, virtually mainten cance free and unaffected by
power failure.
TREVOR HAYLETT
Fans:
a
of heart
By COLIN WOOD
Both clubs admitted, when announcing that
the perimeter fences would be removed before
the city reopened for football on May 3, that
they had responded to ‘the deep feelings of
their supporters following the tragic events at
Hillsborough.’
On Wednesday they agreed to modifications
rather than complete dismantlement of the fences
at Anfield and Goodison Park. But Liverpool chief
executive Peter Robinson said: ‘For the best of
reasons we have changed our minds. We have been
looking for a way since Saturday of removing the
fences as we thought it would be insensitive to ask
the fans to stand behind them again after the
tragic events.
‘Yesterday we decided to modify
the existing fences and extend
the gaps but I am delighted that,
after five hours of meetings with
the police and city licencing
authority, we have found a way
of removing them. We are asking
the fans, as an act of faith, not
to encroach on the pitch.’
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ROBINSON . . . Liverpool
CARTER. . . Everton
GO A H EA D AFTER
UE D O ;A itttU R N l
Safety
Everton chairman Philip Carter
and chief executive Jim Green­
wood joined the discussions at
Anfield after returning from a
Football League meeting in Man­
chester. They agreed to remove
their fences before their next
match at Goodison Park on May
3, when Liverpool play for the
first time since Hillsborough.
Carter said: ‘Originally fences
were put up as a safety measure
as far as the police were Con­
cerned to stop the fans being on
the pitch. The fact that we are
taking them down must be an
act of faith with the fans. The
first game that Liverpool will
have will be at our ground and
the eyes of the world will be on
Goodison Park and the two clubs
and the two teams.
‘Everyone must behave respon­
sibly on what I’m sure will be a
very emotional occasion.’
The meetings took place in the
Anfield boardroom as thousands
filed round the pitch to pay their
respects to the 95 victims of
Hillsborough. It is estimated that
750,000 have passed through the,
ground since Sunday.
Many of those people expressed
their opinions about the fences
and the clubs reacted with their
joint decision.
They said: ‘For the remainder
of this season safety will be
iiensured by an increase in the
policing of the grounds and the
expectation that the fans will act
responsibly.
'I s e e t h e j o c k e y s a r e t a k i n g
n o c h a n c e s n o w !'
Eddery hurt
as winner
kicks out
TH E G R IEV IN G fan s of M erseyside have
talked Liverpool a n d E verton in to tea rin g
down th e fences a t th e two grounds.
Learn to speak a new language
THE Football League .manage­
m ent com m ittee changed direc­
tion yesterday and declared
that 4 4 m atches will take place
as scheduled this w eek end .
The day after League presi­
dent Jack Dunnett had insisted
it w a s a matter o f con scien ce
for individual clubs to decide
w h e th e r to p o stp o n e their
gam es in memory o f the 95
fans w h o died at Hillsborough,
Gordon McKeag outlined cir­
cum stances in w hich p ostp on e­
m ents would be allowed.
N ew castle chairman McKeag,
th e m a n ag em en t c o m m itte e
chairman, said :. 'It would have
to be som ething quite e x cep ­
tional for permission to be
given for a postponem ent. For
instance, a team in London or
th e so u th -w e st might have four
or five players from M erseyside
and one o f them might have
lost a clo se relative. In th ose
c ir c u m s t a n c e s
p e r m issio n
would be given.
'The management com m ittee
and member d u b s are quite
determined that n o-on e will
se e k to gain tactical advantage
by using the disaster a s an
argument for postponem ent.'
The Pools Panel will adjudi­
cate on the Tranmere-Grimsby
gam e which had already been
c a lle d o ff. T ranm ere w ill
instead stag e a memorial ser­
vice at their ground.
CHAM PION jo ck ey P a t
Eddery took a vicious kick’
on the knee and tumbled
over in agony as he unsad­
dled Great Commotion after
winning at Newmarket yes­
terday.
Millions of television viewers
saw the three-year-old colt
lash out with a hind leg iri
the winner’s enclosure, after
his five-length victory in the
Remy Martin XO Maiden
Stakes, sending the six-times-;
champion spinning to the
grass clutching his right knee:
Eddery, 37, in sisted on
weighing in, and was carried
the ten yards to the scales by
three racing journalists.
He had taken a knock on
the same knee 24 hours ear­
lier, when Lover’s Parlour
lashed out. But a precaution­
ary X-ray at the private
Chiltern Hospital revealed
that there were no broken
bones.
Terry Ellis, his manager and
brother-in-law said: ‘Pat will
have physiotherapy and we
hope he will resume riding at
Bath on Tuesday.’
Fellow jockey Walter Swinbum said: ‘Pat was lucky he
wasn’t hit flush on the knee­
cap or it could have been very
nasty. It was bad enough as it
was.’
• Today's racing
— Pages 4 3 , 4 4 , 45
QUICK CROSSWORD
ACROSS
18 Matted fabric (4)
1 Absolute
failure (4,3)
7 Firework (6)
8 Pebbles (7)
9 American
state (4)
10 Swift (4)
12 Comportment (7)
14 Listless (7)
16 Measure of
drink (4)
20 West Indian
song (7)
21 Scribble (6)
22 Wide extent (7)
DOWN
1 Pensive (7)
2 Omits (5)
3 Drunken
revelry (4)
4 Given
medication (7)
5 Obtained (8)
6 Stay (6)
11 Miser (8)
12 Two-wheeled
vehicle (7)
13 Yellow
pigment (7)
15 Bureau (6)
17 Cathedral city (5)
19 Failure (4)
Thursday's Solution: Across: 1 Good manners. 7 Hone. 8 Rivalry. 9 Nut. 10
Lapse. 11 Toddle. 13 Inters. 16 Resin. 18 Vet. 19 Albania. 20 Tots. 21 Over
the moon. Down: 1 Grotto. 2 Opened. 3 Myrtle. 4 Novel. 5 Eclipse. 6
Shyness. 11 Tornado. 12 Disable. 13 Invade. 14 Tattoo. 15 Rattan. 17 Nonet.
by Schulz
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