Show See other formatsfifteen pence 1 ..Viah Ik 55k* ; V. .■ V-. k |v% r J ' 1 r j> e .,,;-y^ r - >■• . •'V,:' •i* ■";» , w. - i^n hllSf?* . ‘ .. ‘ ^t¥ kVORr. - *'•*!$» Ne» Brendan Bracken’s newspaper, by Lord Drogheda p5 Co ' <0 ^ ‘ ja ‘tf.assp.- --- ^^S^tioiiai scenes followed the announcement ^^cfiade a Moscow court yesterday that Mr - *: j 5l In • ■■: - • ~ - ' ■i -■ « »- -- ■■- ^ ^1.-, VtJflUC • a ir iVSW" ^itoly Shcharansky had: been sentenced to 13 —l^;^ ^ ra pn^onineht ior high treason ‘and •-’■’^r-SoViet agitation. Mr Shcharansky will serve labour- caxtirp part of his sentence in ^P^ditiohs one category Wow die most severe. V r >: . . .i; -,r • brother weeps outside Moscow court i-p >w i Michael Binyod W.I+: "■ quickly and I would be with my wife soon. (Mr Shcharansky's Israel in from my dreams as I-haveever been.” 1 He- told 'the court: “ This -V.tKr Anattdr SbctaransEy, die wife emi^ared to Isra : ' v^-ar-oid Jewish '* membeir of 1974:)- ^Helsinki- tinman rights ‘ “I am bappy although I - ' was sentenced today to should be very sad ... I am — ‘ ‘:- : 3 fairs’ imprisonment A happy that I helped people; that " court found him guilty I have known brave and Honest ieh tre aso n in -the'form • of - people such as Sakharov, Orlov 'k k;?.‘;incge and -o£ anti-Soviet and<Xnzburg.- 1 r ,lion and propaganda. “‘Five years : ago I applied ^r Shcfaaransky, aged 30, will - to emigrate. Now I am as far —.» three years of bis sentence rison, thfe.harshest form of jnemenr :£n-yttie Soviet nc iuiu 1 ujc wui i. *»»»•» — —~.n, and 10 years in a labour .absurd charge levelled at mff ,,:5r -: ’ir.4 kT? with a strict regime* one •• and the entire emigration move- — _ '* "apry below the most severe mentiyiH not prevent the libera- ~ “litjjjis' bf diet and hard-., tion of all the Jewish people. As TRj',} f^ur.. the. Jews say, ‘Next year in .. ^ie sentence.is less than, the Jerusalem’.'’' ' i?,ears demanded by the pror . The judge’s summing >up " i~V. ^;tor yesterday and less man'.'lasted 90 minutes. Mr Leonid -maximum penalty which is Scharansky said that when the. h. It does .not include' 8*iy sentence was announced.^ the of exile Within the Soviet specially - selected audience ! Vjh on s :coi^fetioh .’of. the'.'applauded end shouted: “They : 7 :, 'oq sentence,-^.‘T, 1 ‘ , V Tiare given him 'too little.” _ -—-*r Shcharansky was'ako Sen- ' He’"said - bis brother smiled ~^ed to seven .years: in a across : tbp. courtroom to. him •;' , . l rr, v u r camp.on charges ofanri- during the summing up. “"He --et agitation, and this, will held-.himself .very, very bravely 1 '^ -k. concurrently with hfs sen- without any excitement” fox espionage. "’. The verdict came at about "."’Meanwhile, ah official report 4 pm and 15 minuies later a -van carrying Mr Shchnnmsky Inflation falls to 7.4% but £106m gap in trade disappoints President Carter, in Bonn, for the economic summit, waving happily as a-welcoming crowd surges round him. (Business News, page 17) ’ that Mr Anatoly Filatov, an • ce worker accused of spy- for an unnamed foreign . _ ,-a*, had. been sentenced ta be - vl'.^e pleaded guilty and was. . ".'..Id before L a c.losed military uuaL Eis case appears to __e nothing to do with the di- » nt trials this week. —^ews of the Shcharaostj ver- twus givtg this afterpopn to drove . out Irani the court. About 10 minutes later, when Leonid emerged from the-court be was quickly hemmed against a wall by a throng of people. As he began hnltingly to read his brother’s statement, his wife squeezed on ■ bis ami. Some of those standing near-him were crying, twus riven this afterpobn to cr F°T\ , .. , , '2PTWE’ T ® r ® n * ^correspondanxs, ■ Suddeulj'a Torrential shower cRT ‘»* aud^ssinp«auz«roiitsiak' the crowd, ad as court by. 7,Mr Leonid .people put , up umbrdlas, -hai-anskw* Anatoly’s brother Leonid’s voice was drowned by I the only .member of the. a ’group of Soviet Tews who ulv allowed inside the court -began to sing -a- Hebrew song in'g the five-day trial -expressing the .Jews’ .vearning finking bode tears, his ;voice for, Jerusalem. . ntabling irith emotion, Mr- -. The police looked on impas- Jnid Shcharansky .read ont - . sively. There ava$ ih> attempt brother's ' final personal ta step Mr Leonid Shcharansky ement to th^ court thds_ taikh^ to tb? weixerii press, < -ning J. The Filatov case is something Jl was threatened wkii -exe-" of -a .mattery.: The official re- on or a sentence ofcat-.Jeast^ ports -pubKsfced by Tass do. not years during my interrbga- make it clear wlio recruited bini L 'But:th^ promised nR~7 while' Udivas'ciu .a business trip t=if 1 -helped them liquidate _ to -Algiers. Bur reports srid it Jewish emigration move- ' was a diplomat from a capitalist at they . would free me state. i.*a Soviet verdicts >m Pacrioa Cloogh lu, July 14 i h-esidentCarter todav de- red the-jailing of the Soviet ~ ^dents and said thev had tope"- ar sympatiiies.-and Our"suu- i»ATiife -the Tfoited States /gbr to cooperate with' the ? iet Union., whenever Dos- ‘ ” Mr Carter told reporters ■■ .‘e, he reserved bis own ririit call anentiorf to ham an violations; I'.’. Obviously vie have .-‘no - . chan ism," nor. any ■ desire to . . »i-fere in inter aaj affairs of Soviet Umon. But ■ the - using .of public condemns- _.- , i i.-' 7-^!' L r "’ > tion around the vyorld for jtiie violation of these principles of ' human freedom is -a legitimate role for me as a leader and for- the people of our country”. The dissidents, he said, bod ' bean accused, tried aud punished because they sup¬ ported chose who sought the basic freedoms’ guaranteed bv tiie final act of the. Helsinki Agreement,, voluntarily signed by the Soviet Uniou itself. Tel Aviv: Mr Haim Landau, Israeli Minister without Port¬ folio, .said Mr • Anatoly Shch Oransky’s sentence was “ not the end of the struggle ” (Moshe Brilliant writes). - Continued on page 4, col 2 Labour gets ready for October election By George Chrk'. Political Correspondent AIJ three main parties found something to enthuse about in the by-election results on Thurs¬ day at Moss Side, Manchester, and Penistoue (dersils, page 2) but in the Labour camp rhere was a feeling that Lhe;*- had done nothing, one way or the oilier, to help Mr Janies Cal¬ laghan in his decision whether ro go for a general election in October. If the rate of inflation can be he’d down, as Mr Roy Hururs- hsy. Sccr<.raty of Souc ior Prices and Consumer Protuc- [.tion, was ossertiog again vester- ■day it will be. and if the iGovernment can be seen to Ue managing Lhe economy so that a modest recovery gets under way. die Prime Minister may prefer to delay bis appeal to the counrry. It would be a definite ad¬ vantage to Labour if the election could be fought on the new electoral register in Febru¬ ary. But the balance of forces in the Commons is against, him, and’ there are signs that at least Mr Callaghan’s managers of parliamentary business have made the confident assumption that die election will be in .October, Decks are being cleared so that, by August 3, no business will .be outstanding and the way will be clear for a formal session to prorogue Parliament before its dissolution. The Conservatives bod to make tbtir calculations on the near marginal seat. Moss Side, in the knowledge that it Is not typical and, according to them, has changed slightlv in charac¬ ter to make it' more Labour- aligned. They did not find it remark¬ able. that the. swing to. them was only 3.3 per cent, but they pointed out that their propor¬ tion of the total vote had in¬ creased by 6.7 per cent. Th^t, if produced countrywide, would certainly help ro bring them to power. But in Penistoae, the safe Labour seat, admittedly on a Turn to page 2, col 3 Decision soon on new school examination By Ian Bradley Mrs Shirley Williams, Secre¬ tary of Stare for Education and Science, promised yester¬ day that the Government will cuke a firm decision soon on whether a common scho.il exa¬ mination at 16-plus should be introduced. The please was given iu a written parliamentary reply to Mr Bruce Grocoti, Labour MP fur Litchfield and Tam worth. A report published yesterday by a steering committee set up by the department concludes that a common examination to replace die GCE 0-level and the certificate nf secondary education (CSEl is education, ullv feasible. Thu committee, under flic cliairitians'.iin of Sir James* Waddell, suggests that new syl¬ labuses could be introduced bv die autumn of 1983. leading to the first examuiation_ under a common system in 19S5. Tha common examination nr 16-plus was proposed by the Schools Council in 1976. It is generally agreed by teachers to be preferable to the dual sys¬ tem introduced in 1964. The National Union of Teachers welcomed the commi- teee's repon. It void: “Tht: existence of . two different types of examination for 16- year-olds has encouraged u - sheep and goats ’ classifica¬ tion in the minds of many out¬ side the schools, particularly employers. Jt has also been v.asterul of teachers’ rime and other resources, confusing to both teachers aud pupils and. educationally unnecessary in a largely comprehensive system/ 5 The unian cslkd for speedy action from Mrs Williams, saying that the examination ro¬ il ectad the needs and wants of schools and would improve standards. Mr Alan Erans. the union's education officer, said the Waddell timetable was far too cautious. If ?.lrs Williams makes a dec.'ricn in September, it would be possible for schools to start teaching rite syllabus in 19S1 and for pupils ro sit the exam in 1983”, he added. To speed the process. Mrs Williams shoud recommend a male! constitution fo the new system, he said. As predicted in The Times . the committee says that in same subjects the common exa¬ mination would require the use of alternative papers to be token by pupils of relatively high or low ability. It also con¬ cludes diet greater reliance would need to be placed op alternative examining techni¬ ques. such as teachers’ course assessment and practical tests, us well a* written papers. The committee recommends that the new examination should use a seven-point grad¬ ing scale covering the stand¬ ards at present reoresented by the GCE grades A. B cad C and the CSE grades 2, 3. 4 and 3. It says chat. rue examination should be administered by regionally based groups formed com cne present GCE and CSE examining boards. Tr con¬ siders it unlikely that more lhau four groups nf boards could be formed in England. Employers* doubt: The Con¬ federation of British Inrfustry gttve warning of employers* reservations about the recom¬ mendations fthe Press Associa¬ tion- reports). It said it had ‘•serious doubt about whether it is possible to construct a common system to cover the very wide spectrum cf ability covered bv ibe GCE and the CSE Two other teachers’ unions welcomed the idea of a single 16-plus examination, but urged caution in introducing it before administrative and structural difficulties men¬ tioned in the report were over¬ come. Mr Frederick Smithes, assisr- snt secretary of the National Association of Schoolmasters/ Union of Women Teachers, and Mr Peter Smith, assistant secretary of rbe Assistant Mas¬ ters' Association, said that in principle they were in favour of one examination. “ But the work which Waddell says needs to be done -oo tbe administration is in our new critical if the examination is to prove as successful as its pro¬ tagonists have constantly main¬ tained ”, Mr Smith said. Leading article, page 13 Summary of report, page 15 By Caroline Atkinson Britain’s inflation rate fell again in June, to 7.4 per cent on an annual basis. This is its lowest level since September 1972. However, trade performance in the month was disappoint¬ ing. Although the risible trade gap shrank from its high level in May, Britain was still £106m in the red. Mr Roy Haftersley, Secretary of State for Prices end Con¬ sumer Protection, welcomed rite news as u further firm evidence that inflation is umfef control He repeated his assertion of a few weeks ago that inflation would “ remain well withiti single figures for the rest of the year ”. However. June will probably turn out to have beeu the low point for inflation this year. Mr Hattersley said that July’s figure wuuid ** continue the pattern of a stable inflation rate at or about 8 per cent Tn both May and June inflation was below 8 per cent. A better guide to tbe under¬ lying rate of inflation is given by a comparison of prices, ex¬ cluding those of seasonal foods, with six months earlier. On this measure inflation has been creeping up since February. It reached 8.9 per cent, expressed at an annualized rate, iu June. It was 8.6 per cent in May and 72* per cent in February- The pound fell slightly on foreign exchanges because of- rho trade figures and a last minute rally by' the dollar: It closed at 51.8825, down 40 points on the day, but was un¬ changed against a basket of currencies at 62 per cent of its end of 1971 value. The stock market took an opposite view and closed 0.4 up at 474.4. Tbe Government is now con¬ fident that inflation will remain in single figures for-the rest of this year. What happens after that depends very much on the outcome.on wages in the next few months. A White Paper on ' the Government's pay policy- after the end of the present phase three is due within ten days. Figures for the hoped- for level of wage settlements - are at present in the draft White Paper. They arc signi¬ ficantly below those for the current round. Mr Hattersley called for “a further year of responsible wage negotiations" ro produce the same progress in the infla¬ tion battle in 1979 as in 1978. RETAIL PRICES The following are Ihe index numbers (January 15 1974=100) for retail, prices not sesso.ialty adjusted, released by the Depart¬ ment of Employment yesterday: 131 Arrojnt m All noma (21 All Hems ercepr seasonal foods raw &! increase in (2) over 6 etonHve earlier 1977 June 1836 1B2.4 19.5 July 183.8 1B3.5 15.3 Aug 184.7 184.9 14.0 Sept . 185.7 . 1BS22 . 14.1. Oct 186.5 187.3 9.9 Nov 187:4 138.2 8.7 Dec 168.4 189.0 .. 7.4 1978 Jan 189.5 "190.2- 7.4 Feb 190.3 191.4 7.2 March 191.B 192.4 6.7 Aotil 194.6 195.0 8.4 May 195.7 195.1 8.6 June 197.2 . 197.2 8.9 The Government’s target for next year is to bring the rate of inflation down in .line .with, that of our major competitors. Annual price' rises in' Britain in May were below the average for the 24 industrialized nations of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development. But several of our major com¬ petitors, including Germany, Japan and America, had lower inflation. Cold weather this spring pushed up the prices in the shops of seasonal foods. These rose by 7.1 per cent in June. Some of the riss may be re¬ versed in July, although tbe large fall in these prices which limited the' increase in the re¬ tail price index last July is not likely to be repeated. Some price increases are already in the pipeline for July. The recent rise in the building societies’ mortgage interest rate will add approximately \ per cent to the overall level of prices, spread over tbe next two months. The final instalment of the April* increase in electricity charges will raise tbe July index.. Beef, lamb and butter are going up this month' but the rise may be offset by cheaper seasonal food. Business News, page 17 in shotgun siege From Our Correspondent Oxford - Armed police last night sealed off the village of North Aston, Oxfordshire, where an armed man was bolding his son and a friend hostage. Mr David . Brain, aged 32, armed with a shotgun, was in the Old School House, with-his son Mark, aged five, who was removed from a battered wives’ refuge in Oxford more than two weeks ago, and Mr David Pearson, a friend from Banbury. Mr Brain said he was carrying out his action to get publicity for grievances against the police at Banbary.. The siege began on Thursday night when. Mr Brain entered the bouse. -Police said Mr Richard Bowyer, aged 29, a farm manager, answered a knock and he managed to get out of the house to raise tbe alarm as the siege began with Miss Elizabeth Colby, Mr Bow* yeris girlfriend, being held hos¬ tage. After 12 hours, Mr Brain freed Miss Golby in exchange for Mr Pearson. Mr Leslie Eminent, Assistant Chief Constable (Crime) of Thames Valley Police, said:" “ We shall now just have to sit it out.” - Los Angeles tries last gasp aj From Ivor Davis Los Angeles, July 14 The seven million residents of Los Angeles County today were officiallv told something they knew all along—that the air'they breathe sticks and is hazardous to the health. A second-stage smog alert has bscn issued. Today the ozone level will be at least 0.35 parts per million, the lvorsr rbis year, and under stats regulations required by rlie federal Clean- Air Act un¬ precedented steps were ordered to try to curb the pollution. Whether they can be enforced remains to be seen. For the last few days, a per¬ sistent " layer of smog das covered the Los Angeles basin, but it was onlv last night that rhe controversial emergency plan, was put into operation. AU " companies with more than 100 workers' were told to ask their employees to travel to work iu car pools. About 1,200 of the largest factories were told of the smog alert by a special radio hook¬ up and all industries rbar pro¬ duce hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen, the main ingredient of photochemical smog, were required to cut their operations by 20 per cent. Since oil-fired power plants are the main sources of posti¬ lion, the Los Angeles, depart¬ ment cf water and -power was asked to burn 100 per cenr natural gas and the Southern California Edison - Companies was advised to burn SO per cent natural gas and to import as much of its power as-possible from outside Los Angeles. .Residents in the city were asked to reduce the' use of elec¬ trical appliances including air conditioning ax home, though in some parts of'the city the tem¬ perature is 'expected to he above 97 ? F. They were also asked to avoid' unnecessary driving. In some of the worst smog areas, such as Upland and Fontana, people with respira¬ tory or heart problem^ were ad¬ vised to stay ar home. Children in those districts, most on school holidays, were told to avoid strenuous outdoor exer¬ cise. ; Tanker ships in Long Beach and Los Angeles harbours were told to .stop unloading by mid¬ night and avoid painting and greasing operations A squad of 75 inspectors will fan out all over the basin today to try to^ enforce the regula¬ tions. Court; can impose fines of up to S600 (£333) and six months' In jail far offenders. Haiverer. in many cases it would . be cheaper for Targe companies ta pay fines rather than to go to expensive and time-consuming lengths to curb their operations. In theory, the measures sound sensible but because of the late warning it is unlikely that the word can be spread to everyone. Stage two smog alerts have been called earlier this year but ait air pollution official said. “ This is tbe first time weYe been able to predict one, and so tye are required bv law to warn the pub.Sic to take these steps to lessen tfie impact”. Los Angeles has never had a stage-three smog alert, when the ozone reaches 0,50 parrs per million. If the situation ever arose, residents would be asked to stay at home and stop driv¬ ing altogether and a stare approaching emergency would prevail. evidence of at td/Ryder'of Eaton Hastings, former liman of the National Enterprise 3rd, said in evidence at the Central minal Court that he headed a team ' t investigated allegations of a British .; viand “slush fund.” last year. The ■' ’ .. m found no evidence of corrupt pay- - '‘-"nts. A former British. .Leyland xrutive and his wife have' denied irges of forgery and deception Page 2 larrods chief fined 1 Hugh Fraser, chairman of House Fraser,, which owns the Harrods . partment store in Knightsbridge, and " puty chairman.Df Scottish & Universal ■ vestments, was fined a'total of £600 • offences under the Companies Act. /o former directors of SUITS, Mr igus Grossarr and Mr -William JForgie, -;re also fined Page 17 V; Jr Whitlam retires ■ ' ,r Gough Whitlam, the former Ans-' filian Prime Minister, ’ who was sbtused In. 1975,' is to retire from •litics to become a university profes- r. He said he would formally resign s. seat in Parliament before the end the month. He will also do some citing Page 4 New basis likely for IMPS’ salaries A proposal that tbe Top Salaries Review Body should examine the salaries of ministers and MPs in relation to salaries in commerce and industry'is likely to be approved by tbe Commons when salaries ace debated there in two weeks. Yesterday an order was published setting out increases of 10 per cent for ministers and MPs Page 2 Oosterhuis shares in 0n other pages Open lead Peter Oosterhuis, of Britain, overtook 10 players to move into a joinr lead with the holder, Tom H’arson, of die United States, for tbe last round of the Open championship today at St Andrews. Oosterhuis scored a 69 to put him on 211. Jack Xicklaus is one stroke behind and .Nicholas Faldo, another Briton, is on 213 Page 21 Palestine death feud Rhodesia resignations A vicious internal feud has' broken out within Ihe ranks of Palestinian gucr- rilles in tbe wake of the kidnapping of at least 40 United Nations troops. Reliable reports suggest that seven Palestinians were killed and 12 wounded in a fierce gun battle _ Rage -*- Grunwick strike ends The Grunwick dispute over union recognition .was finally ended by leaders of the remaining 5+ strikers -who had picketed the factory for 591 days. For all practical purposes the dispute finished at the.end of last year when the Lords ruled that an Acas report recommending union recognition was null and void _ Page 2 Riot police arrested An entire platoon of riot police, includ¬ ing three officers, is said to have been arrested after an unprovoked attack on an area of the Basque city of San Sebastian. Page 3 Two African members of the board of- Rhodesia Broadcasting Corporation have resigned after ouiy fire days in office. They said they had accepted the posts in the hope of changing the corporation’s policies but this, had proved impossible. Radio and television were Government propaganda vehicles, they said Page 4 Allegro checks: EL Cars advise owners of some Allegros to take their cars to distributors for tests oo the wheel hubs ■ 2 Clergy expelled: The South African authorities in Namibia have expelled the Anglican vicar-genera] and a Roman Catholic priest 4 Leader page, 13 Letters: On Christian tolerance, from tb*» Chancellor of Cbicbester Cathedral, and others; on tbe cat is Budget deficit, from Mr Tim Congdon : on liberty, from Mr David Steel Leading articles : Tbe Bonn summit; The Waddell repon Features, pages S-9, 12 Fred Emery ' looks ■ at tbe by-election results; Jack Lonsdale . on Blowitz of The Times; Saturday Review. Arts, page 7 Faddy Kitchen on “ Eastern Encounters ” at The Fine Arc Society; Irving Wardie on MinstJvZs at tbe Open Space Obituary, page 14 Mr Oliver Messel; Mr Richard SandeU Sport, pages 21-23 Cricket: Championship developing into three-horse race ; Lever, replaces injured Old in Prudential Trophy match ; Motor racing: Peterson fa-dest in British Grand Prfx practice; Racing: Fair Solinia tn complete Oaks double at the Curragh Budness News, pages TWO Stock markets: Breathing a sign of relief over, the trade figures, stocks .went better and tho FT OnUnarp Share, index turned a loss into a gain ending 0.8 up at 474.4. Gilts were fractionally higher by the dose. Personal investment and finance The banks’ tighter lending policy is examined by Ronald Pullen: Roger Beard on investing in coins ; The Times/Halifax house price index Home News European News Overseas News Appointments ArLs Bridge Business 2,3 Chess 8 Law Report 15 Sport 21-23 i 3 Court 14 Letters n TV & Radio - 6 4 Crossword 24 Obituary 14 Theatres, etc 6S 14 Diary' 72 Parliament 15 Travel 9 7 Engagements 14 Sale Room 14 23 Years Ago 14 9 Features 5-9, 12 Science 14 Universities 15 16-20 Gardenias 9 1 Sboparonnd 10, 11 Weather 2 Dog owners lose parks ban test case Dog owners lost a test case in the Court yesterday for the right to walk their dogs in their local parks. The three defendants, all members of the Burnley Dog Owners’ Action Committee. Lancashire, have been fighting a bylaw issued by' Burnley council last year which banned dogs in three of the town’s main parks. Dogs are also banned from parts of 33 other park areas in the town. After Judge Francis's deci¬ sion, Mr Frank Clifford, an un- emploved salesman, one of the defendants, said he would be willing to go to prison for the right to walk his dog in the park. He and another defen¬ dant, Mrs Mavis Thornton, a former child-care officer refused to give an undertaking not to exercise their dogs in the parks or incite others to do so. The judge made an order for a perpetual injunc-, tion against them and ordered them to pay costs, estimated at nearly £25,000. The action com¬ mittee has so far raised only about £2.000. • Mr Clifford said later: “ The rights of many elderly people woo take pleasure in walking their dogs in the parks have been denied.” The court discussed dog excreta, its health, risk to children, and the effect on parks. It listened to dog owners who said that they, never ventured out with their dogs without their plastic scoops and from parkland specialists on Ihe health risks. Judge Francis said : “T do not consider the by-law unjust, nor does ir interfere in die rights of others.” The Government has said it is willing to consider the ban¬ ning of dogs from ornamental parks, children’s play areas, and sports grounds. Mrs Lesley Scott-Ordish, from Maidstone, Kent, founder of tbe Pro-Dogs organization, said later: “ It is a sad day for dogs.” Law Report, page 15 JlWiMDfMlle tiMttasw it ■i.-sanisa&ain K-hich hare CVlcpuuy Umup rttemm nitb PP>*. We’rekeiown by the companies we keep. Fewer people than ever are wfllingto wait months or years for the hospital treatment they need. Fortunately there is an alternative. Independent medicine and Private Patients Plan. - Many now turn to PPP because they know that within PPPfc flexihlerange ofhealth insurance plans, there is one . which will be right for theirneeds. So find out how PPP puts the nations health first. - the health of individuals and of companies like those featured above. Complete and post the coupon today. Tbe Private PatientaPJan, FREEPOST, TUNBRIDGE WELLS, ■ KentTNI 2YZ (Nopaflagcreqoirea). Hleasesend me details of PPP private health insurance fur ti i 3778 ; aj Companies □ IndiriduaWFomUK's a vjLkaxappif^ur' Name it am uacLr ST- uf .ige'i ___ Company i-ftppKcnhM • . Positron _ ■ __ Address ■ Telephone Private Patients Plan Established 1940. Organised by The Provident Association , for Medical Care Limited. PROTECTS '\ J THE TIME'S SATURDAY JUL? *5 1978 home news——-— Hard work on streets of Moss Side From John Chartres Manchester Labour Party officials- in Manchester believe that the tun¬ ing tit dieir campaign in Moss hide, which seemed to Stan so MANCHESTER MOSS SIDE Mr G. Morton (Lab) Air TV Murphy (C>_ _ Mr P. Thomson slowly,' helped them" to ""hold M? H. Andrew (NF) die seat.' 15 ' At first the other main OcTOD8» 12.556 .10,996 2^02 623 Miss V. Redgrave (WRP) 394 Lab majority 1,558 SEf sAM the importMit controversy over Brit), 96. Lab raaj : 4,lli: the state oF the relatively new--- housing in the heartland of the Hulme ward. Mr . George Morton, the Labour candidate seemed al¬ together .too quiet and diffi¬ dent to succeed. However he Stow in stature as the cam¬ paign went on- He and bis sup¬ porters. worked bard on the streets and put up a telling defence to all the criticisms of the Labour-controlled city council’s housing policy and of the so-called “infamous" cres- 1878 1874 Change Lab 48.4«'. 47.0% -0.6% C 40.6-4. 34.3% +6.3% L 0.2% 17.6% -a.4% WRP 1.5% NF 2.3% _ __ 1 Civil Ri0bia 0.7% Prosp Bril 0.3% Poll 51.6% 62.8% -11.2% Electorate -52.460 51.444 + 1.036 Liberal. National Front' and Workers' Revolutionary Party candidates lost their deposits. PENISTONJE me so-caiied “imamoos cres- Mr A- McKay. (Lab) 19,424 cent blocks of flats, m Hulme. t Dobl ^ 14,053 while the Conservatives tended n Chadwick fLi g to follow .the Liberal.line L^ma^STl ' " ■StSicr's General ejection : J. J. Mendelson Mrs Margaret Thatcnears (Lab) 27,146; G. C. W. Harris visit, many observers thought, (C >, 12,011; D. Chadwick (L), was arranged too early m the 10 , 900 . Lab maj: 15,135,. campaign, six days before poll¬ ing. By contrast,. Mrs Barbara Castle arrived on the eve of poll, trod almost the same route of three shopping centres, and 'concentrated on talking to women. A detailed analysis yester¬ day showed that Mr Thomson, the unconventional Liberal candidate, did well in the 1878 October 1874 - Change Lab „ *3.5% .64.2%. C S% 24.0% +8.9% L 21.6% 21.6% -0.2% Pall 50.£% 74.8% - t4.e% Electorate 71.437 67,060 +4.377 _. ary to Labour In a general Liberal election. The Conservatives were mak- Hulme and Moss Side bousing' ing the best of things yescer- estate&r where his reputation as day. Mr Tom Murphy, who had an advocate for the oppressed' said he would win if all his was well established. **pledged .votes” 'turned oiix, On the other hand, he said that the reduced majority obviously.did badly In the mid- had pared the way for a Con¬ di e-class Chorlton and Alexan- servative victory in the general dra Park wards in'the south of election. the constituency where pre- . In fact che poll was distress- riously disenchanted Tory ingly low even- in a consti- voters returned to lie fold in tuency where for the most part spite of his declaring con- interest 'in politics seldom stantly that he was an anti-pact- exceeds that in football, horse Liberal. racing and the like. Cleaiiv Whether che Liberals will Mr Murphy's u pledged votes" contest Moss Side at the gen- did not turn out in sufficient oral election aod readopt Mr numbers, but the Conservatives Thomson remains to be seen. are taking comfort in the fact Mr Paul Carmody, the that changes fu the comsti- Labour agent whose predictive tuency since 1974 have un¬ skills were again demonstrated, doubtedly favoured Labour, said yesterday that Moss with many of the owner-occu^ Side - would not be one of the pied areas deteriorating into North-wesr seats where Liberal multi-occupancy intervention would be necess- lands. Grunwick strikers ended, dispute By Robert Parker.. . .The leaders of die 54 remain¬ ing Grunwick strikers decided yesterday to abandon their 591- , day-long attempt to establish t union recoghlrion. The decision was announced by Mr Jack Dromey, secretary of che local trades council, who in many ways fans led the strikers. In real terms it means little, either to the Grunwick film-processing company or to rite residents of Will es den, north London, who a year ago bad to contend with pickets from all over the country. For all practical purposes the dispute finished at the end of last year when the House of Lords ruled that a report by the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (Acas) was null and void. It had recom¬ mended union recognition and reinstatement of the 130 or so strikers. Earlier this week Acas decided that it could da nothing more to resolve the dispute, and the Association of Profes¬ sional, Executive, Clerical and Computer Staff (Auex), the main union involved,'decided it was ail over. The strikers’ union has sup¬ ported them all with strike pay of £34 a week. That, with the legal costs. of court actions and presenting' evidence to die Scar man inquiry last summer, is ‘said to have cost che union, more than £500,000. Tooth music: Pupils from Ambleside County First School Percussion Ensemble, Wjalton-an-Thames, Surrey, playing a Swanee whistle (left) and a Melodica, a wind keyboard, during the National Festival of Music for Youth 1978, at the Fairfield Halls;.Croydon. Labour eyes on October poll Continued from page 1 Liberal candid are at--Tenistone; most promising'seat,- but - we low poll, the swing to them was held off the Conservative attack have shown that where we arc 3-8 per cent, and a swing of effectively and obtained 21.6 well organized we can consoli- only about 5 per cent at the per cent- -of - the. rote. His date -our position. - • general election would give achievement was praised bv Mr « -c„ n -* i- Mll Mrs Margaret Thatcher, Leader David Steel, the Liberal leader. ' die ™i t ^SSjSSrSSfS of the Opposition, a working yesterday. S bcSr thS?*- tKESi.Stu “aioHty- Tories said that they would baSTbXn dvi^as;Setter One of Mrs Thatcher’s close expect in tne country generally g J Q b 0 e ther 8 ' r "“ ent S ' bv-dSrion advisers, when he read reports ma K e a muc h bigger dent in r ,. su i ts - that Mr Callaghan might be t * le Liberal vote than proved thinking of putting off the Possible at Penistone. That is Mr Steel said the votes, over- election until February, said - because tbev see a more radical all. Rave the lie opce again to * The longer he waits, the har- streak in the Liberal Party in the * premature obituaries of Asians urged to form feb rigf By Aka Hamilton people to-# look to their own . Senior -police officers are. de &" CC s mm ; ara „, leaders -sav ftSBs1Sa»Sss' ; groups in die face of increasing oacb other in suf-deFence violence, much' of it from 'tiessuies. , . , white racialist croups • They have ..urged Asians to ■ Scotland Yard has •' ’said . i°*i \. the Anti-isaai - Le ugue. reoeatedlv that ir does--not which is dedicated to ttpposuig feEur^e formation of.vigL-' the National Front, and sugg&ils latite groups. The latest :sug- Asian businessmen . sh ould gtttrinn came yesterday ixt a R>ve aid to the organi»mon. mint statement from the Fetfdr, ■ Businessmen, chby-wy. should acion of Pakistani Organizations, f»ivc money to enable Asians to the Federation of Bangladesh to™ selMcftowa groups. Organizations, and rise Indian -. . Scotland Yard reEused to com- Workers’ Association ■ -®f, mciit on the appeal last night, Southall. buif it is kooWn that Sir David They said: “For the pept McKee. the Metropolitan Police In encouraging, their members ' establishing to .'join Self-defence-. rigiUmt la wind order. \ ' • -groups 'in the face- of such Asian community leaders bare attacks aod in spite of consider- caHed a meeting for July 29, to able apathy .from the supposed which they have. invited anti- forces of law-'and order. We Nazi and Jewish representa- nbw believe that the time has'--' rives, to. discuss, further joint came when we must urge our action. Mrs Thatcher pledges to curb racial violence Mrs Margaret Thatcher, the grarion into Britain, though Conservative Jeaderv promised - Conservative oolicy had been last night, to use ** the full force ' misrepresented so us to ** spread of the law” to end the present doubt and alarm in minority wave of racial violence. She said 1 communities -The Opposition the Conservatives would fight to^ leader outlined five main points stop ** brutal attacks by •'young' of Conservative policy on race, thugs on minority commUsi-'^d immigration, ties”. First, she said, every citizen In her speech to the Barnet ^ was equal oeforc the law. branch of rile Anglo-Asian Con- Second, Conservatives ‘'applaud servative Society in London, she , the great efforts made by many emphasized her party’s' opposi - 1 of those who have settled in .rion-ro the.National Front.- ?-Britain in recent years”. Third, .She said that n.pdrty with Britain was proud of its toler- tiie Conservatives’ record . arfd ’ auce aud respect for the Imv, beliefs ** could only be irnplac- Foiurii, Tories would seek to ably opposed to the National promote harmony between Front and any_ other group, in people of all backgrounds. Last, our society which seeks, to stir she repeated that the Consekva-. up racial hatred rives would introduce revised ‘Test-tube’ wife in bomb hoax Mrs Lesley Brown, v.lui expecting the fiR> - t 111 , baby, was pne of 60 ivuim.i moved to aubther part *■ Oldham and District Uo*ipit.ii yesterday after a bomb warn¬ ing which proved a hoax. Earlier Mr Pairick ‘Steptur. consultant gynaecologist, auu_ J&is partner, Dr Robert Edward'* announced that the pregnane'' was progressing well. ’ ».•*- birth is not expected m i»r i«' mediate future. No deeisnui h.n been made about the method r delivery.” Four years for hoax<£ Stephen Tucker, aged 21.A Limvood Road. Ware, HerlU, . shire, who was said to hf 11 raised che alarm at former «.« players by giving a tvjriiiis that there would he explusiot- was jailed ar St Albails C'roivs Court yesterday fur four years. Channel boy fails Kevin Anderson, aged i f < failed yesterday to become i!if% youngest person to swim tiK. English CbanncL The Snuilt African had six miles to when he was taken c.\li.iu<U'5,' from the water. j School clothes plan A voucher clothing scheme i* 1 ' help parents on low income- :«»» ensure th'"“ tbeir cbilihvn properly dressed for school I'-i-V been introduced by the Iijiuv; London Educatiou Authority. : Pay harvest ; The Agricu! rural Wutrr ; Board lias agreed to a pun • *, pay farm workers from v-" $ year for weekend« when ll'.'.J- stand by hi case the rigi-^ for harvesting. Lettuces destroyed Thousands of lettuces u«. ploughed into the ground GLiucestershire and HorefiM'.i -ei , , . - -- -—— . and Worcester vesiordav I'-- 5hc added that people were regulations to control rales'of [ c.msc the producers would If worried about tlic level of jmmi- immigration. money picking ihcin. PA hews agency staff to extend der he will foil.” He thought die '“rch of England than is the Liberal Party" that were iTn.arniri4a Ah /il-afm i III both the Darliamentnry uncer- apparent in the other English being written in the press. They j U-tJAUliXlt; U1I Lldllll tainty and the prospects for regions. were a good tonic to the j Journalists at the Press { A - ; — ivages policy and the economy Mr Steel said: “On a re- Liberals as they embarked on I Association, the -national news ing into would compel Mr Callaghan to duced poll we have held ou to tn< : ir summer pre-elecuon cam- J agency, uro to extend the sus- bedsitter choose October. our 1974 share of the rote in P J| 8 n » «c said. . I pension of industrial -sanctions Mr David Chadwick, the Penistone ... It was not the Fred Emcrv, page 12 I to allow, talks to continue ou ——-__ l th<»ir mv rl.tim Solicitors’ delay stopped man’s £80,000 claim Inquest jury criticizes search delay The stepfather of Shaun Bonner, aged five, who was found drowned at a. sewage works, admitted yesterday that he watched television .in the afternoon before looking for the boy, although he had been missing since lunchtime. After hearing that it was after 7 pm before the boy was reported missing, an- inquest jury at Glossop, Derbyshire, made a strong plea to parents. The jury returned a verdict of. accidental, death and .added two riders. The first said: “ We feel that in this case police were not alerted in sufficient time and strongly urge parents or guardians ._ to provide adequate supervision for young children, and to report to police straight away anv missing child." The second .rider urged water authorities to maintain “close and regular surveillance and maintenance ” of perimeter fences to ensure adequate security. The boy’s body was found 18 days after his disappearance two miles from his home at Gameslev, Glossop. He had dis¬ appeared before and been brought back by police. The srepfather, Mr Steven Pickrond. aged 27. said he last saw the boy about 2 to 2.30- pm in the garden, but later ad¬ mitted that he was missing about 12.45. BL Cars urges hub checks on Allegros MPs’ pay may be linked to business salaries By George Clark A statutory instrument and a proportion of their parliaraen- ferent elements involved. For A proposal that the Top Commons resolution were puh- tary salaries and these variable example, the Civil Service of ministers and MPs ia relation . They ace in line -with the 10 figure mil be £3,529; for senior MPs because there are some, to those paid in industry and per cent guideline pnd should ministers, £4,299; and for junior who for tax purposes or other commerce is likely to be ap-_ provoke little controversy, ex- ministers arid whips, £4,642. reasons, do not draw their full proved by the Commons when cept in the House of Lords Because the House derided salary. The department puts the parliamentary salaries are de-- where peers will be held to the not to implement in full the new proposed-range at between bated there m a fortnight- ■ *. present level- of expenses. They' recommendations ot the Boyle £6 ^ and -6-89't but chat must MPs and ministers'^ believe ’ receive no parliamerirary salary, committee in 1975, the salary of 1x1 assumption arout the that they have been severely The following salaries are MPs is reckonable for pension decision of a feir Mrs who restricted by the application of proposedpurposes at £8,208, the pay- decline their full pay. the incomes policy over the past Muuster : from £20.000 to recommended by Boyle. Undo- With the police, firemen, three years and that the time twd ctanwnar s £20Z0S ra tb -f, resolution the figure . Armed - Forces, doctors and has come for a big review. £22,228. ’ will be £9,3/2. ^ , dentists all the -subject of But to avoid the criticism that -Cabinet ministers: £13,000 to There will certainly be' sonic special reviews and with their, they are voting their own pay £14,300. argument about Che sum, which own separate awards, which increases, they propose that ;the »«*« 5 SL nB, 1 f?ww. “i see™* 10 have been fixed ' sometimes .seem to confiict independent tribunal Should ad- rjo 450 * . «a«:- »,suo to ar hitrarily, IMPs - vy-ere suggest- ‘ v\ith' the Government's guide- judicate and that the leaders JunW ministers: £5^00 to £6 050. ing Teste may that it can only lives, the addition of MPs to of political parties should give MPs: £6,270.to £6,837. - be a “stopgap” provision until the list of special categories an undertaking that, in .the new By another resolution, net parliamentary salaries and pen- can serve only to reinforce the Parliament, with. a. House-of yet published, the secretarial sious are thoroughly revised. arguments of those whp .say newly elected members, the re- . allowance of £3,687 is expected. It-is difficult to reckon what' that artificial pay limits can- commendations of - the review to be raised by a .tenth. an MP receives in. pay and not be long maintained without body should be put into effect. Ministers are entitled to a allowances, because of the dif- differentials becoming distorted ‘No evidence of British Leyland bribes’ !Compensation By Stewart Tendler ing, servicing or carrying out" front of my committee which 'offer for Crime Reporter the warranty on a vehicle. No showed millions of pounds of , , - . , „ company with which he had corrupt paymems". iQ^s^ormer r clutirman^of^the beau . associated -had any- Counsel read from one ol &n"Entc£S£ SSri. iSd £« ”nS ^ 7?°™ md -' ^° rd L Rj ’ der Mr Alov p-irk frtrmpr rhirf raen “> nor , W0UIQ , ne , «nd the payments wcVe pay- « m 1 te.^,Ub B U 8 rtand, ““S SUi:h * de P | “" ble to accreted agorfu-Tfr were crQSMxaminad ac the p - ' Howard read another section cStraf CrirtSTcSirt^Jester He . Mked about a referring to “slushing" which dav on * fSSeisd SemSSt ? rapb a report on the the report said was “undonb- SoS dSSSf-S fchli fu ^ u rjf .® citish . Le > lai \ d tedlv essential and has been “Th^er^^.^coirpf jSed^to ^orSn^it^ E 3 &^ P™* °° ^ m e Vdi; 0 ™^ S Pt,b ' iC ,0r ^ R >' der U» .dM'^srsu^ss H rd pleaded not guilty- to charges nichfcr ch ao those in an emo- involving forgery and dccrip- conL.eri j-ate ^ in tive area like the Middle JEast. tian to obtain £15,000 from the -JSSl®* ® He - S ave 311 example of normal Daily M*iL One of the chargee '««■ >'’ s '^“ d ■ Practice. estate homes By Craig Seton Residents of n privnre bous¬ ing estate, which is said to be in danger of collapse, will, be offered compensation up to the market value .of dieir homes, the Natinoal House -Building -Council said, yesterday. The estate, of 26 houses built six years ago at Wwenhoe, near Coloiesfer. Esex. was.visited by Mr Andrew TaiL director- general of the council^ win said assurances had been receh-ed- From the loss adjustors, about compensation. But one resident' said her fti- their pay claim. Leaders of the agency's National Union of Journalists’ chapel (office branch ) decided yesterday not to reimposc sanc¬ tions after the management proposed a new grading struc-. ture. The journalists trill meet again on Wednesday to review the position. The chapel said the decision had been taken ,** recognizing rhe marked step forward in terms of good will shown hy tiie revised grading, structure put forward by management However, it recorded ** dis¬ appointment in the deadlock on crucial house agreement talks The chapel has been seeking a regrading scheme businessman's £80,000 la\v- Provincial Bank, which I.iv * suit against a bank was struck amalgamated into the N'.uioi’ ■ out without a hearing as a Westminster Bank, over to- • result of inexcusable and io- alleged actions oF lu.iu.tei-rs ordinate delay by his solicitors, brandies where he had accon:;;; Mr Justice Watkins said in the during 1965 and 19C«f>. Higli Court yesterday. He said that tile u> 1 vented Mr George Mainz from use in works canteens, pursuing his case .igaiust the- Among the fault-; nf t'i- National Westminster Bank. xolicituns. tlu* judae said, «-.*«; The judge’s ruling means that that- they allowed the c.»«e ' Mr Mainz, of Sruarr Tower, papers " to slmnber ou the dc*.k' Maida Vale, London, can pro- nf counsel for almost a war ". ceed with a clmfn against the They had conceded tiiur tor solicitors for the £80,000 be says firm was guiltv of breach he would have been awarded in durv in handling the clnmi . the action against the bank. against the Westminster Bank. That action,' which the solid- but not in che case against tin.- tors had been- handling since National Provincial. 1972, was “struck out for want The judge ruled that breaches of prosecution" in 1975. in' handling the first case Mr Mainz had sued the West- affected what happened in the minster Bank and the National second. Weather forecast and recordings NOON TODAY Pressufo n shown in millibars FRONTS Warn* Cold Occluded t _‘ _• ISjrmhoIs are an nd yunria g odga NOON TODAT owners of Allegros with chassis numbers up to 140705 to make contacr until distributors for hub tests. The advice was given after comments by Mr Justice Willis at Teesside Crown Court op. Wednesday that the company .should have recalled cars after “ mounting and horrifying eri- dencc of wheels coming adrift BL Cars said lawyers had been instructed “ seriously to. consider the possibility of an appeal- against the ruling ”. Last night’s advice-was issued “ without prejudice to the out¬ come of rhe appeal The judge had ruled that failure by the company to tackle the hubs caused a crash on the Ml In which a passenger was left paralysed. Flights are cancelled by ground staff By Our Labour Stuff British Airways cancelled 366 domestic flights yesterday because of 24-hour industrial action by several hundred ground staff .at Heaxhroiv air¬ port, London, and Liverpool. Their action was in support nf a 24^hour strike by 200 LiveepooI ground staff who are in dispute with the airline over tbs handover of British Air- ways Services from Liverpool to British .Midland Airways. The staff, - mainly Transport and General Workers’ Union members, have rejected the cash terms offered. UV'.IU inu it. wuc ui uic uiaisM i__. - J. „ ,u_. Ts-J.lek alleges the_ forgeiy of a letier Levland had been paying - asked him Whit | surance company was offering BL Cars last night advised all 0Q - s | us h fund " activities aUe- gedly. sent by Lord Ryder to Mr Park. Lord Ryder said yesterday that be had headdd a team rbat investigated *■' slusli fund ’’ allegations last year. The team saw the reports but found no evidence of corrupt payments. Mr Park said the reports, on three of British Ley land’s divi¬ sions, were not totally accurate bribes to get contracts ? Lord Ryder said neither he nor his colleagues _ who pre¬ pared idea, how the company used its money had been carried out. ed the report had any such ^ginai of the lei- A Full investigation into «r allegedly written to hii^i, by L- fh« rnmiMrtv used its Lor .d Ryder. In cross-cxami- uanon by Mr Howard he said Lord Ryder said he had oot TlS?" ™' a biU^a mweSSSS'" “JSTil ™^^mur'type of comm'” __ _ came to public notice last year- “ ' ■ nor could Mr Barton support and added that the report had He did not see Mr Barton’s them with evidence. The infor- not been concerned with die reports until two days - before mation for them had. come day-to-day management of the l be DaDy Mail' ran ixs report from inside the-company. * . company under which Mr Bar- a oout his company and the let- Lord Ryder - xvas shown a tOQ ® ra P°rts came. ci>py of the letter and said he about had never drafted, signed or British Leyland last year be sent such a missive, nor had bad been asked by die Gown, anyone else at the National »ent to invesngate. Nothin« ter. He said par^s -were accurate and. parrs were uol T he payments referred td were not corrupt. .._ _ _ The renorts were emotively. Enterprise "Board drafted‘'such had been withheld by the com- written. Mr Park Added, and a do cum eat. pao>- there was no evidence of cor- Cross-examincd by Mr Wil- Mr Howard asked him about 'ruptipn in the reports,- nor fiam Howard, QC. for the Mr Barton’s reports which could Mr Barton give his defence of Mr * Barton, Lord “gave chapter and verse of superiors, any evidence..when Ryder said he recognized a corruption running into mil- “ e was-interviewed, business commission as some- lions of pounds". Lord. Ryder The trial continues' on Mou¬ thing paid to an agent for sell- said: ‘‘No documents came in day. Railmen want fares cut The National Union of Rail- pass card. lo cover travel for ivaymcn is to seek big cuts in retired staff over a 30-mile rail fares for its members. radius from their home Delegates at the annual con- stations. Cereuce at Llandudno yester- • Waltham Cross branch day unanimously approved a demanded the same travel faci- motion ro negotiate a big reduc- tides for husbands of women tion in privilege fares.. which .? s were accorded to wives arc a Quarter of ordinary of rolwaymen. arc a quarter of ordinary fares. They also supported-a move .Ipr-. early negotiations for the removal of restrictions on privilege travel. It was derided to seek a free Mr 5idney Weighed, general secretary of the union, is cam¬ paigning to raise pay to a min¬ imum of £50 a week for 6,500 members at British Transport hotels. siusinng ’^ meant. He- repBed : >; compensation at the market that he was not sure. - ; vaJite of her home in January, Mr Park said be bad never [.rather than at present prices. .The' difference 1 might be. as much as £ 2 , 000 - Th« council has told the resi¬ dents that where they are under-insured, .as some are bv sevcrij.J thousand pounds, it will make up the difference. . Tliey.b-ave also been advised dmt' they should.'leave their homes, in some cases for coun¬ cil -bouses provided aazr by by Coicbester District Council,.and that the building. council will offer cash .advances., against their insurance, claims, to enable them tq more' quickly.' The families have been urged to seek rate rebates ■ and re¬ duced mortgage payments. The total'payout is expected to reach £300,000. The bouses w ere built on a former rubbish tip and building officials have 'warned residents that heavy rain - could cause: a landslip. \ Mrs Gillian. Child, of Spring Chase. Whcenhoe, said-tbat their home cost £7,950-in 1973. Their insurance company had offered compensation at January values but a similar house, at today’s value. would cost about S16.00Q; , Mr. Tait told a press . con¬ ference in Colchester rim his council and the Association of Metropolitan- • Authorities were tojoin in' research into the causes of such difficulties. Warning over engines for Chile Scottish unions would oppose any attempts to send four Rolls- Royce jet engines from Britain to the military government' in. Cfrije,; Mr Stewart McIntosh. 3>sistani genera] secretary of” cfaa .Scottish TUG, Said - It was said on Thursday that die Cabinet has decided to order the release of the engines Which have been at the’ Rolls-Royce . factory in’ East Kilbride- since. : \they were blacked by unions four years ago. Tomorrow . Sun rises : Sun sets : . Sun rises : 5 am 9.12 pm - f 5-2 - am Moon sets : Moon rises : H J Moon sets : 1.18 am 3.57 pm Bbfc— 1.44 am Foil MoonJuly. 20. . Full moon: July 20. Sun sets : 9.11 pm Moon' rises : 5.9 pm u—Uluii Av: uc—bill jtemSsi. r— i-ioBny; o—avi-iu»r. tr—loq; d—aili-ir ; , .~ n Sl l: r — r ->'n: —mi' 1 1 *——Oiund.-r^tonn a —slioivtr-. or..., |i-,rlQdk>l.raln u-lib -maw. . r Ireland, and near average else¬ where. Total rainfall is expected to he Lighting op: 9.42 pm to 4.32 am. Lightingnp : _ 9A1 pm to 4.33 am- •!?", f'£”3*;. but b £ lo,v Hlsb water : London Bridge, 9.20 ' High water: London Bridge, 10.38 Tjorfhepn SCr '' t ' am; 6.3m t50.6ft) ; 9.46 pm, 6.1m ^ 6.3m -f20.8ft) ; 11.6 pm. 6.3m (20.1ft).. Aronmouth, 2.4 am, (20.6ft). Avomnouth, 3.24 am. m -T 1 ,Jf n<1e SS I nBi !- P ^ b ?. b ' 10.4m (34.0ft) ; 2.47 pm, 10.2ai 10.5m (34.4ft) ; 4.9 pm, 10.7m * k1th abouc average (33.5ft). Dover, 6.52 am, 5Jm (35.2ft). Dover, 8-3 am. 5.7m ilS.lft); 7J1 pm. 5.7m (18.8ft). (18.6ft); 8.31 r pm, 5.9m (19.4fi>. v . . 3 HuU, 1.42 am, 3.9m U9Jft) : 2 Hull, 2.55 am. 6m fl9.Sft) ; 3-19 Yesterday pm, 6.1m (20ft). Liverpool, 6.49. pm, 6.2m' 1 20.4ft). .Liverpool. S.2 London: Temo ■ nm t am t •ft «■ < 25 ' 7EtJ ’ 7M ^ 7 - 9m «5r *■ 5 S « pa*. pm. 21 “C ,70'V) ; ^n. 7™n, to (23.8ft). . . fifi.9ft). /am, 16’C (61’Fl. Humlditv. 7 :—“— -:---*-f—i-rr-i—’-- Pm, 67 per cent. Rain. 241i'r in /pm, ml. Sun, 24hr to 7 pm, lo.S ?™ s -„ Bar : meaJ1 level, 7 pm. l.nifi.o millibars, stcadv. 1,006 millibars — 29.53iii. A ridge of high pressurelight; mas temp lfi* or 17"C extends - from the W across (61* to 63"F)T England and Wales. Outlook fur tomorrow' aha Forecasts for 6 am to midnight: Monday ; Must places dry, but a London, jVCdlands. central N Y?* l0 „;S' h S ,r^ .S i.? 6 East Anglia, E. SE England: f 0 *?*-. _ . dull : a llttin drizzle near coasts, Strait of Dover. Engllsli becoming mostly'dry with sonny Channel (E) Wind) ME, light; Intervals. parilculariv ■ inland ; slight. At the resorts . St George’s Channel : Wind N, light or moderate; soft slight. Irish Sea : Wind -N, backing NW. Ji„.ht or moderate, but Tresh locally strong, in N channel at times ; sea slight in S ; moderate, locally rough In N. j CoveDt Garden jazz .The Greater London-'Council triad N Ughr; max temp 16’-1S“C (61° to 64° F). SW, central S England. • S 'Wales, Channel Islands: dry, sonny, periods ;. wind MB, light: mas temp 22*C (72 % Fl inland ; cooler near coasts. Lake District, NW England. N Wales, Glasgow, SW Scotland, ^0-rinv fnror»a'ct Isle of Man. N Ireland-: mostly JUrUa J IOrpcaSt dry, sunny ioterraLi ; wind 'N of T 116 Meteorological OfRi.e ve»- __ NW, light ; max temp -lS’-TO'C terday mued the following fore- (64° to 68°F). cast Tor the next 30 day*; 1 Borders, NE England: Rather , ra TmV V ^ Cr -' S to , be cloudy iritiv a Utile' drizzle ; - 1,1 settled timn sunny spells developina inland; ,weeks, but with a wind NE or N. light Ibiax temp iSCSIs rSm.^ T ii? rty '*'"?* l " 20’C (63'F) inland; cooler on **““ “waL coasts; . . Mean temperatures and sunshine rhe period- as a whole arc 24 hours io 6 pm, July 14 I „ . Mit Sun loin irmn E COAST " r * w p S:-irf>3ruu>ih I l;r,.lUngion Unrlfsion Cla-.inn Z I ‘•Linatp j ij S COAST K-i>Uliq. lU.il I a.<lbour-iii< 7... Ilrlqhinn M.Z IMHinr - -.1 Smi'li-x-ii II. i Manitouii li'.i', lluurn-iiiUi --.I, ‘ .•rmoinh i i i i.s . JUKI I'J 4 W COAST '•uro.-mi’iic !«.-• Bl-i'• Likju' T.i fjilwi-n Udt »• :< lllra-firdi,- I - I NVuqimv l.S H — !'2 ■?' ‘''"ua--- — 13 ■ .Inu'iv — 12 '■■■ i'lourt«- — l. r-i.-iMiv — 17 o . — Zl Til. l.o«| :inl — c;. Tii i .nil — VI |.^i lU "h Sui\ i:g» — -Jii 7 *.. smin-. — -■* i• I rfi” — Uu T7 fill-■ ur — ; 1 "“\ —unnv — -■ '• 5 > sunn — -J ■ , j r>unm — Z>* r>0 Min u. - IS I. I V ||,| „ — IH i'l !.«,n — -| VI, “imni — 1.. »i4 Sum,. Overseas selling prices .AJJoUri s . 77 CJCCJao .IlglgN » —T 81 CoJoflur _ Am.xrdm v io ::<■ Caphdeoit c lt> bv Mhw» - ”• ’ FU rc/'Dnl ■htfrul has. approved a plan to turab -1 ueznn likely to be above average in nurrh Dry,-.sunny spells; wind NW, and west Scotland and -• •- - WEATHER REPORTS YESTERDAY. jtfLDD'ST : c/ 'cluuil - (■ r-iir ■ sun ; sh, showers. ' ■ 1 .* u i- ■ "' r. i- p -jt rv v !■? si NTiirrhcai-n * li**anil 1 mV v’I fj.ii.-i-! ir fturuieru Iinuunl, - nml. U ,.tU : i-rc.-r-. UuMjTiri On J.v. - A.Ou: luiv. Ur» oji a.im^ Me.uKseii, *■ ”* Lu«f- >i irjtru. ■ Hi 1° Nar-lp. i. fvunu iSU T.i "C \ !-f-i»Jn • i !7 Li I.r J-Jj .'Ijilplra. I-*C u-.l.'.ii: PtlWJlT'J. hr Pdpigr.i: » ... .. hi.Mn, Pf » fi>'.- -Wfli.-n kii i ',. M .'Xi: VnqoaMvia Dirt -j : A ^ ’ 1 ' llsh a-national jnzs centre with 'an auditorium and exhibition gallery in Govern: Garden. I ? ,>!.. i.p-i rr. r „ u '“* l - u . *-U 4 i>ra : 1 -|C • L l« . id' I 4 .it I. a lj .1 W\ 1 v «■ , ; V4i h |", K l1 * 'f*-* :«Vi Au r S f*;hi «■ ».» rfir.a ■" THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 h d .“% ,A r | ■fter ff'Vf ! ,rn ?r -.. . r : n ii’J n ' -1 £>*?» y*'. ifcSrE ^■JS! k 1 '1C}J &£>** -■ ^“v **\- ■* •' :.. r " My*-* it ;? ' ' i;; tr«. b ;' J 4ifwM:r WEST fttbopp _;__ Bastille Day unites all true French PJ f. t00 ^ hearts again with little thought Xr^ight given to the history that caused it 0 f rampage i imm?: From Charles Hargrove Paris, July 14 Once again the fall of the stitutionlil monarchy. Defence Minister, explained on Military authorities report- Bastille, which only became a “ It is true we bow lice under the radio this momting that the edly placed an entire platoon national holiday a 300 years the July monarchy, with this Legion hail paraded last year, of policemen _ under arrest to- after that historic event, was difference that the sovereign is and again last May in. Corsica day in connexion with an attach celebrated in Paris and in pro- elected, and . oij$. can change before tie President; yesterday by riot police on an vinciul centres with • ibe him if he does not suit, instead This ye«r, President 1 Giscard industrial suburb of the Basque traditional blend of official of cutting off his head.'. . .” ■ d'Estaing did not hold open city of San Sebastian, ceremonial and popular rejoic- July 44 has, in fact, become house os he did in 1977, when .Those under an-est while an in?- _ a day of recorcilintioa between for toe Erst tone 10,000 people official inquiry is made apd There was a 70-miniite miii- the Army and the naricjj. cemen- file through the state aparti c ? 1 ^ martial considered Hi¬ lary parade down the Champs ted bv conscription. Hence the nients. The staff, apparently, cinde a lieutenant, two ser- Elys 6 es; there were little street ourcrv tni both left and right felt it iras a little too much to grants and dozens of_ enlisted balls under strings of coloured whenever there is any sugges- cope with on a public holiday. ™® n » accorumg to informed lights to the PtTains of accor- tion of abolishing it. But he did throw open the * ... - . deon music; free performances The miKtaiy? parade also grounds and die palac?S 4,500 r 0 MiS^he noli^cant^n who SL±L°Sf? riiiSSE «rv^a_ s an object lesson. mrited gu es ts,_ including 1,200 SSS^SdS^ 35 * 10 " rim report- ■Rtau. ™s . 'l.'V /'.'.ir v JJj -i ■*- •< , >c J *ir. ol efoth- r Penny Syrooc ■.v.-i's-I , The military parade still short notice to trouble spots in the lie de Ssiu. In Brittany, 150 _ entre on one platoon rather - ' .^aKSgi^Ej. •■»■■■ - : draws large crowds, for there any part of the world. This year, oF the troops who cleaned the th an ,j, e en tire comoany ... . . , . - ■ - *;■ I s a w ®^ sp , ot fo * th ? a f me ^ the nan was to demonstrate the beaches atfer the Amoco Cadiz T h e company was pulled out W forces deep Joim in the heart defensive capacity of a tnufi- disaster, divers of the Janus IV of the Bas^ cotumV iramedi- '«"■ •'... in of . of Frenchmen, nonal Army unit, the 27 th record diving exercise and 1^00 atefv aftorthe incident inwhich Pt- • • j *, . * . . ... . T , j whether of the left or the right. Mountain Division, raised over married couples from mountain nni&u-med noli«»jTh?n wenr n » fes' Harold Goodwin (left)., and Mr Bernard Anssenberg standing meditatively in an empty Bearstcd hospital ward. In fact, the Bastille, the Re- a century ago. region* they took the huge SSSft nS^oA“ volution, the monarchy versus its mission is similar to that buffet bv _ storm and rubbed tion in die township of Renteria. TT • "B A • j "■ t-j ■» republic have verv little 0 f the armoured divisions^-to shoulders in an atmosphere of causing an estimated £50 000 in A CQVA !T!QTPl*¥nTV OA^TIIr^ll to do now wnn what has become defend the frontiers against democratic republicanism with da magS. They aUegedlv slashed /U (JCWldJIl flldlci llily iiWSliilwli in fact the fete of the nation; intervention—but in difficult ministers, political personalities, shop windows iridi rifle butts " ® ut 1 d ° recollect a French terrain. They can, however, be diplomats, general^ and senior fn-^ rubber bullets and smoke ments and not economic. The the boilers, but the offer was health authority, and it is now diplomat, beir to one of the use d anywhere. Tius light mod-' officials. grenades throuch the vrindows j . _ - !_ ir _ _■ _7 t. .. . . _ __ r .L - ■ 1. , _ _1 TL!_ fTrA-iT nf Pwnrti h onni ____I ■._-■ Pr.nJ.nf 7 . 1 _I, peuuucs ““““W * luu5,n ' Campaign to save Jewish maternity hospital Stoke Newington, London, of State, on May 24 to plead so” he says. “The authority Anne Cohn, a member of the I de la Concorde . 1 1_ it. -in -- aa. ’ Minen ie kali<itntin i"n *vn imri^rhfiTirf Cii’Q flia TJnircffi^ C 'f TflP Dl/tf* cl ; built 30 years ago with the hospital’s cause. and mountain boots, marched 900 servicemen ivho had ible end very grave. ‘ tricted-to Jews’and the hos- had been dosed, and in-patient replace staff, and the original authority's area general adniini- j al could cater "for the diet of facilities were tvithdrawn when pledge to expand the hospital strator. says that there are 103 QiSIfoslims as well as orthodox the heating system broke down. has been completely forgotten, maternity' beds at the North in 1972 a ddy room was The first boiler failed last We must have a decision from Middlesex_ Hospital, and 99 in. • ivided by the local Jewish August, the second last March, Mr Ennals. If it is that the Enfield District Hospital. • ' mnunity. end the area health authority hospital is to close, we shall “ We have analysed the need, Che hospital was taken‘over said that the hospital must fight hard to keep it open.’* and think that this is sufn- 1 the National Health Service, close. No effort was made to His view is # shared by Mr cient”, he says. “We are con- • 1 an.undertaking given that repair the boilers. Harold Goodwin, a consultant vinced that Bearsted is surplus 'wouid be*extended. Mr Bernard Auisenberg, ar Beamed, who says he is to requirement, and at a time is behaving in an underhand Save the Beamed Campaign. The Dufce de Castres, his- past the president' and the paraded in the morning enter- The in^ecmr-oeneral of rhe manner. No new equipment has says that dieticians do not feel torian and academician, writes government seated on a dais at taining them at a state nation’s security 0 police forces been boughc, indeed the Jewish they ore nutritious enough and today in Lc Matin that the Re- the’ foot of the Obelisk at the luncheon. Since his davs in today confirmed that the corn- community provided a sonic they have to be supplemented volution was something neces- Place de la Conccrde to the Algeria as a young lieutenant, manders of security police de¬ aid machine at a cost of £1,000 by relatives or friends. sarv, hut the kina should have sound of French horns. he lias always had a fondness tachraents in San Sebastian and There has been no effort to Mr William Alderson. the carried it out. “ He was no anti- The Foreign Legion was al- for the military. Pamplona havfc been removed Professor says he paid minister Democracy at risk by police attack on Basques Six days of riots began in bullring inn iigh taxes 2 nt scope or gi ving 5 Political use of drugs deplored From Our Correspondent town in Valencia province, are which they have there as ?. re- From Peter Nichols Madrid simply not enough. suit of Franco’s tough attitude Rome. Julv 14 Histcrians may well write Observers now feel that un- towards the Basque. Professor Ovidto Lefebvre, «>rne day that the Basque war less the people can be con- The Government hardly one of the principal oeople of independence began in the vinced that Senor Adolfo helped matters earlier this accused in the Lockheed scan- bullring: at Pamplona, and - if Suarez’s Goverrfment has the month when it issued a decree dal, told the High Court today they do rhe very police who situation well in hand, democ- law on terrorism, which in that the first two of the three overreacted in the name of raev could crumble iuto chaos, effect the entire population by payments from the American national unity will share much Unless military and police offi- suspending guarantees of civil : From John Roper Health Services Correspondent Cardiff The use of psychiatry as a means of controlling political dissidents was unanimously con- jrfc demned at the annual repre¬ aircraft company were made of the responsibility. • Jotm'Grnssr dissidents was unanimously con- was none in rue aotiar w *- arce \ . auve a decree alrec . _ __ EsDonsiiae 1 one of hi* demned at the annual repre- Union. Even more obnoxious A motion expressing deep pared sanctioning the purcliase in a radio and teievision^brood- flS Ion. fas those who want to porr of about 12 per cent of roorite causes. Sir Keith sentative meeting of the British than the pathetic charades Dincern at the increasing bur- D f Hercules transports from cast last night, but the police destabilize Spain know they can rhe Basque population. That is se-ph. shadow Secretary of Medical Association in Cardiff played out in the name of so- den ot patient care that was Lfae company. could hardly have been more count on the police to give them certainly enough to help ler- atp Tor^ndnqrrv reaffirmed yesterday. called justice in tne Soviet placed on an qvenvorked word professor Lefebvre said that cooperative with the Basoiie new raart y rs - ^ Will continue ronsts caver up their tracks. . London last nisiit his belief Dr J- C. Cameron, chairman Union was the abuse of estab- start was carried unanimously. i a the presence of Mr William aerators even if riiev had tried s 9 l PSjch©logical traps for The latest events might make "^aiding can- of the council, said that a de- ijfhed psychiatric treatment on It said that there was urgent Cowden of Lockheed, he The six davs pf turmoil t * ,e ^ orce s ^ aw order. riie Government more inclined 3 for W testable situation in which those who had not been brought and pressing need to increase handed over 200m lire in 1970 began with the provocative What is at stake is not toaccept thedemandsofeven- be added.''medicine was being. perverted 10 tr,aJl rf B d showed no trained nur^ng sraff. am j 3gom m 1971 fin all assault bv riot police on tnerelv the possibihtv of Basque conservative Basque politicians zon-makine for political reasons hQ devel- symptoms or signs recognized a. The meeting also agreed dial £390,0001 to Signor' Bruno Pal- croxvds packed in the Pamplona secession: more important is for a native Basque police dispersed rtped. The rkills of medical padiological by most Western any further lowenna of profes- miotti, private secretary to Sig- ring, continued with the fatal frasile structure of a force. The idea has already ^ - graduates were fdr the benefit PS.vchiau.sts. Moual -^dards within the nor Mario Tan as si. a Social shot ii? T two Sa« B e country trying to build a been accepted in principle but ner Socre- of people who'sought medical _ Hp . a Chru.nan and a .National Health Service on the Democrat who was then Minis- militants in which the DoUce without a. revolu- has not yet been implemented. Social Ser- help voluntarily. Medical prac- Baptist, he said. In Russia, plea bv governments of msuf- ter 0 f Defence. Signor Tauassi ^ DOt entirelv 6 Sbove tJ °"? a smicture wbicb could Such a concession by Madrid. Serna dee was based on informed con- people were being created coir- ficient finance was unacceot- is also among the accused. suspiciorT and ciTminat^l IS >f ,*t is sub- arltbough certain to be bitterly ttvy. ST? • *. . f u-^. *<• ssl-shkj- ss ssss^ASgs^i£ -s-,a jpa cers are made to realize that rights in the hope of catching disobedience is one of the worst those who are terrorizing the offences which they can com- Basque population, mit, • democracy can be shor Recent and as yet unpubli- down as easily as a few Basque eized surveys indicate that the agitators. secessionist urban guerrilla It is also being argued that movement ETA enjoys the sup- : as loh gas those who want to porr of about 12 per cent of acr-xTuilQnnin Ltwui 1 tKow rnn t*-zcAiia aatmTL«• ■iat government spending can- r tlie council, said that a de “ *-L SSBtKJ T? c “- BSOT SJfe JS ^ -pjfasa ta sssr* d. uudiH« c^sSSr'"ssfid zs ss& doca - T™w m r M SuSr p tasa Esrri" 'T“. S0 Sg'' cSSS£ Itronzest .te^S. fhl ^ bi'S=’ S"T a rfder “ the I “•»" T ™ K!i accused Pmtes- I com_ ia the past riiat be has no in- ci a ,ion „f -’l. ™.„H hold those two beliefs. Heaitbv supporting a rider to the signor Tanassi accused Profes- men and women were being motion requesting the council f0r Lefebvre of lying. Signor pany of unifo-m^d poUcemen ia the P V* *^ at has in : Nation of sovereignty; it could eSeberser^lTT&n^SS tenhon of conducting a political even be granted on a condi- fwrerf m falhr nf forceful use of medical science j a V u -uc por L etebvre ot l\nng. difpior eone berserk in a San <U»hn«ian «uoau orconautung a punocai even De granted rerred to tne roily or starv iorc«ui use oi meaicai suem.es ret j uce( j t0 t he appearance of to determine and circulate a Pnimintri raid that Professor s°“ e oersert. in a »n beoasuan purge. That attitude makes tinnal basis, wirh g groups each as the Snasties or training to mfhet treatment s ] awr in g idiots. showing set of minimum standards es- Lefebvre was making him a lodus ^ ia ! suburb. sense in a democratic country, rations. -neiy by personal taxation so «n a peraon witiiout his consent, p^pus s ign S of Parkinson's pecially of staffing and faclli- “ sacrificial lamb ” . incidents Tend moral On the other hand, the author!- There are se £b -that the scope for givmg mien it can be clearly shown ^ease from the excessive ties below which doctors would SS kr Justification to the Basque ries of state are surely .rfiJSJf-pJ ir , cenam reser- stunted.” that he is a danger to himself drug doses ^ had received.’ feel i He' continbed^ “In the or to others",^he said. Our The shortage of trained tion. ___jalth field, and much more position is based not on the purses iu tbe hospital service, the G ddy. the need for private political views of the patients vdjch has been growing year serric -—^ending cannot be replaced involved, but on their forceful V ear, endangers standards of edge, government-expenditure. No iiubjecrion to psychiatric pro- patient care, the meeting was He liter how well kitemkHoed cedares.” told. Mr A. Gourev’itch, of be d. c.._U ;_u. , _ I scriwc iu ■* ucujutiaLic cuuriLvy. vatlOOS. juSfiSatSn^to tfae^taSe g n ^e ° ther *»and, the autfaori- There are several possible 5?^"? ties_ of any state are surely advantages. It would remove --- - Bud ms secretary, ne iinea ouc _vr fnr nrh&r- «!«»««« k uie i;vn ouara, patient care, the meeting was He realized that that would ^s^LuI^GuL ffoS fi? «*? * -V to th^nSn^ %i2^££*SiL told. Mr A. Courevitcb, of be difficult, but doctors won- ChrittE? Demo out DrfSS P. robab J y «11 for .the resigna clashes. “* ^ V " ““ Itmsters nis^y be, no matber I • The meeting urged the Birmingham, said / ftr huge tiurir budgets, (and ‘ assembly of the World Medical .e • borrowing and taxing Association in Manila next Nov- oirnuiiKiiaiu, . luat ‘ n IeJ adv |5 e on 016 dilemma: Minister vv-bo is also on trial, jr*** 7 l “ s “““t"! ■ S 1 ® m . e inierior, aumacer. It would do away with obvious hospitals throughout the were they to treat some nJ^ c e JCnister from Franco, they revealed Bupt that is no solution. Given targets for ETA terrorists too countrv the number of properly patients well and the rest as . 19g8 t March 1970 Si"- bow ^ Govern- the same police forces and the and if the extremists beean trained nurses was too small best they could, or in the end first “ ent actuaII y 1x35 0ver the same rieurtance on the part of Wiling feflovv Snues to maintain adequate standards, all inadequatelv. 5S t leter Franco-trained police. Senor Suarez to set rid oF S i StJE - “ When it gets impossible we Tiie proposal to add the rider T ^ ssi an d' Signor The Government’s inability to politically committed officers, govemmebr, ETA might find its.' close beds now at the drop of was put and lost. Gui we accused of using tirejr conn- .°Jtije situation represents there is no guarantee that a new popular suppon waniug. - ISiSS? l °TC mf w l 5 P “ n J Intenor Minister would be able Finally, such a solution would m m . ¥ T ■ 1 _ a _ Jl _ democracy'. The kind of to do any better. offer a pnlrien nnnnrhrniru tn dea -? 7 ^ S on °£ *- e Interior. Minister. It would do away with.obvious «ded to i^y .for them;, ember to condemn such actions, trained nurses was too small best they could, or in the end r inisters can never ident ify At its last meeting in Dubh'n an to maintain adequate standards, ail inadequatelv. **-• d teod al] the neglected, the observer from the_ Soviet Union “Wheai it gets impossible we Tiie proposal to add the rider (fashionable anas Of need attended for .the first time. close beds now at the drop of was out and lost. r iasbk>nable anas Of need attended for the first time. f v d'suffering newly as effect!- - - -;- .. ‘Jy us the- public.” - t * ”■ • Ministers bad -to-', make Wnlt nnln qi ‘ • dices.:Decentralized: decision- kJvll“UvlU Hi iking was EQdubicablv more * _ - iecore than of central gov- ar AQc; |V/f r V mnent The Spastxcs Society ill vilua j v B I £ - ms working proof of that _. r nh. By Christopher Warman - Caffing for tax cuts, so that rt - T ?l*,. i ? 1 P 0 f aIlce ot 1416 Self-help aids inner-city areas, Mr Shore says inner-citv 1 Higher grants for C130 J ; postgraduates Z&TSi&tfSfS SaVS New grant rates for post- P^d Sl.Gm (£800,000) : graduate students for 197S-79 -— beukian Foundation and Tosco were announced yesterday. •_ _ Stores. For students living away from \ CJUCC DOllCC The increase in the self-help home and attending an estab- r , mov'ement had come partly Jishmenr in London, tbe grant QTrP^I TiriTl'f'P because of the desire for , will increase from £1,655 to chase of 14 Hercules C13Q araocr3c >’ : , 1De , to do any better. offer a golden opnortunitv to Sbtarv tr^spore In 2?“ s " ch rn as . '““portment of the build a new unpotitirized pblice exchange toe AnwricSi air- lb ? f« re transfer of tbe former police in the Basque region dur- £ orce which could be put to Scoot is^S^ have commissioner of secun^ log the past week served .to re- work where it is most needed— "iH 01 Rm (£800 000 1 ° policy in Pamplona to a small inforce die unfavourable image, in the troubled north. rrh . ' . . By Christopher Warman beukian Foundation and Tosco were announced yesterday. -wt _ w Calling for tax cuts, so tbar T? 16 inrportauce of the role Stores. For students living away from V CUlCt POllCC ire doors could be opened individuals and commimity The increase in the self-help home and attending an estab- , ‘ organizations surii as the helping the movement had come, partly lishment in London, tbe grant afreSt DfinCe riecy. Sir Keith said that regeneration, of innee-cny areas because of Lhe desire for , will increase from £1,6?5 to B “ ts meant more ripcentvalfoa- was emohasized yesterday bv decentalization of power, “the £1,990. For tliose living away />+ niPlrnHOifAfC ^5 -21 ^ SI Mr Shore, Secretanr of State conviaion that small is beauti- from home and studying out- U* . more : power to ueoofe Mr Shore, Secretary of State conviction that small is beauti- from home and studying out- 1D ggj, “-fa ow an"i wf5i w» f° r Environment. ful, and the feeling of alien- | side London, it will rise from From Our Own Correspondent cord for the effectrw nf He said the many self-help .ation from powerful and £1,475 to £1.610. For those Rome, July 14 _ tvu¥C ICC Ul ..rr-v ... U... I.. J ramAra kiiraaiirmAi' 1 lirino nr hnmtf It inll inrrMrn A Viinarinn mliramon nvrinrt e money entrusted to thm” ' organizations that had sprung remote bureaucracy”. living at home, it will increase Mr Dorrien Belsno rhatrman MP the past decade, includ- In the inner cities parricu- \ fro™ £L075 to £ 1 ,_ 10 . lhe Spastics Society ■ said tenants’ associations and larly, an additional sirumulus j ~ rlzer that it would free a bousing cooperatives, were not had come from the decline of T ra : n jnmiirv w of income m conflict with the activities some of the traditional insritu- \ Aram “ r . e Daughter’s tour of Italian M \ drid P re P ares • ■ cirrbs on priSODS upsets parents tanker lorries From Our Own Correspondent result of the treatment meted ?f°? , .9 u r Correspondent A Venetian policeman expert Rome, July 14 out by the authorities. M Inked Jl £to i4 action - hv i,*r’ in spotting pickpockets at work The parents of Stephania They say she iras taken to a seaside camDsite among the crowds of tourists Maurizio, a 22-year-old student, ^apfosbospitaJ after her arrest disaster, the Spanish Govern- !!:«& sir, a.'sa s » f *>- is : income of more than “l C0nrBCC w® “e activities some ot tue tratfitionai lnsntu- --.- J , .. l- V l “ ,ls ,T, . nress and Dublic ooinion to - ■ *.*1. recnlat ions restricting transit of - Utile ucmnnJnri^ - of central and local govern- dons in the face of population ; A public inquiry into the fire which the most remarkable s P^ess ana puDUC opiraon to u, Jury to her foot caused by lo! r ries ^ lh daocernuBcar-iaes nto?^'8238E ■nenc. “Sdf-he]pisc«npJen.en- movemnnr and rhe^ni-np of | on*n Penance loPsd.dingion J». . . • seasce her^ cnndmonal release the explosion._ °£o5Jh b^lfnT^ 8 m a year of the cecoounenda- uzs of the 1 -Royal Conmasaon Gambling were imple- xzted. . . - . communities by redevelopment, train in which 111 people were ment. ~sett-neip is compjemeu- movement and the OreaJs-up ot ; on tne renrance to raamngton roe last. through buHtup areas, tary to them.” communities by redevelopment. I train in which 11; people were He nonced . the . thiers trom custody after having been She was first moved to Poz- The Road Safety Committee Indicating rhe Government’s “ The family, the churches, rhe killed and 17 injured on uJy. j>olished technique m St moved around various southern zuoli prison, then taken ro mp r emereen e «rinn in .—■Hf- . k!__c ,.II hnnin in T,.. nM n MnH.-’c Snnapr W>iaf ctmH.- th<»___ J___f :„;i _„T.» _I “ c . emergency session in thiePs from custody after having been she was first moved to Poz- j _ ‘ ' ' V willingness to give greater neighbourhood community, in 6 trill begin in Taunton on Mon- Marie’s Square. What struck the p r j 5 o as half a dozen times since Potenza jail, where she and Madrid vesterdav oysonmurd^ta. ““4 was ; S P ^fr Shore accepted dm the Repairs close theatre as the tourist made a quick f j at £g S coniEs.^ ^ 2SSSiwfiSfeSfe " snme areas that was not so. help that people gave to one The Shaw Theatre, Camden, movement and would be less . “ JU "^ Sarfied She was later shifted to'Bari to rife trfteSnamiw^S ' Mr Shore _was speaking ar a another, might be given some- home of die Nadonal Youth S ^' t0 feel encroaching ggjJP”' t * an „2d d grwip. then to 3enevento. The Gristing secondary tos Even • one " da y conference m London times with more sensitivity and Theatre, is to be closed in Octo- fu !*F®. rs - c he denied anv contacts® with parents maintain tbar at rimes before last Tuesday’s horrifying ?llSh cities organized by be more acceptable to tbe re- her for 42 weeks while loose B ”° ng t? ,ck ’ die Smne le ” of !3dl Sey did not know where she gS toS oSnte P 2£rS£ Stoe^ n 2 Ma2 4 ^ National Council of Social . cip.ent thaii anj-tfajng that gov- asbestos claddng is removed at ^oVlav^ae^ufo? w?o l ? ved Cities connected with terror- was and could . provide no Carlos de la Rapka. the toira's • reet, Step ney, on-May. 4. . Service mt h the Calouste GuI- ernment could achieve. a co_st_of ElaS.OOO. _ imn Hi? fS ism and had had no brushes comforrw try w persuade her municipal autoorities had ^ “ 3 ’ -- - - - -: ' I _ , brought hhn to Venice each with the law before her arrest to eat Her hunger strike of 24 demanded that such traffic be - /l¥lh/^ilcOri^l/%ir7/v#|^wU / vl # |; n n'lon#1^4\rklf\nrT L° rd Mountbattcn day to irork. • -Her parents stated at days brought her weight down banned from the coastal road ^imCUSCrillClZefllOrJQOiflmg Jana lOO long ! Admiral of the Fleet Lord ™le the boy was under L’AquiIa where they live that to fWlb. Mranwhile the Health ® ® 1 Mountbatten- of Burma is to interrogation, his father was they are convinced of her mno- Three requests for her to be Ministry announced that four i*m jonn Young historic cost, but what are the to him about a case in which a open ^ hamc Broadlands worried at his absence and cence but feat both for her released on bail had failed We more people Irad died in awung Reporter alternatives?” grant for modernizing a three- Ro^ge*. Hampshire, to the reported him as missing. Tbe physical health and the pos- no longer know”, tbe parents hospitals today bringing the verpool - mm Most local authorities in bedroom house would be public next spring.' father was charged with instig- sibfiity that she might become said today, “which saint to official death toH from the Local aoihonties' that hold 'inner cities that have acquired awarded only on condition that -I-!— ation to commit crime. a real extremist in prison as a torn to.” disasterto 144. policeman »*as tbe .elegance h arrfiSC Mareh s . with niucb the pickpocket ‘ . . reached for the wallet as soon Sigiwina Maurizi. r arrest on March 5. Flora Pierri Ardlaaone, another Earlier rhe civil governors of Signorina Maurizio was **” accused of terronsra, Barcelona and - Tarragona pro- resterf in a Nanlex flat afr<»r 3 hunger strike against ,r|n Ces ordered all tanker lorries «“the~ tourisr made a q“itick crested, in a Naples flat after condtos “ tpU “* I ® r s der ® d ^ ***** ,0 ™ movement and would be less being injured by a bomb P ns ° n conuiuons. _ | ttuuse new toK highways rather liki>K r ro ferf the eocroarhine explosion, and charged wirh She was later shifted to Bari j than the often narrow and tmi joim Young aiming Reporter verpool Lord Mountbatten Admiral of tbe Fleet Lord Mountbauen 1 of Burma is to verpooi , . Most local authorities in bedroom house would be public next spring. ixicai authorities ’ that hold 'inner cities that have acquired awarded only on condition that -^ 1 — id they are unable to use large land banks are Labour- the applicant installed a 4.000- . , ire rebuked yesterday by Mr controlled. Tbe Minister’s gallon sewage tank at an esti- KetUTOing tO Stage fginald Freeson, Minister, for remarks thus indicate a diverg- mated cost of £3.000. Hughie Green, the television a real extremist in prison as a torn to.* disaster to 144. Lords join criticism of EEC budget over agriculture K52 01, ••...• ... ownership. In Liverpool, for the Greater London Council _ The all-party House of Lords loo much land m inner instance, it is the Labour Party bousing policy comnuctee. He — ■■■■■ Committee on the European ties is lust a plain eyesore that has strongly .opposed charged them with having • Communities yesterday Iin«f up = said. Itseems to have been Liberal and -Conservative betrayed their training in per- Oxford poetry CnaiT vriSother cntics of theEEC ni ?’£ bale thought for schemes to make land available mining high-density housing To a small but vociferous slice budget proposals for 1979 by : future use and, unlike our to nrivrte develooers. developments after the war. In D f ch e population, talk ot an attacking too much spending on pejnenee with the new and ‘ Mr Freeson also criticized league-with councils and civil autumn election has only one the Common Agricultural panaicg towns, held ouro in rouncils that laid down exces- servants, they had destroyed meaning: tbe five-yearly poll to policy, which would prevent 0 IV* l/* , nT»rft<Lf_liTrn krtkd Cii>a - ma _________IfJ._— ha 0 - 11 H l CZ _I _ _ _ C T 1 _._ _ _ _ ' - ■ ■ • By George Clark nearly 1.5m is to be spent on mission in preparing the bud- additional sources of revenue. Political Correspondent various forms of storage. get this would be £L764m. ■ Although the commission’s fore- TL. Hniw.nf TnrHc This criticism supports the The Treasury had estimated cast is obviously, very much a .. rthA 56 complaints made by the Labour that Britain’s gross contribution, shot m tbe dark , we suggest ; CoSnities yest2day Ji^5 “ Common Market safeguards after allowing for other factors. that :t isjuot too earl^ to give .- iirWw e rrit& S y thrFFT committee in a pamphlet issued would be about £l,500m com- serious attention to the prob- “!S«S25?fap i!tq i£ yesterday calling attention to pared with abort £ 1 ^ 00 m in lems involved.” sue of the “food raoira- 1978.. ... . ..The cpnMi'ttee complamed uctEiuwsa as »uuu uuu or a nousenoiaer oeimi ur<-imc(.iuic uun prorosea episoa&s ranemg rrorn • _____ ___ *?*•- w , --o— “-,, - K-ieie - j-u-.-, acticsble. “If the authority allowed a new bathroom oolv contempt by politicians of all jJi S ii academic theatre to low T - he c 0 ®.™ 11 ®® comments w mountain” is expected to the transitional arrangements”, a better basis for a debate, xides not to' develop it if the roof was renewed- of parties. school bor farce. In The Sun- ominously: It does not seem reach 2,500,000 tonnes this year, the report states. Lords Select Committee on the resjy. itself for- municipal another wbo was forced to have’ Mr Freeson defending archi- dap Times tomorrow Anthony poss^je that the Dt^Mt shape The Lords Mmmitt^ sratej After esaauimnE alJ J^SHonSPorace*'30p) 9 - The nted housing, that'authority; the bedroom ceilings raised six tects. said the failures of some H olden recalls die savage in- £AP ,^n be marommed that Britain’s -toe of die 1979 mo» oTtam. Je M the obJd get someone else to do inches.; and-of another who housing developments in the fitting of recent elections and .indefinitely. KEC budget is estmjated ay tee sa>d. It u P 0 snb le cenernl Election (Labour Common j whether by building for was required to alter the height inner dtie* were the collective assesses the prospeas for this H saj'S that of the total 2.S0I units of account or -0.4 that the Community’s resources Market Safeguards Committee, 72 le, far disposal. It may menu 1 of bis passaBe-tvav step. responsibilirv of all those v -ear. guaranteed expenditure of 9.5m per cent of tiie totiU. At the ex- will be insufficient to finance Albert Street. London, NW1. 60p sposins'of land at less than This week 'an MP had written involved. ‘ ; ' European units of account, change rate used by the com- the 1981 budget without some inclmUng postage). THE TIMES : SATURDAY. JULY 15 1978 1 OVERSEAS 1 f H M at th P- m ul ui th M bi a< ai M st th th ui ca Rr Li of ar ar Ul R w sc ta to u; St to G. al re fo bt hr in P < 1 st Ul • ai ta dt ui sf< U • m in. S' Wl az ] te : St! S’ pr' tii Sf ca pa wl, fu ot I M Ti it sti ra . St ba Wl’ lo-' vi*' in su sb ur se tii aC of in di Bi th w« ye re m F Di St re V ti th si* m ca rb SI aL 71 Mi rj. iru K( Vi in lit Hi 1C IV M. I»a HI at m Hr 1C th> U> told to leave Fro-m Moshe Brilliant Tel Aviv, July 1+ -Kamel, “his Egyptian 1 tfpptisftc sthr-ready: to -jneet die'-first- number, and Mr Cyrus Vance, three, but not ready to subnut Israel maintained blackout on the American. Secretary of State. Isnd or sovereignty under any the details o£ Mr Szer Wela-- It was said,that now the ice " circumstances.’—Reuter. ‘ man’s dramatic talks with Presi-.- has- been broken the London - 'Our .Diplomatic Correspondent dent Sadat in Austria yesterday, talks may'be able to get down .wires’: Mr Peres said ih’Lon- hut the very - meeting was to business. ■ d.m that the air .of gloom over viewed, here as a breaking of Mr Weizman jslll report to Middle East peace negotiations the logjam. tha- Cabinet, at its weekly toeer- tygs overdone, -and that .- the As sc?n here the immediate , j n g. on Sunday. He’ flew back, ground for next week's London cruse of- the' impasse so.ee ‘ from Austria today to a military discussions W3s better prepared. Egypt abruptly broke off polk base to evade reporters and than'ever before- tical talks ■ in Jerusalem was then drove directly to Jem- . This was not lust a matter of President Sadar’s insistence that sa \ em . . formal negotiations, but also there was no point in further They conferred for one and the atmosphere between the meetings unless Israel changed a quarter' hours. .After their people concerned which, he felt, its position. This was viewed t hey bath declined to 'had been improved after Mr here as a precondition, .which, make statements to the press. YVeizraan's and his own recent tii^ Israelis flatly rejected- Members of the uduaJIv well- ' meetings with President Sadat. Political sources hare said the . in farmed parliamentary foreign Mr Peres, who had been in Israeli Defence Miaister went affairs and ‘security ’committed London as a guest of the Labour tii Austria yesterday with no . SBl ;d today tS-’t- thev. were just Party, particularly • commended authority to deviate from, the much in the dark about Mr the; statement of principles on Israel peace plan submitted to Weizitian's mission as the gen- the Middle. East, dreyvn up by Egypt in December. So it was eral public. The committee met Herr Brandt and Dr_ Bruno assumed here that -in talking Mr Dayan today but be gave Kreisky, which' he said, was with Mr Wievooan and schedule them no iuform?r:on. - • ins another meeting, the Egyp- Sadat appeol : Presitfanr S 3 dat tiao leader tacitly dropped his ended a week o-f .Middle East precondition. t?lks in Puschl. Austria, today Observers said the Cabinet with an appeal ti Israel to show more flexibility. Of'Mr Ee-zin, he said : ** What he wants is securicy, coexis-. tence: narmri relations and all the land and sovereignty. I may have -to reappraise its directives to Mr Moshe Dayan, the Foreign' Minister, for his forthcoming London meeting with Mr Muhammad Ibrahim probably one of the best and most realistic i<sued'on behalf of the Socialist International. Commenting on the agony ” suffered by tile .Christian com¬ munity in Lebanon, Mr Peres said Syria had-xommirted a mis¬ take from-the political point of view, and a crime from the point of view of humanity. Russians give version of trials From Our Own Correspondent Moscow, July 14 Soviet television tonight read out the full text of a Joug article to be prinred tomorrow in all the main Soviet news¬ papers on the Shcharansfcy case, the first official mention of it to Soviet.readers- Entitled “ According to Their Deserts" it. said both Mr Sbcbaransky and Mr ' Filatov deserved their sentences. They were not victims who acciden¬ tally made a false step; they were “ criminals who were well aware of wtiac they wer doing.” zMr Shcharansky, it said; wan¬ ted to leave his homeland for the West. But there was no place far him there as there were thousands of unemployed' engineers. He was net so silly tliar he bad nor seen, this, lie statement said. Senators demand US retaliation Continued from page 1 • more visits by Soviet officials —\I~ri f nr trade because of the sentence?, a «" C d„ £ S" e a^n S J V X , ’sS d e ' t .Foreign Office spokesman ioid. y n \ on Dc Owen, the Foreign becre- of Jhe s , JXb&fB&mSfe Sands froTc^ro S! “% the.’United States’to retaliate t0 on - =>*“?»*• . . against Moscow. ’ Mr John Davies, shadow Senator Jacob Javits (.Repub- Secretary, said the ver- licain ’ culled MrShchaYansky’s ‘dirt* were ,'a . -travesty uf conviction, and sentence an *«***: and a ? ratal? of. “international disgrace" and r * 1a Helsinki agieemc-nt . an “ insult to the word of tbe Brussels: The liberal group in President of tbe United States, rhe European Parliament con- who personally says Sbchar- demced the imprisonment as an sky never spied for tbe .“ a barbarous attack on human United States.” . ' rights”. Meanwhile diplomatic sources Geneva: A Swiss Government said Mr Shcharansky’s wife, offered to give asylum to dissi- Natalya, . would meet Vice-’ dents, now being tried or.jnst President Walter. Mondale in sentenced was. communicated Washington on Monday.— to the Soviet Ambassador ip Reuter. Bonn today (Alan McGregor London: Britain may cancel writes).' Vietnam mocks China for denying refugees entry Bangkok, July 14.—Viemam Chinese applying for repatria- mocked China todav for clos- tion. Those lists, the Hanoi fu mg its border tn Chinese refugees from Vietnam and Cambodia. The Communist Party news¬ paper Nhan Dan commented on China’s insistence that, as from newspaper said, included names nf 1.507 Chinese residents who fled from Cambodia.—UPI. Hanoi: China’s suspension of aid to Vietnam and Albania shows that the Chinese are July 12, all refugees must have using their foreign assistance as “repatriation certificates”. “a tool of big-powef ebauvin- “All of a .udden they have ism”, the; Vietnamese news- closed the Chinese border gates paper Nhan Dan said today, in the faces of the ‘victimized “Aid. has’ become a means Chinese’, the newspaper said, for the Chinese authorities to The article, broadcast by impose ebeir will on recipient radio Hanoi and monitored countries and to force them to here, said tbe exodus of about take their line and become a 150,000 ethnic Chinese from mere tool like .'he Pol Pot-Ieng Vietnam in the past few months Sary clique in Kampuchea had been inspired by China as (Cambodia)”,’ the article cou- a propaganda plot". tinued.- Tt denied Chinese allegations . “ When the recipient coun- tbar some of the refugees were tries go against their .will, the Vietnamese spies and de- Chinese authorities retaliate nounced Peking for refusing to brutally." — Agence France- accept Hanoi’s lists for ethnic Presse. Paul Robeson turned down for Hollywood honour Los Angeles, July 14-.—Paul as saying tbe rejection of Robeson,’ the black ■ singe f Robeson had nothing to do’with whose left-wing politics upset bis politics, many Americans, has been rq-; ’ Robeson earned most of his fused a posthumous star in the Fame on the stage and in con-- Hollywood Walk of Fame, the certs. .His: ■ films included Hollywood Chamber df Corn? I Emperor /ones, Sanders of the merce disclosed today. River, Showboat .- and. King Robeson, who died in January, ! Solomon's Mines.' a [ ; . . . 1976, aged 77. was nominated The singer was a frequent by Actors Equity and the visitor to the Soviet Union and Screen Actors’ Guild to - have had his son educated there a star bearing’his name imp Ian- ■ . Robeson’s. passport was con Pakistanand Turkey agree on defence From Our Correspondent- Islamabad, July 14 . Mr Gunduz Okcun, the Tur¬ kish Foreign Minister, who arrived here yesterday, is un¬ derstood to have discussed the f articipation of Pakistan and urkey in fhe non-aligned con¬ ference and their -future role in Cento at three-hour talks here today with Agha Shahi, I dare Pakistan’s Foreign’Minister. . | political ■ Mr Okcun, who is visiting Pakistan for the first time since the new Turkish Govern¬ ment assumed office, said yes- 1 terday -that Cento should he re-evaluated in the context of detente-. “ 1 believe our age is not au age of confrontation but an age ’• of cooperation and detente ", he said. - He also- expressed die hope thac India’s attitude towards Turkish and Pakistani appli¬ cations for guest status at the non-aligned conference would | be Favourable. | Mr Okcun, who left tonight l for Karachi on his way. home, a.iso met General 7 .iai ul-Haq, chief martial law administra¬ tor, and President Fazai EJahi Chaudhry. - Mr’ ’ David *•’ Newson, "the United States Under Secretary uf Srate, is arriving here later today bn a three-day ' visit after From Our Own Correspondent Jo ba ones burg, July 14* v *‘ The Rev Edward Morrow, the ’ Yicar-Gcaera-t of the Aosncau Church in Namibia {Somh-VVest Africa), his wife Laurecn, ami ' Father Heinz Hunke, a Roman Carbolic - priest, were today ordered to leave Namibia.with¬ in seven days. Tbe order, signed by Mr Justice Mar¬ tin mis . Steyn. the . South African-appointed Administra¬ tor General, was served ou the m b>; tiie security pol icc Mr Morrow is the third prominent Anglican churchman to be expelled fro in Namibia in the past six vears. He .had been the. senior Anglican church mat] in the territory .until the 'arrival in Windhoek a week ago of the Most Rev James -Kauluma, the newly elected Bishop of D arc ar aland. Immediately after the expul¬ sions’ became known Sir David Scott, the British Ambassador in Pretoria, called on the South African Foreign Ministry to re¬ quest -that the order on Mr Morrow and his wife oe re¬ versed. Mr Hans-Joachim Eick, the West German Ambassador, made a similar representation ou behalf of Father Hunke. Sir David said the timing of the expulsions was “ most un¬ helpful . No reasons for the expulsions were given, but Mr Morrow told The Times that tbe South Afi- can authorities probably wanted him and Father Hunke *' out of rhe way” before tbe arrival of the United Nations task force to prepare the wav for elections. The expulsion order came only a dav after the South-Wesi Africa People’s Organization (Swapo) had accepted the wes¬ tern settlement plan for rhe ter¬ ritory. Another ftyctor' influencing the expulsions of the Morrows may have been au Anglican con¬ ference in Maseru, Lesotho, last week which issued a statement opposing the plan. The probable reason for Father Hunke's expulsion is a pamphlet which, he circulated a few weeks ago alleging torture by South African troops .Mr Morrow, a South African, has been in Namibia for just over three years. Father Hunke, a -German, has been •there for 10 years. The expulsions were under the “Undesirable Persons Re¬ moval " proclamation which was amended only a day ago to empower the Administrator- General to deport undesirable Governor Jay Rockefeller and his mother after a funeral service for John D. Rockefeller, his father, who was killed in a car crash Blacks quit Rhodesia broadcasting From Frederick Clc-aiy Sdl'ubury, July 14 Two African members of the board of the Rhodesia Broad¬ casting - Corporation have resigned, only five days after they and two other African:', were appointed. Mr Washington Sansule. a lawyer, and the Rev Charles Msnyoba, a'Methodist minister, said in a letter of resignation to the Co--’-misters of Informa¬ tion, Dr Elliott GabeJIah and Mr Pieter vau der Byl. that they had accepted the posts as governors in the belie: Lhur they coaid change the policy of using radio and television for Government propaganda. But their belief was misplaced. The resignations of uvo of the four blacks on the RBC board has embarrassed thv transitional Government. Both men are Matabele from Bula¬ wayo and it is rumoured that they have been pressed into resigning by supporters of Mr Joshua Xkomo. the co-leader ol the -Patriotic Front guerrilla movement. However. the!* - assertion that radio and tclcvi sion are used For Government propagand i> historically correct. Since tbe uansitioiia] Gov¬ ernment came into being four months ago the RBC has paid far more attention to African Nationalist affairs and even reported the views of critics o7 the Government. Much RBC reporting is still government propaganda but nowadays with a strong African bias More Africans are appearing on radio and television. Last night Bishop Abel Muzorewii. tbe Executive Council member and president of the United African Naiioual Council, made his first half-hour " address to the nation ” and African music with throbbing drum; replaced the usual martial music used when Mr Ian Smith, the Prime Minister, appears. Bishop Muzurewa left un¬ expectedly for the United States todav for Talks with said that progress towards abo¬ lishing racial discrimination has been arrested by dif- __ fercnces over segregated I arms cache, toppled a"Hoi 1 ' flats today killnig at Tea* Vicious feu thins ranks of Palestini guerrillas From Christopher Walker Beirut, July. 14 , In the wake of this « kidnapping of at leas. United Nations troops .f j^T. Lebanon, a vicious -feuiV broken out . inside tKe. fi of Palestinian Bnerr il^e 'j 3 near Tyre. .x By early tonight, - V rrf repurts from the region | that seven Palestinians- been killed and a furtbi wounded in a fierce gun S inside the El Buss re camp. Today’s violence represi ' a determined attempt h Fatah, the largest Palot guerrilla group, to crack: - on the breakaway Pali Liberation Front, a ft group which is closely a ated with Iraq and ; - responsible for kidnappinj later releasing the -V United Nations soldiers. ■, Id Sidon, also id the trfli south of the couutry, a gri was thrown into the ^reg headquarters ' . of . .'the- ^ Liberation Front, another rraq revolotionary group> people were reported deat five injured. . - By tonight it was rep from the south that the ei shoritng bad died dovrir that about 40 members o PLF had .surrendered to Fatah commanders-and ha over their weapons. Arms blast: An expt “like a small earthqa apparently in a Palest tor members of Congress. Meanwhile, Mr Ernest Eulle, been achieved, the Co-minister nf Finance. Francc-Prcsse. schools, hospitals and some residential areas. He said the inability to remove racial dis¬ crimination was one of the transitional Government’s big¬ gest failures. The whites’ argumeut that retaining tribal trust lands would be of benefit. to Afri¬ cans was false, Mr Bulle said, because there were economic advantages such as investment in opening the areas to people of all races. Muzorcws appealIn his address to the nation last night. Bishop Muzorewa appealed several rime* to guer¬ rillas to “come home”. The internal accord reached in March bad ended the need for fighting, he said. “ I reach out first to the nationalist guerrillas wherever you are right now. I want you to know- that the objectives of your war and the people’s , war have now —Agence people, police sources saixt explosion occurred in a,” ment in a predambt Palestinian neigh bonfhodt West BairuL Israeli arms: Senior we diplomatic . sources', in B, said today that Israel supplied Lebanese Chri militias vath two shipload arms since last weekV figt between the rightists^ Syrian troops. .. .... • The sources said weapons, mostly small arms anti-tank rockets. ' were loaded from ■ two sniatt :tj ships near the port of Jn( 10 miles north of Beiruti - ’ Leftist newspapers in Bi' ; have reported that - EU weapons have been shippq Juniye for rhe PhslangistF and to the snrTll pdrej Dbaveh for fighters-:^ ■ Christian National -run Party.—Reuter. Conference dares not go too far in fighting apartheid Church quandary in South Africa From Nicholas Ashford the churches should condone dividual member churches Johannesburg, July J4 violence as a last resort to rile conference's failure to Tbe dilemma facing ’ the ch ®"* e .! I,e system. take a more positive stand on Christian churches in South The discussion n ? investment these two issues was criticized Africa— Cleveland hit by police strike believe oppressive—was w this week at the annual Mauritania peace aim t in Sahara Dutch Reform churches and a ist ones. In a country where the majority, both black and white, are churchgoers, it is an influential body. Repeatedly and unequivocally the council has stated its total oppositiprj. to apartheid, con¬ demning ibe system's violence Cleveland, July 14.—The 2.t»00-stroflg police force nf Cleveland, Ohio’s largest city, went on strike today and stopped most city services. Mr Dennis Kucinich, the highlighted ® n< ? a lon - c and ambiguous resn- act i on to ta j- ei Would a cess a- j Guard' troops*^ to^rotect^rtic 1 anout a ,ir>sral economy, nnuai con- , st3l, “' ’*on of new investment produce | 800.000 population. ■ In a broadcast, the colt the desired changes or would Health workers, .-street it merely increase the misery cleaners, parks employees and r»F the blacks • At wh-it stage other municipal . workers could resistance be regarded as ) refused to cross the police •F'.’Ll ‘‘'k'C - I picket luies set up in protest There was also an awareness ‘ .... - gress of the South African ‘ hal ^vestments had largely Council of-Churches here. be ?" used lu W° rt ,he p,c : „ .. __ ... vailing pattern ot power and The council represents all the BrIw j anH callin'- Nouakchott, July 14.— new Mauritanian bead of s Lieutenant-Colonel Mustt Ould Salek, tnday pledget work for peace in the Sah guarantee freedoms, promo multi-party system and b about a liberal and . . - 1 11 ori ,r ile ,:, e" mam denominations in South investors Africa except for the white rore1311 imcirors on to ’ rcrisc radically their investment and handful of minor nonconform- P r ^'«s in such a t hai religious bodies are very " 6cneni 6 tU much under the critical gaze of P n U ° t" ., ... the South African authorities. Bishop . Tutu said that the A clear srand d&afau>t invest . council was not making a speci- mtfllt or in farour „f resistance ftc call for withdrawal of invest- could bc coff?tnjcd a „ a „ ment or the stopping of new_iu- „ff enco under the Terrorism vestment. What we are saying Aci p or jj,j s reasof> rhe enn- to foreign companies and f cre nce had a lawyer presenr and approving of the aims of foreign churches is thaL w-e have throughout the discussion on _ __ * r_r__ vnn nit' on fnp roll* c* liberation in southern Africa- . This year, however, the con¬ ference was called upuo tu con¬ sider practical trays in which the system could be.changed if the country's white rulers continued tu turn a. deaf ear liven you the facts on the role foreign investment.' r.f overseas investment in South Notwithstanding the mod- Africa", he said. “It is now L .rate tunc of tlie conference’s up to them to decide v.-hul final resolutions, one Govern- they do. Tt is their responsi- ment minister accused the biliry.” ^ _ churches of using insulting lan- . On the cues tion of violence— ---j- t- t , I to the pleas'bv blacks “to treat \nsttSi .-to -JPeWran,; Deih) ^“’Lus as human.beings ”, as Bishop N-nbul. v - I Desmond Tutu, .tlie." council*!* the conference made no judg background paper or “justifiable resistance" as the council prefers to call it— ted on the \¥alk of Fame, a scrip of pavement on Holly¬ wood Boulevard. Tbe Hollywood Chamber of Commerce selection committee, which chooses the stars, rejec¬ ted the’nomination. "Mr William Hert 2 . the chairman of tbe com¬ mittee. was nor available Tor comment today.- Rseated iu 1950 because he re¬ fused to sign, a statement that he had never been a member of I the Communist Party. His pass¬ port was’ returned to him in j 1958 and he later lived in England. Sir Charles Chaplin was denied a place on the Walk of Fame For 16 years before his gvvdgc and seeking a confronta¬ tion with the Guvcronieni. Bishop Tucu denied this. “I am not blouddiirstv. I am not even a radical ”, he >aid. “ I am that it was theu- only someone who liopc-s his ___ __ __,. ...Jtimate for Cbri-- fellow tvbite South Africans can spoken o» commued j inyestmeot in upholding the tians tu resist “ evil lawsThe see that we blacks arc still resistance in outlying areas or es i st ] 0 g system, and whether paper has been referred to in- holding out our haDds to them.* Atghamstan to tue new | “ against the dismissal of 13 policemen who declined to go on one-nidn pdtrols in crime- ridden areas. A city judge issued a tem¬ porary restraining. order against the strike only minutes before it began last • night- But the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’* Association said the stoppage would continue until ejeh of their members had been served with a bnck- io- work order. A spokesman said the strik¬ ing officers were “ keeping their eye on the city ”-despite tlie walkout and would “ not allow aayooe to run away with rhe city .—UPI and Rcurer. said thp new regime, wl took power on Monday, determined to find a solutii to the war in Western S#h against Algerian-backed F sario guemllas. This wo conform " to the higher terests - of rile Mauritan people" and be in agreem “widi the brother kingdom Morocco Colonel ’Salek said the M tary - Committee for. Nano Recovery was conscious t) the war. was affecting a policy of national recovery. Economically and financial Colonel Sajek said, be wai encourage priyare luixiaci within the ; framework of liberal economy. The countr indebtedness would be stud« immediuccly with its credit* and would undoubtedly lie adequate international backifl he said.—Agence France-Pres: have He was quoted in Variety, star was implanted there in the show business newspaper, 1972.—Reuter. GERMAN BY RADIO Parr J of “Fantific Baumann"course will be broad¬ cast front Oct. 4rh'l97S. Wednesdays 17.45- IS.t/0 GMT nied. ltwre 2SH.5 m;I26i} kHz (repeats on Saturdays). Course book supplied free on receipt of coupon. Do not send coupon \f you enrplcdfor Part I: Book 2 will be sent automatically ; For be¬ ginners. Book I still available. DEUliSCHLANDFtJNlC English Service. PO Box MO SOriO GiIngiie 51. West Germany He also broadcast daily in English, ptesrtiling Gennany today. Leaflet on request. fftwtc.uVttfr Xdhie. Address Fanuhc Baumann Book J I ,_i twni/ie Baumann Book / I_J Eiiglislblangiiagc programme l^atlct l BLOCK caps.) . -T- I i_ Nigeria eases out military but politics still banned Lagos, July 34.—Nigeria's' on political .activity would - be armed forces are to begin fbeir strictly enforced. . withdrawal from Government in " The federal military Govcrn- 10 days’ time, after 12 years of ment will nor tolerate any dis- rule, but the ban on ’ ruption cf its programme by civilian political activities will any individual or any group for remain in force, Lieutenant- General OJusegun Olrjsartjo, the head of state, announced to¬ night. ’ Ceneral Ob as an jo said that milirary governors of the coun¬ try's 19 states would be fc- plcced on July 24 by the brigade or garrison commander in each state who will act as military administrator until the final handover to civilians, p.Iaijued for. sonjc time before •Octabar aevt year. -. whatever reason", he said-The Administration was committed to bringing about an elecred Government in. 1979 through ’* peaceful process of free and fair elections and we will not tolerate from anybody -or any funup any act that is capable of diver ring us from this goal". Nor would the Supreme Military Council permit anyone to use “ the name or office of anyone of us. tn canvass for political -support or patronage. iMilitary Commissioners- CrcinK.- Any such action will be rtlth- stcrsi in the federal Govern¬ ment who have been selected to remain in the’ armed forces aifer the return to civilian role will he redeployed «n purely milirary assignments on July 24, as will the state governors. . However, senior -officers still holding purely political offices lessly dealt with", he said. The military Government had no special inrerestm who would succeed ii • and had “ absolute confidence in the sense o£ judg- Iment of our people The new state military administrators, who’were.Domed during the broadcast, would in the final vear. of military' appoint civilian deputies from government will retire from the' among their commissioners armed forces at rhe time of the who would be expected- to changeover. General' Obasanjo remain outside immediate post- said. This would mean’that military-rule politics. Likewise both he and Sfrehu Yaradua. existing commissioners who armed forces Chief of Staff, arc intended to take part in parry heading for retirement next rrapniy— i . , '* politics next. year would- be General Obasanjo’s. state- “excused from continuing to meat, televised nationwide. sert’C as members of govern- incmded stern reminders to ment ”, General Ob-canjo said,— aspiring politicians that the ban... Agence France-Fressp. .- - Resignation of editor starts political storm Wellington. July 14.—Fivr hundred staff on the Christ- church Star, .ouc of ’New Zea¬ land’s leading papers, p.tsseri » unanirrmis resolution today sav¬ ing that the resignation of their editor jeopardized the credi¬ bility nf press freedom in the coun'xv. Earlier (his vear the editor. "Mr "Michael Forbes, wrote a series of editorials urging the ruling National Party to dismiss Mr Robert Muldonn. tbe Prime Minister. The paper’s staff said they believed he was forced to resign as a consequence. Mr Muldonn. questioned in Parl'amunt, -said: “The editor wrote some defamatory articles about. Rle earlier this year, f haven't the slightest doubt in the Ion® run this was. assuciured with the man's resignation fol¬ lowing an adverse Press Council Ruling." The ruling, given last month, related to a dispute between Mr Forbes arid the Prime Minis¬ ter’s press secretary The board oF N2 News Ltd, which controls- the newspaper, said F*dar it would ask Mr Forbes, who is 44 and editor since .1974. to reconsider bis decision.Rente.-. Satellite will monitor the magnetic field Cape Canaveral, July It.—A European space agency satellite designed to monitor the mag¬ netic field that protects Earth from harmful radiation blasted off today from the air force station at .Cape Canaveral. A previous mis.tiuti failed in April of last year when a defect in a rocket placed rhe satellite in the wrong orbit. The replacement launched to¬ day was due to be put into orbit 22.300 miles above the Earth. The drum-shaped spacecraft was to be controlled by the European Apdcc operations centre in Darmstadt, West Germany.—Reuter. Mr WhitSam leaving politic for university post a book on the British Laboi Government of Sir Harol Wilson. . Mr' Wbiilam. aged 62. Australia's ’ most cdutroversh politician, an ebullient:' ori articulate barrister whu becatn the .country^ first Laho«l Prime Minister, for 23- jpKtf when, be ■Ied"his‘ partyJii’iit Ji Canberra. July 14.—Mr Cough _ Whitlam. tlie former AustraUatt Prime Minister who was dismissed in 1975 three years *fter bringing the Labour Party b-ick to power, announced today' he was retiring, frpm politics Ui become a university lecturer. lie said he would formally resign his parliamentarv seat the political, wilderness ta-'J before the end of this month general - election • ’ victory, "4! and take up a ibree-vear 3972. ‘ fc-llow>hip to lecture / un But in' a political' upjieav 3 political science and intei- - three years later, his.Cuveoi national relations at the Aus- mem was dismissed from offig rralian National University by Sir John Kerr'; “{ here. _ Governor-General, ‘to’- end-,* During Iris fellowship he is crisis - between' the" unper as* to be given time far writing In wer houses of. psu-Iiam^J and is already wnrfcinj. on two He stepped . down., from:-ioS books—;«ne on the workings of Labour ’ Party : leadership' parliament, government and the last defeat • in -December, opposition and another on last year, and has since made Australia s future relations few public apeaiances excel* 1 vmh South-East Asia. for routine visile to Parliament* He is also expected to write —Reuter. Guitarist defects Berlin, July 14.—Rainer Blass, bass guitarist of .a top East German rock grouri, has defected to the West after a West Berlin concert tour, ^friends said today. Thais lay on welcome for Cambodian .From Our Correspondent journalists hall a mile from the standing and better' develop th* Bangkok. July 14 bridge. When journalists ap- friendship of the two. peoples Mr letift Sari- Ucoutv Prime Pf°^ ed tl,c Cambodian party. In Bangkok.- Mr Sarv began Minister of Caniiwiiu, in charge Jv ,L r i ,f ar> H; f'f. c , ted thcm . witI ' - gl_l« with the Tliai of foreien affairs todav st irted sm 0 .. Hls wearing dark Minister on. measures t? * nfl a four-day official visit' to Thai- identical to liis. border cfasties. Tlj# Tbw GW; laud faliowine two years of ex- statements ernment al« askcd Mr 5Tin ^ rensivc border fighting between *« ■"<! fcnftlwli. release Thai ami the countries. . ,n ‘ ,1L ' stateincnt Mr Sary F ,eir trawfurs now bein„ nLIU Mr Sary swept aside strict S3, ' d: "We are happy to be irilf receive security arrangements when he here to pay a friendly official Mr sirv totUfl^v and -Gencral arrived .n Thailand « the KriaJthe across the Royal Tha, Government”. Thai Prime Minister, .will cnofc After wnlkFn; bridge which marks the border He conveyed “ friendly re- him lunch ait his o«m home o" and embracing Dr Upadit Pach- fiards from the Cambodian Sundav. ' ' - lhC if? r 5S n * C u0p c . j° dle Thj ‘ P«plc who, Mr 'Saiy and his party Miinstcr, he suggested that Thin . he said, used to have Ion®- occupvmg*seven' rooms al and foreign journalists be standing .relations. He hojied kok^Orilntal Hotel- one of ** “ Con ? c ^ , ? scr / .., h l ! s ' al ^ ,n would fur- mosr luxurious and expensive The Thai authorities had kept ther increase mutual under- in Asia. J J* THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 , *<? v A'l! 'i: ' V^u-^wssome time during 1332 .* •i jnet Brendan Bracken. I / ^'iik that I- first met him hixigh one of Pempie’s Pamela Smith, ! the .tangly beautiful and .formi- daughter of !F. B. Smith, by Lord Drogheda . '*>, ... r fete a member by a .strange -JP ’ rather snobbish character " .• -"jed. Cdurtauld Thomson, a ' me-like figure with a . . business sense, who- . : >. the chairman of Brooks's • fei. i-b and who had befriended •"vj 6 (He. was tfce owper of a " called Doroey Wood, : before. bis death be ^ ujeathed to the nation, ••.''•i'. *' jo in consequence en- • v led.); ". r . ... > "fy ., chance .encounter with ~ - ^ twTnn. Was a turning point ! me, and he -wan to become -] l .‘ .major influence in my life. • „! vards the end of 1932 I was . working with the Mining - v ..'?ist. The job- was as dull as | • ; ;; t ; metal prices ware un- 'nomicaJly low, and prospects „ . adv ancement seemed ... iote. Therefore; when Bren : ’: offered me a job -with the ancud News, I leapt at the ' nee of escape. - lie Financial JVeutf.was. part ... a- group .he had forined in "" -late- twenties bn behalf of family trust which owned -e t Sponiswoode, of which had been made' a director Colbnelf Jack' Crosthwaite- .. ^e. who became heed of the . uness following the -death of ' father-in-law; James' Bris- t Eyre. Brendan had been ommended by Lord-Beaver- wk. - He was only 24 years - when he joined the board, 1 1 most of the other directors '; ce past- retirement age, .and - ramp agio us nature .seems self to Winston Churchill dur»;i woodc, and Oliver, the son of mg a by-election in Dundee,; Colonel Jack Crosthwarte-Eyre, from- which moment he became I joined, the board. Lord Drag- Churchill’s seif-appointed and!! heda (then Lord Moore) be- dedicated servant for life. 1! came managing director of the His appearance was unfor-!i combined paper. Brendan gettable. Some of bis friends;! Bracken' was appointed chair- nicknamed him affectionateJy man, but his office was in-the Tarzan.' Wherever he went he! Union Corporation building, created a vivid impression. He!] and be left the day to day run- yvas tall and well-built, with, an; ning of the business to Lord immense shock of - unruly,,; Moore. Before many years had ;i countenance the FT doing the >\ much, I job on any terms, which was j I his true attitude, dungs would! j have been vastly easier. But be! ! began by being enthusiastic, so I that much time was wasted j your leadership The idea of a total uprooting was ]: direction of Michael Benthall ji any way regrettable. It was ; .perhaps never more needed than • and die skilfu-l management of'[ thus made clear from the scan would really have been very now, and if you go I shall follow'I Alfred Francis who . kept .the that-the editorial independence Ji hard to face up to. I not only init. my beart °° Joneer “ 1 1 Old Vic . going by brilliant'll of the FT would not 'be in had the FT to supervise, I also q : !. stratagems at a time wben'j jeopardy,' and there was a [! bad to pay a good deal .of . ;j Government support for the great sense of relief. Most im- ttiere- ,| A—- Ufa— nn a Hpricnr.. 11 nnrtunt rhnuph wac foA-lin® II UHL UiULU LUUU HIM T.LWLCU1 n... __ T , W . Cl MUwll k SU^UIL , . I and feelings ran high. The real' I - 10 n 'I Arts was on a derisory scale: portant though was the feeling 'battle between them arose inir £ “ e m n t ° d .°u J* 31 i '?' liate T e ^ h Without their efforts there of being Jess cramped and coo- chances I might be taking with ;; rai^hr -well not be a..National fined as a result of belonging my own future the only proper ! Theatre today, for in a sense to a very large group. The course open to me was to i provided the - foundations, ji eacplanation for this should be crinkly red hair. He had power-1 ful features, with prominent i lips 'and a rather large soft nose, and being very short¬ sighted, he always wore specta¬ cles. His voice was deep' and penetrating, ' and it seldom passed, the offices of the merged' paper became inade¬ quate, and it was derided to erect a new building. Bracken House, oh a large bomb-site close to Sr Paul’s Cathedral. It is rad to relate that soon relation to a famous property , named Knoydart, situated on || 1 1 the west coast of Scotland; on H || the mainland, yet only! 11 approachable from the sea. 1 [This was something upon; <i which Oliver had set his heart, | and which he eventually I acquired. The purchase price was considerable, but the prop¬ erty was unique for its situa¬ tion and natural beauties. Brendan was terrified that in attention to the various other ! constituent parts of the group brought together by Brendan ! of most of. which I bad to act [as chairman, and with each of which ] • had naturally d eve- res! gn as well, since it was 11 The same may emphatically be self-evident. Essentially it was !| loped strong personal ties, through Brendan that I had [I sgjj of Oliver Lyttelton, whose I! that the larger group was able !l Pride of place in a sense went originally joined the organiza- 'j mother dedicated herself to the,ij JQ take a Broader view since i| to our monthly. The Bariker, non more before. than 20 years jj cause of a National. Theatre ! from the'early days, of its con- I ception ; to honour .her memory J! he made every endeavour to This decision I conveyed to dream a reality, be- Oliver and his father. I do not think that either of them coming the first chairman in 19fi2. give up the chairmanship, and J: ?. eo *’ , e „ ! Financial Times Oliver Poole tired although it was in con-|| a f^g r decision to put up a With the passage -of time. Istresses began ro develop be- .[ agreeing to the purchase he^ “at either ot them ! Quiw soon ^er his appoint- was to become closely involved'I txveen Brendan and Oliver I; w>ul.. be departing from his,, “ t ! ment to the board of the with the personalities and prob 1 [J Croscbwaite-EjTe and I found lems of the various publications 'j myself in a fairly agonizing in the group formed by Brendan jj position iu the middle. Brendan (in-which It should be said B that, i v was surely already becoming contrary to popular opinion,:? jy. One symptom of which his he had no personal stake at all). J.' colleagues were ■ especially When I first joined, after Bren- j aware was an increasing car¬ dan had asked me in a casual tion . As OUveris nrusite this off-hand manner - whether i mutfcm had unhanDv conse- ■ its risks were more widely - because it was has first venture . J into the field of financial jour¬ nalism, from-which everydung i else stemmed. Irs sale was tiny, j but it stood on its own feet. I After the appointment of Wil- ' liam Clarke as editor, it deve- cautkm had unhappy conse j qLienees. Relatively to the rest ) of us, Oliver was wealthy, I altliough it would be wrong t» ' think of him as a very rich 1 man. He was MP for the New i Forest where Warrens, his • family home, was situated. He ' loved Westminster, bu-t he also duty as a trustee. He thought it would be a bottomless pit, j -into which money wonld flow. | The position berame so diffi-;> ^ TuT^' ‘.vVrtnV^c " Bank Rate Tribunal. This-body . cult that Oliver’s father, a “ e managing director 'as n j. . rr c efT e- !: good and kindly man who had 1 well as the chairman came as j] ^ set up by the H^e Secr^ : emigrated to South Africa, in 'something of a shock. At ' 115 i N 0 Je m ber 1957 to enouire into order to help'his family more j; point Luke Memertihagen of i allecations thar' ' information rlun fnr ant- nl-har rpoenn npr. . ('.azenavfi & Co. the fOmoanv’S 11 ai _ le E al !< ? nS mlOrmatlOn i.spread. Also it needs to be [said that both Fat Gibson and Oliver Poole are men of excep- : tiorial talent, and no one could [have done more than they did I to bolster my rather insecure__ J sense_ of confidence in my own ji loped into an important and j abilities. j profitable' magazine. • (Clarke There was one approach I i later became Director of the during - the early ['Committee on Invisible after' the transfer of ;j Exports, but continued as edi- would like to work with him. I was offered the job of collect¬ ing financial advertising. It was a time'of deep depression, and the F'N had a minute sale, under five thousand, copies a day. The company was losing money, and bad to be recoostructed- ^ y J^L^f e ^ E !i ^ d country life. He farmed me. He never interriewed me 1; hJ«° and at all, which is just as well, for j! Jj® !S? I was very underdeveloped and *Jl e ^5' inexperienced. As with r all his actions and nearly all his ! ? ea P, and improvements to appointments, he went by hunch i! p 81 ? 1 bui_dings n ere costly, and. not by reasoned judgment, j Reference had therefore to be but looking back on It, he must i;"^ e t 2-i e f° r have been reasonably pleased! which effecn.elj with his derision, because we re- !■ reference to Brendan. His : mained firm friends and col- [' agreement was nearlv always leagues until his death in 1958. h forthcomng, but only • after I knew Brendan for a quarter ; quesnonmgs and procrastma- _ _ of a century, and during that I ti0n » he usually treated . _ have been allowed free [i time I established a great in- Ji Oliver as a rather naughty ►pe.' J ' !| timacy with him without- ever jj schoolboy, li . 'He was-wilhout questSon one ! l knowing any single detail of bis ;; In the office there was con- • Flil the most extraordinary menij origins or early life. He was |. stant bickering between them his'generation. His. back-jj al all times for me a figure of over a proposal to print the • onnd was wrapped ' in inys -1 j mystery. I loved him dearly, Observer in our new building. Fry, and he preferred it thati; although at times, I hated him •• Oliver was chairman of the St iy.;He h^"been borii in' Ire-^por his unreason. I respected jj Clements Press (the name of the nd, was sent to Australia ^as a j him immensely for his loyalty •; printing subsidiary of the Fin- '^ild, and - then ~ appeared at! -and' his pour^e r and for his j; ancial Times Ltd) and he had “dbergh (a- public school ini integrity.' : therefore been deeply involved i than for any other reason, per-1! Cazenove & Co, the company^ ; son ally delivered a letter by |i stockbrokers, who had played a hand to Brendan in which he j very helpful pari: at'the time proposed that iu the interests | of the merger in 1945 between asking him therefore in polite;! Brendan in 1928), came to the • language to resign his position. j| rescue. He was a close friend :i Brendan had an intensely sen-} 1 of Oliver from the war years, . amenta! side to bis nature,-'| as well as being his (aud the-| •- and he reacted as though he ji Eyre Trust’s ) financial the FT to Pearsons, which it would be . wrong of me □or to record. One day, I for¬ get. the date, Siegmund War¬ burg asked to see me. I bad -codie to know him in the 'course of my daily rounds, and torial consultant.) There was [the Investors Chronicle, the | appeal cf which was also i pretty specialized, and its pro- I Stability precarious until 10 | years later, in 1967, 1 success- i fully approached Cecil King about the raising of bank rate, on 19 September , from-per cenr to 7 per cent-(one of a :j of "their future friendship itijehe Financial Times and th* jj nf”whidh ^s 11 ^ wotece^tto • would be sensible for Brendan j t Financial News (acquired orlg- ;< s r ™ ®n h-«5 1,1 ktiaL «veiMiui-j'«™»su uhuo^i -to cease from being a trustee; i in ally for the Eyre family .byi "rr.V.ir |; ing the built-in resistance of:; Cecil was, although his deposi- - - S ■ been ) mpropyy toj , srablished city imtifarions million, so vividLy desmhed by persons who had used the i talented newcomer in their ;i Hugh Cudiipp, was not far oft cormation for the purpose of- j - ... private gain. Oh. 18 September the Chancellor of the Eschequ- I er, Peter Thorneycroft, . had : had been hit by a pole-axe. In ji adviser; and he -had become a ii er » ,, ■*“°™ e y cr0II > ■ MQ .'t the letter no reference had I'good friend of mine through jj Personally seen representatives : been made to Brendan's chair-;. o Ur regular contacts in the ? E selected newspapers tinclud- 1 liked and admired him enor-j| about the possibility of a mer- jmously. He had immense entre-ij ger between it and its rival the t prene.urial flair, and he I 1 Stock Exchange Gazette , then ! achieved marvels in overcom-!> owned by IPC, whose chairman hallowed preserves. His J There was The Practitioner, approach was to ask me to lithe medical monthly, which become a managing director of [j was extremely well edited by . ,our regular - ... — mansbip of the FT in which it | city. He was therefore free to must be remembered the | gp ea k his mind. Also he had Crosthwaite-Eyre family had;^ e )j er brother, DanieL who • the controlling stake, whereas i W11S j]j en one 0 f principal Brendan bad no stake at all. m anag ing directors of Lazards, Brendan, however, made * . ... ing myself from' the 1 Financial Times, under the mistaken im¬ pression perhaps ; that I was editor of the paper) and given a very grim account of die pres¬ sures on the pound,! and. of the his bank. The salary would at first be less "than I was then receiving but the scope was clearly greater. I was sorely I Bill Thomson, a candy omnis¬ cient Scottish doctor, with an ! inexhaustible appetite for work, while Michael Fletcher, Brendan, however, made it r h„ m«rhant banking house Dn rae pouna. anQ.ot tne p ot my me, ana tor tne furore | znere clear that if be gave up being rnntrn iiPfl hv Ppar«mn & ! need to restnct the supply of I] of which I felt a good deal Today, a tempted and torn. In m: heart- 1 - despite bis frequent need for of hearts I knew that I could j: reassurance and encour- .not leave the FT which had I 1 agement, provided very cap- become such an integral part ;l able management, of my life : , and for the furore jj .There was also History monthly magazine lemon ! (mim'nn nf »hA ft - would have been as relevant in ]! safely through. I did however;; tnen was u b would.; ire ! 1977 as it was in 1957, the only '» write to tell Brendan who at magazine was a great lore of _ _ _FT. I .SUSJJJife 8 JWoinf difference being that since '\ the time was away in South, Brendan s because of his pas- with him and urged ® (then the value of the-pound i! Africa on his last visit. Thissionaro addicnon to history, to do so, writing in °L. hAin^ n«n! i : ha * by almost. 40 per«-as bis reply: I especially the history of the t emotional terms; ^urtfS to the newspaper.'i At 110 P®' 01 didhe make »' G ‘-- - - _ . English-speaking world, above imberland) at the age of 18, eque book in hand, persuad-j 3 the headmaster that h e- was; [j ;ly 15 ■ and thns ' gaining j| mittance. When be left the! At the end of the year ain the -discussions. Brendan's controlling interest in the jj development of cold feet and Financial Times was acquired ;j his unreasoning reluctance to from the Camrose family, and [| examine the figures dispas- _ ____ a merger with the Financial 'i sionately created an awkward root after two terms be bad ji JVeiwf was rffecred. The com- ;| and embarrassing situation all spell as a schoolmaster, andjl.pany .was public but control|l round. Had he said in the • r sb contrived to, attach him- 11 was held by Eyre & Spottis- !l beginning that he would not with ti>e Eyres—which mean resigning from the pleaded him not B. me " 31 7 .j ''any^reference^to" the proposed j- 1 have been in remote SuazUand : all "of the United Stared, where I am filled with gloom by what' He t “ at . he ha . d increase in bank rate. Nor did “° d havc on ly 5660 y our let ' ^ knotvledge was extra- ;you said after lunch today. I know much capital oed up in do - SQ w j, en jj e saw Oliver I! ter * ..ordinary. The joint editors of how trying your trusteeship has [ this single investment, and. ne ,|_ . . . , . handed ii As yon will understand it is hard ‘ the magazine were Alan Hodge been to you. but that should counselled him to dispose of it, r rhairmanshin nf j** i to put aside affection.and interest ;and Peter Quennell, thar surely cease now that you have which he believed be would be 1,27!!' remained '' "heir asked for my advice about an . renowned man of letters, ceased to be a . able to do for him for a profit 1,rfJiml?,! w i' oEfer ' rtricl1 must a partnership r whose name I had strongly , uppiNLumijr wv- irprtp j f emn ] 0ver «j . coances or capnai a cere non rrom- •* ,‘■"“““■““J -trol of the FT, font j; ordinary “gainful employment” ’W. reivarding magazine, known to be profitable and ,] 1 **2 •; Is^^ an opportunity which is Indeed 1 which achieved a monthly sale 'growing. The transactions lead-j; Qot •Lnorneycrotr out by \ uaujcely to recur. • of over 30,000 without any [ing to the actual transfer of ]< c,,r0 otllBr Ministers. I control are not important, but. was obviously necessary j . they took place very swiftly j and in secret, being concluded 1 ,,and announced in February I; 1957, when R. P. T. Gibson ; joined the Financial Times I board. 1 Pat Gibson was : councils of the Pearson, family He was married to -Dione, a Remembering-all I owe-to you -i yielding to- the temptation-to The allegations about, .the and the happiness Tve derived . popularize its contents. A large misuse of information were jfroin our long'-pannership I must :[ part of the credit for the suc- vaguely hinted' at by ,qne' or|[ stifle very selfish feelings and cess of file magazine was in two Jess responsible jonma- • lists, the implication being, that| someone or other had profited ’ by selling Government securi advise yon to seize this fare oppor- feet due to Robert Harling; now the editor of House & l know, too, how the offer of a . Garden, who designed the !; ta *• pledge tha^they jj EH? Sff I SiS high in the!f^ 0l i d , faU the increase [. managership of the FT you as I Fr typographical problems. He' rson familv !| “1 hank rale was announced, managing director w-oold be more 'j was a real onginal. For a I HP mi mamM to -Dione. a w Ce, Y *?““ 1 Hei; chan ever bound to stick to-the last i while he and I became good ! i JUS bou S fac tack for 3 turn-! in London. - j;friends, although we drifted. 1 SuS h t ffm SiSn^of johi" ,i 9 H °5-i working for shareholders In a r when our excuse for rtlwdrav and' he S olaved a !| Haroid w ^ ^rge -ubiic company will never; meeting was gone. I well hn;id1ne P M th^ 1 - a ,u ,re ^? randum to . die Lf ? rd ! enaMe 7°° ro cre *'* capital. The || remember his most attractive targe part in butidios up sugge sang Uiat orfly vray (it’s hardly ever to be j : wife ivith prematurely grev successful ^ misgivings on this matter -j found) Is to come-across a rich. I ■ hair..whom he told me tie had paper chain, V\ es tun ns ter Press ■ nee j I0 jjg allayed”; and less j. international enterpnser many of • rtea ^ a hus and fol- :ssiMS ssslts jb-^ ■ \\ZL2 ZS&ZtLS a* SL there had been no . improperEnzlehart who some-years ago i 1 ful of the investments made bv' disclosure of mtormatiort, and :j took a IlJdng to one of .Its : Brendan when he first-formed appointed r board and his arrival on the ! . scene was for me most v.el- ! ■ come. He had a wide-ranging j knowledge of the newspaper.! no improper action of any ,j managers. Gordon Rich dale, and [ his gronp. kind, but between the first sit-.‘I offered him a job with a reward In _ . rea- a its , _ __ interests : of -the Glyndebounie Opera j, sense ofgoHt but becuute of It- .2?. ° r { W' . Society, and also being a reg- ,( natural uncertainty. Above , all, i pride themselves on tallowed tar ! Waveriw Si ch^Sta f 0 f the ular attendee at Co vent . knowing the personalities I 1 parfAH mmK am ivhn rnp as mn« _ vuv T r _ cn fi cnairnian or tne : Garden, taking a 1 helpfully, cri- 11 -•—*--‘ .deal interest in peilormcnces. -.there'. No one could have fore¬ told it at the rime, but some __ ___ ' SVbrJSSti’.f JSL™ '[ contiorof'je>r,'ihBre i.i !■ cure, for ,j sinecure. To uproot myself and ,. tinea to be appointed chairman -.clear risk that if a group con- ijiorc civilised things fortune ^tart an entirelv new bnsineq^ j of the Atts Council in succes- il troljing a. leading merchant-; Salting. • ' SeeratjStthewm^S Sion _ to Arnold Goodman, an ,i bank also controlled tile Only! Your going from the FT.must be ' w o U ld haveib^n verv diffirulr • appointment which wws ima- .rexclusivelv business-orientatetf . a sharp loss. NO one can • aaT r ' TCTy ilculu . •ginative and which worked out |, newspaper. criticism cdhld : ' siW,f, *y take 7 0nr Pla« e the . au “ raQ , m y ' very well, although Pais truck i arise. It was therefore impor- 1 ' wl JI long be missed and will yonr- ;; father fell ill and on November ■ tn M that Pearsnn* tiiftnlH PrJ iSeIf for. which you .,22 he died. At the time I suf- r ; i x n B ^e j '?o u r- ^ ^ ^ iu "per cenriu-cr^rir-reS || ndgfv^reed^ ilB5fS5. , Slt?£S , wS !| terms in ibe amount of Gov- !a raregorical assurance to thisjsSS-Si/ l!' doi ! e . mor « ® e ? se th ® ] S nel y : eminent money to be made effect, and I can say with abso-:; Dear G. newspaper life wffl !j' ::a pretty, terrible patch, for when he first started the job :t •: was on. the basis of an annual ij Pearsons, was also appointed ; ji to represent the new control- i j! ling shareholder, and from my [ . point of view, and I bope from On 24 September 1957 Olive/ :l far i! 'i JS fi ■' ?R ole * wll ° wa ? l!^?oiSv y absent* HiJ^ dS^mi"!' 51x16 up 1116 Union Cor Pocation and ;! and he had also resumed many ; ^t monagmg . direcmr of ^beforelhf'£= ot hfs seemed to us in .the. office an fllreSncan be found or trained /1 ;; -Si* ° f - bl f attitude of aloofness. He sel-j; shall then depart in the hope of I. ?f r 5‘|8 e *® 1 dom tame near us, and this wt* peace and of living in London no :j 70 years that he was with i&ri^a’w^sarisfriM .rVltresreued. ' It may have been !j «ore. . , j ; her it was surpmmg how few tneirs, a very sansrymg reia u u;*'noted-'Shvnes^ hut-1 thinki 1 w,sh 1 imd your hJang for 'people he wished to see fSTtS a 1 2=2 ! d-plt. hi S nat.rully greg,,. j. acquaintance : sat together ! the Old Vic; . I' major row relating to the r ;a omnpy piane. Hwas not as muen justified as I tween 19-w ana 1963,.while I >iaffairs .of • the British Alo-ji . That letter qf course had the >theii believed; for among my ■only served ror about • five I.minium Company-in•iviHch' cer--;j effect of confirming me in my 1 ,fathers papers was-a sealed jiyears frpm My own_con- ,j tain merchant ranks were pit-i|ecj>ly .felt instinct that I ,envelope, addr< j ! tnbution. vras I tear vary rnsij^ ; ted -against- one another.; On [ ! could not move elsewhere. I ‘ marked to be i , otiicant. However, I much I one side was Lazards. Merri-ji^nust. I vas sure, stay where I 1 death, containL. j enjoyed the jovial chairman-; fully the commentators of the [[was until put out to grass, an text of which' r reproduce ship-of Sir Bronson Albery, a FT took a point of -view diatnet- '..eventuality to which since I in Dr der to «hnw mv^lf si, real grand old man of'.the : : rically opposed ,-to the Lazaid;*as then only' 47 I. perhaps < ^empbrv 0 son 0l because that I theatre, and I-was fillefl trith jj positioo. but nothing was ■ ever J rather foolishly gave too little • p ’ admiration for the . artistic il said to suggest.that this was In ^tfidught. 1 continued on page 8 addressed to me and opened after his death, containing a -letter the not myself as an A J THE TIMES SATURDAY: REVIEW JULY 15 197S ENTERTAINMENTS Whan laiephanlns vac prefix 01 only auurcfo London Metropolitan Area. Weekend broadcasting THEATRES COLISEUM. Credit urdi 01-1140 5258 '-•'HestMMMonfl 01-BuQ 5141 fm.il pcrfa. NUREYEV FESTIVAL wllh DUTCH NATIONAL BALLCT COVENT CARDEN « 240 1064 iCvAenfharBe credit urd.1 6 VO.ii THE ROYAL OPERA Tonight, rue. * Fn. nest at 7.00s NofTnfl. (Tonight Uvlrgon ronUiccn cralfl, JB- - -July-. V«u*y -replaces Bumbiy, “Lavtweri replern Craig,- 21 July; Bumbry replan* Caballe. Veflsoy replans Utunurv. Lavii-nen ropwera Cralfli. Seal prices for. 21 July reduced *o schodule 51—rebates avail arior norf- THE ROYAL BALLET it T.rjQ; Tout Schumann Places. The Firebird. The Concert. W«l. & Thur. at 7.30: Anssiaila. 6-5 Amofil' srau avail for all pert a from 1C am on day of pert. CLYNDE90URME FESTIVAL OPERA, tin'll Alig. 7 wHh the London Phll- harm'Onlc OrchoMra. Tonight, MPJi.. U'cfl. & rri. next at 5.30: Cost-Ian nmc. Tomor.. Tuc. A Thur. n»xf ar 6.J »: La Bntiemr. Possible rclurns only. Box office GJyndnbourno Lew os. E. Sussfy 1CT27S H12411I. N.B. The eurinin Tar Cosi will rise *i G.uti sham; Then Is no dossi- bllliy of admli lance for Irtto comers. SADLER'S WELLS THEATRE. Rosebery Avc.. E.C.I. R37 1473. Until July 22. Eves. 7.30.' Maw S at.. B. oO. NIKOLAIS DANCE THEATRE Today Mat. * Wed. n<"<i: Triple Don from Grotto. Gallon'. Suite from Senc- lum. Tonight. Tue. * Thur. nett: Culgnol. S;ick Figure*. suite irom Sanctum. Mon. next: Tompl&s. Gole- nol. Triad. Frl. -next: Trlnlo Duel irom GrrWio. 8U4. Trfad. •' Shrre ulr.rvire ... an oiDoMwica not to be missed E. New*. " Utterly, utterly betuiUful . . . *’ i Triad* Guardian, July ol- Avf 24 MARCEL-MAPCEAU. THE ROUND HOUSE Chalk Farm Road. HW1 U47.2o<54 7.30 p.m. BALLET RAMBERT Until Sarurday CRUEL CARDEN July i7ih-l?Hi: Embrace Tlccr and Return 10 Mounlaln •* For ihceo who die »s cart Id ". NuUiqiuo Stomp. Black Angels. July 20th-22nd; Pleirni Luiuire, Wings. Laocoon. Episode 1. ADELPHI THEATRE. •’ 01-836 7611 EvuJ. 7.30- Mata. Thur*. 3.0. MU. 4.0 DIENE. THE HUi MUSICAL OF 1875. 1977 and 197F 1 -LONDON'S RUST NIGHT'OUT"— Sunday People. CREDIT CARD BOOKING 630 7611 ALBERY. 830 3678. Crodlt card, bfcgs. 854 1071.5 from B.-.O o.m. Party rates. Mon.. Tues.. Wed. 4, Frl. 7.43. Ihnn. & Sal. 4.30 & £. A THOUSAND TIMES WELCOME IS LIONEL BART S MfRALULOUS MUSICAL —Fliunrlal Times. OLIVER ! vrllh BOY KL'DD A JOAN TURNER. eONSIOUR YOURSELF LUCKY .70 BE ABLE TO SF.E IT AGAIN.” D. Mir. ALDWYCH. 636 6404. Into. 654 53-32 fully a'r cpndtiioned ROYAL SHAKESPEARE COMPANY Today 2J» & 7.30. Mon. 7-30 Strlndbcrp’* _ THE DANCE OF DEATH ** Emerges as a wonderful piece of work.F The Tlnn ■ With: CORIOLAHUS ‘nest perr. 20 July* RSC also THE WAREHOUSE . • SCO under IVi and at Hie Picradllfr Theatre In Piter NlchOl'S PRIVATES . ON PARADE. AMBASSADORS. 01-863 1171 Nightly at tf.OG. Mat. rues. 2.45 Sal. 5.00 L B.OO. • PATRICK CARGILL^ A TONY ANHOLT SLEUTH The world's ramoun Thriller ' by ANTHONY SHAFFER " SiTtny the play again la In fact an uiier and total lor."—Punch. . Seat vrice* B2.O0 in r -A.oo Dinner and Tod price Seat £7.50. APOLLO. 01-4.37 2643. Evas, at 8.0. Met. Thurs. 5.0. Sat. 5.0 & 8.0 . DONALD SINDCN (.Actor of the Year—E. Sld.i ■■ IS SUPERB."—N.o.W. SHUT YOUR EYES AND THINK OF ENGLAND " WICKEDLY FUNNY."—The Times. ARTS THEATRE B36 2132 TOM STOPPARD’S DIRTY LINEN , " Hilarious. See IP.”—S.T. Kvca. H-50. Fr1„ Sal. 7 A 6.13 a RTORIA THEATRfi. Charing Cross =•• 42VJ. Mon-niurs. 6 p.m. FH % A Sat. 6 tc ».4o I Bullet food available i ELVIS " Infectious, appealing, foot-stomping J nd heaf^ihumpmg.''-"Observer. Seat* ="-« Half-hour before Show beat available seats S3, Mon.-Thurs, anti Frl. o. p.m. I'orf. only. EBST MUSICAL OP THE YEAR EVENING STANDARD AWARD CAMBRIDGE. 636 60.36- Mon. tu Thura. a.OO. Frt.. sat. ai 3.43 & B.30 LBI-TOMBI EXantSTG BLACK AFRICAN MUSICAL Packed with, variety."—O. Mirror. Beal price* i2..00-£o.r>f> THIRD GREAT YEAR Dinner and too price seat £8.75 Inc. Chichester] 0245 m312 To day e tj.ro. July iv at 7.u0 THE A5PERN PAPERS THE INCONSTANT COUPLE Tonight. July It Jt LB Jt 7.CK) ■ TV CHOICE (continned on page 7) THE CHERRY ORCHARD . mct r. ■;.V; ’.fey-Michael' Fxayft ; .Do'rbthy.'Tutin as : ■" K a ny e y s' k a yii/' b r lilia n t! y ■ hbseivred ; -ry : '■ :&nJte&JcTn/y '.AiiyerJ Fivirii=y ss' : '.’ ..r-'DiiaiSin ■' ‘.sujeub-' ’ f ■ t.-'NAnONAL ' m -THKAXRE . ' :X;0.V.-9 2B’2'252j ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL SUNDAY JULY 23 to THURSDAY AUGUST 3. The sensational -s'. D/INCE COMPANY with GALINA and VALERY PANOV ; : dancing nt every perfofmanjee / : Ey'gs.7'30. {July 28 at' T.OOi: Sun.july : 30 y Vat'3-,00;.&-7.30;7:; .N<5 performantc'; •'Sai'^uiy'2S HTicReis: ; £t.5b; ^ C i'iSOVEO'.SO 5-7$ £v _^too;£i:op;i£6p;)y ‘.Eox .Ollice:' r --vV- ■"bl-92a-.>3191 v-. , simply -/wonderful • dancers - CJiwV Bj rn c %,N.y .T irp es- -t. eloquence and V;' natural Vfg o ur' • '3 .•’ .>'!«• ATpoif<», Ptrii .Syjor/yorad; ■ ..byth>i. I .."'‘Je wish Chronicle. Saturday •. 630 pm ITV When in 1967 I saw a -husband, egged an by a hysterical studio audience, ‘ publicly humiliate his wife, I-realized T had witnessed television at its nadir. The programme was the American parent of Mr and Mrs, Britain’s longvst-nsiame qui3 show. 7.50 pm BBC 3 Nfjwork brings a dash of good news from-our iLLareateilfiahjag industry^ _ -- -• Fresh interestin the blue whiting cotrid turn the Hebrides into Europe's main fishing ground. 8.20 pm BBC 2 Victoria and Albert was one of • the most infomuufve episodes of Royal Heritage ~mi is “weil worth seeing again - ; 10.15 ptn, LWT The Smith.Bank Show’s most ambitious profect to 'date is a Jam-js fvocy film about art- • - collectingjn InoLt. With a ward-winning cameraman Walter Lassally, script by Ruth Jhabrola, and srairiag Peggy Ashcroft, it must hare something for everyone. Part Two neat week. ■Sunday 9.30 am ITT Buying and Selling's House is a valuable- new series about do-it-yourself ( conveyancing. Cheap but time-consuming, it is generally straightforward with this kind of guidance, provided the other chop's solicitor doesn’t deliberately make.it difficult 12.00 Nuts and Bolts of the Economy has a -predictably over-simple -attack-oa the-education system for turning out TV producers rather than industrialists. 7.15 BBC 1 Congratulations to the scriptwriters of The "Gnedin Line who have ma nage d to dream up yet more episodes. 9.30 pin ITV Clouds of Glory .Coleridge gives ' Ken Russell room for a little exoric imagery. Jf th ese two films have not been specially enlightening, they- have been- enjoyable. 11:45 pm BBC 1 Dilemmas, greatly imder- . appreciated, ends on BBC 3 with a look at happiness. It now transfers in repeat to a sensible nine on BBC 2 on Tuesdays. „ . . Philip Venning If anyone trished to be able to point and say. “Thai is a radio feature ”, Philip Oxman’s From Hand lo Mouth (pro¬ ducer Desmond Briscoe) would be’ some thin g he could safely point at. The first and greatest commandment for an author be modulated in so many pro¬ ductive ways) and pulse which can be seen as tone dismem¬ bered and all you are left with if you break down tone into us component parts. This seemed to me one strand among several: there were also some wishing-ro create, a feature is 'interesting: remarks - about the that he should end up with nature of hearing which in Mr something which, deprived of the medium of radio, would not be able to exist—or exist Oxman’s phrase is “ fuelled by desire” and hence presumably turns music into an instrument at best very incompletely. By to assuage that desire:" Bur FILMS this criterion many so-called features are nothing of the sort, but in the. case of Mr Osman’s work, it was simply -impossible to - imagine it trans¬ lated into any other medium. From Hand to Mouth was the exploration of a theme in the form of a son of spoken essay ioio which was woven music and many other kinds of sound. It was beguilingly mar- desire for what ? The human ralke ^ persuasively to old ear he dcscnlws as inden- who remembered . tured from, 'infancy w time, benefits which include place and tribe": in other arten tions of Dr Davis, ■words, what we are able to app; ,| ute d of Harley Str« hear and understand is condi- - y - his aM w a sma] , . tional upon the circumstances !£ acl J ce . B ut there wa of our upbringing. glossing Ov=;r the be Ac dus point I have said ^ obody could bring, like a most of what I am able to sa> p nel uuonicosis or at with any confidence ai all p rovea jenc in some q( about Front Hand to Mouth .. n .,; n i K n r ,hp meaning suEfcred and grat became impenetrabla. The thirtieth anniversa the National Health S> was the occasion for Pau ris's From Whence Comet Health , a documeman.- appropriately._in. .the hij South Wales, in Tredegar, whence also came At Sevan who may. so legen it, have modelled the on the local Workman’s cal Aid Society. Mr talked persuasively to old bitants who remembered . its benefits which include attentions of Dr Davis, appointed of Harley Sire* giving his a): to a small ' practice. But there wa Bath films in tonight's monster double bill. .are a bit coo tricky to be better than middling. The Fantastic Disappearing Man—alias The Return of Dracula (BBC 2,10.40) transports the old vampire,' disguised as an Iron Curtain refugee, to 1958 small-town America. In ROger Cor man’s The Man with X-Ray Byes (BBC 2, 12.00} Ray Milland is driven crazy by his - ■ scientifically-producedpowers. Today’s best ' is the 1934 version of The Metry Widow " (BBC 2, 2.55). Ernst Lubitsch .staged Lehar with wit and "extravagance ; and Jeannette MacDonald, with Chevalier as Daniio, could not be merrier. Tomorrow, Hunters Are for Killing (BBC 1, 8.05) is a 1970, made^for-televisian drama about a man’s fight to clear his name", with Burt Reynolds, Melvyn Douglas and Martin Balsom. Two-lane Blacktop (BBC 2,10.50), Monte Heilman’s 1971 contribution, to the “ road-”- films that came in the wake of Easy Rider, is. -off-beam, by turns comic and melancholy ; and -almost deserves its cult reputation. Little need to lose time on Wednesday’s 1959 remake of Tarzan the Ape,Man (BBC 1,6.50), with basket-ball star Deony Milier and Joanna Barnes. Him Tarzan (No 12, approximately) ; she Jane ; ugh. The week ends with two prestigious . productions from the Sixties. Elia Kazan’s version of William Inge’s play about young love in the pre-depression Kansas. Splendour in the Grass (Thursday, BBC 2, 9.00). is never worse than watch able. The Swimmer (Friday, BBC 1, 11.12) a “New Yrrker ” story by John Cheever, expanded by writer Eleanor Pern-, directed by Frank Perry and then augmented by a second director, Sydney Pollack, is a portentous and heavily symbolic affair, with Burt Lancaster (failure dr.rebel?) breasting his way to Fate through Californian swimming pools. David Robinson vellous" ro sheet; variety, the richa&Ss of its texture and its language. the. beauty - and interest of its no means complete. Itmay illustrations and not least the .also indicate that. Mr Oxman HAMPSTEAD T20 9301 Prets. Etos. B. nucna Wed. noxi »i 7 BEYOND A JOKE a nmr.'revut HAYMARKE1. ^7U S«o2 Evas. 8. Wed. O-SO, 9-ita. a .30 & 8.0. PAUL SCOFIELD HARRY ANDREWS ELEANOR . TREVOR SRON PEACOCK IRENE HANDL A FAMILY A NOW plxv by RONALD HARWOOD Direct<'(' by CASPER U'BEDE *' An adialrabl*. pb,. hnnsw. welt can- relved. proper.y u-aitKl out. fresiuy A fMUnflly vrrlnon—rtchljr laflstyuiij— Paul Scattcrd ai M» beat/.* 3. Levin, ' S. Times. BBC 1 . BBC 2 7-15:.am. Open University-. North, 1M am. Open University-. A Poet ■clifEe ; Community. High School; and Politics; S.03, Plastics and 7.40, Army Board (1); 3.05-S.30, Steel: 8.30, African Religious .Laws of Thermods'iiaQlics (.1). • Dasce; S.55, Chicago's Suburban 9.00, Ragtime. 9.15, The Flashing Family; 9^o, Bamdan Inter- Blade. 9.35, Goober. 10.00, Rock- ference; 9.45, Victorian Music face. . 10_25, 'Bugs Bunny. 10.40, 'Hall; 10.10, Dance, without Step^; Grandstand: -Cricket: England v ' 10.35, Beating tbe Bogie; 11.00* New .Zealand. Golf: The Open. Desert Ecology; 11.25, The Nature 1.55, 2.25, 2.55, Racing from New- of Chemistry; 11.50, Choice in bury. Athletics: The Kraft: Games. Education; 12.15 pm. The Three SATURDAY Grandstand: -Cricket: England v New Zealand. Golf: The Open. 1.55, 2.25, 2.55, Racing from New¬ bury. Athletics: The'Kraft Games. Motor Racing From Brands Hatch. v 5-30. Final Score.- 5.45 News. 6-00 Wonder Woman. . 6.45 - Film: Hell . Boats, -with James Fra ad sc us, Elizabeth Shepherd. • 8.20 Seaside- Special from Tor- . - * bay, with Boney M. Joe DassliL -Plastic Bertrand, Matia Bazar, Ian Durv. - ' 9.10 Kojak. 10.00 News. 10.10 SaiIor(5) : : Puerto Rican • Banyan. • 10.40. The Expert. 12.30 Smart Burrows Sings with Bernadette Greevy. 12.00 Weather. Rational .variations (Bfec 1 ): BBC WALES: 8-SO-911S am. Hobbv - Horse. NORTHERN IRELAND: 5-S5- 6.00 p*n. Northern Ireland News And Sport. Granada. 9-30 am, ATV. 10.25, Paul. 10.55, Film: The Texican, with Andie Murphy. 12 JO, London. 6.00, Happy Days. 6.30, London. 8.00. Film: The Horse Soldiers, with John Wayne,- waiiam -Holden. 10.00, London. 1L15, Tbe Enter¬ tainers. Bruce Forsjth and Rita Moreno.. 12.15-1.35 am. Film: .Goodnight My Love, with Richard Boone. •• / Yorkshire 9.10 am. TatJdnp Bites. 9.3S. Mc»li-ry toUnd. B.43, London. . 10.15. The Gene MamiMfr. ltt.45. London. 11.30, code B ”■ „12.30 am. .London. 6.00, . H.icmi Da-*. G.30. London. 11.15- 12.15 am. Quincy, London Weekend 8.50 am, The Saturday Banana. 8.55, Sesame Street. 9.45, The Saturday Banana, part 2. 1C.15, The Moukees tr}. 10.45, The Satur¬ day Banana^ part 3. 11.3U- Tarzan frl. ' 12.50 pm, World of Sport. 12 J5, Cycling, the Tour de France: International Athletics from Berke¬ ley, California ; Australian Pools Check. 1.15, Nev.-s. 1 JO, The ITV Sevcn : 1.30 Ayr, 1.45 York, 2.00 j .slightly hypnotizing effect of has crea Mr Oxtnan's voice: all this tant to < [ without any. very great neces- But it s I vity to understand what the as well. programme was about. So, of radio 1 what was.it about ? ' without In tbe words of« the bill- recorder ing, this was an exploration of ought l “ Music in. the Act of Malang ” )iLm wi and of “desire and its instru- chance meats in’ the working of clear. K; h umankin d. Its starting point literary was an African myth about the ticulariy snaring of an antelope which ing high appeared to account for the requirini appearance of music by com- digested, paring it to an elusive wild have g creature. Once caught, offered, however—and caught also in quoted ; the structure of tbe myth—its tiou of captors dismembered it. Later by no ra we heard “oneness which had to grasp gone without saying became in be retail a patchwork world the object The rich of 'its conscious quest ”, sug- ex press it gesting perhaps that man has tive as been trying to reassemble the dense wi antelope ever since. At the one so V ot 1 l . u “rf, for paeumomcosis or at with any confidence at all p rovea jent in some about From Hand to Mouth (-apa^aes of the said for its and I am sure that this reflects jj^. « a>s a bone-seru my own condiuoned under- absolutely hopeless” standing, for my account is by arrogance prev no means comp ete It may £f m recognizi^ the fat? .aUo indicate that Mr Oxman mistakes are stm ^ has created a thing very res^- ™ d Tredcgar ro ^5“ tant to criucal dismemberment.. 1 r i,;c my own conditioned, under¬ standing, for my acco'unt is by But it suggests something else as well. One of- the conditions of radio as a medium is'that— without benefit of tape recorder 011 which no writer ought to- count—it provides him with only one fleering chance to make his meaning clear. Radio is only in part a literary medium, it is not par¬ ticularly good at cammunicat- iag highly verbalized concepts requiring to be memorized and digested' Of tbese, as you may have gathered, Mr Oxman offered, a plethora: the few quoted above are only a frac¬ tion of the total number and by no means the most difficult to grasp, yet each requires tu be retained and thought about. The richness and variety of his . expression, immediately effec¬ tive as pure sound, was also dense with ideas end allusions one so hard upon the heels of Sisters; 1:05, EngHsfa Flats of the. Avr. 2.15 York. 2.30 Avr. 2.45 1930s; 1.30,. Functional Approxima- York. 2.55, Sneed wav, Volkswagen tion; 1.55, M101/19 Maurices t Grand Prix Final. 3.40, The IIV 2.20-2.45, ’Socialist Realist Art. Seven, Pan 2 : 3.45 Th= Curraah. 2.55, Film. The Me ny Widow, with 4 .00, Wrestling. 4.55. Results Set- "Maurice Chevalier. Jeannette Mac- -vice. Donald.* 4JO-7.15, Cricket. Eng- 5.05 News. land v New Zealand. . s.15 Celebrity Squares. 7.30 News. 63W Laverne and Shirley-. 7.50 Network. From BBC- Scut- 6.30 Mr and Mrs. land: Current Account- 7.00 The Life and Times or . 8.20- Royal Heritage - (7) Victoria Grizzly Adam-,. . . and Albert. > - 8.00 Film: The Professionals 9.20 Cricket and Golf, high- (1966) with Burt Lancaster. lights. jack Palance, Lee Marvin, 10.40 Film. The Fantastic Dis- Claudia CardinaJe, Robert appearing Man, with Rvan, Ralph Bellamy. Francis Lcderer, Nonna 10.10 News. Eberhardt.* . 10.15 The South Bank Show: Hul- ii’32 ‘ • . . labzloo Over Georgie and 12.00-1.15 am. Film. The Man with Bonnie’s Pictures (part 11, X-Ray Eyes, with Ray Mil- directed by James Ivory * . , ^ - and -starring Peggy Ash- * black and white. croft;. 11.15 Juke Bov Saturday Night: ; , The Music of the War ... ’ . Years. 1939-45. JJ}» n ' 2 - 1S am ’. Entertainers : .Man ii. Loncnn. Price. 9 . umdqn. 12.45 $i r j 0 b a Gielgud reads a Shakespeare sonnet. (r) repeat. same rime he . has apparently ' another in radio’s unrelenting, been working against his own irrecoverable sequence that attempt, an idea suggested by even in the ears of a vary the reiterared contrasting ideas willing, not rn say captivated of tone (continuous “undis- listener (net more than avera- mem bo red ” sound which can -gelv conditioned, T believe) as a result of this progr; .] am little wiser as n origins of the NHS, I ] ha ,- e been told quite about the essential cha of a Welsh community, t W3S memorably struck b Ferris’s ending, fleeing v quick, shiver from the oh lera cemetery that lies doned just above the town. With a more recent quite different offering the same author I was less happy: The Reel Wo ,Inspector Smith pursued : raising off beat idea abai head of a vice-squad beU tage by a trio of ren from which he only esi so I understood, because mild and frightened grasp of • the vicicusne* only talked about. If the did not quite come off rad something to do v tonal gap between the real aggression of Lhe rorists and rbe unreal wo Smith. Realism and caric never quite fused to mak credible play. Ulster 10.00 am. Flint 0.00 am, Flint: The 01 *. with Grog on- esame Hired. 13-30 Srsame Hired. 13-30 gm. UinCnn. B.Oo, -Happj day». 6-30. Umdqn. ii.1S-i1.40rCeoroe Hamlllon IV. Channel - ■ WiA « dHwtt llalD. 7.00. London.-11.IS- Thr Law 5.00 am, News. Tom Edwards. 8.06, Ed Stetvart.f 10.00, Adrian Juste. SATURDAY 7.55 am. Weather. 8.00, S.05. Tailleferre. Durey, RiSk'. O^t 5J1, Robbie Viocent.f 630, In New «- 9 -°S' S««u Relea«: Char- Concert: David Coverdale’s White pentier, Poulenc.t 10.00. Brahms ATV Border B.SO am, -London. 6.00. ATV. 6.30. Oh No lu Solviryo Fropnllt. 7.00, Lon¬ don- 11.15-13.1S »m, Quincy. it’aib. 7.00. London, n.is. Tbr Lw HTV ».1S am. Old Housr. Now Homi». 0.45. London; 10.15. BaimAn. IO.AS. Lon¬ don. 11-30. Space lviy. B.OO. Halin' P9S?-.«- 3 .°* ArV. 7.30. Dcnniilun. S.OO. London. 11.15-13.10 am. VlUitn IhMC WitllS. HTV CYMRU/WALES: As HTV except; 5.15 pm. Cartoons. 5.30- fi.OO, Shin-a Sian. Ljw 9.0S am. The Shape of Things, caire Sw30f Sesame Street. 10JO, Film: Taraan’s Three Challenges. 12.15 pm. Mystery island. 12.30, Lon¬ don. 6.00. Mr and Mrs. 6.30. The B.45. Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, iJnSv 7-30, The Entertainers, with Bruce iiiun". Fcrsyrb. Rira Moreno fr». 8.30, 5.31, Robbie Viocent.f 630, In Concert: David Coverdale’s White Snake, The" Only Ones.f 7-10, Sports Desk. 7.33, Top Tunes.f 8.30, Midland An Stars Big Band.f 930, BBC Radio Orchestra.f 11.02, Sports Desk. 11.OS, John Hemy.f 2.00-2.02 am, News, t Stereo. 5.00 am. News. S.02, Torn Edwardsf 18.03. Racing bulletin). 3.06. Radio 1. 10.02. Tony Black- burn.f 12.02 pm. Sports Desk. 12.05, Twos Best.f 1.01, Golf. 1.02. Offbeat with Braden.f 130- 7.00. Spore including Golf; Cricket. England v New Zealand; Athletics. UK National Champion¬ ships; Tennis, France v Great Britain; Racing at Newbury. 6.03, Cross-Channel Motoring Informa¬ tion. 7.02. Dos O'Connor Enter- tains. 7.30-2.02 am. Radio 1- and Dvorak.f 11.20, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, part 1: Beethoven.t 11.55, Reading. 12 . 00 , Concert, part 2; Mozart. Stra¬ vinsky. 1.00 pm. News. 1.05, Heritage. 1.20, Joaquin Acinic arm, piano: Brahms, Mussorgsky.f 2.20, Map of Action, Fr Michael Holliogs.t 6.30 am. News. 6.32, Fanning Yours Faithfully. 7.00, News On Your Farm. 7.40, T Papers. 7.45. Yours vMfl 7.50, i;'s A Bargain. 8.00, 8.10, Sport on 4. S.45, Yester Parliament. 9.00, News. 9.05, national Assignment. 930, Week in Westminster. 935, Stand. 10.13, Service. 1036, of the Week. 11.20, Tim Verse. 1130, Science Now. News. 12.02 pm. Away Pram 12.27, News Quiz. 12.55, Wea 1.00, News. 1.15, InsMM.Su by the Seaside. 2.00, Wn Peace. 3.00, Newt. 3.03. Dw 7.15, Hippolytc ct Aricie Trage- die lyrique by Rameau. Protogue and Act l.f 8.15, Reading. 8.25, HrppoJyte et Aride. Acts 2 and 3.f 9.25, Finding a Voice, talk by Bar¬ bara Pyra. 9.45, Hippoiyte et Ari¬ cie. Acts 4 and 5-t 30.55, Sounds Interesting-t 11.45, News. 1130- 11.55. Schubert Song. Ending. 3.55. leather. 6.00, Ni vs. 6.15, Desert Discs. 6.30, Robert Robinson Christopher Grier, records. Play, The Night of C: Knives, bv William Keenan. Weather. 10.00, News.. 10. Word in Edgeways. 11.00, ration. 11.15, News. 12.20-12- lashore Forecast SUNDAY 6.30 am. News. Sam Cosn.t 8.00, Playground. 833, Ed Stvwart.f 10.00, Peter Puwell. 1.00 pm, IIUIIIHIII # VI J’ bU, |VJ U1 Pil/I Cirt> (( I, a.JU| *u,i»v, M Vila A, M*l L’l. l.vv ks'- 3 ^ The Law Centre. 9.30, Soap. 10.00, Jimmy SevUc. 3.00 (medlumi Anne . 5 . 3 o- London. 11.15-12.15 am. Film: Nightingale. 3.02 (Vbf) Dadd firamnmn O.IS Talking antes. 9.4S. London. UUXUipidU . 10 . 15 . Tho B-alfes. 10.«0. Look and 9.10 a itt. Taikjno Bikes. 8.35. Stwii on See. lO.os. London. 11.30. Cu* Honor- Westward Sarorday. 10.05. The Whhe Stone. 10.30, • Swame Stre«. 11.30, «p»ce .ly?'*. 12.30 pm, London. 6.00. Ha pay bun. 11.35. Code R. 13.30 pm. L>n- don. 8.00. Hapoy Dav». B.30. The Cuckoo Waltx. 7-OQ, London. 11.15. Woman. 13.10 am. RenccUoM. Tyne Tees am, Urn‘9 Look In. 9.15. Space 139?. 10.157 TOP Paow LjdS. 10.45. 11.16.' Police ^3* c U.-IS *m,.Thc Electric Theatre Show. 13.40, PaiUi Tor Life. Scottish llie 9.10 am. Talking Bikes. 9.35, Sean lhe Anffjia - Leprectuun iri. 9.45. London. 11.40,- ‘ 1,0 Elegy of a Vampire with Sebastian Cabut. Southern 8.50 am. London. 5.15, Mr and Mrs. 5.45, Celebrity Squares. 6.30, Happy Days. 7.00, London. 11.15. Celebrity Concert. 12.15 am. Southern News. 12.20, Weatber. The Black Experience. jacobs.t 430 (VbH, Charlie Clics- ter.r 5.00 i medium), TJie Last Wale. 5.50 (Vbf), Move On.f 6.0, (Medium), Simon Batesf- 7.00, Robin Richmond.t 730, Glamorous Niqbts.f 8.30, Sunday Half-hour.f 9.02. Best Tunes.f 10.02, Jaaz.f 12.00, Nens. 12.05. John Hemy.f 2.00, Neil's, f Stereo. 7.55 am. Weather. S.OO. News. S.05, Vivaldi. MarceUo.f 9.00, News. 9,05, Your Concert Choice : Ros¬ sini, Kbatcbaturian, Elgar.f 1030, Music Weckly.f 11.20, English Cbamhcr Orchestra; Lennox Berkeley. Michael Berkeley, Tchaikovsky-f 12.30 pm. Let the Peoples sing.f 1.00 pm, Words . . ., by Denis -Doooghue. i.OS, Violin Recital; Bach, Zimxnermann, TurhuLf 2.00, Talking about Music.f 2.30 l Webern, Brahms and a Debussy Premier, part 1-f 330, 4 7.Ip am, Apia Hi Char Sami 7.45, Bells. 7.50, Reading. Weather. 8.00, Nests. 8.10, S._ Papers. 8.15, Sunday. "8.50, A{ League of Friends of Chailey itage. S.55, Weather. 9.00, l 9.10, Sunday Papers. 9.15, L from America. 9.30, Service McQuiston Memorial Pre6byt Church, Belfast. 10.15, Uste Letters. 10.30, A La Carte. 1 Sherlock Holmes. 11.30, One . One Voice : 021-432 5432. 12.14 Forget Tomorroiv’s Monday. 1 Weather. , f™-; • a 'L~ r SS vt tjpTFcnjun iri. a.os. London. Il.ao, ""f— 12^15 , F l3'-»n LU r C SS' PlL,S.-00 »">- Cxwain Nemo. 9.30. Hip tTLl.- Ju"?' 12.30, ^Lon- 6.00. TliD Many Mvw of Patrick. 6.30, Nexi Wim^ic Show. 9.45, Lfonttari 6.00 2^, n- Ep|iogup' l ^ , ^ UI 71,0,0 13.15 lAndmi. 11.J4. Sire,!*, of San Fran- Happy Davi. 6.30, OtimoJi. 7.DO. Lon- Edg3r Allan Poc in France, talk. Wgftiter. 3.40, Concert, part 2. 430, His- T* 00 . News;, 1.40, The Pai toric Performances of Schubert.f Quartet. 2.0ft Gardeners’ Que 5.20, Claudio Arrau, a -portrait.t Trme. 230, Play; The Idiot cisco. 13.15 am. Law Calf. SUNDAY BBC 1 7.15, Open University: A Poet and Politics; 8.05-8.30, Maths: Differen- BBC 2 7.40 am. Open University; Making Sense of Society; 8.05; ’Unity and tial Equations. 9.00-9.15, Barnabr. Diversity; 8.30, M101/I9 Matrices 9.40-10.10, Nai Zradagi Naya Jee- 1; 8.55, Maths Analysis; ‘9.20, van. 11.40-11.50, On tbe Move. 12.25 pm, Sunday. Worship. 1.00, Farming. 135. Canoe. 1.50, News Headlines. 1.55, Tom and Jerry. 2.10, The Irish Way. 2.40, Grand¬ stand. Motor Racing: John Player British Grand Prlx. Athletics: United Kingdom National Cham¬ pionships. 5.35, Mickey Mouse Club. 6.00 Newt. 6.10 Xaty. 6.40 Your Songs of Praise Choice. 7.15 The Onedin Line.. 8.OS Film: Hunters are for Kill¬ ing, with Burt Reynolds. Martin Balsam, Melvyn Douglas, Suzanne Plesh- erte. 9.40 That’s Life. 1030 News. 1030 Everyman. The - Right. to Believe- 11.05 The Editors. 11.45 Dilemmas. The Search-for Happiness. 12.10 am Weather. RlfloiMI vu-iallons C8SC11: bbc WALES; 6.40-7.IS pm,' Canu'r Pi-ms. BBC a WALES T-S5-«.« ptn. CrKkd- Olwnoniu v Middlesex. Channel 1.63 pn> kMllwr. 1,55, Film. Not » a itrnnHrt*. *.20. ATV. 5.20. London. -15, ATV. a.15. iJMldon. 10J0. li^n. Floating an Oilrig; 9.45,'Element¬ ary Maths; 10.10. Maths; 10.35. Plastics and Steel; 11.00, Army Board (2); 11.25, The University Library; . 1130, Computers— Operating Systems; 12.15 pm. His¬ tory of Maths; 12.40, From Time to don. 12.15 Ml. Al Uio End of ilic Day. London Weekend 9.05 am, Talking Bikes. 9.30, Buy¬ ing and Selling a House. 10.00. Morning Worship from St Mary’s Whitby, Yorkshire. 11.00. Thu Shape oF Things. 1130, Winning with Wilkie. 12.00, Nuts and Bolts of the Economy Seminar. 1.00. Cartoons. 130. Funky Phantom (r). 1.45, University Challenge. 2.15. Movin' On. 3.15. Those Won¬ derful TV Times. 3.45. The Cedar Time; 1.05. Policies, Authority and Tree. 4.45, Doctor on the Go frl. Attainment; 130. The Corporate Economy.- 1.55, Cricket. Notting¬ hamshire v Lancashire. , 6.45 News Review.. 7.15 The World About Us. The Rhonis' or Assam.. 8.05- -'News. 8.10 A Quiet World, convcri saiions with Ulster writers- 935 .The Devils Crown. 10.20 Grand Prix. highlights. 10.50-1230 am, Film. Two Lane . Blacktop, with James Tay- - lor, W’arreu Oates. Southern 9.00 am. Tbe Shape of Things. 930, London. 11.00, Farm Progress. 1137. Weather. 11.30, Horses in our. Blood, 12.00, Lon¬ don. 1.00 pm. Survival: The Family That Lives with Elephants. 2.00, Film: Lady Ha mil ton. with Vivien Leigh. Laurence Olivier. 4.15. -Southern News. 430. ATV. 5.20, London. 7.15, ATV. 8.15, London. 10.30, The Electric Theatre Show. 11.00. Power Without Glory, 12.00, Weather. The Black Experience. 530, Juniur Sunday Quit, 5.45, The Owl Service (r). 6.15 News. 6.25 Jaywalking. 6.50 Come Sunday at Winches¬ ter. 7-15 The Incredible Hulk: Terror Timas Square, with Bill Bixhy, Lou Fcrrjgno. 8.10 Paul Daniels* Blackpool Bonanza. 9.15 News. 9.30 Clouds of Glory. The Rime ol the Ancient Mariner. 10.30 The London Programme. 11.30 Concert. Pat Boone. 12.15 Sir John Gielgud reads Shakespeare sonnet. (rl repeat. Yorkshire 9.00 am. 'll,.- of TlilnnS. 9.36. uui'ino .m-j SrU'lng a -House. 9.50. f*'.’ 1 »<1 10.00. London, il.oo. Mjgoir tn Iround. 11.30, /-arm¬ ing. 13.00. Lonrion. 1.00 pm. ua|i-nrlrfr' Sunday. 1.30. Emmcrtlalc Farm. 2.20, r~!" ; -H»v»e U> ih« Wavo*. wuh John Mills, iviin Ureqsnn.* A.lO, Cannon, Racing John Player British Grand Prix: Tennis, Athletics, Cricket, Cycling and Rowing. 5.50, Move On. 6.00, Radio 1. 7.02, Sunday Sport. 7.30, Radio 1. 10.02, Des O'Connor. 10.30, Hinge and Bracket. 11.02. Sports Desk. 11.05, Softly Sentimental. 12.00-2.02 am, Radio 1. ATV 9.05 am, London. 9.30. Farming ID. 10.00, London. 11.00, Buying and Selling. 1135, Captain Nemo. 11.30, Gardening. 12.00, Luniinn. 1.00 pm. Chopper Squad. 2.00, National Bowing From Holme Pitrrepont. 3.20. Danger in Para¬ dise. 4.20, Tile Cedar Tree. 5.20. London- 7.15. The Love Boat, new scries. 8.10, London. 10.30, Whicker’s World (r). 11.30-12.00, Madeline Bell in Concert. ten ham Festival, part 1: Haydn, 6.00, News. 6.15, The Ard Hamilton-f 9.40, A Composer oa £.15, On the Town: Paris. ( Criticism, talk by -lain HamHton. * • pan 2: Schu : wSer^^OO.^ S^,' bertf 10.50, A Scluotzlcr Short trait of. a Love: Elizabeth Bai *** ano recital: and Robert Browning. 11.00, . MedQMr.f 11.45, News. U30-U.55. logue. 1135, News. 12 30-1233 Schubert Song.f Inshore Forecast. Tyne Tees 0.00 am. Soulh<-rn. 9.39. Muvmi *n.l S-ilUria a House. 9.SO. Po-i-bc imnos- riWr. lO.OO. London. 11.00. uiUnn Hikes. 11.35, Whurt Ihr Jobs .In*. Granada 930 am. The Shape of Things. 10.00, London. 11.00, Talking Bikes. 1135, Cartoon. 11.30, Buy¬ ing and Selling a -House. 12.8ft London. 1.00 pm. The Beach-, combers. 1.30, Out of Town. 2.00, Space 1999. 2.S5, Banacek. 430, ATV. 530. London. 7.15, ATV. 8.10, London. 1030, Police Woman. 11.25-12.25 am, Russell Harty. HTV 9.00 Jim. Smjiup Street. lO.OO. Lon¬ don. 11.30. Talking Blkc-i. 12.00, Lon¬ don 1.00 pm. Job-LLn<*. 1.30, rirm- Border’ 9.05 am, Lv-I.jon. 9.30, Yuw. 19 . IjmdDO. 11.39, Elephant Boy. 13 London. l.OU pm, 1 of 3 ■■ 1.35. flonli; Ulan. 1-30, Farm 3.00. An. 3.13. uu-'Juli. 3.«S. ..Icoay ot Iho bitun. 4.20, ATV. S London. 7.15, AIV, B.IO. Lo* 10.30, Cancan: Leslie L'gflanu. 11 12^25 am, WlUiin Tlickc Walb- Scottish 0.30 am. The Special Child in 10 Tar/ap »ri. 11.-00, London. • il Junlor Sunday Outr. 12.00, Low 1.00 pm, farming. 1.30, TftMc-9. dert} 11 TV Tmw. a.oa, fipgee « 3.00, The Ccd^r Tn-o.-4.Oo, ran PlMPtom. 4.2s. Cl.oppor Sauadj ». That'a the- Spvrtl. 5.05. London, l A d&r. H fflgSfti JOSS 12-a0 Pra-6c^wsn^r.. :; Uorouati. Brian, farlw,.- 4.20, ATV. * ,1 . • ' borough. Bri.m mrb«,. 11.30. BulW low Own Bill. ’2.00, 5.20. London. 7.1C. ATV B.ld. U»n- l?* :rf,don - fl iT' ?.^ C 2'IS - rian 1 0-30-11.50, Him r The SLrannrr Farnima. 3.00. srorlino i^ioinc'. 3.30. \i-|<hin. with BoTharj Ed-n. iLinornn MBMllWi!. .3*50. Thnje Vi05. •’■nuanl. Joyce Van Pdll^r, David Doyle. KTV tYMBU.WM.e5: A4 HTV llertul TV TBRCC ■VIV. 5.20. Ulster London. ^-VlVr ^xeoni: l.oo pm. x Cftrldren "of 10.30, InipdCti 10.^5. Quincy. 3ion^. 1.30, AaflculiioT, S.20-5-- 11.00 am, Granaiid. i 2 . 0 O,_ LD^ i.OO pm. Gamori; Wav, 1JO.-jp*S - - - ——• - --- .itv comyn. 2.oo,. Him. Her. l«- _ , , . Children o f lhe 3.13, London. 3.43. H’and5._ *1 oi™i™ 2l?^-,i^F rl JS , !i5f r -'-. 5^0-3.45. Captain Nemo. 4.20. ATT. 5^0; T Piwityn a i Fcibt: 10.30-12.oo, Paics- don. 7.15. Art’. S.T0, London, tai 11.30, GlbbavUld. Grampian A -/.I- 10.45 am. Morning Worship, il.oo. rkll^UH. - '2-no’ 1^' 12.00. ‘9.05 am. London. 11,30, BtUW JJ P"l; .Farming. 1,3o, .own Boat. 12.00. London. ijW.J Chopper Squad. 2.30, Tiia hn-oion lac- George Hamilton IV. 1.30. 4h« 2rt5.V l- 3 b Firming. 2-05,. The PwcO nona'd 2.35, Flbn: Cumae TO Lm. wjlh WJ. 5*Va* Lamnni. Bjnks. Aiasialr Sim. John M1TU. *-5 : .iT:. 1 S V-.\! V ■„*- 1 L ^ 11 - ATV. S^2Q. London. 7.15, ATT- »■] OOII. 10.30, Mini: N'qhT Tcrrpr. wii« London. 10.30. Maroc. 11 jOO; •uw-jT!«i xioi2 n0 5i» Mil Houmous, Li aim and GenUomeo, 12.00, The an Michael Tolofl. 12.00, Heiiocviona. tor today. . • Westward 10.00 am. London. 11.00. Butlil 1 our Own ilo.it. 11.30. Burinii Selling a IIAU.I-. 19.00. London. 1.00 Pm. Suet l'uj'J. 1.S3. Film: Nnt ,1, n Etrangcr. with Oil'In rtr Hdil'Lind. Hobert MH- . hum. > 4.20. A IT. 5.20. London. 7.13. ATV 8.10. London, 10,30, Film - . •■a a, •<>■■■■ til I'HMill. •*, iu, LfdTIVtin, I ■ ■ -a ■ . » ■ • •»- ■ r - r>u r ■ , a .. 4.20. AfA. 2.30 London 7.15. Alt'., The Lo»tl»<ir Ony^. wllh HUa Tushlnf]- 8.10. • London 10.30. Tlie First Ten lium. Cn'In C.nnpbv-11. * 12.20 am. y«.jr>. ii.i3-ii.45, Jos concert: -Sa- ■IM -lnnes I'ultli for Life. - utack ond while. -in- ».«. uiiiwn. inn gnodna Ql nnlmdli.rr. '.Villi neiurd 2 is Flhn- rn-rum m lull wlln MS, ATV B-IO. London. 10.30, Film-. Lnvia Oliver need. Duncjn Limoni. Bjnks F AwiiSr a sFm ^dhn^'.inB*."''M’ 0 »u. ? r onyi. with HHa Jushlng- 5.20. U, rjdDO. , 7.1S. A 7 V.S. 1 o7u, n ; A7A .S^O^Lon Am. 7I1S. ATV - _*-■ SCOTCH WHISKY SCOTLAND’S NUMBER ONE SCOTCH WHISKY l! JfJ? ** 1 THE TIMES SATURDAY REVIEW JULY 15 1978 . ■»L _■ . -lift .• -- •■ie*’ r;’>. -■* ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL SATURDAY, 29 JULY at 8 p.m. TCHAIKOVSKY ' Romeo & Joliet. Violin Concerto* Nutcracker Suite Swan Lake Capriccio Itafien NEW PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA ALUN FRANCIS ERICH GRUENBERG TlefcMa:-£1.00, £1.60, £2.20. £3.75. £3.30. £S.B5 only. HaU 51911 & Agents. FRIDAY. 4 AUGUST at 8 p.m. VIENNESE EVENING Gv. ‘Die Tledcrmaus’ Johann Strauss II Emperor Waltz .... Johann Strauss II Symphuny No. 40 In G minor Mozart Ov. ‘Morning. Noon and Night' Suppo Waltz ‘Voltes of Spring' Johan- Straus* II Radelzki March .. Johann Stratus I Hunitng Polka .... Johann Strauss II Waits 1 Gold and Silver *.Lobar Pizzicato Pol La Johann II and Jour Straus* Blue Danube Waltz Johann Straus* II NEW SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conductor : VILEM TAUSKY' Tickets: £1.00. £1.60. £=.20. £2.75. £3.50. E3.B3 only. HaU A Agents. ■'01-908 5191) \. Lady.of the Tooti-Nameh, by Val Prinsep ‘ --i id -' . ,r, -‘ ei •. Slaves, sphinxes and sandstorms - '*-u ■ -■■j '“Are • i.i ;; -■•it we never to get out of Egypt any more? Nor to perceive ' the existence -of ^ T r any living ■areatures but Afabs -- *: ‘and- camels• remarked Rus- • kin plaintively, as the Royal T Academy increasingly reflected ’ ; nineteenih century involve¬ ment with the Middle East. Quite a lot of camels ' end. Artifcs fend. slaves and 6$njpp&._qaxl Sandstwrins) have accurate in their studies of camels. ‘Thomas Seddon, friend of Hotmail Hunt, shows a thin, panerR dromedary, waiting while its master smokes a long pipe at the City of the Dead; Frederick Goodall’s '.camel, fodder laden, stalks proudly by an eq-iraHy haughty Nubian.; Theodore. Frere has a group of quiescent camels and donkeys, ridden by awkward- looking Europeans clutching and guarded by a black servant holding a gun and a fly whisk. Many of the pic¬ tures in- this exhibition have an element of the cinema about themdie Pre-Raphae¬ lite bard focus and brilliant detail; the contrived “ nat¬ ural*’ pose. They don’t exactly add up to a good movie (though Individually there are some worthwhile paintings!, but they do remind one of that relaxing form of entertain¬ ment—a really good bad movie. Particularly recom¬ mended; William Strutt’s The Terrible Scare, in which an been gathered together at The : - Fine Art Society m Eastern azure-fined parasols as they ' " ErttMZWars, -an' 'exWtritiWF' of' visit the Pyramids; and John '. Orientalist Painters of the Frederick Lewis made studies Ninetettith Century. of camels delicate enough for Now that Arabia tends to Rusldn 'to collect despite, his' Arab steed and spear-carrying confute, ;lm images of" o£t "surfeit of tfie East The dot-’ rider flee from two fierce, and " reticent ' and ' Towerblocks, tiest carnal is in Georg Opiz’s one rather vague, lions; and •’ there is Something nostalgic tableau vh'ant of a Lebanese Benjamin-Constant’s delecrable and touching about these pic- Emir rendering homage to an Emir relaxing with two equally tures of exotic scenes, made bv Egyptian commander: the delectable cheetahs. And pre- ‘ heavily-caparisoned, startled serving a firm link with reality azw'nial occupies the centre of are groups of David Roberts* the stage, with an _c r nate edi- topographical pictures, includ- fice on its back probably con-, ing one which be presented to raining the documents of the another anise with an eye for occasion. three-dimensional solidity— Also bj r Lewis, who lived in Charies Dickens. Cairo' according io Thackeray Compared, say, to Georges “like a languid Lotus-Eater—a. Clairin’s extraordinarv Feeding dreamy,, hazy, lazy, tobaccofied the Flamingo in a • Harem . . . life ”, is an extremely powerful (CJairin was said to live like a Stift, boringly bright*.pictures; picture of-a white chiid-prince, “.crouched greyhound at the and were compassionate • and impassively holding a sword feet of Sarah Bernhardt, which ■ artists who. set. off. equipped with everything from “tents, " canteens, bases, tubes ” to ‘ “ sago*, apricot jam or marma- - lade, books”—as one surviying tistisfarms/us. They developed fantasies about harems—which . had- to be painted from models . -.ip die studio; gasped ar the hear; and light—Wbich often became reflected, in- rather may have accounted for a loti, Matisse’s response to Morocco belongs to another world: a twentieth century world, where light, pattern, colour and shape could figure hugely and simply in the forefront of conscious¬ ness, openly prompted by the psyche. The Luraley Cazalet gallery has a varied exhibition of hCs drawings and prints, which are interesting to see in conjunction with die paintings at Tbe Marlborough (described earlier by Paul Oven,). Nearly all the drawings are of women, and . if one considers his Deux Odalisques . languid and chatty on a chaise, bur above all pal¬ pably fleshy, on the same day as some of those Nineteenth Century harems in which neo¬ classical statues seem barely to have come to life, one appre¬ ciated how successfully he searched for a consistent artis¬ tic expression for his sensuous feeling*. Though I have to admit I hare great admiration for those cemcl-rrekkers, with rheir “camp stools, armchair, spades, umbrella, straw hats, saddlebags” and “green or blue spectacles ”. Some of them seem to have packed rose-timed ones as well. • Paddv Kitchen VICTOR H0C3HAUSER presents . in association with ihe Greater London Council Margot Fonteyn Mama Gielgud Natalia Makarova Yoko Moroshito Galina Panov Lynn Seymour AUGUST 7 .to 19 GALA BALLET SEASON with Fernando Rujones Stephen Jefferies Jonathan Kelly Ivan Nagy Valery Panov Tetsiftaro Shimizu with CORPS DE BALLET Repertoire : Les SyJphides. Romeo and Juliet Love Scene. Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux, New MacMillan Ballet, Japanese National. Dance. Bal de Nuir, Diana and Actaeon, Albinoni Psalm, Pas de deox from : Sleeping Beauty, Swan Lake, Don Quixote, Le Corsaire, Flower Festival. Subject to alteration. Evening at 7.30. Matlrtoe Saturdays at 3 Booking now open—Royal Festival Hall <01-928 3101) ' Minstrels Irving Wardle \ L. O.'V Sloan’s documentary with the propaganda of the Black Arts movement. At times,.‘the manner gets a Bit arch, particularly when. Mr Sloan doubles the roles of genial host and. lecturer,' and . . leads into, say, a sombre section musical originated, two years on the .Civil, War with linking ago as a learned contribution flourishes Hke Ci And now, .to a San.. Francisco bi-centennial while we are on the pinnacle of . exhibition of early : American art, and Mr Sloan says that the organizers were at once sur- prised, ihar a black man would - propose the taboo subject of . minstrelsy and nervous that be • nnght degrade their show. with. Talent in embryo Royal Ballet School Wimbledon such a low art form. levity. . . 7 ’ However, he has a toujpj job (also dancing as strenuously as anybody else), and comes up with any amount of curious Information: giving Dibden his due as a white who was the first actor to popularize black-face ballads, and pointing .They need not hove worried.- Ae slmffle F he AnytHng more proper it would ' slide a means of getting be hard to imagine than the azrival -of a stone-faced pianist, to. launch the company into ** ph, Dem Golden Slippers ° with_ a foursquare ' tonic- domin ant vainp. Barely a ayn- around the plantation prohibi¬ tion of dancing (technically defined, as crossing the feet). The all-male integrated com¬ pany contains; some excellent and -well-contrasted dancers. . copated bar or blue note dis-' from Robin .Coverton, at bis . turbs the evening, which , runs . from the arrival of the first swaying to the rhythm of that -giant wooden 1 drum .-' . called the boat Vto the age of Ziegfeld and Bert Williams, Jf™ 86 _most famous number, Nobody comes over rather more pointedly from Mr Sloan’s black and white chorus than tit does solo in Bubbling Brotcn Sugar.. ..... .... Like that production. Jubilee ■ Minstrels is another sign of the pobtical relaxation by which biack America can how accept its past forms of entertainment, even when they conform to . white stereotypes. - A few years ™ e gnnning faces of Mr bloan s troupe would have been an expression of ■ ferocious •.irony. But hostility now-gives- way to a bantering-manner .that jm more ,.iji common .-with Players Theatre Yic'toriana than best in . competition numbers like the Juba-, to Anthony Cabello, who rums into a winy flirt once he gets into a Spanish skirt. The acting is ool so hoc. The difficulty here is that xhe nonsense lectures and crosstalk for Mr Bones aod Mr Tarabo is as dead as anything exhumed ■ from, the- Victorian music hall, and the company cannot decide whether to play it straight or in quotation marks. That, I sus¬ pect, is one result of Mr Sloan's self-can celling purpose of “ dis¬ solving ** the minstrel myth while at the same time cele¬ brating the artists who put the myth on the road. •There is. no - difficulty where dance is concerned, bur it be¬ comes acute as soon as anybody opens his mourh and assumes a blackface character. Let me re¬ commend the show as ah excep¬ tionally friendly night- out. . New Milner symphony Radio 3 •■■■■. of appeasement, and it is with this that the movement ends. There follows a chaconne, with a ‘tenor soloist singing of the poem “ Spring and Fall ”, by Gerard Manley Hop*kins. Here, accepted without personal re¬ gret or special pain, i i the msn, faced memorials of his John Percivai It is an ambitious repertory which the Roshal Ballet School bas picked for its week of per¬ formances at tbe Wimbledon Theatre: three established works which are difficult enough to have given experi¬ enced dancers trouble before now. together with two specially created ballets. The familiar works are all ably aud conscientiously done, but Let Sulphides a little too solemnly, even making allow¬ ances for the funereal tempi preferred by .Alicia Markova, who supervised the production. You have to make some allow¬ ance for the size of the stage in Kenneth MacMillan's Diver¬ sions. but even so the speed and neatness of Julie Rose and Roland Price were notable, also tbe smiting confidence with which Ashley YVbester tackled bis difficult partnering assign¬ ments. Ashton’s Birthday Offering makes some severe technical and stylistic demands, but it was in that that the young dancers came closest to absolute success. Tbe seven solos are among rbe prettiest anyone ha* created in this century, aud the girls h3d been well cast so tlr.t each, in temperament or physi¬ que, was able to bring at least a touch of something persona! tg her performance. Two of them at Thursday's performance went further than that. Clare Shepherd in - the •nio that was made for Beriosova and Karen Paisey in Fonteyn's solo both gave per¬ formances that (admittedly at a more modest level than the original interpreters) were rounded and shining. Good bearing and a nice sham attack, too. from the boys io thrir mazurka, with Mark VVelford leading. T- 'e two new works were both made for die younger dancers of the junior school. One also introduced e. new choreo¬ grapher. Jonathan Burrows, still a senior student. His Kaleido¬ scope. to music by Eugene Goossens. used simple oiove- meot with much invention and humour. His choreography- imagina¬ tively transforms children’s games into attractive dances. Richard Glasstone’s Odd One In is also related to the per¬ formers' own experience: in this ease u ballet rtudent, serious and sljglaly dreamy, whose reveries are repeatedly inter¬ rupted by horseplay or flirta¬ tion among Iits colleagues. Michael Clark's sensitive but resilient account of the central role makes the finale credible, and Glasstone has ingeniously used his sub¬ ject to allow students of all ! ages to ihuw what they can do I best, so that moments of ! virtuosity emerge scintillating from tiie lively ensemble. It is a pleasure to see so much talent in embrvo. CITY OF LONDON FESTIVAL 17-28 JULY Programme includes : Sl Paul’s Cathedral: Brahms * Requiem 19 July St. Paul's Cathedral: Haydn * Creation ’. 26 July Schubert at tbe Mansion House. 18 & 25 July Miriam Fried Garrick. OtUwon Rohan de Saram Southwark Cathedral: Britten * Prodigal Son ’ & ‘Curlew River’, 18-21 July. Guildhall: Monteverdi Choir & Orchestra. 18 July Polish Chamber Orchestra, 21 July Carl Flesch International Violin Competition Prizewinners* Concert, 28 July Kent Opera : Monteverdi * The Return of Ulysses 25/26 July GLASS/LIGHT An international exhibition of stained slaw at Ike Rojal Exchange iBank Underground) Gilbert & Sullivan’s • YEOMEN OF THE GUARD’’ with TOMMY STEELE as Jack Point TH». TOWER OF L0M>0> UNTIL 12 AUGUST . Full details and UtkL-if is.a.e. ploaset Hum r estival Bo:: Olllcc. Jus on House. St Paul's Churchrard Condon. E.C.4. Tel. 01-i48 0465 and ui-4£B 48SO • 1 eomcn ticket*- uitl> i. or all branches of Keith Provrsc: CHRIST CHURCH SPITALFEELDS Commercial Strool. Nr. Aldsote ft Liverpool St. l»\ST CONCERTS THIS SEASON SATURDAY. 22 JULY 7JI p.m. ' L’ECOLE D’ORPHEE • the beet chATJClcrUrd authentic Uisamrucru ensemble -1 Financial Tones Castello, Legrcnzi, FrescobaJdi, Moffat, Handel, Bach. SITL-RDAY, S AUGUST 7.30 p.m. MOZART PIANO CONCERTOS K46$ K4S2 and the "Jupiter’Symphony : JULIA CLOAD piano «•• Formidable '• The Ouardam Hertfordshire Chamber Orchestra cond: Howard Williams 3.CN7. £1 50. £1.00 latsiet ■ from Frlc-mls or Cftrlii Church SpItoKWcls. 45 Chalcol Road. N\V1 it.j e please > or at door. SUSLMER MUSIC AT ST. 3IARG \RET*S, WESTMINSTER. P.VRLLAMENT S®.. S.M.I. TON1CHT at a p.m. VIVALDI: Sinfonia in D minor ; Concerto for 2 violins in G HANDEL : Concerto Grosso Op. 6, No. 5 . HOLST : SL Paul’s Suite PURCELL : Suite of Dances from “ The Faery Queen ” SIMON STANDAGE. ANDREW* WAT KIN SON—violin* THE RICHARD HICKOX ORCHESTRA Leader: Simon Standag- Cuoduetur: RICHARD HICK OX TIckeLv £t. Cl. CS at door tonight. THEATRES Philharmooia/Davis Festival HaJI Max Harrison The Beatrice unU Benedict overture is late Berlioz, and on Thursday the Phi'ht-- monia Orchestra conducted by Andrew Davis yave )"» the sort of buoyant performance movement must uoiv promise j needed to bring out rhe music'; vehement and ecceoiric grace. In particular the rhvrhms were consistently springs. rhe colours Paul Griffiths The- Liverpool Festival of bacred Music opened on Thtirs* - - , £ day -With a concert mtr-odtieinc tranststory lot erf Anthony Milners second sym- everywhere by riier phony, commissioned by the mortality. The third and final ,BBC-and played by.-rhe Roval movement must uow promise Liverpool, Philharmonic. A new ** peace that is to be founo symphony, for such a festival only /in God, and rbar it does might seem a carious dioice, ! n m ' SS[C olaboTately laid out - ‘■'though - riot perhaps to any- for s°P rAao “““ teQor soJoists bright and glowing trithout dy.wbo knows 1 the irnporrance "l b chorus and nr rhesus , uver-empnatis. aiusic of hisReraan spiritual peace is-not for atholic faith.‘In tiiis‘case be mner a . rela3an B mto bbssfid as addressed himself -to the repose: instead the bulk of the music takes place in tbe flaming ecstacy of struggle, again re¬ calling Schoenberg but also, and even more strongly, Tippett, ft is nn episodic,movement, and ir contains some unhappy moments, like the bootlessly resolute duet. ** Be strong in rd”7li lady. Dulcinea, some gritty brass chords signalling the col¬ lapse of his mind, yet Cer¬ vantes’s anti-hern himself did not always hold our attention. Rafael Wallfiscb. the young cello soloist, does not as yet have a strong musical person¬ ality. altbouch he did assert hirr.seif at rimes, especially in 'jie solemn meditations of the j fifth and last variations. Cer- | teioiy. rco. his refined tone 2nd a 0. MJii. ITiurs. 3.0. Sal. 3.U ft R.7U. nLUMENA with Ellraboih Archer, Trovor Crlffiths by Edward do Fiilippe Ulrmncd bi FRANCO ZEFFIRELLI ■‘ TOTAL TRIUMPH.-' E. News. “ .\N EVENT U. TREASLTIC." D. Mirror. “ MAY IT FILL IHE LYRIC FUR A KINDRED YEARS. - ' S.T. MAYFAIR. 3036 ti'M. 8. Sal. 5.50 ft 8.3U. Weil. Mat. a l 5. WELSH NATIONAL TKEA1KE CO DYLAN TBOlUAS’S UNDER MILK WOOD A JiUilit " Gill). •• Malcolm Tav* lor & r.cauiirully staged and lovingly dirccled produTtion Dally Trl. MERMAID. U1-3A8 7«6 IrCBI 248 2&S5«. Lunch limu July 17-28 11.05-1.35 J'.m.' KY SHAKESPEARE July 2i onlv ‘J.30 a.m.-Midnlntu CHRISTIANS AWAKE A Celebration trf Uie 5l>orh .tnnlvers.iry of lli<? Pilgrims' l>rograss. THEATRES OPON AIR RECEKT'S PARK. Tel: 486 24.-1. A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM. Evgs. 7.45. Mats. Wed.. ITiui. & Sat. 2.30. In reper-MIrr vriih Sh,iW» KAN OF DESTINY ft DARK LADY OF THE SONNETS I mm Mon. With MARIA AITKEN. IAN TALBOT. HELEN V.’EIR. DAVID WHmVOITTII. OPEN SPACE- 01-387 6‘^S'i Cvqs. 8.0 until Sun. JUBILEE MINSTRELS AMERICAN DOCUMEN¬ TARY. Tfcu. £1.75+ cancauioiu. PALACE. 01-457 6834 EVPS. 8.0 FT), ft Sal. 6.0 ft 8.40 JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR by Tim Rice ft Andrew LJovd Webbai. MERMAID. 248 7M6. RMLitnanl '341* 2835 fetcnlng.-i T.oO ft ‘-.15. EVERY GOOD BOY DESERVES FAVOUR N.ir for aciors and orchouj by TDM STCPPARD & ANDRE PREVIN. m:Yii acute ohrasing conveyed . _ ,.i_:_ r>_i _ . f LOVLS Irlt cnULIaH LANOL-AI.E .V>nj '■umethmg of ilie Don s way- thk highest comic art can pgs- 1 5IBLY MISS THIS PI5\Y.-' S. TliFirs. subject yof . peace!, - which- '• is ' istlly and ; patently . com- V. during the course of the lree-jnayethem work.. •: _ Hie ^naphony begins with an >rdrestra'.aidegto. prefaced 'by yejed quotation -front' Boethius. ggf* :—I”- 11 cl ® r ti . is . the Lord-./u fights its way. 10 f 16 ,BIQS1C - U a ^ 0 ^. however, tofu fine and moving of-.-Peace.. Herfr it is,-, conclusion, when the meaning chattenas and Strenuously D f' the prin&pal theme is re- lnviog -m -a maimer whaefa vealed as: « make me an -.m -a manner ^Ssssts - .a not inappropriate instrument lqaeHiug on Scfcaenbetg’s Meredith. ^ Dance 'around the 1 Golden, symphony al ” even to fhe occasional passion w unis -of-frustrated jazz. ' Only a even over xumpet'melody, still 7 , taut. Jxit Manning at ield„in..DQiance^ offers a strain ieeling, li if Thy peace ". Davies gave the It was Dleajunt in contrast that with the 'liffcrem though obviously related orchestral in¬ ventiveness heaid iu Strauss's. Don Quixote. Here rhe composer wastes nu time, for the intro¬ duction at once presents the three main themes associated with, tiie central figure, and cho.se must be ivi-i! charac¬ terized, and were by Mr Davies. The expressive foro* of power and texture are everywhere ap¬ parent in rhe score but pic¬ turesque derail must be recon¬ ciled with overall structure, the more sa as the former' has ward ness. As vioia . soloist, Csaba Erdelyi had a smaller role but .Tt some points filled it more positively and well suggested Rancho Panza's humour anti liveliness, particularly m rhe ’bird variation. The orchestra non rayed the sheep of the pre¬ ceding variation almost too vivid ; v. and such awkward mat NATIONAL THEATRE Y2S 2252 OLiVIER ibprn ^U9vi: Today 2.AT a .5M. Mon. 7.30 THE ORCHARD by Chekhoi- M ictijc -i Trayo. LYTTELTON t'ltrcisccnium TaJnj- 3 ft 7.43 PLUNDER Iravtp*. Mon. 7.43 Plenty, COTTESLOE isniAJI audiroriumi; Ton'l ft Mon. £ AMERICAN BUFFALO by D:vid Mjiopt. ■ Many ractllMil cheap Kill all 3 d-iy of tiorf. Car. Park. R<-. s’viirarii “3e 2 m. .r. bl.tis. ‘,26 3032 CHERRY ITulW by btape i: by Ben UroJi: uird vivio-v. ana suen awkward mat- j tours of the buildimc uMiy onci. ters as the downward glissanuos [ t>acJ;siagc''. jii.ao mr. 633 obso. nr bss-i tuba ?.«id contra-bassoon ,_ „ _ special importance in sugsest- erformauce whose i ing the Don’s various defeats never in doubi { (by two flocks nf sheep, several ’ windmills, etc i. In the event there was a nice .oboe solo depicting the Don’s ie air, with Jane John Elwes as 3ou5 soloists. in ••arisyon four were excel- lenrlv man?«ed. However, the larger orchestral perspectives were less sham; the musics I vestures were decisive enough j but overall balance was less sond. I Afterwards. Beethoven’s : Evuica ^ymnhony ?eemed. to ■ "’e a* leRSL loss interesting. Yet i __ _ Vr IVris »or a great' deal of I K,locr ' n ^i l S;. SESr ,” ,ci,ael fyrv into all those tutti chords in tiie first movement, and that | TSdifli^ii anJ'7'.to ip fact wps cn eniorably direct arid positive reading.- Oxford OXFORD FESTIVAL 1978 Pfaiyhoiifc i uBp 3 i 47133 Until July -Jind HORSESHOE THEATRE CO. pTVftml* Polly Jimit. John Noabbt and Josepn O'Conor In HOBSON’S CHOICE . by Humid firighguao Evga. B.Q. Krt. jnd Sal. a.U ft a.13. £1,25-2o.uO. OLD VIC tr£lH 7616 PROSPECT AT THE OLD VIC Junc-Sopt. Season Donlson. Derel; Jacob! In THE LADY’S NOT FOR BURN INC “ fresh and buoyant " Di>:i7 TplninpJi lay '2.30 and 7 .jC TWELFTH NIGHT an oillitanUlng rcvlia! " Tho Times Rptums July -2T. PALLADIUM. 01-437 7575 HOW UJY1IL AUGUST IV. Mon . Tucs.. nuns, and Trl. at B. Weds, -rnd Sot. 6.10 and 8.60. THE TWO RONNIES to a Spectacular Comedy Revue ■ TWO EXTRA PERFS. TOMORROW AT 5 & 8 Bk»>L now on tlOCUnc 01-407 2060 PHOENIX. . .01-856. 22V4 Evgs. 8.13. l-'ri.. Sal. 6 ft S.ftO TIM BfiOOKE TAYLOP-GRAE'lE GARDEN make US laugh ”• 0. Mill THE UNVARNISHED TRUTH Tho Hit Comedy by Royee Ryton. ” UUKiH. WHV 1 I'HOUGHl t WOULD HAVE DIED ". S • Times. "SHEER DEUCHT". E.9. •• ULOR1-. OUS CONTINUOL-S LAL'tilfTER " Tms. PICCADILLY. 137 4506 ICC blips from 8 30 s.m. 836 1071 -3i moa.-Fri. 7.50. 841. 4.30 ft 8.00 Wed. Mai. al 3. Royal Shakespeare Company m THE OUTRAGEOUS ADULT COMEDY by PNer Nichols PRIVATES 0\ PARADE " Ripriuring Iriumph " S. Express BEST COMEDY OF THE YEAR Ev. Std. Auwrt and S.U’.E.T. Award Fl’LLY AIR-CON Dll ION ED prince EDWARD cc i formerly ckisoi U l-J j 7 6877. PrrtonnaiiLi-i. this vreefc: Erg*. 8.0. Thur. >1.0. Sat, 3.30, 8.40 NOTE CHANCE OF SAT. PERFS: From JULY U2: Sain 3.0 ft a.JO F»m AUG. 5: S4U 3J> ft 8.40 And from SEPT. Sals. 3.0 ft 8.0 E\HTA by Hm Rico anil Andrew Lloyd Webber PRINCE OF WALES, ill -030 EfiBI 6vo» B .11 SaUirt).iy» 5.3'i & S.-tO THE HILARIOUS BROADWAY COMEDY MUSICAL i love my Wife ’ surrl'" Robin Aal.wllli , Directed hy- GFJUF SAKS CREDIT CARD COOKINGS «)S0 0846 OUEEMS THEATRE. C-f- 01-7.35 Ub6. Evga. 8.U. Veil. '>.0. Sal. S.U ft B.30. ANTHONY OUAYLR FAITH BROOK MICHAEL ALDRIDGE and RACHEL KEMP SON In ALAN BFMMSTf? - - 1 THE OLD COUNTRY BEVI PLAY OF THE YEAR Pli'V. .ind PLiyrrs London CiTIIc-i AH'Hra Ometed JV CLIFFORD WILLIAMS WigmoteHall . Mann gatW|Hj acni-Vn e /M ailing J ist.?Op.n y c ar. ^Trckels tr.om'V/igmort HniL .36 ’Wigmote’.SlrfV.I ,9T-93o2T41 cjn.Kjjtti-Pfqii.'sc-. arid -olfi'er agents-»• Arts CouncM ot.Gretit Britain SUMMER FESTIVAL 1978 Concerts nightly at 7^0 pjn. 15 JULY to 5 AUGUST Tonight 15 July Son IB" July price C Mon IT July erica C Tucs is July prfca Wed 10 July price C- Than 20 July price C FrI 31 July price C Sat . 22 July price C Sun 23 July price B Mon' 24 July price C Tua 25 July price B wad. 26 July price B Thu 37 July CHRISTA LUDWIG mezzo, GEOFFREY PARSONS piano AH. SEATS SOLD: CABRIHJ STRING QUARTET. KENNETH ESSEX viola Mciairl ■ Quartet In E Hat K.420- Mendetiohn Ouintci In A Op. 18 Breihovcn Oulnioi In C Op. 2R JOAQUIN ACHUCARKO piano ' Brahms Sonata In F minor Schumann Novcllrite No. 1. Erodes Symphonlaucs ALLEGRI-ROU.es ENSEMBLE Mozart Plule Quartet R.S8B ' Clarinet Qulnlci. horn solo 1 Schubert Quartctleau D.705 Bax tJegiae Trio for flute, rlola and harp RbvM - Introduction anti AJIrgro . . . MEDlCf STRING QUARTET. HOWARD SHELLEY piano Hayrtn String Quanot Op. 76 No. 6 JanaceU Siring Quartet No. 1 '* Kreutier " MendeUnobn Piano Quanot in B minor Op. 3 PARISIAN FLEMING ROBERTS TRIO Haydn Trio in A Hob XV: 9 Schumann 1 rio No. 2 in F Op. 80 Mendelssohn" Trio In D minor Op. 49 LONDON EARLY MUSIC GROUP rUrurtYd oy JAMES TYLER Muilca da Camera—eongg and In&irumnnial ploces from (he courta end chambers of i6lh and l7ih Ceniury Italy MAYUMI FUJIKAWA violin. MICHAEL ROLL piano Schumann Sarul-i No. 1 In A minor ' * Fa urc Seme hi bi A Op. 13 BcoUiovon ■ Sonata in A Op. JT " Kreuizer u JOHN SHIRLE\-QU1RK bontonr. MARTIN ISEPP piano Schiimann Ucdcrkrcls Op 24 ' Bulierworth BredDn Hill-aong cycle Ravel.- ftoert. Purcell Don Qoictietic songs LINDSAY STRING QUARTET. JANET-'HILTON clarinet Hardn- - - ' Quartet in D Op. 76 No. 3 Schumann Quart el In A Op 4T, No 5 Brahms . Clarinet Quintet in B minor BORODIN PIANO TRIO Kecthovro Brahms Tcnalkoi-iky GEORGE. MALCOLM lizrpsiUiPrd Bach programme*. jnUudln^ EnpUah Sidle 7no in O Op.. 70 No. 1 Trio In C minor Op. 1D1 Trio la A minor Op. 50 The Ghoul price _ __ _ _ No. 2. Variations In iiallafi'Slyie. French Suite No. 5” AEOUAN STRING QUARTET. KENNETH ESSEX viola Haydn - Ouirtet In G minor Op. 74 the Haydn - • On-met In G minor Op. 74 No. 3 Schumann Ouariel In A minor Op. 41 No. 1 Mcndcti>aohn Oulntr-l In B flat Op. U7 FrI TAM.\S VASARY PIANO QUARTET w . 28 July wnnrt * Quanois In E Flat K.493. C minor K.4i8 price B Schumann Quartet In E flat Op. 47 Saturday late night show' at 1030 dju. Tonight RODNEY SLATFORD'S BASS INFLUX price □ Doable ba>s quartet with ELAINE BARRY Miprano -. Eugi-ne Kurt/ The la>l conirobeu ui Las Vegas . Don-1 Rimswick “ Suiie and Low. Works bv Cordon Langrond. Alan Rldoul. al al. 22 July. SWINGLE II IN CONCERT prico t Each. Scott Joplin,-Mozart. Paul Simon. Me. Sunday morning sbeirx/coFfee concerts at 1130 a.m. 1C July ANNE SHAS'bY.’ RICHARD MeSlAHON piano duel . ' price D Doncus* bi' Schubert. Grainger. Berners. Ravel. Brahms. Reger. Dvorak 23 July . Member*, ol LONDON SINFONIETTA price D Beethoven - - Serenade In D Op. 2o Mozart ' Serenade in C minpr K.388 ; . Prices - B—£2.80. £2.40. El.60. £1.20 D-tn .60. £.1.21/ ^ fcHS^.40. £2.ciol El .fZ. Sl .20 E—£3.00. Sn.bO. El.20 ii( r account on aubsolpllons and naiHra._ Tonight WIGMORE HALL SUMMER FESTIVAL . LATE NIGHT SHOW RODNEY SLATFORD'S BAS51NFULL Tomorrow morning 1030 p.m. SHERRY/COFFEE CONCERT ANNE SHASBY AND RICHARD McMAHON - Fpc sJirrrj or roffu alter ibr cunrert For details sop-WIgmore Hall panel above. 11.30 a.m.' WIGMORE HALL SUMMER FESTIVAL SATURDAY, 22 JULY aflBJB P-W- SWINGLE II • For details sec Wigmore Hall panel above ROYAL ALBERT HALL JSKirrS!*™. Kensington.SW7 2AP BOX OFFICE: Mondsy to Sri unlay-opv" Iwn 10 am. loBiun. (01-589 8ZU] Slndeyi-opentorbooUngs tot ihrtdayoN*. TONIGHT at 7.30 BEETHOVEN MOZART HAYDN ~. Corioton QvorUira . Jupiter Symphony Holton Mass THE LONDON MOZART PLAYERS . THE NEW WESTMINSTER CHORUS Hue! Holt . Timothy' Penrose Alan Byers Michael- George COIrfN M A WHY Sponsored by John Bar her iHcrifurd) Lid. Tltkcls; E.3.00. £2.’J O. CJ.OU. tl.bo: K1 OO. 3Cip Irom Hall '01-58? glia* - . LVICTOR HOCHHAUSER pcesents TOMORROW at 7.30 ' TCHAIKOVSKY . Capriccio Itaiiea Piano Concerto No. 1 Nutcracker Suite OVERTURE *1812"—Cannon & Mortar Effects ; ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA MENDI RODAN PETER ARONSKY 3 li'tkets- 73p. £1.00. £1.30. tl.Ou. L'J.iiU. ‘J6.0U. Hall .Ol-OBH ft AgcnLu . Open ioniorro\* 10 a.m . Tho BBC presents Uio 84lh season of Henry Wood Promonado Concerts 21 JUU - lo lb SEPTEMBER FipST t'.lGHT FRIDAY 21 JULY at 7.30 AND HEW DAVIS BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Uc(|Ulelu VLI.'JI; ALL SEA IS SOLD 'Hckei* now .iraliable lur SI. Augustine's, irom Ib/ri ft riitrll _i';33 BilB'J- The Round House <267 I56J- and Rivarsldo Studios i <<1S ..j5li. TICS 115 Iw all ulher concciL. HY"' axallable Irom Royal. Albert Hall ‘l.■l-^o , .> BUI J.- • Season Tickets : Wholo season Call'.r only. v , ‘ All Uckess for Ihe Last Nlghl bare been alKxaled I'i" ballot. . All seoto sold lor August 11,. I 1 ' " • .■:i.73'ft £1.23 only Aua. 1. 3. Sepi. 2- ■». 13 1 I’rospecius. SOo .by po»i r.yp. nov>- on »al-. THEATITCS ROYALTY. 4US »!0O4 'lundLiy-Diiirsddy. Leg-.. 3 . 1 * Fri .i.3i> and B.40. Set. >and.B. London's critic, vole I.ILLY L>4*:iELS in BUBBLING BROWN SUGAR Brel musical ol 11-77. lei. boul.lnao ecccpii-a.. Major cTt-lll ..-arts. Special iLduri-d rai-.-s lor matinees tXoi limited period only ■ __ ROYAL COURT. 7".0 174o. Air Cond. Mon.-Fri. 8. Sal. 8.3U FLYING BLIND Bib MurdHiii* 1 " S • age Mnr. " l-.lins “ AUDAQOUS COMEDY ” Tms. ST. MARTIN'S. &‘.b 14 J3. fl. M-il Tue . J.a.j. S.ns. J a a AGATHA CHRISTIE’S THE MOUSETRAP . ,WORLD’S LONCEGTT-EVER RUN . _ 2ETH YEAR __ SAVOY THEATRE. CI1-B35 ri8B8 TOM CONTI in WHOSE UFE IS IT ANYWAY ?' With JANE ASHER. •• A MOMENTOUS PLAY. I URGE YOU TO SEE IT." LiUn. Lta ol H O. F I. ft Sal. 5.4o ft 6 .J5. SHAFTESBURY. c.c. Ol -330 6 Shqncsburj- Av>»..-M'.n 2 - High Holhorn cndi. lor a Special Summer Srasan. A New ProduLlaon 01 GOnSPELL Seats From £1 UO-LZ. Best a-.aiiabio seals ai 12.30 '-hr. Mfon- slime Irom Ihe Co\ Ofllce. Man.-Thur. S.15. Friday ft Saturday 2.^u ft < «.oO._ STRAND. ■'■830 2<ooU. Lfgi. 8.U. Mills, thur. .'.li. Sat. 5.r>0 ft 8.30. NO SEX, PLEASE. WE’RE BRITISH THE WORLD'S GREATEST LAUGHTER-MAKES GOOD SEATS 24.00-21--*1 STUDIO "68- TUM.-3al.. H p.m. Tan) Stoppard*;; " Real inspector Hound ”. ■£l‘< ir*zi. TH. ROYAL. Siraimrd L.l'>. .334 U.'.1U ‘tues-Sal. a LAND OF HOPE - u GLORY i A ‘-nislL.il l-arrc by Roy Kill £c fralrlcU B ar low. _ THEATRE UPSTAIRS. 73'J 2334 f ■-•iilmrj 7.3i> ii.'h. IRISH EYES & ENGLISH TEARS be Nlgri Ba-lihi-lh._ VAUDEVILLE. P'h ""H3 Ey«. £. Mam. lues. 2.4-j. San. G i a. Dinah SHFrUjAN. _Dil' cle. t.RAY ; AGATHA CHRISTIE’S l!El‘**=ST V/he^uriH A MURDER IS ANNOUNCE!! ‘ Ain-^UNDniuNi:D thlaih; VICTORIA PALACE . BUOk Nil. 5T23 '73-j *i OI-JjJ 1 j17 STRATFORD JOM1IS SHEILA H-NCOCK ANNIE Ktga. i ,au. ^l.-is. We d ■ * __ W*- ^ WAREHOUSE. Ounm.ir Thratre. CuvcnJ G.i-den B.”6 6Sl'8 . KOV.il. SHIKt-Sr- ISfc . OM3.1N1 Tan'l B.On David Edgar .v THE JAIL DIARY OF ALBIE^ SACHS • • ThEiiCaa jJcce. cL Uk-vi i L.uartuai. All Seam Cl.ao: Adv. 81 g'. Ildvryth. SLudenl standby 21.OU. SUNDAYS IN JULY AT ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL Holy conin.uruvn will be ti l-.-braied al, 11 .lu a.m. und^r ihe- Dame urlwi. s-mial music sung by the Caihcdrai. Choir acebintanled by Ihd Sl. I’uul'^ Cliao.b-'r Orcln-slra. • 16ih July Second Mass In C Schubert-. 23rd July Kglwn Mass HajrdiL JAZZ AND POP SEMINAR ‘: Trinilj '-O'Ii-jl ArJU-.Te i-ll .tua. for: Plants.s ami Muut rcJChir.. %r - a»- 1 Imenslve 'I-Uiud lu Laain n) msifu;i ur Puj- "rheso Formt. ?re:j sc.gs.wl bv Nuleil Anu-rlcan .‘.ulncrllv,; ul-b37 7C<34 lor Inform.lion i-ttU. Droiiiurv. ur vrlic A. p. Wati. Bcdioru liuw. London. Y-'.C.l. .1 THEATRES WESTMINSTER 01 -K'i4 U253- SENTENCED TO LIFE /- Mi:i;i.-.u.'iln;i & ircncli.ini nmiioui I HOHN HILL'S d.-ajn ’UC an.—D. 1^1 ■‘Inlcnsciv human, caring drsn'S" ior'., Pnsi. liv.iucndoua Imaaci " .v.O.jv. ■ I ivns sharrii) nioeert " J. i.. Irnv.jn. Cvn a . 7.-13 %;al9. V. cd. G.O. S. 1 IS. 4.oU MLsr L:\-D JULY L”4. __ V.YNDKAMS 336 ."njGr.. Cirdlj. U ,r d ■> bLns. ■ VZb 10T1 -G iram H. Ji am Mon.-Thuis.. v Fri. ft Sal. ,>.U * B.Z.J. ■■ CNmmOliSLV RJI-..H. VLKY I'!. NNV ■■-L'. Nl-VVS. Mar-/ O'MjIIw‘ 9 Sn.aih-h.l Uamedy OSCE A CATHOLIC ” -lur.'-ilri- romrdi on se-. and rcli .r.n “•—ilalltf ri|rjrju!i. vm: sl«AKi. with _ LAUilllTER -Liu.inllan.- YOU1IG VIC. • b.-.L". fcfrn Jo-l.-on s BARTHOLOM£‘7 FAIR. U-.go. 7.4 j. “ A 11 .roaring nroiiuriior. " 6. Tins. Younu l-'C 11 ;.i-. 11 dJ un:il Julv is. "Piione Du-; oil if.- lor leall-t. _ TALK OF THE TOWN. 77.4 GL'Sl. rnun tj. Dln'nu D^nclnn • D.-rs oprn Irom 7.10.. il-'u'l! 1 Air i.onaiiionedi ■ 6iii,-er It* . 11 -. RAZZLE DAZZLE BI 11 LOS lit,ALLS DtL PAHAbl.’.Y CLNEMAS ABC 1 f. 2 snci;-. i'.-ury <\ve. F.-.is S-r P--rl- All. SC.MS HtfELC 1: 2001! A -SPACE ODVSS'.Y 70-mi II'iii. \t|.. A Sun. s 23. ' I-He 'hew I'uiight 11.0?. 2: FftTUHPAY NIGHT FEVER ''1- u fibn- 2 . 00 . .‘i.lj, Eli •-hgn- ToMighi ll.lj. ’■ I 1 . t continued on past 8) J THE TIMES SATURDAY REVIEW JULY 15 1978 ENTERTAINMENTS V When -teteptipoUa HM proflx 01 Ml) landon Metropolitan Area. -Collecting- Chess CINEMAS ART' GALLERIES At £PA MV 557 2981. HjinUCl’a CHANGE GALLERY-S-fi-Ccrl; Sv» W.I. ™;. T M ■ OSJECT OF 01-7M 4626. EvhUrttlng Pain dags ay Va?ri ft?*'* f lrtk ' Mon-rn.-10-r^d,. k««uU3‘s myiDtMce tx>. proas. l.oO. 3-60. 6.15. JJ.4U, ACAJtMY TNftbfc. 437 881*. THE ■TRAVELLING PLAYERS l\i. pTsgs. Mon-F-H 7.00. Sai *-S 0 H X.UO. 7.UU. CAhOEN PLAZA loan,, united Town Tube t. 403 M4J3. lavLtrUB ALLON- sanfAN (AAi I by Uic director oi PAJORE PADROALl 2.00, 4.40. w-aG. i’.OO. Li. lu. ; c • COLUMBIA, billlieibury Avo fT34 5414i. THANK COU IT'S FRIDAY 'Ai. Coni sorts (l.oo not Sum. 01-704 4626. EvtUlrtrlng PainUnna by Grapery Flrtk. Mon-fri.- 10 -g 7 Saw. CHRISTIE'S CONTEMPORARY ART, E Dover st., w.i. oi-4y? 6 T 01 0.00-6.50. . sat. 10 - 1 . - HENRY MOORE—fjcturuji. LlUioorapii* and W<M\»a. ' ' ■ FINE-ART SOCIETY 14 ii Nias' Solid St.. W.I. OL -629 5110 . EASTERN ENCOUNTERS ,i9c UnenTtillsi 'poinlen Boxing clever at St Albans Flags of convenience DEtf&u UZALA 1U1. in 7 U nun Mi# HAIM'S - Mini' AnmVBrfcary. Mon- iKiuriiih Suwiiiea.i . Film by. AKIRA Sat. m.-TO-o -A) . KUnOSAwA "Masiarpl^ci 1 -—the " e..,.w "n,ni Times. " Maaiervork ’—Qtocrtcr. H ^X'V* ,ID f U°^ J ASPG R ■* lUtTicnliyri *v—i- v Mim S.l.1. ' aKS UJUnCiUi diiJ- * k;.« . V.rP. JOHNS, until .-.0 July. Aon..' btlp: Times. ■■ Mastarwork —atocrtcr. ” Muiterpleci- •*.—tv. New*. Him gi£ Sft »g ^ JJruui. Ill>\ 2.00. &.1S, 8.35.-Sww- SurK ___ a .tilb, tOC 0.13 it W.3-> proas.. VntB. . leFEVUE GALLERY: An Exhibition of E ^i#-S i r V ^ U S'- ,a7 >&■ • H. I J** 1 c c ■. SS£- Bruton si.. London. W.I. Tel. Mon.-l-rt. and all pens. Sal. tk Sun. ■n-u. , ^r» 1 .™ 1 not Lie nioht nowsi at Uio box ——— S -- flUufl ill a.n».-7 u ni. .Man.-bJl. ■ LECER GALLERY. 13 Old Bond St., or oy post. Phinr booUnai only w.i. E-.hlbiUona at lb Hi c. ENGLISH with Acorns ■ Darciaycord. SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER >X| Progs. Daily 1.00 < not suns. ■ 3..TO. n.O. B.ou. Late Sh-*w Frl. A bat. 11.30 p.m. Now PfTZ, Lctaester Sudan?. I WANNA HOLD YOUR HAND CAr A OLD MASTERS. _ LEIGHTON HOUSE ■ 12 Holland PL K«I.. W.I4 paintings of two a tutors: Eunice Ansi ton and Ruth Dnnnertt ’Monday to Friday. ]l a.m. To- 6 n,m. Sal*. .11 Progs. Dally J.L5 (not Suns.*. a.m. id 3 p.m. L'nUI 3vlh July. .>.V>. 6.6U. d.3U. Late Show Krl. A &ai. ii:|d. _ CA 1 - Oi...-«IA. NOH. mil. 2iSI 0220 OSHLM.VS erotic masterpiece - i i ,-i o Rt/ii.J nF 'fne. dendM ' * At NO CORRIDA ' i CLUB t. Proos- L.uO. 3.0U. 5.UQ. T.UO. Y.1U. LENNY I.\» A MIDNIGHT COWBOY ,Y,. 11.10. GATE TWO CINEMA. K7'J 177'3402. RUKCU Satuie Tube. WLM WEN- nn>s' > tux a MERIC AM FRIEND LORDS. 2b WoHlnmon "IM.. R.VT.It. Nouveau Se Pe^o Pfutcd Schwltlnja, MARLBOROUGH. 6 Albemarle Sr. JIM A SELECTION - OF IMPORTANT PAINTINGS by HENRI MATISSE. 15 Junc-29 July. MOn.-frt. IU-O-wU Sat. ItHlS.SO. MILNE HEIHURSON _ ' •°A 1 i b ’prMS ,H " OU E ??f ,i l5 SS'^UU* ZEmSSmINJB-RELATED .^RTisil*.' • ink wETn£& , *A^iM?‘ Jauanojc palnnno and wood black LEICESTER SQUARE THEATRE, i *130 -2E!I!i2:- 5352■ ■ _Rlcliard Burton. Rog er M oore. NATIONAL PORTRAIT OALLERY Lon- : ^. JP •iT™. c H T? y J*™®" m don U l ~ 01-930 8511- CAMERA THE WILD OEESE 'AAi S*-P. ■PORTRAITS BY HOPPE! a centenarv ! Mks, l.W. ■I.l'O. 8.10. l-alD shtlw^ czhlUllan. Artiir. free Alan At VS ! Il'frii.. Thurv.. rrls. A Sals. 11 .*j SCRLTON HOuSE rtitRACa swt; O-Pl-. Seals hvfan d Fri n 9Ji' wTH CENTURY PORTRAITS: mter- »S?i * «^M. B lst F e Uhl ODEOH HAYMARKET I !'3«J 27X8/ 1^2. 5tm^ 3-6. _I---- 27711 Jane Fonda. VanesMt Hedpmvt- anv ampc in a I red yinnrrnnnti Him JULIA ROY MILtb • A*. Sop. piw,. -D'f. 2. jit) <nol 6 Duko Si.. S3 James s. Sun. i, .T. 40. 8.45. Fealuro Dly. 3.43 London. S.VV.T. mei S'in. 1 . 6.00. Y.OO. AU )NU - TM£ VICTTORIAM IDEAL bkb'.c. at ihoaire. An ExhIMUon at Victorian Paintings. 00 «H?,. L 5w«G2 5?"«SS pink unm 28U, July. Mondar-Krtlay. .10^ PANTHER lA >. , Sep. nfOgs. Dlv. ROYAL ACAOETMY OF ARTS SUMMER □non mien. monUno show n.iJU ei a.n-. i Not Sun. i. 1st pino. 1.4-■. n. 2nd prou. 1.50. eV" nroo- * J 5. Late. . night ehow Mon.-Sal., doors open ™ 11.14 u.iii ail s«a:- bki*'*-. EXHIBITION, open DaUV 10 a.m.-6 f .m. AdmliMan- SOp. Sunday.. -Unlti .46 p.rtt. 45p. Burlingion House. Ptccadtny.. V.l. _• THIRD ' KIND «A>. Son., proo?. io-7. Aditi. fred. ■Vina -Fn Odors op^n 2.l-.a. 7.1.'. - —■■ ■■ » - Lain show rri g. &ai. won open TATE GALLERY, .•fllltuiift. S.1I J-. -The li-1’ p- nl - unup Henry Maora Gift. To mark Urn c °-f.° w n |ST; r v*unvT i L * r iHrTrrHm sculptor's iift to iho iuiioo of 06 . OHira KtOpInrci. Adm. free. THe’ Drawing* ■> to o' H*nre Moore. Adm. 50p. Wkdys. Wl. lJ 5* y -i; £Sr;.-Fr?r?5ir Sal' 11 is lO-fi. suns. 2-6. - Lac lure and tUm H & 5“rtal Vliaw Sal. ll.lb proararame. . For recorded infornia- RARIS PULLMAN, South Ken. ..17S Tton ring 01-827 7128. _ 58481. Bryan Forbes’ THE STEP TEDDY MILUMGTON DRAKE ford WIVcS I.L-V*. FTojjs.- 4.10.- Drawindr Thjia a lourncy la India ti lt,. 8 . 2 U. Iasi year PHOENIX, L- I-lncnley. Bgo Tuesday -1Ui July to rrlrlap 14lh July tOEHIX, L- Finchley. Si-Sw! Tuesday .lib July to Ti-lrlap 14lh July w?V« aaT Pro 1 ?, J™6?05“ HARTTxOLL AND EYRE LTD --- 0 ■ w, ■ .>u Duke SI.. SI. James's. 930-350rf ' nAn'ki^ ll rartimM‘ Yhb IYEAGH beouest. Kenwood. Ln^;r 0 HS l ^ UCU1U ' 3# ‘ * Latio. H.W'..-. Tel: 01-348 dj Fntbire Lelecster Scmare. 1. THE MEDUSA TOUCH iA<- Props. Daily 1.40. .>.53. 6.OH, 8.25. 2. BILITIS |X». Progs. Dly. 2.05. 1286. Drawings by Georgs Romney 1734-1802. Until 5 Scpiember. Dally 1U-5. Aditllwldn' Iree. «. Shirtey MacLalnc. Anne Bancroll in . pfiiio-iiiihl^Sn'ui V 3- sISP^All ^fdm h the Turning point ia». a-o. - st>»mrt 1 *nol 6^f- 8?M r V 1 * 1 nal SUM - ’* 3 - 45 - 5^0. M Fridays auM - PRINCE CHAHtJES, I.elc. Sg. 457 8181. WILOENSTBIN : Paintings and Draw- MEL HRnnKd HIGH ANXIETY >At Sep. Ports Dly, > Inc. Sun.l. 2.15. «i 16. 9.00. Li? Show rrt. & SOT. ‘ll.-tS. Soars-Hkble. Llc’d Bar.-- ■ Scam. Tatu-iharn si. iGamiye St, Tiibai. A37 (iSIVy, Sen Prons. THE HARDER THEY COME <X». V.. . midnight ‘ Sat. On’v. BLACKS BRITAHNlCA 4. h HARLAN COUNTY USA i A i 6. THE MAIN ACTOR Ifta* by DIANE ESMOND. L'nUI Ulsl 'July. Weekdava 10-3.50. Saturdays .10-1250. . 147 NcK-Ooad .surcat, w.r. MODERN- MASTERS * The mighty struggle that is due the German Butides Repuhlik And aot 9 . . , PxP 5 10 ( to open next Saturday at tlie‘ since it was at Hamburg that cn. : mountain resort favoured by he was offered and that he 11 kuki ch oia:: [2 & . President Marcos of thp accepted a training post. Or why 12 Q -" 4 «» p*» ^r*ki f. \ Philippines for his summer not simplv a painting by some . . w , .. ii holidays, Baguio Citv. has been non-represemational artist such wiwuer weaKenmg ® iDreceded bv the usual us Mondrian 1 5*lSr J s »> ■-i ■ _ P KS 3; .' preceded by the usual : : skirmishes, forays aod ranging Perhaps David Anderton, B-Q2, R-Bl ivith an ever P-B4 in mind. was Bobby Fischer who set th@- the English team playing under Breaking 'open the pos ■ fashion for psychological war- the Union Jack. He remarked, only favours White; "Prefp , Korchnoi is going a lime too iar under which llag the team S 3 S-rs qh-ku 25 q-rsS ;) in bis eloquent complaints a hour played and was fully prepared l, the Soviet enmity towards, him to play under a packet of com- A little better was 26 ii should realize that, comparjed to flakes. I suppress the name of QxQ; 27 RxQ, R-B2. i| Bobby in such matters, Viktor- brand which he in fact ar ■3 -Kl - Q ' 33 28 g -* 11 ; :! is as’a minnow to a Triton. mentioned since this might _. . _ . ‘ i Others who think be is debas- come under the heading of ^4‘ s -9a e 5” i'ing a game which has some ■ advertising, which would never n£!!l? eDC !; pretensions towards nobBityond do for- an event calling itself, timSi of ■ idealism fcf, tire phrase “die. quite wrongly, an Olympiad. SSidSaSS?iii£5 ■ ^ v royal game of chess ”1 wfll My oiyb suggestion is that Hxkb i learn to understand that in Korchnoi should-play under,the % ggg n^'SSfi-SJ Q * a ^ ; vulgarizing chess the grand- : re d flag with; a skull and cross- si p-qkiar-ks . i master complainers also bones replacing the. hammer . . . i popularize it. and sickle. For this would give A very strong and weH^p The first action in the cam- him the perfect reply to Viktor lated move that foreshadow i paign concerns what one might Ratumnsby. that grffeot “^ lal aI:I ^ : n T 0,l Blac k s .KB ;i think to be the innocuous ex-colonel of the KGBL, who has ' ' ' ' -t. ;• subject of flags. Tbe matter said that the challenger can _ gag i mss ggeassag-^ i; would seem to be a'tender one only play under the flag of the . [ ,1 ’1 - ; - 'jin the Soviet Union since 1 country of which he is .& ***{''~ remember some years ago when a citizen.- ^ ^77* jt i'it was a question as to whether Clearly Korchnoi is a most 3£i ^ ^ Guernsey was a separate and formidable tactician in the field 3 i i-. ![individual state that could be of controversy. That he is -./-“.fiqB Xj i[ admitted into FIDE (rhe World similarly to be feared in chess *■«£; . f#! /.Chess Federation I, the Soviet appears from the following m v«"ue * - delegate inquiring with anxiety impressive game he played at and almost tender colicituda Beersheva in bis last tourna- But has it got a flag ? ” meot before the nidtch this • ] |||; ? It intis therefore astute of year. . ' -. 3^1 ’ -V l, Korchnoi to make a virtue of .... . - . . ! ■•&/%’£ - .ft~.fi" ijhis necessities and-prove that ‘ WWrie: Korchnoi. Black; i K-*.. , W-'..Q :iO=4- by offering four different Kraidnmn. English Opening. i, "flags under which'lie. a state- 1 a P iS^ns plwh 133 a b!q 5 B-Kia •• .... .Wj. less indiridua], might play. •> Ki-na p-qkio ~ These were : a Swiss flag, since ' '■ 35 h-ke- 5 n*Ki3 ch 36 h'-R2 p- he is now resident in Switzer- In his 19/4 matoi with Kar- jj e must 2 j Te tlie Kin' ‘ land- a white flag bearing the P° v ’ Korchnoi had di't position MCa pe square; if 36 ; ., f word “stateless” a Soviet flag u “ es ^ played here 5 3? jyn^p d- K-Ktl; 38- • similarly inscribed and the flag bus us every case the d, K-Kt2; M’R(B3)-B7 m of the Swiss town of WohJen saine was drawn. Hence this 57 o-oa O-xo 40 r>bt where he Jives bizarre wnouon, which is not QM, 07llPctl ^ - I am myself surprised by p ? rncula ?X l # ood - -39 q-kb ci. k -«4 Korchnoi’s moderation. Why not But this plays right into u. m 3 r-rf aft-r 41 a Dutch flag with the words White’s hands; better was S p,.u - A nn 7 ch p pa. j ‘Mother Courage” since it was . . , P-Q3 and if then 6 B-B2, £r4 ’ v ’ ’ in Holland that he sought P-B4.- political asylum when he left „ „ __ HfUTV GOlOHll i Russia ? Or why nor the flag of 7 a-Kt IvB 11 "fw B « D . hsS 4 6 P-KA KI-KH 7 B-K4 BkB 8 KUiB P-04 9 PxP a p. HsP 55 H-KE-5 R-KI3 Ch 36 K-R3 P- He must give tlie Kin; t Harry Golornl IVImton-tiles of the. 1870s, mostly designed by Moyr Smith- Brendan Bracken’s newspape Continued from page 5 or passed judgement upon him. his nostril. And yet he.- of the daDy delights Of able to joke and smile; aai There are such riches iq Lon- Eosely, Sumrv. owned “ a deske the 1650s; a century later JJ?* “J* 1 , SU- or ,^ fonnS?v ,5e twoniit a,so talked of his intense* don that the Lohdon-based col- of chestnut tree ” and “ a Jirtle John 5adler and Guy Green cou®ld an^fceDtiomil a iTcCer- live in the country tfgS . v ■ m - - - -— ,; 7 ,7"“. auK.t auui nuica m uuu- Lusciy, amiev', uiwieu a Q»i.e uic JD3U5 ; a century larer ■ - . _e _ ! Fo«i E ?.n<ffr '5 T despair“ iaai ^lib' CHAGAffi^.u^/mcAssoMoRE. doo that the Lohdon-based col- of chestnut tree ” and “ a Jinle John Sadler and Guy Green could ^^Lt an^ceDti^al 6.4fi. D ®.«i. 1 siireunT dirk «i'imiMOTwi»i , r»rLrnY lector can too easily concen- oiher deske. to write 00 produced the first “ transfer- r n ,, ! ^ BOGARDE. Scrip! rOi>i STOPPAHD. 7 Royat' Aradc. AibcnuLfliPsL' trate on them alone anr! miss Conner’s Rihlinrharn FMntna nrintaH ** ritloc ir> T iVamA.-l father I possessed, This IS tbe ART GALLERIES AONEW GALLERY. -1$ OI<| BOaJSL. W.I. Ul-62"' /-176. OLD MASTER PAINTINGS. Until.28 July. Mon-FTI. '*.oO—».oO. Thurs. until 7. ful word 'and a pleasantly for had recovered. He was' everyboody, and, of course." wise the manuscript of Fredi EXHIBITIONS lou get this letter I shall ^s advice whenever it was asked. Ho kenhead’s, as yet, unpiibS knew full well, m the last wo iif- „f R„Hi- 3 rd KInline.1*3 years, what it cost him in health C JS as he drove himself to fulfil the of publication wa* duties of your Lordsiiips’ House. c 9°. s ®^ ,r of Kiph^s ft Ad^ncipBoMmiQ 1 1X31,1 . ~‘ T Fw Arcade. Albemarle st.- trate on them alone and miss Cooper’s Bibliotheca Eliotae printed” titles in Liverpool, tamer i possessed, inis is me everyboody, and, of course." wise the manuscript of FrediB|3 -1-- --;—-— some of the impressive (15481 describes u. * littei rh^ miinrirv *f vir.r~.Jr,,, letrer: ad rice whenever it was asked. Ho kenhead’s, as yet, unpiibS ART GALLERIES - • EXHIBITIONS antiques exhibitions held in holowe dsske lyke a coffer tiles «« mnifor nrini «2 ’>» Old Man. knew full well, in the last wo ]if e of Rudyard Kiplinc fig _ — • ■■■■ / - the provinces. Quite often after-whereupAn' me do' ^rite you i dih le«n I ,h a U aThc' *** oflSSaJI!. iS AG Za W af.ktf ™™ 5 old Wsrai i20 ^"!uo^ A ra SbiecL ^ 6 Francis^ R^on “"an i^ Wui^ today are those hand-decorated . no longer be able to express appro- duties of your Lordships’ House. c *?. s t nr . of . K ^^ 5 until.28 July. Moi.-Fn. iHcDhon ^ 10 British^ antique a 3 b - v William De Morgan ( 1 S 39 - ciation. And so I just want to say And so. my Lords, did we. But which she withheld), and — ->0:"- , 0. _ p > urs. M'UII . ■ - —_ dealers' asoS?2ij itutifliiSTriu. lett ®* fr0 ?providual dealer Hawtrey using table desks, hlr 1917, those designed b\ what I should have found It diffi- we also knew that It was useless spoke of it enthusiastic _ ACHIM MOELLER GALLERY s.W.T. 0 J- 5 BY mop. _• saving: What a pity you Cnspjn. acknowledges the in- „.i. __to try to deflect him. because Then he rook tha bv <urn«s a oruavenur ^ s^,. Ho^^TTj^^p, di^^Jmow about my current togrton ^na^Kelj of Mr Morris^ UBM8) or those im- ot mu^l emh.^em ffinta?**, ^ ^ ffl &. ««»*'wheiherl s,ltc,l0 „ 0/ aNW, w,,, " ,s by n. 9 ? m -"° Of course" I trv to replv srate- Queen’s College, Oxford: here Tl ^ tb a Iu ^ cct ^St J '° U ^ ^ ? r ff* 11 °f, a ^ *&**■$» -pEjsswns K-H.JS-.iKrfs sAaiatSTis SwsHSaS SSSSSS' S^^ot'pichirrcannot Ste ^Anothe^ ve ™^terlSing i^glnSalk'orYptSS^ ^ 1 ^ved-Jou ve^ much for the first year or so after ft*wr..io^. Slow. 2.30-6. Mm-fre,.. w.\' tai n+Sg about exhibitions if their BADA exhibition butside Lon- Sf L 1'and been very proud cf you. tbe transfer of control of the ? ,£2, . __v or specialize in a • * u “ * u - v - c -- transpired meant the last d oarricular arouD or simniv and been very proud of you. the transfer of control of the or fo \, r v-ar, thS 11 *?? d o^ n °V et Z e kj ^ 01 ^ bv D Celia be ienirfne«; UP 7 r 0r Fmf make wp a nice harlequin My death will not—repeat FT ^ p earsons, Brendan con- Queen Anne house in a sar Ihey doWcS’ it t n^ly mn bJrough (Kent)- Antibes,To to P ut rpund a fire *! n01 'j_T s the > sa - v , to CWI C’ ^ late, because I like to vary the Church Road. Famborough. p ^ C :f„ reflected mimicked . Serwce-bc an occwion for sen- the; differences with ther Crosth- tore, and bis manner of «1 diet in this column: if I have Orpington, KcnL It is titled even ll r he cErS of? T'.l 5 ert *' aly to f me ' 1 'T aite ' E - vre coupled with » JJ® «« so grj Viritren about Georgian silver “An Introduction to Early Victorian decorative art They shd be od an ? ared ' 1 lnl r ^ e erave deterioration i n his ? tea-strainers in June, I will nor Woodcarving” and is therefore were jnextricablv linked with vcry lo0cy w ' ,thout 0,lve fm - v health, had removed all his ^w 113 ® “ se couW t be eager to write about .Mr aJljed to Mr Crispin’s show. S GoS^Reri^i orig^al pother,. I long ro be sparide. He came Jess and less ^ rZ Ind“t *L” ?«ausric tiles dug up at Whit- S ^ l™*' 1* L .?. nno i to the office. When he was there __ 1 , „ _ . . , oone mat my place in ^? 1e * sss . less affections was real and C | of Georgian silver tea-strainers duced 'an illustrated catalogue |^d “AbbevTn “l837^nf Juenced 1 he until f die. death holds no ^ ** Ynis there , Brendan died on Angus in Rutland in July. ■ of high - historical standard, dorian ” Gothic ” designer, terrors for me but the possibility nZh^ r.nrt I'L 1958- On tire night of his d< A case in point is Mr Thomas The exhibition, begins with Lewis CoNingham’s discover- uf great joy. I have been very h^SraM^Se JS^t r J e raain trimk of a Qg tret Crispin’s e^nbition of ” Bible curch wpodcarving The caw- of ^ magni f icent f| 00 'r ‘lucky ail my Ufc and bad twemy- ^ c hed^gf bLT^ren ihlSf S nf* fd^ 13 n) Sh *- boxes " at 37, Molywell Hill, St {oguc. points, out.that the mom of rhe chapter House at West- five marveUuusly happy years, and wJked at alThe 1 f a ^K h °^ Albany Herts, throughout this function of Church art was minster Abbev nromnted the . now 1 am nniv-maridnu rime tin , .!v iJV 1 ■ 1 al ° Jiad t0 ^ saivn * wo aImos1 month. Mv last article was on didactic”. The people “bad to publication 0 «' 1 c. ‘Nichols's' 1 ->m t id m ret«rc ainn^ complain tilat it was too ground level but merdfi “desks without legs" (ieclud- be made conseious that they P £ „T GoMc , ^ ^ ,?, y the tree proved to be lot ing Eible boxes, desk boxes were fighting a continuous Tiles (1841) Encaustic floors Only four things I want you to {j!^ te / ears he tructible, and its const and writing slopes) and Mr battle with the Devil and that if (Minton’s were the ma in ; do for me. The first is to see that a ^lightful_ couple vigour in a sunless corner Crispin wrote to me imme- they lost, a terrible fate manufacturers) were laid in'i ra - v funeral is absolutely private 'P“ D ®P““ Costalta, heartening. flidfoNr AriflnfiRir IIU.a. ivuifPrl t hp m 1 1 1 « *- « < #■ 1 • *u A .. i- ____i-i ... Stic Cjll’lJSl). D 0 IrtSu. fYl Inrilc y in 1837 influenced’ be und f r ». dic - d «m holds no f j . ’ fa . “ rint-hlr ” l)«,inenre tCITOrS fOT Die but the DOSSiblUtV e 7 . vinuajiy Brendan died on Augus 1958. On tire night of his d< \burcar willgo faster when its in diately enclosing the illus- awaited them ‘V__ . _ 1 _: c Li. _i i/:-. . L:_i xiuruutucmrers / were min m-- . Pnirfich h. i^h i..t- hundreds .of churches from the :•«* that there is no memorial ser- “ J* , after him, bur at the mom eat of -For almost week of ■iipr ts4fe=- ' /■ examples of Bible boxes, that I ing long, church services, are £over of the CoS^ Rcrival i \Z^'° sug ? cs 5S d « kin ?- ■** !*«* he bad, received to d«t feel I must break my' usual - carved with mafiy occupations (Encaustic tiles are chose in ! w,f, P ^ d ■ 1 J h * f°2 k ’ Mrs Norgren. a Swedish every letter and any od rule aud give the show some and preoccupations of medic- which the oartern is formed bv ;■ w ^° y as d ® voted to Bren- document which lie might f mention " " . & ule and give the show some and preoccupations of medic- which the oartern is formed bv:O^V- VI . !® s .* r, . , w “° was devoted to Bren- document which he mightT nention. ’ "' val life— 1 “ men hnnting, tilling inlaid coloured^clavs i ormea ay ! wish was tinat* should mingle dan, whether she would be there; and he sat solemnly. It is one of a series' of exhi- *he land, mending shoes, . . 1{! - n j !j his ashes with those of Olive and willing to move into his house, front of the fireplace ctnisi itions set up by members of women sitting, by the fire, becamen vehicle far the new ;i distr,buIe d,em ground the reels of To my surprise, he agreed, ing to the flames whale; bitions set up by'members of women sitting- by the fire, tbe British Antique Dealers' delousing their husbands, and Association to celebrate rhe what would seem a dispropor- di amend .jubilee of BADA, - .tionaieljL. large number of which was founded, in 1918 women beating their hus- sbands, and Snrii.Jn!-. h 0 *- A^frhlrir ! a larsc group of roses in Brook- When I spoke to her she reive- papers be could find, a dispropor- ^ Ue ”Mocia ted* with '! wu °d Cemetery. 1 The third I* that tan tiy consented, but within a one knows what sci id, and secrets : diamond .jubilee of BADAZ- . tionaiely- large number of h Jviiners suchai F W Cnd-' yon wil1 look after J cnkin s Ibis week she came to me and said what treasures disappeared-1* which was founded, in 1918 women beating their hus- -, n( 4 rir rhricmnhpr ^ 11 sardener-dciver-manservant| and *h«t it was impossible for her his pains, Aley had bequeatt when 16 members of the bands er Sunflow-ers and lilies i chat he is not turned out or the 10 “"T on - Brendan, she said, to him all the contents of fi antiques trade met ip tbe As books became available, l ' Th*cottage here unless he waots 10 P» ced HP Md do "’ a the house house, save for the boo offices of The Connoisseur, the Church's educational ^ii'rn hv i Sro A^ the fo^th is ^i vou a " ni « ht Io °S: she had no which went to Sedber then' in Duke Street, St methods changed, and the onus D resser 0 r t L re i cranes flviua ’• «i"l Rive Pec and Sandv (mv rest, and also found it impos- School, and some valui Janies s, to consider the gov- of teaching the population was s ' #1, ,,r nn’ 1 brother and stepsister) Xouradrice s'ble to' communicate with him. Chippendale dining room £ emment’s announced intention removed from the carvers. But jIllLJ 11 and help if they ever need it. They I had to go to Brendan to tell niture, which went to die M - ‘- *- ’ ' 1 - L -ius.es ('many of them J" nr , ;| have been very Idnd to me. ’ ■ - - - - • As you mighlexpect,^ very high proportion of Times readers are mobile. In fact.612,000 ol'ihem have taken ihe decision to buy a car,and in the ihsl 12 months 101.000 of them have bought a new car. And ■ they re a lot more likely than Ihe rest of ihe population to have paid JL'2,000 or more for a car- new or used. Thai makes ihem vejy good potential customers in the new and second-hand car market. So much so.lhat ever.’ Friday The Times runs a special feature in ils classified columns culled "The Car Buyers'Cuide". This feature also covers car hire which Times readers are 57% more likely to use than the population asawhole. So mobilise our resources and > oull-probably do sonic pretty high-speed selling. For further information, con tael The Times Motors Team on: 0I-2 7 S *G5I.and in (ho North call our Manchester Office on: 061-8341234. James s, to consider the gov- of teaching the population was * ' er ?- r c P re * *“^ ne A ,‘ y " *i, brother and stepsister) "vuuradrice s'ble to' communicate with him. Chippendale dining room t emment’s announced Intention removed from rhe carvers. But rfl2L n ^Kv !I and help if they ever need it. They I had . to go to Brendan 10 tell niture, which went to die M to impose a duty an luxuries larger houses t'raany of them , ir nT :| have been very Idnd to me. him. He took it badly, and sug- ter's Lodge at Church in the proposed Finance Bill. timbered and built on the based on the Drcwer^ design ' Tiiank you a 5 ain uld man. May S.esnons that 1 should trv to College, Cambridge. ^r e che S rS ,e aa 5 hod ; ! yc. Have many happy y<* rs on this J" ^ d '"f / M action; the association demand for hirnirure gave the » 6eem . a “ cnacc of : straflse eart i' Atld mzs wc mecl remained ar the house 3? ft made many references to Brt remained to protect the it.- carvers new scope. Thev con- decoration. “ From one. again somewhere somemne. himself untU within a mana S dan. I have tried to show wh terests oF its members and the tinued to carve familiar Chris- “ ccasion °} e j p . 01 ' : B,ess y ou - weeks he was obliged, no, v; n rt.!HI USU f a ^ m « U » > public. .(You can always ask tian subjects on domestic build- »| . ... ^1 forced to his doctor to enter f J\ VI uic mine UdLe. OU CJ w- 1 ■ 1 ■ I. . T|. , rtf II -- -^ ^ - Mr Crispin must have been '“S a cupid resting bis elbow ™ ■ fl U I t0 me ' Firsl of ^ ^ ,etcer •" collecting for years to marshal °n f skull which is resting on -,£?» con,e a R a,fl ,s not Lor ' [| . the amazing coliectian of Bible an hour-glass: and a sixteenth- rLCC *. . , . I would like 10 -siy wiih what deep keep the car on tie road, enigma in iw $ sexual tastes-^*. ; boxes' now on show in St century- panel of a couple tali- British tile production For, regret 1 read the news of vour From time to time be told t“ e y were ever in any way ■ Albans. Thev range in dare ing cheeses ro market on a domestic use perhaps reached j. father’s dcatb. He and l wurked Brendan that ir must he re- filled, it was In complete ob,.^.-. from oak table boxes of the mid- stretcher. •« peak in the 1890s and the ■ very iIumiIv togctlicr lor five placed, but tn no a roil. Brendan curity. It is possible that Sixteenth century to oak table One of the most worthwhile l5rst decade , of. the twentieth 1> yea rs at the Ministry of Eupnu- of course was right. After he suffered from some cabinets of the second half nf antiques exhibitions to be seen F eniu T« a« d now the prevail- ;i ^nic Warfare. It is an association went into hospital he was seated frustration whit* the seventeenth. In his admir- . in the provinces at present sty,e L ..V? s Ar . r Nouveau, j 0Q which , , Iinfc hack Mllh ^ never to return home. His the cause of his extreme mood . able catalogue introduction, Mr opened in Wolverhampton Art Th , c * xh, , bw “ ,n . u ” :lu l dws . ? \ veiy greatest pleasure. What I final weeks were spent in ihe "“*■ There wrere those **1 -■ Crispin confinnsm.’suggestion Gallery on July 1 and tvili con- - c ^, one 1} chieflv remember is ihe genuinely Motor Company’s flar in f *“ nd h,m 1 os up portable, Bi hosp1?3l by faiS d0Ct0r “ emer fauliT Hc fa h r ad Sensed - p and courage, real intcgrityi. A similar sense of every- vivid imagination, and a wil thing coming to a halt revealed and lively mind of great caps itself .in relation to his car. He 1*3"- He hod a passionate had bad the same car. an old .in individual freedom, .hath blue Bentley, since before rise the onset of collectivist trejw war, and the same driver. Fundamentally, he was a Aley. Aley achieved miracles to solitary man. He was.'-tfYS**, • keep the car on the road, enigma in h-is sexual r. Many collectors have lent ttnuiK Abbey and Lam- tbe roof-tiles made in Roman bech Palace have, no contem- Britain; English “encaustic” porary examples -of Bible and tiles in use from the twelfth box being treated as a natural century until Renrv VHTs Dis- combination dunrig tbe solution of rho Monasteries in permd. _ • . tbe 1530s. Then the revival of The introduction also gives tile-mfiLHlTirr hv • I many docuhienta^ references and Liverpool “ delfr "* poners, in S” style- II to use . of table desks. In imitating the nainred to me use of table aesks. In imitating the painted wares L»6,_ Sir William More of made in Holland. Tbar was in by him, and I constant!) I priceless gift of sympathy In such resembled those IQS MI UU Urtlibfl 1LUI I#- f El July 20, by Weidenfcld B ' * TT'ir !| fuH measure as he: it allowed Greco 'saint. He had/tn be fed Hicolson, at £10. iSeVIS JhLlJIier ; irim to put himself in the other through a rube which passed \ secood extract will app*^ ;! man’s place before lie gave ad rice from his right cheek through .ncxr Saturday. Jej) I l>* «j THE TIMES SATURDAY REVIEW. JULY 15 1978 Gardening f ' ^British people are, I think, ‘jiv '"- 1 - ■ • joique In .that we refuse to i;lf:,ccept .def«J 9 t Tmd .we expend ■*-.. ^infold care,, time, labour and '^ ^Srtoney on things that other ! .'-V ^jeopJe would jettison almost T J- ^ore they had taketr the pro- V 1 ' ecr. a quarter ;ot the-way : hrough. , ■ a Frenchman - wHJ ask pit l "“ei idw we‘produce, such beautiful V' ‘ v fo, --awns. You begin to explain ' L ; -j ' p foout smoothing the. surface - -^-’iuNwth top dressingscPf sod, fill- o ,‘ 5- Qg, hollows, - and rcduang simps, srarifyingj spiking, le h £r , orriliring, controlling ^weeds, itg*: iad in no time at ali ne loses merest. L But where flowers are con- , "tonw erned the British will go to Ri'-^Ssifcjar more trouble than other “:“ c b'i J'leople. We make hornculturai o? Martyrs of ourselves. Y/e just V-’.pU-. td decade tow dearly we f v ;5,?f .-ant to grow-certain plants and i. ; : '.■£ ^ow Tnug h trouble'-we arft pre- ■ared to take to grow them. ,r . 0li ;aM .For example, I love all the thaj ^.““.(fianthus family, the dwarf stn- ■-° n Elp-i^Je and double pinks, -die tardy border carnations, ffle .vcetJy icenred- pinks. Ske the ouble, white-. “ Mrs Smkms”. •’VJUUIC. mitts-. .■ , / .ut they are not . long-lived tents and one Jhas. to keep * propagating a new stock from * tattings nr layers. : “Ai-This- is notdifficult,. «mly S tightly - ome-comunuog. Pan- t i£s and violas my wife and I *- (lore, but here - again we have > keep raising new stocks -bm seed every year. But if -regular animal prop- gatioif of favourite -plants is Long lived and carefree Bridge something we are not able to do any more, take comfort because there are many flowers that will live for many years and need no attention. All the paeonies may be planted in the certain know¬ ledge that they will grow hap- piiy for. half a lifetime. If only the paeonies flowered for a few more weeks, how wonder¬ ful they would be. But their foliage is attractive after the flowers have gone. . All the varieties of the orien¬ tal poppy are tremendously Jong lived. When I worked on a seed farm in the 1930s we had stock beds of Papaver oricn- lalis varieties which bad been planted before the First World War and were flourishing. Many people, l find, have only a hazy .idea of the varieties of oriental poppies that are avail¬ able. Many of the best were raised by the firm of Peirry at Enfield years ago but they are still unsurpassed today-— u Mrs Perry” salmon pink, “Marcus Perry ” orange scarlet and “ Perry’s White ” There is also " Ladybird ”, a dwarf variety with crimson scarlet flowers, and if you like double flowers there is “ Fireball ”, a really dwarf plant only about a foot high with orange scarlet double flowers. Among the evening prim¬ roses too we have some very long lived plants. Tbe dwarf Oenothera missouriensis which makes a large mat two feet or more across and only abour Sin high'carries very large yellow flowers all summer. It does not mind dry conditions—on our arid seed farm it just had to grin and bear it. I have a great fondness for the gemi$ Campanula, It con¬ tains about 300 species and these range from exquisite dwarfs only an inch or so high, for the rock garden, to species and varieties four or five feet high. Continuing with my theme of long lived trouble free plants, I must put Cam¬ panula portenschlagiana high on the list. It used to be called C muralis a much nicer and more descriptive name because it loves to grow in chinks of a wall, in gaps in crazy paving— indeed it loves to grow any¬ where. Then we have C corps* tica. C gurganica in all their varieties which are ideal for the rock garden. And, of course, when think¬ ing about this genus, we must renvember the Canterbury bells so useful for providing colour io June when the gardea is not at its most colourful. All the perennials I have mentioned are offered by Bressingham Gardens, piss, Norfolk, and the way things are today, I would suggest you write now for theic catalogue if you have ideas about buying plants for autumn delivery and set your order in fairly soon. This advice applies no matter where you propose to order your plants because the demand increases every year and, as I know ro_my chagrin, if you leave ordering until the end of the year or later you may find that tbe ptents you want are sold out. li Ducks and finesses Unwins, Ltd, Histon.j Cambridge, are very quick off j the mark with new varieties' of I flower and vegetable seeds. To: We used to say that players who did not know when to refuse a trick should expect to- lose, and there were few of sow in July they have t offered {■ them who did not spend their the new diicory ' Crystal i Head This produces a i lettucc-Iikc hearted plant from! October to March in foe open I ground when other salad vege- j tables are scarce and .dear. It is ] slightly more bitter than let-j tuce but it does not need blanching as do the endives. Seeds should be sown now. Unwins also offer a new quick / maturing cabbage ‘Spring Hero*. This is sown now and transplanted in October to give good hearted cabbages in the spring. first years in learning to deceive opponents in un¬ expected ways. Everyone was cold at school that the way tu make four tricks with K J 10 7 5 in dummy opposite 9 8 4 in the hidden hand was j) to lead the 8 or 9 and finesse !: against the Q if ao honour did not first appear. This is mathe- maticaljy correct but psycholo¬ gically wrong. You are almosr as likely to pick up the queen' if. you have led a cord from the long suit, because the defender was tonight that second way of convincing the ‘declarer that his contract hung on a successful finesse in tramps came about when a defender refused to take his only trick. North South employed tbe conventional One Club of the day, and declarer expected to be raised if his partner pro¬ vided a sure crick when he bjd a jump rebid. No score ; dealer South t O A 1 £ 7 42 •r— — ,* 753 E: i^AHOSU O a TO 6 4 a Ust week I wrote about!, h hand be should ploy low; green flowered plants and o«:i ud ir ^ onJv he ha j reader comptemed that I bad*! pieced tage tfa^ the declarer's not mennoned the green form [, band fowTbe aminpsces when of the white arum hJy, Zm ,, ^ afford ro go tip wi* the tedeschta oeihtopica. It is noti' queen ^ e a favourite of nvne, but Ili 4 ' . greatly admire the white J .Jr™ e we<r 5 counties* ex- “Crowborough” variety of this! such cunning attacks arum lily, which my mfe has j! DC £1 ; but most oF foern successfully grown io the open sienMned *** for the past 14 years. It has even seeded itself and the from the declarer’s j skill m using unseen cards to advantage; but he did not clump grows bigger every year. !i ^*4 the distributions True it is in a sheltered south li h * expected or was led facing border against the I house, but even so. it has had! to believe. One of the earliest examples of ducking i n order to put up wWi some severe J! t0 , the declarer from a winters. Some people grow itj finesse was given when I in a shallow pool said find it 11engaged m march play, 3 nd quite hardy. Others cover • T can even remember Ely CuJ- plants in a border with straw- ! b e rison boasting that the safest leaves, or bracken in winter, | • e3s ^ against a. part-score suit but my wife has never done so, y n ttact was the small trump with her plants. !; 5 * 1 ** 5 ! the king double too in the Roy W«»v 7 ! b»nd > of the player with the opening lead. A more sirbrle I V J18 l w _ 1 - * --«•- ^01018153 A AK J 10S . Vj *-» O K J S 3 A A K Sou nr ' WriI North ‘ ‘ cast 1 Ciu No 1 Diamond u Hc-aru a Spades . No 4 Spades -No No No West led the ^J, overtaken by East who played the top honours- South ruffed with the’ dS9- and West discarded the <'9. Assuming that the diamond finesse was against him but that East held tbe 4»Q, declarer cashed the 4 A, entered dummy with the QA and finessed the 4>J. West won with the and returned a dub. By fail¬ ing to take two rounds of trumps, declarer lost not only his trump trick but also the OQ which he was unable to ruff out. It is clear that if West overruffed tbe third heart and returned either a club or a trump, declarer would be compelled to look for his tenth trick bv finessing the C.f or by ruffing two - diamonds.. Sometimes-die defender who- wins a trick which he can/ afford to duck gains nothing and at the same time saves the' declarer from -being ckrveu 10 take.a losing finesse: The lack of cooperation -between West aud East in their defenceto a slam can rarely have been sur¬ passed in a world championship when this deal was played. * No score : dealer South : - A A K BES o A 0 A K q 102 !-N- >**** I— s -4^ A to a V T 6 5 2 J 10 8 * AJ »» South Nj S Hoaru 3 Spade* 4 Spadus 5 Spadn No . ■« v* . A 0 4 ? A 9 3 2 T«'cs4 North Nu 2 Club, No 11 Sparin No J Diamond, No S Club* No 0 Spade; No E.isr No No No NO No South tried to sign off twice and the slam looked very remote when East led the <?Q. Even ■ with clubs favourably Traced, decJarer appears to have- one loser each in chiba and diamonds. After winning with the \7K. Nortfi showed: much foresight in leaditig the 4^8 and not the A3, in the hope that dummy’s A7 might provide him with an extra entry. This play also gave defenders tbe .impression that he held a six-card trump suit. After taking the second trick with die Aj, declarer led the £5 to has £K followed by a second dub from dummy which be reentered with the AQ- West won with the i£A, noting at the same tune that bis partner had not signalled in dubs. - In despair, West shifted to the 0J and effec¬ tively destroyed tbe defence. Whether or not there had been any hesitation over the play of the dubs. West had no. reason for failing to return a heart, except the possibility that East .had led the VQ from , four hearts. Moreover, he ivai unaware that; East was not only short in clubs but also held a trump. On lie CJ North played the OA, entered dummy by leading has AS to the A7* finessed the *10. 'cashed the AQ, played off bis remaining trumps and squeezed East between his and CK- I was once asked why, as a general rule, I have avoided giving the authors of such brilliant performances. The-, answer is that I should feel obliged to give-the name of the defender wbo neither returned- tbe club lead after winning with the £A nor returned a heart in order to remove the A from dummy. He was a very distin¬ guished match player nod author wbo boasted that he. - never played for money stakes. He was the first paper tiger whom T had the pleasure of meeting over the card table- Edward Mayer a.®* . , • . - luch " mote . than 'rarice' " is defined Good Food Guide Fleshpots of France Travel England, fast famil y living- the Perigord: pate and saucis- her room—-the wall decorated by a son sec with black olives and _, ■_ n ^iehac- nilv-Mriirtv na II- - sy of ,500m dressed lettuce salad: frn- mages et dessert. Cote de Ven- toux red wine is 15 francs, Gigondas from the other side of the Dentelles twice that, and Ca-iranne, a lighter Cotes du Rhone a.c., somewhere in be¬ tween. The young girl who serves would have to scanner to serve everyone without a few longish waits—but who is in a hurry? It is instructive, after this, to restaurant, much smartened no doubt since Edmond David pere first gained his certificate as nuzitre traiieur from the Club Prosper Montague, and the village itself, whose busi¬ ness before the tourist explo- sion was tbe production of red ochre, deserves a visit from nyj . iyl . . cal study of just such a place. Village in the Vauduse. David’s customers’ one lunch¬ time this summer, ranged from a German party who smoked through their -ecrevisses to a French family with a fortnight- _ old baby (which cried and was : dulv taken out by its mother to Be breast-fed in the cloak¬ room between courses). The cheapest (adult) menu at 34 _was distin- piettes de veau with pork and _ home-made bitter- herb stuffing, or lapin ovaison amie—have _aiven way on'-orange conserve that even an dark with red wine vinegar; ^ ostal add ressS'to uninforma- English marmalade freak was rhen lamb chops gnlled on arr\ Qt^ve, or at least non-evocative, proved to admire unreservedly. charcoal with a _ sfaaiyly uxnerds- The Rhone, and its The most promising hotel in m —^^tibutaries, the Drfone and tlie ^be .Diois is undoubtedly La ^^"""■■lurance,- marfc- . the western, Write Auberge on tbe outskirts ortherh and southern limits of the little town of Die itself, f the mountainous region that Not that total peace could be r the bottom 1 '.end begins in guaranteed here: there is a ^TlOllhe Vauduse and runs up past mountain view from the little ■^FFCIlllont Ventoits. to Haute. Pro-' garden at the back, but when * Tencei, then adross the Aygues visited the place was packed ver Ugh plateau''to the val- out for a holiday weekend by of -tile Drdme and the xwn large parties, one of . peaks that command motor-cycling couples who ' 1 ‘..'he wine-growing district smnked at (tinner, the other of -- . ..J'ound Die. Though rich in nat- extremely fit Belgian canoeists visit a thoroughly professional T' ; ral and Gallo-'Roman history who sang instead. The cooking Provencal restaurant w’hich like the whole region is more and the diningroom service— figures with some distinction aantiar to French than to Bri- not to mention the value alike in Michelin. Cault-Millau ish holidaymakers, who if given—were the more impres- and the Auto-Jaumal. David in ‘ hey start in Provence seldom give because of this press of Roussillon is a two-generation rienetrate farther in ..a north- custom. ‘ - : } ast«ly.-. direction than Ven- ^ usual m such places, .. oux and - Vaison-Ia-Komame. mosr people were eating the The sun has prior claims. 'second cheapest menu, at 40 GastrOnomicaUy^too, Tt 'is ; francs, which included charcu- . ‘air to sa>.that they have some terie of good quality, well- '' --eason' for confining--them- cooked and. .-generous .meat -elves to. the warin' south arid courses, gratia _ dauphinolse • he much-traffidced line of tto potatoes (the regional specia- . -' -Ihone. Once among the high lity, and an excellent example who has read Laurence . - ills and the goat-grazed mea- of it), an elaborate blackcur- Wylie s ^ .■ -'ows, you are in campEfag, fish- rent meringue confection, and : -ig and walking territory, a choice of a dozen cheeses, :here the-year-round .popula- -with the expected stress on . -\ou is sparse, sometimes with local goal ones. - —hundred people'or so Kvitig 'Less expected was the hotel’s j;a medieval mortified village -, wine list and Madame’s know- :hat was. built for 500. Res- ledge of it: Tranquilet de Die '• mrants and hotels tend to be • *73—the still version of the ber- J. ' rodest, except . where, the ter known Clairette—had real ecent French passion for Ie freshness and character, and a . . port tTJuver allows a two-sea- non-vinrage Comas was mature an year. However, whether' by the standards of the un- •'ou begin in the comparative ready Rhodes most places in francs here was iu no way per- ' 'ustermes of the Diois and. the region.. serve. Both these functory, with fresh, firm beig- -- - escend gradually to the flesh .■ bottles were under 20 francs, nets de Jotte and kitchen-made 'ots round Avignon, or do the whereas. almost ucdversajly herby tartare sauce as a first ■jMur.the othri 1 ivay round'and .Hermitage, Chaceauneanif-du- course; and creanyly delicious • r ^e tbe mountains " to purify - Pape, and Cote Rotie now cost ‘•ie. system, you will have expe- upwards of 50 francs in a res- ienced a useful cross-section tauranc. •T French holiday tables in Farther south, in what is 378, and ^ with_ lude. emerge known as Provence Comtadine. ^assured that French res- ijg Nvons—worth a stop if only " lurateurs - can still teach to buy some of the best black • nglish ones a thing-or two, olives and p&te de fruits that • ■ boot Simplicity as well as France produces—and Dieule- • r .bout complexity. fir. The'latter is a straggly pot- lapereau and unlimited, irresist- .' Take, for instance,’the -only *®rv and ' textile town ible, crinkly black olives, and .bvibus hotel m Chattilon-en- (LTiomme-le-fit ratitcr than continued with fresh scallops, ; iois, a village'which gives its Dieu) whose best recom- done Momay-style in an indi- ; jme to a found light red mended small hotel, Les vidual copper pan, and a house : -' "'iue, tod lies at die foot of a Brises, proved an overworked speciality, coqueier en pate. ■- " mo us steei>side<i mountain disappointment apart from the rich and brandied but surpris- ‘ illey caUed" fa Cirque d’Ar- fresh herb butter with snails ingly light in total effect. Tbe tiane; Tbe France could (ironically called “les rap ides tarte aux poires meringue e tras ardlv be nc dnuneaded ' de Ventoux”), tbe bottled less interesting than tbe sor- 'imes reaxleri for a holiday, funci served with the main bet, but a soft goat cheese or • hat with" its cavernous spaces, dish, and again, the intensely- foe region (from a board of a .. " trd-pressed young family in flavoured apricot-and-cmger dozen others, all in sound fet-. targe -of overdue redecoration conserve at hreakfast. This is tie) married verv well with the •id no visible fire escape. But tire kind of district, more test glass of tbe resuturanrs is hard to go far wrong in accustomed to family holidays own Cotes du Luberon at # 1/ ich a place if you are able to til 311 international tourism, francs, a VDQS wine from just . Ter your guests for 35 francs where the French gites ruraux across the Durance to the ■« local -jamhon chi with country cottage system south. The total bill for all ives. an pmk traite comes into its own. and anyone this—for two people—tran- rx amandes from the stream prepared to settle in these slates at £14 if the pound sterl- *• tat rushes down the valley gently rolling hills for _a few fog is for safety's sake pessi- ■■ even the supermarket oppo- days would be well advised to mistically written down to 8 -te the hotel keeps a viuier), a write for the appropriate francs. It is no easy matter, • -w good cheeses, and a chunk literature to foe departmental even today and even in the : pineapple,; Besides, break- tourist office (“Drome- countryside, to find an English Vacances-Conseil ”, 11 ave de Romans, 26000 Valence). A mountain range or two further south again, and you are in the Vaucluse, which is so combed over by the French hotel and resraurant guides that it was a surprise to be .given, by French friends who visit the 'district often, the . naine of a simple place that figures in none of the books consulted. Le Barr dux is an ancient hill village between the .serrated limestone edge called the Dentelles de Montmiraii and tbe smoother, higher cone of Me Ventoux itself. Out of season, these high-lying vil lages, with chapels or chateaux spinach that nsad-J up for 5 somewhat chewy escalope, and a sublime pineapple sorbet. (When it was admired, the waiter launched into an enthu¬ siastic description of its mak¬ ing.) The 54 franc menu began with a workmanlike terrine de fruit/Vegetabli Cages . ./our questions answered: . ■ How much do they cost?* How can -. ley save me money?* Wfoatsizednd tPe should I choose? •Which make .' oesthe professionalise? . -'rJ-'V-tfl* Iv- r,r ™ to V* 3 * 3 *“ J ‘ J ‘ k • -• j uKte v -nuhii; t-, • L-ei'. icaJmj FUSE BOOKLET ' waliout '■'■itetc*- &grifhames ‘ 3 W FREEPOST CfurfflCKHfcRtl -J. RHj5 ?BR Tg I r 0 34?^ ^64 4 j n yt fm &-tl a y' 0 r nj girt, ..cfij jitficAgnitaiies .^ir,e_ 354 Optional Quotation: 1 v.’onld be mteresled in restaurant that can do as well for less. Hotel dc France, Cbatillon-en- Diois 26410. Tel. 5. Closed Wednesdays out of season; Nov 18-Dec 23. Menus 25-45 francs. Room 30-34 francs. Full board 66-76 francs. La Petite Auberge, avenue 5a di-Carnot, Die 26150. Tel. 22.05.91. Closed Monday (except public hols) : January: Nov 23-Dec 20. Menus 27 (weekdays only )-76 f rancs. Room 46-70 francs. Full board 75-95 francs. Les Brises, Route de Nvons. Dieulefit 26220. Tel. _4S.41.49. __Closed Monday; Oct 15-Nov 15. on the sum vir rocks, are as Open until 9 p.m. Menus 26-3/ .peaceful as anwdiere in Pro- .vence. The Barre faniilv's hotel Les Geraniums, overlooking the scrubby, thyme-carpeted garrigue, would be a place francs. Room 26-30 francs. Full board 55 francs. Les Geraniums, Le Barroux, Vaucluse. Tel. 65.41.03. Menus 27-40 francs. Room 25-35 where a normally impoverished francs. Full board 65 francs. British family could stay, since Restaurant David, Roussillon even fufl pension costs under 84. Tel. /5.60.13. Closed Mon- 610 a.day.. day; June 20-July 4; Jan 30- In the dining room, decorat- 20; Sundav Dinner out of ed with staffed birds and foxes season. Menus j 4 (except bun- in Aesop-like poses, the 30 day)-90 francs, franc menu was reman isceut of £ Times Newspapers Ltd, and the all-meat meals served in the Good Food Guide various old-fashioned country (Consumers’ Association and districts in France, including Hodder) 1975. i In exactly twelve months’ time, ' the P & O cruise liner Oriana I will be tbe scene of much activity in Southampton. Hav¬ ing arrived there at 7 am at I rhe end of a two-week cruise in tbe Norwegian fjords, she is . due to sail at 8 pm on a voyage to the Adriatic and to Sicily, again for two weeks. Passengers and their baggage wilt be disembarked and seen off on trains or in their cars, stores will be loaded and foe ship made ready for a new set of passengers. All will be bustle and boat trains, goings and comings. Meanwhile Canberra, which shares the burden of the P St O cruise programme, will be enjoying a comparatively easy day. Sunday, July 15, 1979 wall find her nosing up the Tagus to berth in the heart of Lisbon for a 24-hour stay. Most of foe quayside activity will be asso¬ ciated with the share excursion coaches, calling their allotted loads into foe citv itself, or along the coast to Estoril and Cascais and inland to Sintra. The reason I cast ahead a twelvemonrh is char in just three days’ rime P & O is to launch its 19/9 brochure and I was foolish enough to remark that this seemed to be jumping rhe gun, as so many of this year’s cruises have still ro take place. I was firmly informed that this is far from being the case. On the strength of their advance brochures—folders containing the briefest of details—both P & O and British India have already sold a number of berths for 1979. The detailed brochures are apparently snapped up fay cruising devotees who book well ahead to ensure getting the berth they want on the ship they prefer. Not that 1978 is completely sold nut. I? you fancy an autumu cruise, berths oq O riana and Canberra are avail¬ able, especially on four cruises P & O mentioned when 1 checked on sailings a few days ago. Oriana sets our on Sep¬ tember 17 for Thessaloniki, Volos, Athens and Gythion, returning to Southampton ou October 1. Then she sails 011 a three week Caribbean cruise with Curacao, Bonaire, Bar¬ bados, Martinique, Antiqua and Vigo as ports of call. There are a number of berths remaining at the lower end of the fare scale on this Carib¬ bean voyage, with fares start¬ ing from £499, and the pros¬ pect is a tempting one. So, too, is foe Canberra cruise on October 20 to Athens and Istanbul, with stops at Marseilles, Gibraltar and Vigo on the return leg. There is plenty of time at sea at the beginning of this two week cruise, for Athens is not reached until October 25. As far as l am concerned, this is foe right formula for a holiday at sea, and the aforementioned Oriana cruise on September 17 also fits mv preferred pattern with just four pens in a couple of weeks. There are those, T know, who select a cruise holiday on the basis of the number of ports it crams into the two or three weeks of its duration. They presumably work on the theory that you get more for your money that way. For my cart, I prefer *' long and lazy days at sea. trith no responsi¬ bility”, because as soon as a liner reaches port one has to start making decisions. Should one explore independently or take an excursion ? If an excur¬ sion, then which one ? If inde¬ pendently then how much money will one need and what is the latest time to return on board ? Give me, instead, the li n cum plicated routine of a day at sea with no outside pres¬ sures and no decision to be made apart from what to have for dinner. Is there, I wonder, a market for a cruise that does not call at any .port * Stripping companies are forever trying to make those days at _ sea more “ interesting “—as if . simply being on a liner was not in¬ teresting enough. They provide cabarets and gambling and films and sometimes designate “ special interest ” cruises, fill- Antiques afloat Canberra and Oriana, foe largest ships in P & O Lines* ten-strong fleet of cruise liners. ing the vessel with devotees of ooe pursuit or another. - When Canberra sails on November 4 on a cruise to New Orleans she will have such groups on board and nn fewer than three special in¬ terest themes, Arthur Negus will be talking about antiques (P & O suspect this will be the first time antiques have fea¬ tured as a cruise theme). Percy Thrower will be talking about gardening, and escorting gardeners on special shore excursions, while Nico Gardner will be leading the bridge enthusiasts. (On this subject of special interest cruises, inci¬ dentally, I should mention that a 19-day holiday for gardening enthusiasts starts on August 22 and incorporates a flight from London to Canada, a tour of the Rockies and a voyage north from Vancouver on P & O’s Sun Princess. The guest lecturers are Frances Perry, gardening correspondent of The Observer, and her husband Roy Hay, whose name and knowledge have featured on these Saturday pages for many a long year. Mr John Lancaster Smith, director of the Passenaer Ship¬ ping Association, confirms the tendency for people to book cruise berths well in advance, and spoke' to me of voyages extending into 1980 which are already being booked. Coming to the more immediate pros¬ pects he sard That following a very successful spring, rhe cruise companies were finding the peak of summer somewhat patchy with space still avail¬ able on sailings in August, could it be that a cruise is beyontf. the pockets of those with children still at school ? i believe this is the case, for all other forms of holiday report very heavy bookings for that school holiday period—indeed the lour companies have been scratching around to fir quarts into pint pots and I suspect that the end of this month will see thnse pint pots spilling over. At least one does not experience overbooking on cruise liners, or turn up at the port to discover that no ship is available. British India’s programme of “ Discoverycruises represents some of the best value in holi¬ days at sea. They are primarily educational cruises, carrying groups of schoolchildren and students, but have cabin accom¬ modation for 300 passengers. This, in my opinion, is about the' right number for genial companionship at sea. Large enough to be able to avoid those one wishes ro avoid, yet not so large as to give foe impression of overcrowding. Though these cabin passengers on BLs Uganda travel quite separately from the school groups, they are welcome to attend lectures on board and may take advantage of free shore excursions. On October 1 Uganda sails from Southampton into’the eastern Mediterranean and is based out there for a -series of t'lv-cruise holidays until the end of May, 1979. Another aspect of autumu and winter cruising which deserves consideration is foe - popularity of the Fred Olsen line services. Between now and early October a ship sails every day from Bergen on what is arguably foe world's most beautiful voyage. The Olsen brochure does not hesit¬ ate to make exactly that claim for the 11 day cruises along the Norwegian coast. Blenheim and Venus sail from Newcastle to. link up with the coastal ships and provide a round-trio cruise “ package" which enjoys great popularity. These continue until mid- October and it is then that Blenheim begins a series of voyages to Madeira and the Canary Islands, sailing Fro.n London on alternate Thursdays from October 12. Seven of her 16 sailings offer Gibraltar as a port of call instead of Lan- zarote, and all can be built into cruise and stay holiday*. Olsen's Black Watch also sails fortnightly to Madeira and foe Canaries, * alternating with Blenheim. _ To return to foe contempla¬ tion of 1979, 1 believe that as far as cruising is concerned a great deal of attention should be paid to the fly-cruise pro¬ gramme offered by foe Sovier cruise. line CTC. More than 25,000 berths will be available, compared with the 1978 total of 7,000 and I expect we shall be bearing much of foe 500- passenger Odessa, British-buih, as well as foe smaller Lirva. These two vessels will be based ar Genoa for cruises into the Mediterranean and the Black Sea next summer, while the Mikhail Lermontov and the Mikbail Kalinin will cruise from Tilburv. Unlike P'& O. CTC will not publish its brochure until Sep¬ tember and my guess is that the company will push very hard indeed to win over Bri¬ tish cruise passengers, both for cruises out of London and foe fly-cruise hulidavs. This opera¬ tion is a valuable source of hai'd currency as far as tbe Russians are concerned and although the cruises will be sold in north America and other European countries, sterling will be tbe shipboard currency. John Carter r Cruise away from Winter "I B The world awaits you. Cruise superbly aboard P&,Os flagship Canberra across | four oceans to five continents, Canberra 8 sails January 6lh to begin an 89-day voyage of a lifetime. Home in time for Spring on April 6th. Fares from £2,080 (4-berth. 1. £2,877(2-berth). Full details in the brochure T&O Cruises World Wide 78/79' from your ABTA Travel 1 Agent or contact P&O Cruises Ltd* J5 St.Botolph St., London ECSA 7DX. Tel: 01-577 2551. Here's where vou‘11 call:— Port Everglades Rabaul Bonaire. Cristobal Acapulco San Francisco Honolulu lahaina . Suva . .. Auckland Sydney Hong Kong Singapore Mauritius Durban Cape Town Rio delaneiro Tenerife Madeira / ; .-r-.-=a J '*$?**• ¥*M # Alresford Crafts make some of the most appealing <md endearing toys I have ever seen. Their designs have originality and a nice sense of whims*, but they are also practical and hygienic people who “vard" tiheir own virgin polyester fillings in a way that I believe is not done by other British makers of cutkMy toys. Their methods ensure that the toys keep their shape and softness even When washed and tumble dried. Alresford is run by John aod Margaret Jones, who started the busi¬ ness by their water mill seven years ago, doubled their sales annually and now sell some £500,000 worth abroad on their established reputation .for quality. Margaret designs while John runs the business side, and their sense of what children reallv love is one of their greaioesr assets.' One of their most recent lines is a baby doH in fine English bone china, like the dolls of the pasr with rosebud mouths, roumj eyes, and. curl in the middle of the . forehead. In black or white, these baby doWs wear long-flowing robes like christening robes, petticoat and close- fitting^ bonnets. The bodies, as in Victorian times, are of cloth with bone china hands and feet and they are setting well despite a price of about A father, mother and baby family of teddy bears is about £ 10 , and they look charming in ginghams and denims. A red-brown fox is £11.50 and fin* a suitable conyianion in the white Arctic fox who looks rather glamorous and anything but cunning (also £11.50). A black Labrador puppy (about £11) is somehow gangling, awkward and nnco-ordioated, as puppies are. despite being a more or less inanimate cuddly foy. I think the favourite in my oEfice and among those who came hi to see before he went off to be photographed was the white Pofer Bear, a big fellow about 30 inches long. Be and his companion, a brown Siberian bear cub, are different from almost anv cuddly toy you may find. They are readly floppy, youthful-looking and gentle and good value even at £15 for the polar bear. Any animal with clothes can be easily dressed and undressed. All are wash¬ able, aFl have machine-sewn, hand- f ini shed eyes for as much safety as passible and all are filled with the"soft polyester. The range includes pigs (black or white and delightfully dressed), rabbits, baby seals, beavers, otters, elephants, badgers, cats and wild cats as well as those I have, mentioned. A colourful, illustrated leaflet, with names of local stockists, will be sent for a 9p stamp, but please remember to enclose your address. Many readers for¬ get and the company has to wait for an irate “ where is my leaflet ? ” letter to be able to give the service they wanted to give in the first place. The address is Afrerfoid Crafts, The Town Mill. Ahresford, Hampshire (0962 73 2689- 3953). Whv Hnn’t thpv ^ colourants. Also, the cake mi rJUJ UUU l UICJ . easy- t o wash off without stai 9 Why don't they make dry, mart lip¬ sticks ? Mrs Peregrine of London wants tn know. She wants nothing gleamy. glossy, lustrous, shiny or creamy. She just wants something that stays on long enough to allow her to eat a biscuit or finish a gin and tonic. In fact, she saved the tiny stumps of her Dior lipsticks from 1973 because they stayed smooth, never cracked, and stayed on. The stumps are now kept for rimes of crisis or jubilation. I like that—it is true that we need the same conics for both situations. Noiv the trouble with all cosmetics is that they hare to be applied to human skin, which reacts in thousands of different ways so that what works on one will fail on another. But anyone with Mrs P*s problem might like to try Rimmel’s new Super Glossy Lip Colour with automatic applicator. It is more or less painted on and costs only 78p. What looks like a felt-tipncd applicator .is fitted to the screw top and resrs in a narrow bottle in which is the lip colour formula (rather like the eyelash, colour brushes on sticks >. Lay it on as though painting. It feels greasy and I find it worth blotring with a tissue, but the colour is lasting well as far as’ I am concerned. The colours are modern, young colours, and rhere is a _ good display at most Rimmel stockist?. [There is also Lip-Cote; a protective paint which some think marvellous but others find a bit drying and tautening—not by Rimmel—but ar many chemists.] Oddly, Rimmel is the answer to a “ why don’t they ? u from Mrs Churchill of Kingston unon Thames. She is hunting for the old-fashioned cake mascara on winch she used to spit and which, she says, still give Tber lashes more “body” than any of the modem colourants. Also, the cake mascara is II • Last week I mibli^mt a , M. ii fr — one of n™ SL survives swimming pools. j Qad ' written 10 ask where they could Why don’t they start designing labels M fauy brass weights for their ' old or so that die directions far use are I reproduction kitchen scales. This week legible and not in the smallest-possible j about 30 readers have rushed to her irons easily, ff at aU. That is often ! S^I» fiQ r°® C *: dowi .* udl weights myself true but. iF you knew the countless laws ji J" ,r? e . * ew days since returning from and reguktrions surrounding the I &T>lKia y- fnbAllimr rxf __ur_ _ J Wdinl,*.- *4._u _ _. • . labelling of practically everything we Weights, though not in brass, are at SiS *SE C cornparad^Te *^"5? " D °v5i < ° 1 ' !I3S 06891 = sizes are all stipulated to comply with i ” arn>ds > Meilor. 4 SI wire anything from trade description to food S ? uare > London, SW1, who also mail and drug or ocher health and safety (01-730 4259); Edwin Preston, Jenner •Js ss rs'snrst \ Ss »£=iS'iSra practirejK- Street, 3 L& pack. My own solution, adopted since;! P 001 > a&d W. & T. Avery, the scales I had tn wear glasses for reading, is to •> ~_ keep a magnifying glass in everv room ’l m rite house, indndins the kitchen and \ * HASS is th* Hnma , bathroom. It is a faMy costly outlay i L Home Accident but the magnifiers do not need to be ; i ■ ^ MCe *’p rem » a_ new and good wonderfully scientific or- expensive and- ! | ltw ? 10 ^ n>l_tde statistics on home some can be downright cheap. I have}; acadents hi Britain. The aim is to an edegant one by my bedside but the ' atert companies and householders to rest ore plam and practical. One tip— f take preventive action. Started it a, do get, large ones. The smaller ones !■ beginning of 1977 b, r ^^w * 3re when - TO « ro read j! 0 fS 8 . Ir"J* lb * Department a whole label or television programmeli **'f ,ce “ and Consumer Protection, and' at once to fcdce everything in. Anyone continued with the cooperation of 2D with long sight should try it and I am i e i«uns hospitals, the data have sure many others would also find it! stimulated a leaflet from the Safer iLseful. Ones glasses are alwaysi, Glazing Information Service, produced upstairs, in the handbag in the other'! J 0 conjunction with the Royal Society room, anywhere but in' the place you J| ft * r Prevention of Accidents. I 4 ,^° n ^ etld " tbe 9 ra , DP -I Something like 30.000 ta 4GD00 nf *■£4*5*ji sirssi^a-i-as w— - — HiwwifiKS • To go with all the autumn '; ©Sales are so frequently listed ss^*“A , rte' , ^” u - d, K a " need ™ r ° cinnamon, banana or saffron-^ ? n 1 sh u 0LlJd Uke Boots are selling Sarongsters at < K/EJp'SJ at cor ? er most of their larger branches. cLil? b wL?' 03 ^ and Beaufort The Sarongster is a filmy, n r W ^? er “ 15 the “" cottony rectangle of fabric, F . r . T , . machine bound along the edges ! mi „° t u? s JL^ !o “ I , of and measuring abouT four bv **“*- ha ? f . t beco nie exclu- six-and-a-half feet. It costs £2 q9 : Sive a - furn,n “'e and borne and is a versatile •Sesso’rvS5S2JS? « ^ P - wh ^ c since it can be'tied to cover- “P_ h “ s *fT y *J£ - sold - ,, ] l a Wlde up over bikinis, be a sarong, a t S®f!r« f r X T uiIe>s was turban or oriental head-dress ^ ar . 1 5 ver ,? aw and even a rather sexy wrap- I J. J22 U, ? 8 i ^ ” bco ' over skirl. Two sarong in Ton- l for^ch^^L^^ trasnng colours can be tied at ■ for . v, . b *'- b fitted or loose covers the shoulders .and belted with cord to give a Grecian-style ^ a '^ are /° fr,S,l,e ° J tIyI!StCd UDtiI . the O'™*" afford one* were in old^hi that you do not need me to prettier topcoats. grocers* -shops. The shoi do u agam, but I should like Their service is friendly .nd fragrant as you come np . to praise Tulleys at the corner efficient, and their prices are and hard to leave. The p of Fulham Road and Beaufort good. Just now those good are picked and dried in &rreet whether it is their sale- P r, ces are even better so call Mediterranean sun. wit time or not. at 289/297 Fulham Road, Lon- ' pesticides or chemicads to For lop® a local draper of doo » SW10 (Ql-352 1078). their natural scents, and once were in old-fas hi' grocers* -shops. The shoj . fragrant as you come np and hard to leave. The. p J -- ~~ LU jedve. |j good. Jurt now those good are picked and dried in don, SW 10 (Ql-352 1078)7 Their naroral scentTid are packed, on site for ship ©A short walk to the west while fresh from St Rem; along Fulham Road and you Provence, where they come to No 341 where faeen fanned for 30 yearsSj L’herbier de Provence has set They also sell teas.'TJ up its first independent United Cey/on tea (how can one]J Kingdom shop.. I say indepea- Sn-Lankan ?) is seemed .; dent because a number of its rose, peppermint, jastbk lines have already been found Orange Pejiae or green C. dress for the cool of the even- 'I ’1 S0 raa 3 y type * fa t br ‘c, ing—the sketches give some ,f hi ? d P atta ( ns that there ideas. Each sarongster costs '• T hL J ,eth,n8 for ev ®°!: £259 in either saffron or terra- ‘ J hey do noc * v 1 n mmd cotta colours. The cotton :■ rh2 U <J»VIf«T« r °r wn 1 B - ,ong f- nd rrp-icoc n( 1 _ ./ . •; they sell masses of plain calico S3=S ?si a not. And it is casily pressed or. t —^. if drip-dried in 'hot s.un, needs , little ironing. Packs into 1 f -Cl nothing. fr J y manufacturing firm/ The latter was Che evenrua 1 ! retadler to at least half a dozen readers who, between them, j' ganre me addresses in . Copper Mill i, Une, London, SW17, Belgrave Gate, ! Leicester, Basingstoke and Guildford. »| Avery is not actually a retailer and some _ readers found that “ a little |( irvrinudatmg ** to bury because one is :! going to a despatch warehouse or com¬ mercial building, but said that Avery were very helpful once you got there. So look up the telephone books to find a branch in your area. 1 Two readers found the Metrication !| Board urrheipFiri but four said obey got 1 lists. The board assure us chat amy- one writing to them at GKN House, 22 Kingsway, London. WC2, wtH get a list of sellers of weights, retail, wihoile sale and 'manufacturing. It is then up j to readers ro check cm whether they il will be buying brass or some other j! compound but I-am very grateful to ! you all. |! j|;! ;'(fa l ‘.fj - v x \y r r-" this is the first full-scale ’herb * ror ° ab o*w 95p ro £L 20 shop from these producers of grammes, so much-that is aromatic and .There are also bath essen original. There are herbs you shampoos, tonic waters; may never have heard of before face or body, essential ' as well as many you know, love galore with wonderful na and rarelv find." They are in 5 in elis, potpourri and a; large sacks, rotted down like r 'fic range of jams which the sugar and barley sacks elude a few delicious flavR; that we cannot buy efcsewhf rg oa = j >i, k . *7 Olive oil is very costly but-? mstic and in -shapely or-etfi yr — bottles while rather state bottles hold other temptatk **jdrs* ' 'Ww There are attractive loot >. I'ljk. sirops, honeys and thick or t ' ^-^ui rg^ - ’ .. ,™K. natural beeswax candles t ; as Roings of the hot! srSur . combs had been rolled into hi ing tapers. You can buy li Tnw. ingots of pure olive oil soap, raw, natural colours sceu, with honev or bitter almbi or rocks of palm oil and -d? oil soap at about 88 p and 99j '_- '• other soaps are 75p but the? Sots or long, heavy bars-c more. Persona] callers only T least for the preseat: but it' 1 hoped that other shops »' Jr J onen, under franchise or ■? _J shops in shops, round Brira // The telephone number is 01-3 0012 and they are closed /f Monday and Tbursday moii ■fNr /( inss. Nothing Is cheap b| \ everything is good. any lowering of standards on riie | ground of cost. Patio door manu¬ facturers too often fail to brief nheir Salesmen properly and some installa¬ tions nay not be safe—-about 7.000 to : 8.000 glass accidents hurt children at ; play. The booklet is for industry, For I- Installers and for consumers, to alert!' ennyone m the need for knowledge, (j care and the specialised use of tempered i- and laminated gtess. It is free, and j interested bodies can also get posters : and a colour film for educational purposes. Contact the SaEer Glazing Informswaon Service at Strode House, I 44 Osnaburgh Street, London, NW1. I In return, SGTS would be grateful for details of glass accidems in your home to help them with statistics to make for- a safer future. I • Gi existence i? that peaceful, beautiful Georgian warehouse in Bath where tile antique and modem, the costly and the average!- priced, the lovely and the amu.fin 3 . the arckii'c and the practical live in harmony. Ibcv cuter there for the home and personal fashion, attrje- V “ ©Also-on the subject of te 1 . I would recommend Whitrart Whkjl in the Fulham Road and east l ‘t Tulleys, near the Miclitij. building at the corner of SIoJuMfi . Avenue. They have the M“}IJnp vv) selection of teas and coffe* y !\l V/v I have ever found. Their on h»\ Pelham mixture, a jasmin highly scented tea, is really/^. Freshing. They can mix specia’jy. \W For you and thev do handle me y.. V order really efficiently. Set* /UU for cheir list to Whirtards, ll'ti- Fulham Road. London. SW3 l0 '' Qi Jf . SS9 4261). Thev have til sori U 1 y of other delicacies and are we. worth a visit, though be prf 'la y 1 pared to spend a lot for wna V /,1 is good quality. ' t:ng male and female shoppers to their artistry Cjfti _ und service. I ‘have not yet had a chance to see J - C tjiuir new warehouse in Covent Garden's Floral ijh* brrcct, at No 2, Conduit Buildings, but ! most - fell readers about it pending my visit in c**®v Vi they are up for a shopping trip, I ^ THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 ©. I am delighte'd with'a new car mirror, ‘‘stuck ” to my old, interior rear-view ’mirror by ! means of ‘strong stretch bands. The shiny new Panaminror gives me a wide rear view in the central, wide part of it and adds a bqn^s of tdie side views through mv side windows on the extremities. It took a iittie time ta get used to it and one must learn to use th& centre and ■ the ends separately, but -it has completely wiped our;any blind, spots. Mark you, I;had a wing mirror in any case so that my sides were not blind but I.do find this Panamtrror good 'to discover pedestrians or cyclists' before pulling out or opening the door. It has another plus in chat it gives you the essential extra ail- r 6 und vision ' for right-band' drive cars used on foreign' roads where.driving'om the right can rob you of awareness in some .circumstances and tit- needs no- refocussing as tire move from interior'mirror to wing mirror sometimes does. In-effect. Pan a-, mirror gives- something Hke a 92-degree angle of vision as compared with an average-of something like 37 degrees of-tire standard 8 -inch mirror since you get .42 degrees in ~ the cencre- sectioo and 25 an each end that curves to show the car’s sides. Made by Combined Optical Instruments, it can be bought for £3.50 from Tavistock Trad¬ ing, 42 Tavistock Street, London WC2E 7PB. Endorsed by the AA, selected for the Design Centre, it was in Motor maga¬ zine's top ten awards in 1975 Weekend You can also buy a map read¬ ing magnifier from Tavistock. It is a magnifier moulded as a tingle piece incorporating lens, - frame and handle so that it stands up to being dropped in ] the car, shoved into glove com¬ partments, anything. In fat*,, a good accessory for any rOom in the house besides the car and ! it sells with a cord tpigo round | the neck so that it bes in the i jap or above it, leaving hands j free—-tbe_ cord, is optional and ■ the magnifier looks fine without j k The 96 nun lens magnifies L 8 times, almost doubling the j map or prim size and it looks | like clear Perspex in a sJighdy j pearly Perspex frame. Much !i recommended,' the Ore DP costs )| £3.50 complete directly from - Tavistock. i; :©Mr$ McCarthy writes to sug- jgesrt that, in the travel bag ; recommended last week, there , should always be those impreg- nated cleaning tissues for face ! and hands like Sray Fresh. I Agreed, and may I add st»p leaves ? Crabtree and Evelyn do soapleaves in jasmine, sandalwood or rose. 10 to a pack costing 45p. Their -towelectes are also good, very lemony, at 85p for 10 sachets at most Crabtree and Evelyn stockists (or write to the firm »t 24-25 New Bond Street, London, W.l for your nearest). To others who suggested ingredients for the emergency or standby travel bag, my thanks and my assurance that the only -reason for not pub¬ lishing a full list is that every¬ one has different needs and wanes, to say nothing of differ¬ ent priorities.- It was not my intention to list the contents, only to 'suggest that the time to pack this bag of essentials is when you are concentrating and well io advance so that afterthoughts can be added to tiie list before you leave rather than, infuriatingly, when . it is too late. Sheila Black ©Canned fruits for Sangria of even Pimms? Maybe, as long'as they are freeze-dried to have some fruity flavour without that syrupy tasb end consistency. At Jackson's of Piccadilly, the cans or Blanchaud Lyopiiilise “ Mixed Fruit Base ” contain pieces .of orange, apple, apricot, banana and strawberry with some fruit sugar and lemonv essences. It is not bad at ail Tor emergencies and it is rather cheaper than cutting up your own fresh Fruits but it lacks colour and sharp¬ ness. both of which add so much to festive or summer drinks. At 95p per can [add 20p postage if by mail) it rs a good standby but honestly not as goad 'as the genuine article. From aJI branches of Jackson’s but by post from 172 Piccadilly, Lon¬ don W’l. On the subject of summer drinks I would like to repeat myself and to mention, yet again the really graceful, useful elegant glass pitchers 1 wrote of recently. With wide base and curving sides rising to a narrow neck, these pitchers have silver- plated neck bands and handles with a raised, patterned finish. The' silver-plated lid. which is scooped for eatiy but safe pour¬ ing, can be screwed on to a- central cylinder which is then suspended inside the piteber, right to its base, to keep con¬ tents hot or cold. Fill the cylinder with ic ? cubes or with hot water. I mention it again because I have found it so use¬ ful that I failed to do it justice tiie first time. Ir is much admired and ir stands about 95- inches tail and. holds three pints without-the'centrai y der, but a Iittie.more than pints with ir and it lodLsJ either way. Versatile': at £13.95 .rndosive^frcifl Howiert (Dispiriting),. 28. _ Ashwn-undaFiLyp^^ Here again by" Ipat demand is' HarijenwareS^ troduced Gompacf,"Set- stewpans (5, 6 and 7-incfedi meter) with lids,' sold/ matched frypan detachable handle so that? inch frypan and stewpitf combine to make the bast lid of a roaster/casserole! : stick insides and useful a;' as inexpensive for £9.67. paid from Harbenware, D< Hanover Mills, Fitzroy, &f Ashton-under-Lyne; Lan^. ui at ta THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 11 Hi ; ^i.n ; ' Huri, - r . £'**i*i ASLsl and > .Hnrt ‘ Jr .v: Millr i%/ ocr.t.S; SAVE MONEY ON KITCHENS & BATHROOMS iilSfegf COME ALONG AND SEE OUR EXTEN¬ SIVE RANGEi QHE OF THE LARGEST- DISPLAYS IN LONDON, COMPARE OUR PRICES. KUQHEW &. BATHROOM FURNITURE AEG JLYNWED) AND ALL LEADING MAKES OF \~i .V T i'■ / 8ATHROOM EQUIPMENT ENGLISH & CONTINENTAL 1C. P HART & SONS LTD. fifewtifrant Tsrrocc, .Hercules RDa&$itJ.Jekphbne::G1-SZ8 6.86ST4)/nasF : . •r^. Or,iy s stones throw from Big Bcrv ■’.* > - * •y?}r—> *• GARDENWORK MMSl •« ooi, cimsnir * mmis, scuhul west mdslmc ■Zs L July SALE 10 % Discount • ON - ALL FIREPLACES. VCWS- COAL .LOGS, . V STOVES. ^ELECTRIC FIRES AND r^tL 1 J ACCESSO RIES. •yL BUY.now, offer '7*. >^ENDS/31SL JULY G*S COAL LOGS—THE INSTANT BLAZING FIRE WITHOUT CUT¬ TING wooo . or Cleaning ASHES. JUST LIGHT GAS! NORMALLY C» x VAT. ■ . fcSELL&OHEMlNEE LTD. :' ; «6;WlGMOflE street, ‘ .01-48^7486/7 SALE PRICE FROM J £89 +VAT J TRADE PRICES OFFERED! „ FATHROOM SUITES WtfmOWtS* - TROH WIfltE^n) SLACK , » "Wig*.- FtfWnll leiuUB ud gnldancv olvcn to . aw Tocp lna nents. Phone John £A:-«.-5EMi 5607 or 01-336 ff.JM sa.mgaj?. «*- teak Hob.), We regret .sent.. ASTON MATTHEWS LTD CLOSED UnHI next SATURDAY Make sure your products are in qur window next week . for details Ring now on 01*278 9351 7 tliln Cwcul (jus; a if Porto beiio 1U). London ^ Green, 01-727 4594 Beautiful Bamboo Blinds: 2u to 6ft wide, from £2.87 Mirror. 135.95. Inun * selection Chest of Drawer? from around £65 JAMES TAYLOR AND SON Bespoke shoemakers since 7857 We m she -1 (^measure boots end ;hoej lor men and women compris¬ ing style, lashion contort and quality Orthopaedic looi-wear our speciality 4 Paddington St, London, VY-1 Tel. 01-335 4149 and 935 5917 POOL, SNOOKER & « BILLIARDS TABLES 8 S Direct Sales. o New and Secondhand. » Immediate Delivery. o 2 Recovery Service JJ O Anywhere. o | TRENT YALLEY LEISURE 8 A 34-36 LINCOLN STREET § § OLD BASFORD « Q NOTTINGHAM o Tel. 0802 782377/0802 268803 after ® apseessoosaecsssseesss iMEWl til r* j ii No more Marcn- OVTY tag. at the Owl* tom of dark cu:«- bouros 1 Simmy — _. _ •■eng this tup. » acallly SHOE GADDY iiulde vrardcobc. oh door or wall to j<rn- ildo masJniuin sion<qe in the mint muni nr tp^c. Cure* dual and scuff rto- tettlun to 18 pairs nr shoes. Made of heayv dntv ’extra strong Unyl wUh rdr.fort.-Dd edges tor added strength and set- rhrn no; hen for earn >hoe selection. A . wu.i for MW home! Beware of Imitations: 2 ter ES.'Yi y .iftn. SOUTHERN CONSUMER PRODUCTS Dent. TT1S7ML. Welle Place. London Road South Merslham, Rcdhlll, Surrey _ Hie Space-Saving Bert Centre wVr'l l«iu n trd a : l Ite Lt ■ in ,;i td.rtf ..<d dual pn>pfl-r nw ■* -sqi.'it a- •»n«.osj l »-.• Including fa- MdsA*| ‘Al fit HKD*. • uii)r: cab.net »r;:rt lie patfl'f . I*K* SlaC-mg •i’-t b'.ni Drfl ft* ,|.iii»v or, eiwrivr. Stawiorr*-, ? era; 'ioc P icw<fiH> fiiru w S b J(i3 n. Sr! J it n I hu'i 1 fom l>' *.<1» III! I Mf i 33 pa?p cs-o.-i • k'VMPh .. ■ Vh’iMi ‘.'i-rlrtM ’' Ttn:Space-Savinu BeriCnUn; Dapt-3913/14 Goldin Sq. London W1R 4EP. T4-. 01-734 4246 , Wmn J. 6 'tan, Bkal. Bfjhln. IimP. Rchnal SlML Iflbac. SILVER PLATED CUTLERY to Use, Enjoy and Treasure Notnma anas mote to a dehcious meal man an elegani lablp jrd niihmg adds mors to an elegant table than me gleam or beauiUul cull:iv Silver cutlery made to (hs Mghesi standards of Sheffield C-raflsmen is not only a joy to the eye tml smooth and cool to ihe touch with a suislying weight. Our canteens of cutlery fill ell these requirement!. We hai-e chosen two uaditicnal Rsgonty designs ol Al Silver Plaied cutlery made by Shellield Cratlsmen. 1 ha Dubnrry paltern is a clsar aimole design without adornment—^ts beauty relying on curves and indents on the sides of the pieces . while the Kings ptnrrn is mors elaptraie leaiurinQ the well knoon convex end concave shelf ptHecn. You can choose an 84 piece id or i li piece sei In eiiher or these paherns. They a/s ah p'oserved In hesunful walnut fmiuh wooden ienlecns lined.in rc;-al blue velvety fabric. The 14 piece canteen contains £ of each ol the following • Table knife, tabie fork - dessert knife, deisori lork. tun knife, lish fori, dessert spoon. j-ju p spson. ie>:poon. coUee spoon plus a serving spoons. ' The 44 piece centeen conialu 6 ol each ol the following ; Table knife, lable (or*, dessert -kmle. dessert fork, deisert spoon, soup spoon. leazpoon and two serwng spoons ?u:h superb pieces are naiurally . e’censive bui because we have obtained them direct from Sheffield Craftsmen ne .ve able to oiler them to vou at me exceptions! prices ol £i7S trepresenting s saving Of nppronmatolv E1C0) tor the S4 oiece canreen and CttO frepresenting a '-inn? of appicitjnately ETO) lor tint 4« piece canteen. They will undoubtedly give much plcasuie now ane lor mary years to come To order, complete coupon In block leUen. This oiler Is open lo readers in the U.K. only. Please allow 25 days Irom tecelpi of cider for delivery. Queries, not orders, on 01-637 7951. Selective Marketplace Ltd.. 1M Ogle Street. London WlP 7LG. Send to : Silver Cutlery Offer, Selective Marketplace Ltd., II Ogle Sheet, London W1P 7LG. Please send me 8^ piece 44 piece I er.rlo.-e m» eresje for E .. Sntecu e :iari>e!o;«ce Limited. te>e-se of cheque. NAME . ADDRESS ..... Kings C CH D £175 00 £ 110.00 itumsrcav SUPER TYPEWRITE Get a bargain of-alifetimel-.r IQ'DFF- OLSVETT! ft I' 0 - PORTABLES 8^45^‘J. ■*. S NP.1 kTL'i>iP ftEA RLrvLH'Ue-U fu*U vnvimmji •.ii." ». rat ^ rm MARBLE ARCH TYFIEWRITERCO 1 > MARBLE ARCH; &Edgw..re Rd.W2 01-402 8457 - RECENT ST: 3."5 Ragout Su W.l. 01-625 3627 MOQRGATc.157MvOroMle.ee 2 01-6264532 ’ FINCHLEY:ID Sallardl Lin* N 3 bL34fi 7195 KEEP WATER OUT OF YOUR HOME! KEEP £££s 04 YOUR POCKET! wftii Kess Synth as r| water repellent • mr-Mc war erp roof pnneaioB (ok all wills Braiy-applicalt.iR • tast-drvmp k.»1ourIr!S siliomc Milutivn • lonn life-41 least 10 vears ptirtecimn 0 reduun heal hilli-Jry nllr prevent heat loss hend fur Nevi Synrha^il Iratlrit, 1". Thomas Nes< I jmilcJ, Sinlpjrc, Lard ill Mid-Vi Lmorgan. \Kalcc, LT171U Hie 5-pocket car , tidy for books, / , toys, pens etc. j j High quality _ j- j &■ canvas in/'J ; *“} l , navj-.redVv / : or brown.\ ..'*4* •’ Pockets sg"- detachable.'’ Easily fitted. Fend £3.99 + 26p pp to: Dept. F‘ SALLY RICHARDS, NAZELOENE HOUSE. CHOBHAM, WOKWC, SURREY, CU24 BEE ■ewriters nwitai nuaiHB Bicmcl . "tede payable to Pte«:e write nima and address on * . OT . 2 .ss — Post Code .£":'!! SSI'S® GALCULAT01 mm MACHINES DICHTINS MARINES & PWOTBCBREBS Seal row tor ; La r—t Catatogua MEW AND USED Office MACHINES Ora mono nm» «M pitta rathmi ■ imtk. . u»bi n iawuwi a i'a-Ui u iy w Hmiinawi On, 1OO0OU »a»rai»d i mum - h* a Man tn> Wn - m'A SLUMBERSHADES .... FAMOUS SOFT SLEEPAIBS TL M VJlt by l0 ya|ly, major airline!, ibeI. CoDCOttfe. - recommended bf The Times. D. Telegraph, etc. Made of rayon & nylon Airways blue only. ,EI eadi find. p. tp.l.{4 lor 5. SLUMBERSHADES East Street, Petworth, Sussex n ixsa un imomi niuMtau • ■rauraui «•* ■ aqumOMM «OOU fcB*i-ronr«B«sroL «c*ums»iu ■ cauemocc • camar • wtom chtitcimmi ■ cHisrvn • cbicxcrmi • covn.rn. • soimi crovoch OaHUMniMaDt/MtaSTtt aSihiOH aL0wa*Ui»G«tSMt*O0 OLMGOW a "Uti amt>u aiKJSia LattSTEra u/to« au*r«tw B**' UAHCauaimr U*UEV •wnw/era wo tt»iCh«u a o<»crb ptflRrsARa »Liuam< a acwiswauie a mni» a wuaioa niSTWiO m attoan a n.cnBHt-» nr.vrom a s«p*KU» S0UTHuaBiOMBM>t/iMK*r • 5TJWCS •ST.urpm raj a bwaaSF* aSAamOa auoaioce a rat uaiE . • AON'.va wolvcBHBU«iou \four friend in the lumiturc business. FENCING MADETOLAST . . A'1evr;operfdc;.:cn oi overlapping slat? rece?vetJ into ihe irume joints tor qraater ngiQity a nn the '! same sound npqenrnnce on both side' IWati'hinq g.vds & irefhs foos Posts o! ?.concrete- d T^nahih pressurised wooa * -Spec died by Architects Government - Authorities Selected by the A London Design On ire. •fr&rochineirom ALBION BOX DumbalH. Read. CARDIFF ® 0222-2151J A 31 ?G5 Commercial and Industrial Property PRESTIGE OFFICE ADDRESS AT OLD BOND STRETT. V t> PRIVATE MAIL S2.fiVILX Ji75 P.A. ron DETAILS TCLEPHOST Mr J. Heme ' 01-499 2193 ‘ LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES Commercial Services TELEX. TELEPHONE iibi-iriag nr ■Vplng. jutomallc, -uaJiu jqo cupy. 24-hr. 7 Hays per Wi-ak lenlci. fi'emsee. oi-YOS tltw. TELEX.—Europe'Overseas. Daily late night-weekend swicr lor LL5 p.a.—Phone: Bceocr Ranld TLX Services. UL-J64 7605. PUBLIC NOTICES ROGER P1LKINGTON VO UNO TflLitn Tim Tnuteos Invite applications for IlnancSdl assistance In hie tonu m a weekly or periodical payment rreen persons vTiom income has diminished and who arc oter t/e age of -.Lviv years or ore in i'l heaitii. Please write for appUcatlsn form to Dunning & Uo.. So’lntora. 130 Hloh Street. Honllon, Dcton. LEGAL NOTICES No. 002148 of 1*178 In Ihe HIGH COURT Ol JUSTICE Clianterr Division lit lire Matter of JOHN Li OVETT & Co. Limited and In Uw Matter of The CompdnJes Act 194B Notic e ts herefti’ given mat a PtmTlON was on the 5th day of July 1*78 urrsentetf is Her Malesiy's High Court of Jusnce Tor ihe coimrnvatlon of Ihe P.EDL C- TION of the capital of ihe abore¬ named Ctmipdny from £445.000 to f JU5.000 tn- returning can;til wnIrh is 111 exceii or the wsnis ot ine solrl itor.i'eni. And notice Is ronhrr given Uiar the Mid PETITION Is dlrCL-ied to be h'jrd be lore The Honourable . Mr. .insilce Oliver a: the Reiil Courts af Jus tier. Strand. London, on MomUv the UAlh day of Jul«‘ 1«*TS. Any Crrdilnr or Shareholders or tne raid Company dtsinnp to oppose (hr maids') of an Orri er¬ ror ih* connnnauoii of I hr jai" mtncllon of capital should appear *L me lime of bearing !n oeraott or by Counael for Uiat purpose. A tuny of U»c said Petition will be furnished to any such person requiring ihe. same la’ ihe under¬ mentioned Solicitors on payroml O' rhr regulated charge fee the same. Dated this ISUl day of July lOTJe UNVLATERS * PAINES, < CtS'C i. Barrington House. 5«-6T CrKham Suy«. Lon¬ don. ET2V 7JA. Solictors for the said Company. NOTICE is hereby given pursuant to S 27 Of -tie TRUSTEE Act. U 25 mat any person haring a 1 -LAIM against or an INTEREST in Ihe ESTATE of any or :ne deceased person^ whose nciiri, addresses and rte*crinnons are s«i no; b«lc’-' as hereby nquired jo send uanfcti- lar» in wntil'd of his cL.sn o. Inleresl to ihe person or persons incnlluned m telatiofi lo the deceased person -concern *d h*!_rr» toe dale specified: after which oa’e the estate o£ Ihe deceased will b* distribcted by Uin per.ujna! repr,-sen- latlves among ihe prjims enutled Lhertto having roganl only to the claims and Interests of whuii Ult? have had notice. RHODES. Georgia Margaret 'Mlaal nf Hiding him Castle. Gkalle Hedhui- lnn. HaloJoad. t«« and formerly nr HUderaham Hall. CambrtdB*- died on ieth February. 1^78 Par- itculan to Ctward Chance. Solid, ion of Poyev House. Aldemanouis-* Sauarr. London v EC2V 7LD. before IhUi Sr-p!ember. 197B. BARTFIELD. 5?:.,. C-l 2 orrcnwood. • '.i prir.tr, lid!’. Lo.id-.ri. Sit !■-*. died cn lUth Oct -her lM... , PurLcuUrs '. j Jjnae.i rLjl.cnoc. ,t> of 22 Cr-vtr f^rcok blrcei. MayLlr.- London UTY "HU tv-fore 2 r Ui Sep- ta-i.bvr :*. 78. No. liUUK4 or J:*.J Lt Lis tLs.i cioun. oi Jutlrte. CiiamiJT w.ViMUh. Mr Rou.iuar licojoeidh ui u» Ma-ur or A^dJiii'dri r 1 iflLlidN Ljm.ied and In Lie Mailer or I Hi. ci j>i e.vs its ACT. 2*.4d. Vot'—a l» hire by given that bv am uHUi.ii u*.«.c Uie din Jail, lv.a nu23 !n the jbdV? tnitiers ihe t-uurt has rL^c-S'-l sruriU SiWLBQi at Inc tK>d-j pi <.-• Uu- luu.nan biM« I'sihij tlu-i Lit liraituav' S:j_a n. s» .Ian.> 011 } gttiuu by Trnns.v Ir..tf3iL).ui Ini-, and . o. Li« i-.- to, Cumuiui.vi- Hi.-luiri.r ol ;h., abore-.um—t A.as!giil *- >i -13-n Lii-ltii -hcTVin- a:icr ui-.-i *' l,,r r.u ii^n. > n- ”b^ rrc..-i—' Lb j vurdOM- pi tiKU-c.7iaj 4ib. u inoinn: . !.i. .jen.iii 1 ■-.lit w '.tUiiotu m-vll- ricoL'yn, a Sasiimd -?l Arru.ijeu.en - . lo Tv nunc OriHiin tiio U a ma,' uiJ the sa:d Itolders ci lis ur-xr-«-'> —id HrvicnnLe StocL and Li at >u_i Millings will be held a.: The Udllroom. Hvdo Pail: Hotel, tfn.slit&jrl4gi-, London. S1V1. on lion do j. Ui 7 in dot,- ol August. Ji-73 a: Lie resnc-if.TO times bolow at-nconrl. nune'r:— . 11■ lilt ; Ici'dRS of Lhp nokwi -af L*ie DnLr-iry btocL ■ oiicr than os ai«a:d si 12 noon: HU Li; Muios oi the boiden of Ihe preference stock at 12 .Uf u's. :ln- di.cmoon .'or so orar. ihe.--ii 1 «■ js Ihi- Breeding i.ivoLDe s. 10.1 .uw boea concluded or odjtlir.iiil•: .1 i.ncti i-loce anil renes a:i Lie said >:<KkiH>ld?rs are reounfi-d 10 oller.d. Aliy rii'L'cJ to 11 rend me Sold -lieUnjs -jan ohU:n topics af li.e said Scieme >u‘ Arrairucmen:. urtns of and codes of thr* S^jfcj.i-ni r.-iiujx-j io tv furnished surstiam 10 Scv.-t Ion "ul of Ihe -Jiiir-iBei.-vifii a«i at the .rents- lored ors.ee ul ll*« Cons MOV situs le a: AlbrsAbl i WJ»ori Huns.-. Ha-t'ev Raa-I kid. Oidtaury. tVarii-i- tte*s Midlands 0.1-J 41 lilv M1.-OU ol ibu ur.rt»rr.,tnL-n-.-J S-jL-. .i-jts a: Use address mentioned below durtaq Uoiisi bus.neia hours on any dav 101 tier ihsn a Sjiui^jv or bunds v, prior to lire day ancomied lor the Mrd Meetings. The said stockholders may vom la person a: 6 = 0 h oj the. said tncet- mgs is they are enailed to attend cr they mar appo'mt another oerson.. whrSurr a mpoitcr 01 the company or not. aa their prow to attend and vc i r in tne r uead. In-the calc or loinf hoiden Lie vpt* Of the seiuor who lenders a tot 7 . wriether In nerson or hi mow. will be at ecu ted ig Lie e.iclusipn of th.- vorcs of ihe oilier lo'nt Wrlrr-s ■ an.1 Ire Ihbt ellrpnia se-nlom-.- will b» determinrd bv the '•rd-r ,n wh.l. L’r mmr« «3nd 11 the register of raamben or the Comiuav II Is routs!nl that fomK nnioinf. !iu ara\.es h** lodneil with Hill Sam Of 1 Hegistnr.R Umlfed. r. Creen- coil P’ace. London. BUT noi 4cs« Thai -SB hours before rhe respective times apoolnled tor ihe Nfeetlaas nn:. ir /arms are not jm lodawl. thev may be ba-idei lo Ih* Oiiir- nuB at the M<*elctg at which they are tj be used. Bv the said Order the Court has aucointed WlUmotl Unao- Mon.e or. fa'Unq him. Kenneth Anthony Ward or, failing him. Harold Maynard Kimbcri-cy yj am as Chahmen of ra;h of thr sail Mattings a~d has directed the Oialrum to . nr-ort the results tharof lo Ihs Court. Hie Oa!d ^rhrtne or .Airanqemehl will he *nblrc7 to rte jubsepnent- aoprosal or lh» Court. Dated ine lain iav of Jutr. i«78 CnW’RD CHANCE. Rnir-: Unuse. .kjd«rnarilviiry Soiure. Lo-idon EC3V 7LD. Solicitors foe the Ooipany. In :r.o Msikt ar THE COMPANIES ACTS. f'-Jfi 10 I"76—and—In Ihe Matter of TRAD AIR Lid ■ In Yoiun- ;arv LiquiilaUu.l • NoUci: is hereby gnen pdrsaant in &*Cliun 2 ,, ‘i Of the Coriiiun.es A=l. 1048. lha: a GENERAL MEET¬ ING of the MEMBERS of tlte above- ra-ned Company will bo hel.i m in* 01 liens c.r V. U. Cart. Gully Sc Co.. Chert (-red AciMrimnnts ef riiuidha'! House. Ai/87. Gresham Street. London. ECfiV 7DS. on ftl- ray. ihe 21st day of Julv lfr78 el 11.30 a.m. lo be folbnced nt 11.4.5 a.m. bi a GEN ERAL MEETING of tne CREDITORS fv the pulrposr- nf receiving an account or the Liquida¬ tor’s Act* and Dim! mgs and of iba conduai of Ihe Winding Lp lo dU*. Dated ibis 27th day of June. 1S78. K. R. CORK. L!guldaior< Nn IOJI.V. ol l'»7H in the HI>ill COURT of JLISTICE • Chancery Dlvtaion- It) Ihe mailer o.' W N. SILAKh'b Unrited and In l'n« maiu-r Ot tne Ct-mpanlcs Acl. 1-*4H Notice 1> herr-hy plvr.n that a PETTflON wae on ihe 27th June 1-.-7Y nivsenled to Her M,lKU 1 H*gh Court 01 Justice lor tin Ihe saiKitordng of a SCHEME ol ARR.ANGLMENT and ,t>, Ihe con- nnnjtion of the reducUon of capital d( ihe ab. 1 ve-na 2 m.it iLimoany Irom ill.EAo.iHMT to £d4.12S bv cancel¬ ling sliarra» In aiconL-n-M- with the l.-rms ol Ihe sold Srheme or Arrangeinenl And notice is further given that the >iW PETITION * rtirecind 10 be hr.ird hr 1 or- the Honourable vir. Ju>liie Oliver -ii. the Uu.val Cnuns ,-i Jusllc-- Strand. London VVC2 on Mumi, 1 ' Ihe '-'llh rlaj- or Julv 1673 Am IVi-iUlnr or ShorWiobl.-r of •hr --ilrl C-.miunv I'r.iHjKi lu opr-ose U.v 1.1 lUnn u: .-n lirdcr tor thr ro.-i- 1 rinallan o: Ihe r.-'lucllcm or r.'itili! Niou'd ^.nyi-.-.r ji me rime ut hunn-j m uaun ur by Counsel lor that j'UT*io--y A enpy nf Lie s-iJd Pitilion will i,.- iurnUhi-d to any suet, rcroon reoiijrlng ihe time by llie ur ler- nictutonod SolKilors nn rorlB p Bl af Ihe renulaied charge Tor ihe same Dated thla I-lh rtav at Jute l u .» TRAVERS . SMTTH, BHATm- H'AITE * CO., a Snow HIM. London DC1A 2AL. SoUctiors for Lho Mid Coiupaw. DENTEH. — Pert I- Un -er De.-.lrr. late of 2 Mataavale Crescmi. Styveuiale. Co-, rain. Wcut Mid¬ lands. died J Coventry nn 17m October lv7? irsiaie about L7A.'><Mi 1 . lT-n kin of ihr above nam“d are jT-dtlealeJ lo -IB!* 1 ', la tlWtri. nrmdlei Twi-.r Tjlli A James or 3 m*- i,)liadranl. Coicnlr-. - . Properties under £25,000 eoDDDOCesoseeasssses § LOVELY TUSCAN 8 q Stone Farmfaoiut O in uipcrb iening. outsiand- n mu view* of the ChUnti X Hills. A bedruomi,. 2 to lha. II Share ■|iurtha»e ol vwlirunmq U pool. Ideal family hoUday name. £25.000. PORTUGAL Inicridins new house in Olive Crpvo 2*i miles souih of Lisbon, -i mllfT Irnm in.- bc-autllul hill, and uoaches of Ami- blda aul Sesimbra. -V beds . “ btda aui aewniora. ■> oco? . O all acr.icci Lie, m appmx. h«ciares. OITi-r* In ricess or- 116 , 00 - MBnlpeller Iniornadonal Propany M Milner Si.. S.M'.5_ 581 021B Tclev *il*>0H7 Property Overseas Property 19th CENTURY FARMHOUSE £45,000 Freehold This period farmhouse situated in Provence, near Arles, has been renovated by an architect into a beautifully• designed, open plan. 2 storey residence -which combines twentiettveentury amenities with nineteenth-century • character. The house stands in 3,000 sq. m. of parldand and is surrounded by open counry. The original charm of the property is retained by the open fireplaces, oak beaming and antique furnishings throughout ihe house. Upstairs there are 2 large bedrooms while ihe ground floor is completely open plan with a fully fitted kitchen and bathroom. The property is gas centrally heated, fully carpeted and in excellent decorative order. The gardens surrounding the house are well planned with a- vanety of trees and shrubs. 2 small outhouses adjoining the house and a large, parking area. Interested parties are invited to view by arrangement during August. Please phone Mr. Evans'or Mr. Mutz Port Talbot 5141 NOW! Country property «96SeSS9000Q09SSSS99 GOUDHURST Weald of Kent Substantially built early nineteenth century cot¬ tage. • Semi-detached, vacant, laige garden. 5 looms, 3 bedrooms. Oners around Cl8,000 RING GOUDHURST (058 03) 21E . REMOTE BUT NOT INACCESSIBLE Freehold Cottage. Si. Manjarru Hope B3y, Orkney* s rooms, lor., and tell), with open fire¬ place*. Main service* and tale-, phone. Own Hlpwaj.. Dlilr air wrier Kirkwall and dally ferry Service. Only Sy.ooo Ring Haletlngs 427532 wwl BHBIIIHIBHIIlIBn I CHARMING £ £ COACHHOUSE | | Tunbridge Wells | ■ 3 bedrooms, study, 2. fi ■ receptions. C.H. Small. ■ ■ secluded, well stocked ■ ■ garden. Garage. Free- S m how. 5 | £37,000 o.n.o. f | Tel. Tunbridge Weirs ■ B (0592) 21162 ; ■ SnnnnnBnniiS CEORGIAN RESIDENCE. - NarTi Y orM. Fishing 4 arrre. oulbulld- ingj. A5 ;«•>. - OH ore mld- bivUPk.—Tel. 11543 77 5M. The Times Special Reports AiJ the sobjecFmaff» on ail the fubjeds ihat matter _, .Country property EXPOSED BEAMED COTTAGE in old mart pi itiwti or ifik. Rwriu. Fully modernised. EsiJ - access to motorways. Tn. Usk .M34 Offers £10,000 HANTS.—A la ail ve alone Barn con- vetiod. Hawkiev 504. A London & Suburban property' BUSiniininnHii DO YOU OWN A . 5 HOUSE OR FLAT? . ; .S no vnll warn lo M‘ll 11.7 B Or d>» iou wani la' buv 7 ■ LOOS \0 riJRTHl.fi : We a h.nr a rradv niailp mnrki-L _ si-rklnn and hrliing Mala and ■ nmisi- aU over the eoumri. ■ lor ihe bui price for your ■ properly and flral-ilass it-r- ■ vlu*. ■ eomaci : - • _ AL AWADI REAL ESTATE . S London (01) 4S3 T7S5/6/7 ■ KUWAIT 444005/B/7 ■ 4B Mount Street flliird floor) ■ 1 Mayfhlr, London W1 I Telex 2991 S3" . ■ No a genu, plcatr m CHELSEA.—Immaculate Ragrncr tomPMi-mLr' ]iaiu« 6-7 rooms Sc. liny nardCD. IdoaUy.placed-.be-. ■ iwi-tn CWl»«" Cnvg snd kings Road r.H. £81 ,OOQ O.n.Oj oi- 352 377J. UVE. INVEST in n Florida water¬ front village on Strueu Bay. 2- brdroom, 2 -bub spacious villas. * S39.OOD-5o6.QOO. • Shopping;- re- crreiion. fUhtaq. bird preserves, nnar beach and Sarasota cultural acifvfUes. ^Iv'rile s or tree bro- rhure io-. CH-Waters. Ml. Vernon. 25J0 S. Trail. Sara sola. FI. .. 55579. London Flats KNIGHT5BRIDGE, SW7 opposite Broniaion Oruarv, Fist In good decorative order In purpose-bum block. 5 bedrooms. 1 rocepUan. dmsr.hall. modem kitchen and bathroom. soiuraU'W.c. Porter, itotral heating, ean- siani hot water. Lease 28 i'rars. E44,500 ler quick Bale. Telephone : 3S9 0273. : CHELSEA l.uvurloUB designer - decorated duplex apartment. S5fi. -living room, dining alcove, o doutae b'idrooms. 2 bathrooms rn- ,-ullf,. separate cloakroom. American I.lichen, stud’’, patio. B-5 c.h. To be sold complete v.ith nil carpets, curtains, fu¬ tures end fillings. 26 year lease renewable. orr*’* around . £75.000 Telephone; 353 4344 UNIQUE AND LOVELY Garden MM- Pntnrosp Mill. Light end inarl- - ays- , a jt*** 1 ' , t * b. Private udn. Caj c h 70Q-rr. Inwf-E.Vi.ojw will also 55: contents .—086 4152. J THE TIMES. SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 Fred Emery The by-elections message that puts . t * Since about tbe only thing foreign leaders seem to wish to know about Brimin at the moment Is the date of the general election it is likely that Mr Callaghan will, after all, have to disappoint his colleagues at the big Bonn summit this weekend. Instead of nursing judicious nods and .winks, it could be that on this ac least they will hare to re-turn home 'Still playing the uninformed guessing game. For if the Prime Minister needed any encouragement to put off the day until next year he could find it in the hazy returns of the Moss Side and Penistone by-elections. Instead of being barometers of national opinion they turned out to he like -local weather forecasts ; changeable and different on either side of the Peninnes. Forget all tbe ritual public boasts. The fact is that Labour were relieved to han-g on to Moss Side as well as they did, and were discon¬ certed by absenteeism of their sup¬ porters at Penistone. The Conser¬ vatives are simply irritated.' They tell themselves that their t Moss Side showing was good, knowing that it ought to have been better. And at ' Penistone it is they who are per¬ plexed by Liberal enthusiasm which —let us not be stinting—secured a local triumph in keeping'Mr David Chadwick’s vote share at 21 per cent. If'that does not tell Conser¬ vatives everywhere to beware taking Liberal votes as automatic prodigal returnees, nothing will. Mr David Steel is at last entitled- to claim both credit and evidence that, at Penistone at least, tbe Lib- Lab pace did not run against him. But from all this one would still need to be a seer to make more than a superficial deduction about the outcome of a eeneral election. Tbe two distinct differences in “ swing " away from Labour to. Conservative were striking. On the Moss Side 3.5 per cent model, the general election would end up in deadlock; • on the Penistone model of an 8.8 per cent swing there would be a Conser¬ vative landslide. Of course, tbe summer period and the election campaign itself habitu¬ ally close things up, but on this evi¬ dence an autumn election would be a gamble. Mr Callaghan, or so we were told in the week of the Royal Commission’s report, is not himself a punter; his gambling is purely political, and be has always been cautions. The Prime Minister is also depic¬ ted as not the man to make up bis mind on such paltry events as by- elections. Until now. Government assump¬ tions have been hardening to the conclusion that most Factors, econo¬ mic and political, were nicely con¬ verging to make an October election almost compelling. But that is not the message of the by-elections. After the much pored-over progress reports from local elections, particu¬ larly favourable to Labour in North West England, and tbe opinion poll evidence following Mr Healey’s ■^family budget”, the favourable noises have now been stilled. The Penistone result no longer makes it possible for the. Govern¬ ment ro talk of being on target in unless they thought it daft to be asked to vote-twice within a few months. The thought of hanging on through the winter in the hope of improving party fortunes is also reinforced by those Labour Parry traditionalists who are waiting for that brand new electoral register to come into force in February. their planned recovery from the nadir of their fortunes ur 1976. And who would urge a Prime Minister to go to the country if he thought it unlikely he could win. So the Prime Minister's original inclination to persist in office as long as possible bears reexamina¬ tion. He will certainly be encouraged by those ministers who counsel him that the voters must not be inconvenienced with an election if they are nor thirsting for - one. The 52 per cent turnout at Moss Side is hardly an indicator of citizen passion for an election— One overlooked argument in favour of Labpur waiting for the register is that it would give many presently unregistered voters among the coloured community their first opportunity ro vore since this year’s controversy over immigration. How likely is it? The choice of course is pot entirely tbe Prime' Minister’s. The Liberals are now as good as - pledged to force an election come October if Mr Calla¬ ghan tries carrying on. They-might be won over by some new deal, but that seems unlikely now. CouJd Mr Callaghan try cobbling together an arrangement with the other minority parties ? He might try and still fail. And this was one of the ■ scenarios in Westminster politicians' talk fast week. Mr Callaghan might not call an election himself, it was sug¬ gested. But he would defy the Opposition ro bring him down after the Queen's speech in a new ses¬ sion of Parliament. His appeal to the country would then be chat the Government wanted to continue, do¬ ing its best, keeping inflation down, but had been thwarted by an irresponsible Opposition. I hazard that Mr Callaghan would prefer to appear~more in command than this . All this is very frustrating for Mrs Thatcher. She seems raring to go in the autumn and any post¬ ponement most surely let her down. A delay would give Conservatives more time, both for preparation and for self doubt. One side worry for 'the'Co lives that emerged at Moss S what happened to the Irish'^ vote? Conservatives had counting on Mr Tom. Murpft very effective candidate. lij have some special pull .??*? voters. One suggestion, fro* Government sources, is tfj Tories seem to have little-' of how much they. have -sea rhe Irisiu They.and their ati descendants are possibly out single, and most ovei-lookeo grant group. It is suggested-ti have, been . aroused: ■ hj Thatcher’s immigration -talk the nakedness of ber-bid for Unions! support: - ' .' '5 Perhaps we should'uow vrii study of our marginal constjt to analyse all possible- combi of the ethnic vote, just-b Americans. In a. close rip) it is going to be importaa How shady tricks and a top hat made the scoop of the century A case of less bananas " Discuss the Eastern Ques¬ tion.” The directive was a favourite hurdle set by examin¬ ers in my youth and was always the despair of those confronted by it, so intricate and tedious were the issues in¬ volved. To John Morley it was u that shifting, intractable and interwoven tangle of conflict¬ ing interests, rival peoples and antagonistic' faiths - . .. w . The Encyclopaedia Britannica's def¬ inition is more prosaic and elu¬ cidatory—■“ contest among the European powers for _ control of territories in the disintegrat¬ ing Ottoman Empire in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries_”. That question was die back¬ ground -against which ' The Times brought off one of the greatest scoops in the history of the press—the publication 100 years ago of the Treaty of Berlin on the day it was being signed.- Who was responsible for the remarkable feat of journalism; bow was. it accomplished ? The triumph- belongs to Henri Georges Stefan Adolphe Opper de Blowitz, the Paris corre¬ spondent of The Times. This exceptional man whose entry into Printing House Square was rather obscure, began writing for the paper about 1872. On New Year's Eve, 1874, by a mixture of gooc[ fortune and assiduity, he obtained an interview with tbe Prince of Asturias, who had just * been proclaimed King of • Spain following the overthrow of the republican regime. Thereafter Blowitz’s position ou the paper was assured, and in 1875 he became its Paris correspondent, a post he occu¬ pied: for 28 years. Unfolding, the account oL how-he-obtained the treaty is like recounting a novel by Wil¬ liam Le Queux or Phillips Oppenheim. Blowitz’s Memoirs, published posthumously in 1903, are an amalgam of fact, fantasy and high melodrama. In Berlin in June 1878, the powers of Europe with Russia and Turkey gathered in a further attempt ro solve the Eastern Question. Journalists from the world’s newspapers were present, each one eager to snap up what scraps of news filtered through official channels, not. to .mention the . drawing room gossip.' Into _ this scene appears a mysterious youth whose iden- tirv never became known. In 1877 he had sought out Blowitz and asked him for' help in obtaining employment. 'He im¬ pressed the correpondent who tried, without success, to find, him work. In January 1878 he saw Blowitz in Paris, an event due say the Memoirs, to, “ the intentions and dedesign of the Supreme Will”, a mystic inter¬ pretation occasioned by Blow- itz's feeling that “ I was going to make a grand fiasco in Ber¬ lin The outcome was that Blow¬ itz bent the “ Supreme Will * and secured a place for his friend in the entourage of one of the foreign representatives at the Berlin Congress. Having secured his “leak”. Blowitz evolved a method of passing information which was simple to the point of ludicrousness. Every day The Times corre¬ spondent would have lunch and dinner at Ms hotel ; every day so did his informant, who would hang up his hat, in the lining of which were concealed reports of the day’s .proceed¬ ings in the Congress. On leav¬ ing the two men would take each other’s hat In such a situation, a nove¬ list or playwright would ixxro- duce a touch of farce. Accord- rhe scene as mysteriously as he July 13, so it was essential that ^ ing' to the memoirs that ele- entered it. The Times man was Blowitz had a copy on Friday. n|jr| ITl'fSrP meet became fact when an now left with his task of His main problem was how to 44 Alvl 111^1 v. English colleague absentmin- obtaining a copy of the Treaty' get the text telegraphed to 1 dedJy took the incriminating in advance of his competitors. Printing House Square. frfcr'WT, Ire haft At this point another Because the authorities at lUV>0.»i3 Tka u CitnHr.mn bVill 11 murt rliorlnt.rrr fioiira “ a dSnlnmnHtr fCoflin n- ^rKTrtim'nn nffira The ** Supreme Will ” must shadowy figure, “ a diplomatist the Berlin transmitting office have been hovering in the who had always been friendly would have refused to pass it, At the age of 24 Catherine background, for on putting on to me” came forward and Blowitz obtained an interview Ardy wrote a book about a the hat, it dropped on his promised that tbe Treaty with tbe Belgian Minister in group' of upper middle class nose, and amid laughter the would be in Blowitz’s hands Berlin, and on tbe pretext that girls going to London, parties, mistake was put right before the end of the Con- The Times was contemplating It'*w3S at the height of kitchen. Blowitz’s informant who had gress. opening a nightly telegraphic sink popular fiction and The provided good, copy for the The delegates were due to service to and from Brussels, Colour of Rain, as rhe novel correspondent, departed from sign the Treaty on Saturday, got the minister to write a let- was called, was not destined ter ordering the postal authori- for success.' But that did not ties in Brussels to be ready to dauiic its author as much as transmit urgently, as a ‘rest the rumour—true ? apoc- run, a long message to London, rvphal ?. she never A further ruse employed by discovered—that * Moravia, Blowitz ensured 'char Bismarck judging it for the Prix For- would not be favouring the mentor,• dismissed it with con- - German journalists by giving ternpr. as a “ sign of the moral them the Treaty before Sarur- decadence of British fiction ' day. Some voung' writers might '' His plans were nearly com- have .taken Moravia’s words as Pnot^nph of Emma Wanj by-& pleted, and on the Friday praise of a sort, but they filled - * jBHBBPllPfilllfflM Blowitz saw his “friend tbe Catherine Aydy, a pseudonym . , . , ... • '.'‘l diplomatist ”.. who kept, his for a travel writer on Queen bookstalls and a grant of sibue. It represents sign • ! word and handed over, the magazine, called Emma Ten- £6,000 from the Arts Counciil, of a break with her pas 'V , .. Treaty with Hie exception of nant, with despair. She stopped defensively because her bro- ing, not only for the Jf * S*. :->m two Articles not then drawn showing anvone her work. It ther is Colin Tennant, who encroachment of real.in'. I s Up, and the preamble which- was-10 years before she took owned most of Mustique, satire, hut- because'jfi ■ had still to be drafted. The Crack, a slim, barely Princess Margarets island in research, both literafyas Jag Blowitz, pretending great in- 40,000-word JJong novel, a cross the West-Indies, and all Ten- cue I, has gone inta^Ji l§J§ife, digaationat tile treatment he between-satire and science fie- nants are assumed to be rich. cant sit back .like 4jaj.' jMfflii: had received from Bismarck, tion, to her publishers, though Each istnie takes Emma Ten- paxnxer and wait fig ’. made preparations to leave meanwhile she had completed nant many weeks of intensive Muse .she says. Youjj Kt53sj§-v Berlin, making sure that his two 450,000 word "bad datura* work, commissioning, editing read Horace, and. wuu Aiii rivals heard of tbe departure, list” novels, which to this day an d preparing pieces for the "'hat happened to n3frS( Having sent off his colleague, are stuffed away in drawers. ' printers. To write her last two nineteenth century. Mackenzie Wallace, his secre- The Crack wouldn't have nove ,* s had to skip twq have to work as hard tary and the luggage to the come about at all had she not numbers entirely, trusting to. were at university, TOfe station, Blowitz called on the mer, in the winter of 1971, a good luck thar her readership can use p.rose in -me s Comte de Saint-Vallier. the group of science fiction writers, would still be around three suits your work. Comte de Saint-ValL'er. the group of science fiction writers, would still' be around three suits your wonc. ; - French Ambassador in BerKn. among them J. G. Ballard and months.hirer. When she missed. This., way. _ of ^working. Blowitz asked him for the Michael Moorcock, who jostled * ast summers edition because her deeply into the the- text -of the preamble, but the her out of a feeling that a real 9 * ie - was frying to write her the double and The Bad _ ambassador asked what value novelist has to aspire tn Proust * ew The Bad Sister, is closely based ,on • It cootio be without the Treaty, or Thomas Hardy. It was a Bananas very probably would -Hogg’s eifhteetuh cebtmv So he was sworn to secrecy revelation to her, and it broke have folded had k nor been of a possessed murderer aijd shown the copy. The the block: The Crack was- for a« anthology of its best, sessions of a Justified S Memoirs relate thar the a m b u s- .swiftly followed up by two. contributions in book form, “I get an idea! -then I 1ft - sp^or " wnned. ■skgbtly -pale oo--other sharp, short novels,-half- which bridged gap. obsessed, then I read seeing it” and continue: “I way. between comedy and the Emma Tennant talks of books . read.” Her finished hut tf . : ptose p childhood iariryof’ time'to ju stif y your reputation prize. someone who has spent much “hallucinatory riarity of’ : for a wonderful memorv". Emma Tennant id'now in nme thinking about writing, hood vision”, and .was Eftovsitz was soon on the her early forties, a tall, slightly both her own and other pen- spired by Bruno Schulz., traki mzd dictating, the hea^-y woman who moves pie’s. She is uneasy- when the Polish writer who was sh preamble. Mackenzie 'Wallace bghtiy: she has short straight conversation strays towards Warsaw in 1940., sewed it and the Treaty in his f3ir bai f, and a somewhat wary her own life, gathering her The satire and the fo.. coat, the two men changed into expression. Her terrace house three cuvktran and three mar-, were, Emma’ Tennant n separate compartments and bv , c ^ le Portobefto Road shares ris^jes, and famjjv childhood in one feel, safe bets; but a 5 am on Saturday Wallace wa's an inunense communal garden a mad mock Gothic Scottish er has *e .be -mare-ombw at the telegraph office in Brus- behind her Private patch of castle .on the Borders, with She doesn’t have,-sh^-s.ayi ■ sets, where before the clerk Pink roses, and the room she stone gun s _ and gargoyles ”, knack for- handling would transmit tbe cop%-, he spends most of her time in. is into- a -pnvate' comer she- amf ■ familrcs^. ' Tire' TOT 1 had ro be shown the letter fu ,. .hooks and painted wishes to protect from public may now have come to rai which Blowitz had been given white. It is . from here that she scoitiny. ' herself, within' the comfit which Blowitz had been given « « irom nere tnat site scnitiny. , herself, within the comfo bv the Belgian minister in' Ger- , lts P rotlu oe- S Bananas , the facts she gives out are protection of research, many. the Quarterly magazine she bare: eldest daughter of her It should be the perfect Thp revr in PrMirh with m ,three _ vears ago. and father’s- second marriage: a now the hurden of Banmii English translation, ” which she sold this month, fed solitary childhood in a pilde- to be shared with som U 000 worS^BDtSor^d iii^e Up - - Wltb 5 W0 1 ? , ? pa,d Jobs “ ? ,1C U TO, *°, V ar ** e ed S e ^ a eJse - She ^ ks «^ 0U C 5 JjstSf writing and editing a mag- loch, eating powdered egg in tion of writers‘.'and. how n? r;L I«rf U f«r a71 °e that « he couldn't even the basement because of the magazine gave her— mnisc rn combine. u-ar; to St Paul’s school in people she invited—a dr , Lr^d f. , : riie new orrdMgeraent London at 9; to the Louvre Art to meer and talk at parries Neverthelpvs a te\(-oraim frnm 1 >-■»» 7' ,,-- —=>, io me LHiuvre /\rt «*no at pa rue r S iwr .. 0 ™ ? l,e wrli Bananas wrh school for a' year: married at has now ceased to give. London arrived in Berlin “ at I ] ls new owner, a poet colled 19. 7L~"'j:'' ”' L"7“ ‘~;T /;• 1LS wwner, a poet coueu is. Bananas will- continue to.- hour on July I*. Abigail Mosoly. Gut it will con- The childhood part at least, her at least the contact; hoi?;, “ e Treacy was f; n,,e exactly as it is, a rahloid after four detached and almost other writers, while * r77.-7 U 1 . literary magazine, publishing impersonal pieces of fiction, Mosely will help to provide; ,UtK ij ,I,UST c ve „ ? cn ramoly fiction, and no reviews has now started seeping time in which to decide comply sold out, for Prmr. “because once you let in through into her work. Th? - to go from here. Sc Vi are , fai]ed -., t0 reviews they grow and mul- Bdd Sister is rhe most roman- . keep even one for its files. The tipiy and finally drjv c out the tic of all her books, if roman- ' V-STOllIlC MooreM rrnSLtt COn " sh ?f t ■‘ 5 U ,rie?, \ tic is the word for a story of The- Bad Sister by Emma: Hu n f- ed Tl ' eaTy ' She talks, rather defensively, murder and possession, set ar nant will be - published in uie issue ot July is. about the pitfalls of a literary least partly in the lochs and ■ GoJiancz on Thursday at Blowitz oF The Times, from Vanity Fair of August 29, 28S5: sewing up the Treaty. TgpL I nncrfalp f niagaxine that costs £12.000 a moors of her diildliood, as It will" be reviewed on tbe 1 liWiauaic i yw to run (50p a copy on the well as the most in coni prehen- Page that day by Jacky Gifi OPEN GOLF DIARY Dire warnings from-the Kingdom of Fife The Rood Hole at St Andrews, whose image is to be found reproduced' on breakfast mugs and dinner mats around the world,!has been at the centre of this week's Open golf cham¬ pionship. Tr Has to a large extent regained the notoriety it was in danger of losing and has provided thousands of specta¬ tors with the most interesting watching o£ tbe week. Tn this mood any attempt to famner with it would lead to armed * rising . far beyond the cnnfincs of the Kingdom ,of Fife. It is undersfndable that British Transport Hhrels should be nlaying down for the moment tbeir ol-'ms for development of tl^c land round their boro! which flanks rhe tee and firir- wny of that hole- The Plans, which prmndfi for the building of 4 n chalets, two souafh cmirts and a swimeiins pool, have been . ^proved by tire Jjort^-F.a^t Fife "District Coun¬ cil. The Royal Fine-Arts Com¬ mission hare given it their approval on tlft grounds that auytbmg likely to soften the unlovely outline -of the hotel will be diminishing an eyesore. But strong opposition has been voiced by ■ townspeople, through the St Andrews Pre¬ servation Trust and by tiie joint guardians of the Old Course, ‘the Royal and Ancient Golf Club. Dire warnings have ■ been uttered about the difficulties •ruch a development would raise to the ( holding of another Ooen, and nightmarish projects have been raised of holidaymakers trailing back and forth acre??* the fairways from tiie chalets to the 'bench. Such objections may in some Quarters have been exaggerated—tbe occu¬ pants of the^e multi-ownersbin apartments are more likely ro carry golf bags thfen spades and bucket^-but they have served the purpose of malting tbe owners think again. They were, in any ease, voiced before the publication of the 24 conditions, oo which detailed planning would be based. These are stringent and thorough and include such details as the.haoem? out of washing, tlfe disposal of refuse. and even restrictions on sun¬ bathing and outdoor recreation. - Opponents may object that such regulations cannot be en¬ forced, but a good part oF the conditions show respect for the _ golfers’ sensibilities, in particular one which states thar no movement of anv kind in the area shall be apparent to anyone standing on the Road Hole tee. The_ Royal and Ancient can, when it sets its mind to it, show a good deal of muscle, and much will no doubt go un behind the scenes before the next step is taken in a dispute which, like so many of its kind, ranges the legal rights of business against the forces who believe they see a threat to parts of our national heritage. Crowd records bite the dust This week even such an im¬ portant issue for golf has been lost sight of under a cloud of canvas From the attendant trappings and of dust-front the record crowds that have Swirled round the site, Merci¬ fully St Andrews is well fed by approach rouds, even though the streets converging ou the course are narrow. The huge □ umber of cars squatting all day on the open acres beside the shore have been funnelled- in and out of the city with great smoothness bv traffic police ivorking with an enthusi-' asm which suggests that they must be golfers to a man. Their work this week has been - studied b\- a delegation from' Royal St George’s, where the championship returns “in . 1981 after a long- absence.'. Championship traffic, has been spread north and soiirh over rhe . Tay and Forth bridges. Even - vi>irors from abroad do not have to stay m St Andrews anymore. One American com¬ pany have paid £4,000 for a cii.sile. 30 miles from the course, during tiie championship, Thev have been regaled with such delicacies as grouse and J%6 claret and every attendant luxury for their pains, alchouch one member of rhe group wav heard to complain that he had been given “that Goddam, rink . fish for'dinner last nighr.” The Old Course Hotel ha* . within the city, been head of the leasue for prices, but some visitors have managed to attend the Open without too great a strain on their pockets. One' professional spectator and his wife who seldom mks a big event ignored the fact that most accommodation is booked months in advance. Thev drove up the afternoon before the First round, drooped into the Information Centre and were offered bed and breakfast at the home of a younn univer«uv professor and -his wife. Price: £5 a night a head, and si real Scottish breakfast to boot. four were at the champions din¬ ner to hear Henry Cotton prais¬ ing the voluntary work that »n eh into the running of the Open, without wli'ch ib-i prize money wTnuld never have reached its present heichts. The Four cham¬ pions missing from St Andrews were Arthur Havers, who was not well enough to be there, B«n Hogan. Gene Sarazen. and Sum Snead. This private enterprise acts □s a safety valve for the increas¬ ing pressure on accommodation at championship venues, which for the mosr parr have never been strong in that department. If the present increase in atten¬ dance is maintained Royal Lytliam next year will find ir- self with special problems, anJ the Royal and Ancient must, be conscious that they are ap¬ proaching the limits of capacity. One meets people from every walk of life—stars from other sports, in _ particular cricket, masters oF industry, trainers of racehorses. Cur the nvoKt im¬ portant of all this week are the past Opai champions, Of the 20 of those still living all but ‘Village’ life is not the same Part of the knack of finding rnum fur l.trse numbers at the Open is v> draw them in and then keep them away from rhe com sc by artrarting'them to the activities of the tented village. The motive i> not really as cold¬ blooded as that, for the village plays' an important pan in get¬ ting spectators l_u the cumve early and occupying the hours before the stars go our. The number of things that can be Imughf m- at least ordered in¬ side the trade lent grows every year, aucl ranges from cars or carpets to souvenir pictures and golfing trips to Bangkok. Each year the connexion be¬ tween some stalls and golf be¬ comes more remote, and one exhibitor of graphite-shafted clubs from San Diego was mourning the absence of the country fair atmosphere, which existed when he first starred coming. Ho u<ed to know, the mher stallholders hy name, saunter over and take a cup of coffee with them. Vuw all that has changed. Woollen sweaters siill s-M like hut cakes, huf the corridor- are narrower, life wiikin is earnest dmi ai times Claustrophobic. •'Mill, I am sorry' ths "Bond Sn-^-r hirers are nor there .'"..in tills yiarrti would like to have recommended thorn-to one or nyo younger golfers. Hie Californian's view was ecli-ietl by Mr Guoruv Bhiinberi}. a South African golfing phjlun- nu»r*'-t. who i-.iih his wife is Sl rCEilI.tr visitor in world clnimnjunshiiJs. His first one in CriMin was W.W. "j ple.is.mt. ' easy going affair" in his nwn wordi. cnnM.-tirg largely pf - club professionil-, f:»r whom sr* jOi orreric* on *K<* LTpl-j're.i'ation oj V-i-3 "othsctilll Sflr°rt 7 ... 4 ■ rho pi-.ren;;e of TbonMUi or dc \ ic.-n.’o iva* snmethUlg -of an Peter Rvdc THE. T-IMES SATURDAY JUI,Y 15-1978 13 ! i] } i- ' ±. • * y.~. .^PrintingHotijcSqukrfc,lindon.-WClX8EZ; Telephone: 01-8371234 MORE questions than answers ^^o^tbe leaders of the major industrial. countries committed . . —-r to the summit meet-. wig-. .that ^starts in Bonn thisi was in the hope.that tpe; ..event would' force a collec- ■■f c t ^.political will to. solve tbe; deep problems facing them; individually and collectively. As the^^tteetmg has come closer, - it ■ is-^. clear that the major has become to avowt-.-iJiei damaging impression thasr^the. summit has 'heed a failure.-- ' „ It is obvious from the inter-.- ■news that the major partici¬ pant^ have, been giving over the last week that they Them selves are concerned to reduce any. excessive expectations that would certainly .be disappointed. Last time 1 , they met. in Londbn-' fhey committed themselves .to econo-' nric .'performances' and other, polky actions that' have been' conspicuously honoured. . more, in: the .breach -than in .the', observance. • - •It is,, therefore, essential that the Bonn gmmmit should not pre- ten d'ro more than it. can achieve.- ' If it were to dtf so,: the' damage to the cohesion.and credibility of the .western Industrial system would-be,.dramatic: ..The task* of. the-statesmen in Bonn this week¬ end is. in fact a reversal of .the normal pattern of such 1 siuninif meetings'. 1 Traditionally, Primje Ministers, Presidents and Chancellors meet to, p uV the final stamp of approval and.authority on plans and pro¬ posals that have been worked out in detail by their staffs'' in advance.- Id' this case*the basic elements of those plans have-.- conspicuously failed to mature in'the weeks-of preparation. The ■ United.‘Stares has failed to* con¬ vince its partners that it is fol- : lowing policies that will restore stability to the dollar. In par¬ ticular, because of his extreme Congressional weakness. Presi¬ dent Carter has failed, to make 1 any -significant progress on his critical energy conservation pro¬ gramme. At the same time, the major ' surplus countries of the system/ notably Japan’ and- West. Ger¬ many, have failed to convince their partners that they will,, or .can. take action’ to -bring the intern aricmal balance of pay¬ ments back into better equili¬ brium . The 1 reverse ’of' this.. coin is that there is no sign- that other. major industrial countries will. be able to provide the - stimulus for . the continued growth of the industrial system as a whole,'a role that ban been played for the past three years by the United Statesat] ,the expense.-of the dollar- in tKe exchange markets. r The .. danger throughout; -bes : been that, in conditions of wdrid - economic stagnation-and foreign exchange instability, there would be a'sudden and uncontrollable 'grotvth of ■ self-defeating 1 protec¬ tionism, led by-countries like the Uuked States and the. United • Kingdom. It was indeed pre¬ cisely - to avoid this connected. . downward spiral of events' that' theWestern leaders undertook the whole summit- exercise. . Tbe trade-negotiations, con- duCTed. in ^Geneva, were' placed deliberately . under the con¬ straint of' .having- to produce constructive resuks.in time fair the Bonn .summit. For the past.'. ■ several weeks’ it -has been clear • that th>s liineitable would not be ■met. For the past'few days it has at times looked as if the outcome of the Ifrade nfegorit- . . turns.would be a disaster, in the sense that it would have to 1 be admitted' in public that even agreement on broad • principles- could-not be.reached. The worst . ■has-: been averted, for the “framework' of 'understanding concluded this week in Geneva at least holds out the hope that, with good will and political com¬ mitment, there can be an orderly continuation of a . reasonably open world trading system. The Geneva negotiations, how¬ ever. will have to set the pattern for Bonn. - Sinte there has not been sufficient agreement, action and 'preparation to' enable the heads of government tp endorse a concrete programme of action, : the. requirement is that the meetings should produce a suf¬ ficient framework of understand¬ ing for the process.of coopera¬ tion ' and . understanding - to continue after the summit has ended.. The danger Is that there . should be' insufficient- such understanding and that the next year- will then, be -spent in mutual - recrimination - and in haaeraang rhe , slide into self- defeating protectionism. Above all,' one issue has been deliberately excluded from the summit agenda by the United States, namely positive action to -*dea3 ’'with th'e?Tost?bility 0 f tb e dollar. Tbe present international monetary ' System 'is unstable, largely because it contains more dollars than the world wants or ijeeds .t The* res 2 rye:and trading rble^d^ tht-dollaf -is-’now grossly excessive, in relation to the- size ; of the^ .United States economy. •Tn -a sense the United Spates as a result is experiencing the. former problems of the United Kingdom .with 'the international reserve role.of sterling; but on a much larger scale. . Successive United . States governments have declined to face this problem squarely; They have preferred a policy of benign neglect, the effect of which, has ■been to force.the revaluation of other, stronger currencies as the dollar sank. -The domestic, poli¬ tical reasons why such a policy has , been followed, are _ clear enough;. It "is, however, ah illu¬ sion-to think-that, the 1 problem cah • be- dealt with by being ignored. .Jf. his fellow heads of government can convince Presi¬ dent Carter in the margins of the Bonn siuomir that the dollar problem .must he tackled .d.irectlv, sooner or later, and that all the other problems of growth, currency stability and protec¬ tionism-are intimately bound up with it, then the summit - will have achieved more than will ever be expressed'in the final, necessarily bland and defensive communique next Monday. PUBLIC CONFIDENCE-TEST OF THE NEW EXAM Reform of the secondary' school examination system comes a step nearer with the publication of the report of Sir James Wad¬ dell’s steering committee.' It was set up by Mrs Williams to.make sense of the unsatisfactory sub¬ mission which ..she had received from the. Schools Council*. This report dearly reflects the present view of tbe -Department of Education and Science (which was strongly represented on.the steering committee) and if the Labour Psty remains.in power is likely, to be put into operation. Getting rid of two separate sets of examinations at 16 plus by merging O levels and CSE into a single system is seen—by supporters and opponents dike —as the logical outcome of the comprehensive school. .It does not fit the ethqs or.the organiza¬ tion of the comnrehensive school to divide pupils at the end of the third year into.; a-high pres*; tige 0 level group'and a low' presriee CSE group. Attempts have been made to try to pro¬ vide for overlap by establishing the top grade of CSE as equiva¬ lent to a GCE pass grade, and bv inventing lower grades of GCE below. the former'. pass level. But the result is a mess : something has to be . done and the scheme now put forward has the merit of matching the needs oF the schools as they are developing in a comprehensive system. , What is of overriding' impor¬ tance is that a reformed examina¬ tion system must, at . all costs , retain public confidence. This is clearly, recognized by the Com¬ mittee j which had first of all to . be satisfied that the technical difficulties inherent in the estab¬ lishment of a single system could be overcome.. It is made clear that in some Subjects there wiU have to be separate papers for . more and less able pupils—even if this, does mean pre-selecting different groups—nn order to 7 make sure that the full'range of ability in' subjects like physics " and chemistry, mathematics.and modern 1 languages is .adequately covered.'.Even so' they'conclude -that over much of the curriculum, in wiU be possible to manage with common papers. The great dan¬ ger is- that syllabuses will be trimmed to suit the examiner's* convenience .and mass examina- ;.tidn.- 'techniques, like multiple choice questions, will _ distort teaching methods. On this score the report is less than convincing. Much of the Waddell Commit¬ tee’s time wa’S taken up with how the new system should be administered. In advocating regional groupings of the exist¬ ing GSE and GCE boards—prob¬ ably about four or five—so that each group consists of one or . more GCE board plus two or three CSE boards, it chose the ■ only workable option. But there can be no doubt about the stresses and strains this will pro¬ duce during the period of reor¬ ganization. And the “new group¬ ings which will emerge will be much more likely to he cockpits of teacher politics than the present highly professional GCE. examining bodies. There will have to be a lot of horse-trading between the CSE and the GCE boards. and. they■ represent very different educational traditions. Some of this horse-trading will be about standards and the rela¬ tive weight to be 1 given to exter* .naj and internal examining, and ' this will bear directly on the vital issue of public confidence. Tbe examination system is’ the : ^hreF*instriihierrt by which public ..control -of .the - curriculum - is maintained and it makes- sense, therefore, to- give the Depart: meat of Education a major role In ' the reconstitution of the ..examining boards. A firm hand will be needed. Thereafter it will fall to-the iSchools Council to .oversee the arrangements' and lay down criteria for syllabuses arid examinations. Quite rightly, it is felt that the time has come to strengthen the central direc¬ tion of the examination system to make sure that in important sub-, jeccs - like mathematics, : the syllabuses of the different boards have enough in common to com¬ mand credibility. N.ew Palace Yard design From Mr ./tones Budenoch Sir. Now that the redesign .of New Palace Yard Westminster is com¬ plete, and its awfulness' so obvious may I protest to the MPs responsible for it ? They have installed a fountain which has the appearance of a cast¬ off prop from the set of The Student Prince. The fact that tbe “ card¬ board ” will eventually crumble io water is only slight consolation. In front of ir, presumably fn order to conceal the fountain and their red faces, they have planted, very close togerher in a sort of fairy ring, about sixty trees. No-dotibt they regret that this necessary screen of leaves will soon conceal a large part of the House of Commons from view. Fiually, irr the centre' of the fairy ring they have dug and planted a large crop of what looks like beet¬ root. We British know that vege¬ table prices arc high and MPs 3 salaries law, but thousands of foreign tourists to the “Mother of Parliaments" may still pay us the compliment of regarding this site as inappropriate for an allotment. Your s faithfully, JAMES BADENOCH, : 3 Crown.,Office Row, r • Temple, EC4. National Parks future From Mr Corol Johnson and others Sir. The future of our National Parks is in peril. ... . u In 1977 an exammenon-in-pubHc was conducted into rhe structure plan for the Peak District National Park. In the light of this exanuna- rion, the Department of the Environ¬ ment has now published comprehen¬ sive draft modifications to the plan which, if adopted, would generally reverse the policies defermined_and acted upon by rhe Peak Paris Plan¬ ning Board over the past 25 years with- widetv acknowledged success. A success which has thrice earned the board the Council of Europe s Diploma for protected landscapes. The effect of the proposed modi¬ fications to the plan would be. to prevent lie Peak . Park Planning Board accomplishing the prior pur¬ pose of a National Park which is to preserve and enhance its natural beauty. At the root of this distressing affair is the form of inquiry into the structure plan—the examinarion- in-public. This occupied only seven working days and failed to expose the dominant Nariqnal Park issues or the prevailing community inter¬ ests in them because topics and par¬ ticipants were pre-selected by the Department of the Environment; the general public was nor allowed to make representdtidnr; no evid¬ ence was presented- or subjected to cross-examination by interested parties. , . All National Parks are at risk. For what is.decided for the Peak District will certainly determine their fate as well. We call for support from Parliament to urge the Secretary of State for the Environment to reject the draft modifications to the Peak Part: Structure Plan and so prevent tile indictment of history that he was responsible for the dis¬ solution of National Parks. We are Sir, vour obedient servants, CAROL- JOHNSON, Chairman. Com¬ mons Open Spaces .& Footpaths Preservation Society, • J. CYRTL KERMODE, Councillor, Cyclists’ Touring Club, SYLVIA SAYER, Dartmoor Preser¬ vation Association. MARTIN PRICE, Friends of the Earth, _ . . ' , GEOFFREY BERRY, Friends of the Lake District. ALAN MATTINGLY, Secretary, Ramblers As socia tion, JOHN PARFITT, Chairman, Youth Hostels Association, Council for National Parks, 4 Hobart Place, SW1. The unenforceable From Mr Colin MacLeto* Sir, "Obedience to the Unenforce¬ able” is the heading given in your issue of June 28 to the Guest Column bv Professor Duncan Wil*. Hams. In his article. Professor Wil¬ liams seems to attribute the expres¬ sion to the late Sir Thomas Taylor, Principal of Aberdeen Uno'versity— a man renowned for his eloquence and for the emphatic expression of bis views, not least in graduation addresses. Some of these addresses were published in 1965 in a book with the title Speaking to Graduates. In the graduation address dated July 3, 1958, and entitled "Obedience to the Unenforceable ” Sir Thomas (on p 1501 credits Lord Moulton xrith the expression : “ Civilized society depends not on compulsion bnt on. what a great judge. Lord Moulton, called Obedience to the Unenforce¬ able.” It was another Scottish university, principal. Sir Michael Swann, who made me aware of Lord Moulton’s memorable phrase when, at a uni¬ versity function several years ago, he quoted forceful!v from the speech in which Lord Moulton spoke of “ rhe domain of Obedience to the Unenforceable”, this domain being the third of three great domains of human action—first, the domain of positive law; and second, the domain of free choice. Sir - Michael ■ was speaking ar a time of some student unrest. The tone of his address -vas. as I remem¬ ber, somewhat different from that of Sir Thomas's. Sir Michael was kind enough to give me a copy of Lord Moulton’s speech : I was then Scottish editor of The Times Edu¬ cational Supplement. I feel sure that you would lv-isb as a paper of record to give credit where it belongs. The relevant speech by John Fletcher Moulton (First Baron, a judge, par¬ liamentarian and . administrator) was about 2,500 words long.: it was given in the Authors’ Club of Lon¬ don and .published first in The Atlantic in July 1924, then in The Atlantic Monthly of July. 1942. Yours sincerely, COLIN MACLEAN, 1 Lygon Road, Edinburgh. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Effects of cut in Budget deficit From Mr Tim CohgdOn Sir, Mr Wynne Godley's letter of July 10, in reply to your leader of July 3, is disappointing. It fails :to meet the central argument of your leader—that the big - cut in the' Budget deficit -between, the 1976-77 and 1977-73 financial years, which The Times recommended, in Septem-' ber 1976- and did in fact take place, has had • none - of the catastrophic effects on output and employment which Mr Godiey and your other critics predicted. It- therefore does not properly discuss the real question ■ at' issue in- this debate, whether reductions in public ex¬ penditure and rax increases' have. the adverse repercussions on econo¬ mic activity which are convention- f- ally attributed'to theta. 1 - There' is no - question- that' fiscal policy was “ tightened •” considerably last year.. (Some might prefer to say it betame more-responsible/bur that is by the way.) The public sector , borrowing requirement feH to. £5,575th iii the 1977-78 financial year from £8,583m in 1976-77. Mr. Godiey is correct in pointing out-that about £1 billion was accounted- for by financial •' transactions, with no impact on real demand, but this represents only one-third of -the reduction.' •' More pertinently, the PSBR in 1977~78 'would * have been about £4,500m had it nor been for Mr Healey's £1 billion incomer tax ciit towards the end. of the financial year, which became effective in the final quarter. In the second -and 'third quarters of 1977-78, the PSBR was running at an annual rare of £4 billion, compared with £9 billion in tbe second quarter of 1976 when The Times vqro te its original leader. Indeed, rhe figures match '-.your recommendation almost exactly. According to Mr Godiey, this should have led to an intensification of the recession and large-scale unemployment. But, on rhe contrary, tbe progressive decline in the PSBR was accompanied by growing opti¬ mism about the outlook for domestic demand. The jobless total has declined in the past 12 months and there are quite definite signs of a recovery in output. Mr Godley's prognosis could not have been more wrong. Mr Godley’s-refusal to mention or analyse these facts is discon¬ certing. But his claim that The Times bas given “no bint of the process by which recoven- might conceivably take place, even in some theoretical long -term ” after cuts in the Budget deficit is still more unsatisfactory. The claim is in¬ correct. In. his article on November 11 3976, “ Ask a reasonable question ..." which formed an important part of the earlier controversy, Mr Peter Jay, then Economics Editor Of The Times, argued that a lower Budget deficit would permit lower interest rates, stimulate private. sector expenditure and thereby offset the weakening in the public sector’s demands on the economy’s resources. This is precisely what has happened. Minimum. Lending Rate dropped .to 5 per cent in October last year (from 15 per cent in November 1976) and stayed at 7 per cent or less until April thus year. Interest rate-sensitive consumer demand has been. powerfully affec-' ted,- as evidenced by- the buoyant bousing market, the 34 per cent rise in car sales in the - past 12 - months and . muich ' increased ' spending on consumer durables: Another strong reflationary mechanism was the rise in the exchange rate in the second half of last year. It moderated inflation and contributed to the increase, in real ' incomes 1 ' which is now' being- reflected'' in higher consumption. There is little doubt that the restora¬ tion of a degree of stability to. Britain’s financial'position, through determined control of the. money supply and PSBR, was an essential condition for tbe appreciation of sterling. Mr Godiey seems to have learnt . nothing --from 'Britain’s economic experiences in the 1970s. This is. a pity; as his counsels continue to be taten-seriously by many economists . in . the 'policy-formation establish¬ ment in the Treasury. One must hope that in future proposals for a return to responsible .fihanriaj policies, such as those made’by The Times in September 1976, will not receive cavalier and dismissive treatment at their hands or Mr Godley’s. Yours sincerely, TIM CONGDON, Economist, L. Messel & Co, .' Winchester House, 100 Old Broad Street, EC2. Service in prisons From Mr Tim Brown Sir, As a social worker I have accompanied children in care to six different prisons co visit a parent. I have been impressed by the courtesy and helpfulness of both the prison officers and the probation service who have done- much to ease a. traumatic experience. I was, therefore, saddened to read ' Caroline Moorhead’s account (July 10 ) of the closure of the visitors* centre at PentonviJle..It seems that bur prisons are increasingly being run by the prison officers rather than by the Home Office -and the governor The irony is that prison officers, like the police, are likely to support the present “ law and order " lobby’s concern at the decline in respect for authority. I am reminded ;of the disgraceful discourtesy shown to the Home Secretary wired; he addressed the Police Federation conference. Unfortunately, the prison officers' action, however powerful their sense of grievance, is symptomatic ■of a general and worrying tendency for public service organizations to be run for the benefit of their staff rather than (he community. Sir Dermis Hill’s concern (letters, July 10 ) about the moral respaa si- . baity of medical and other hospital workers for their patients has parallels far beyond the Health Service. Yours faithfully, TIM BROWN, Thyme Cottage, Compton, Winchester, Hampshire, Tolerance between Churches From the Chancellor of Chichester Cathedral - Sir, By now we are used .to the predictable anti-Roman outbursts of the Reverend Ian Parsley, which in any other 1 context than rhe givn tragedy of Northern Ireland we would dismiss as comically absurd. It is irritating for Anglicans to be lectured on the correct- fnterpreta- fibn of the 39 Articles by dissident - Presbyterians, but even more humili¬ ating to have to read an anti-Roman outburst from a priest of rhe Church of England, rhe'Reverend Roger L. Roberts (July 6 ), who seems to represent an (rid isolationist high and dry Anglicanism vrtrich many of us bad assumed to be on its Way out * Triumphalism"' is a word that seems to have come into fashion (or even into existence) with tbe Second Vatican Council and has been used .by Roman Carbolics to denounce arrogant and superior attitudes to¬ wards non-Cadnriics prevalent in their own Church. Mr Roberts has dearly demonstrated that there is such a tiring as Anglican triumphal¬ ism and that is .as unlovely, a phenomenon as its Roman counter¬ part. He will not, I hope, deter his fellow AngHcans from ardently seek¬ ing reconciliation between Canter¬ bury and Rome by has attempt to dismiss and misrepresent that quest as “ Anglican flirtation with Roman Catholicism” Yours sincerely, ROGER GREEN ACRE, 4 Vicars’ Close, Chichester, West Sussex. July 7. ‘ I.' '* From Sir Charles Taylor Sir. I read Lord Hailsham’s splendid letter (July 7) with admira¬ tion and some sadness. My wife divorced ' her first husband in die early 1930s, and she and I were married . on May 20, 1936. As 'we were very anxious to .be married in an Anglican church, if it were' possible, I wrote to the late Canon Gekie-Cobb- at St Ethel- bufga’s-withio-Bishopsgare t and asked him if he would be'agree¬ able to conduct the ceremony , in his church. After a talk with both my wife and myself, he agreed to break the “ rules n and do this, and we remember the day with joy. On May 20, 1976, we had our 40th Wedding Anniversary and we both v.-nnted a short service of thanks¬ giving fto be attended only by very close friends, our relations and those of our four children and eight grandchildren who were in England at the time) at St Ethcl- burga's. Bur the present Incum¬ bent refused to allow his church to be used by someone “ who had been implicated in divorce proceedings”, even though we were married in this same church over 40 years ago. Someone said to me at the titne. “ It seems a pity co turn away, these days, those who wnnr xo .30 to church ” ; and of course my wife and I were distressed by the decision of rhe Vicar. We were able to hold our thanksgiving service, however, at another church in the vicinity, (rich the good will of the Bishop of London and the Rector; St Mary’s ar HilL We sang God Save the Queen and prayed for Parliament, and our eldest son read the lesson , but, although it was a very happy occasion, we should hare preferred to have offered our tfiinkstivin«s for our many blessings at . the church where we had been married. God b'ess the Prince of Wales, Lord -Hailsham and : ■ Christian Charity. I have the honour to be. Sir, Your obedient servant, CHARLES TAYLOR, 52 Westminster Mansions, 1 Little Smith Street, SWt. July 12. From Mr H. JakiihoiDtcs • Sir. When Dr Ruwsc writes, con¬ cerning recent- squabbles among Christians, that H those who will beli&ve nonsense must expect awkward consequences ” (Letters; July 11) It seems that he considers ■ so much disagreement between rhe. various creeds as a manifestation of faulty philosophy. Perhaps we should radier bear in mind the. following alternative maxim, which is due to another - atheist, Niels Bohr:' TEie opposite' of a correct statement is an incorrect statement but the opposite of a profound truth may well be another profound truth. Yours faithfully. H. JAKUBOWICZ, / Department of Physics and Astronomy, University College London, Gower Street, WCl. From Mr Robert Hurling Sir, Controversies involving so-called Christians always generate such gruesome and unholy attitudes that en unbeliever can only thank his pagan stars that he's well out of such venom and spite. ROBERT HARLING. Four, 21 Crane Court, Fleet Street, EC4. Soviet justice From Mrs Elizabeth Young Sir, A Tass commentary on the Moscow trials on July 9 has com¬ plained that “certain circles" in the West have been attempting to “put pressure no the courts", an activity which in the West, is' prosecuted as contempt of court. Indeed it is. But it may be worth looking at Soviet practice, as des¬ cribed by Lev Nikolayevich Smirnov, Chairman of the USSR Supreme Court, in interviews broadcast by the Moscow Home Service, on June 16 and June 20, and monitored by the BBC. ’ " “At all stages of a criminal trial the accused -or defendant is granted and guaranteed an exrensive prac¬ tice of rights of defence. An import¬ ant condition of this is. the strictest Observance of jadiidlal .norms and respect, foe criminal legal pro¬ cedure. - - • Study of the courtroom practice has‘shown that din is still' not accepted . . . The Coorts need- strictly to observe' the -legal right of the accused or defendant to an all round, full, and! objectiye.investiga¬ tion of the materials of the case and to -reveal both circumstances that are incriminating and also those tending to prove the. innocence of the accused or defendant, as well as those extenuating his i guilt... The slanderers of Soviet justice say that ’ .according to our criminal procedure, the defendant or accused 1 is deprived of the right of defence since it is his obligation 1 to prove bis inno¬ cence. In fact there is notiling oF the sort, neither in rhe Soviet law nor in Soviet court practice . . ; It is very important that the constitu¬ tional principle be observed, accord- ina to which, the defendant nr accused is considered not guilty upril his guilt is proved in the way laid dnwa by the few a-od until it Is e-srnhliched by the verdict of rite court. This in fact reproduces the constitutional norm as’laid down hi Article 160 and Article 11 of the Human Rights Declaration and also bv the Human Rights Treaty. More¬ over. the plenum of the USSR Supreme Court stated thar in this connexion it was impermissible to oblige the defendant or accused to prove bis innocence -. . The"plenum a T so resolved that a guilty verdict could not be based on the presump¬ tion of guilt. All the doubts which cannot be removed are interpreted in favour of the defendant ot accused.” Another member of the Supreme Court, Gavim Yelimisov, inter¬ viewed on June 12 (also on the Moscow Home Service!, after men¬ tioning the . M extensive range of rights" guaranteed to the accused —including "the presumption of innocence "—claimed tha^: “ The .courts have begun to violate the norms of a criminal trial less often .... Nevertheless, in certain cases, particular norms of the criminal judicial legislation have been in¬ fringed. ... It is for this reason that Article Two of the Baric Principles of Criminal Court Procedure of the - . USSR and of the Union Republics lays it down as one of the main tasks of rhe administration of justice to -see that everyone who ■ commits a crime receives just punishment, and that not one innocent person is pro¬ secuted and convicted.’* (Here Mr Yelimisov confirms our suspicion that guilt or innocence are com¬ monly established before prosecu¬ tion.) Mr Smirnov, in his June 20 inter¬ view,.pointed out that the “defence of tbe accused" is—or at least should be—an important means of establishing the -objective truth. But then, having “stressed that it was our country and other socialist countries, .and only they, which carried bigh the banner of real humanism and legality by ensuring tbe genuine and effective defence of the citizen’s rights”, he let the Cat—to which we in the West take such strong objection—out of the bag: : . “At the same time it should ob¬ viously be noted that socialist .humanism cannot and doe* not hove 1 anything in common with lax senti¬ mentalism towards persons who im¬ peril-the cause of socialist construc¬ tion. Tn that case. Soviet courts have, to enforce all the measures, required for punishment, when the matter in question is the Struggle against dangerous criminals who have committed grave crimes." Nor for them tbe “ lax senti¬ mentalism" of "real humanism and iegaHty ” or of “ objective truth ", Mr Smirnov and Mr Yelimisov have made our point, I think. . Yours etc, ELIZABETH YOUNG. 100 Bayswater Road, W2. . Realities of terrorism From Ms JiWem Becker Sir, In her article ■ off May 26, “Facing up to the 'realities of ■ terrorism," Caroline Moore-head asserts- that “since 1970 40 Red Army 'Faction members have spent up to three years in solitary con¬ finement:”. This comes as a surprise to me. As far as I could discover in my researches into che conditions of imprisonment of die Red Army Faction members, the facts are otherwise. A few of them, arrested rn 1972, -Were kept in single cells— by no means in isolation since they had family visits and a great number of visits from lawyers—for a matter of some months, not years. After that they were kept grouped to¬ gether in conditions of exceptional privilege; so exceptional that the word luxurious would not be entirely inappropriate to describe them. In my book Hitler’s Children I supply derails 00 substantiate this. Might I therefore request, sir, that Caroline Moorehead supply the names of the 40 persons meld “id solitary confinement for up to three years ” the. dates of their imprison¬ ment, the names of the prisons, and any other relevant-details.-to sub¬ stantiate her surprising allegation. Yours sincerely. JTLUAN BECKER. 144 Hemmcford Road, Islington, STL The Hirsch collection From Mr Christopher Norris Sir, Having known the man and enjoyed the great hospitality of the late Robert von Hirsch over nearly forty, years I must express my regret that your paper should ha ve printed a commentary upon him, his collection,' and upon Sotheby’s sa'le by tbe somewhat misinformed New York denier who presumed to write this (July 12). . Few people would have been more astonished and sometimes more critical than von Hirsch at the prices realized at this sale. He was not responsible f-or these, and I do not re m ember any occasion when his guests thought of “ paying court ”, or of more than grarehihly enjoying this qiriet man, inis things, bi s coo k, has cat, and his abundant hospitality. Up tn a very few years before Ins death he Imped that his collection would remain undis¬ persed, and I believe that—if his relations with the Swiss civic auth¬ orities had been more perfect_no sale would have taken place. The bouse of every great and real. col¬ lector is “ charged with Ms per- sonaKty", and every object that he possesses, good or bad, reflects this. In gratitude for chis, I am, Sir Yours fariChfufMy, CHRISTOPHER NORRIS, The Athenaeum, Pall MaH, SWl. July .12.' Personal liberty in a market economy From the Leader of the Litvnd Party . Sir. Mas- I be permitted a bri«st reply to Professor Hayck s dial. •»- (Julv ID? I find dktuibitis In- placing of more emphasis »n chatce in the market place than chor.-e in die ballot box, and positive- •. abhorrent his view that ' trri? choice." (by which I suppose lie again means in the_ market p.jce) can exist under a dictator*,!ip. The seizure of power by a minority appears to be the current aim of the Conservative Party, al¬ though they criticized (riihtly) tin- present Government's claim to a mandate based on 39 per cent ot the votes- „ „ ... The academic comforts of virnua or Freiburg clearly shelter Pro¬ fessor Hayek from the downtrodden conditions of life enjoyed by lua many of our citizens, for whom “ liberty" is at present but a sham unreachable condition. How other¬ wise could he criticize my .insertion that we have not yet created^ condi- "tions of liberty for all o-ur ciri/cnv I draw two conclusions from ins letter. First, that politics is too serious a business to _ be loft to economists. Second, since lie i**' an adviser to Mrs Thatcher, that it IS sad to see the leadership of a once great Consorvutise Party tak¬ ing ,-idrice from a man of such opinions. Yours faithfully, DAVID STEEL, House of Commons. Saving a museum interior From Professor D. T. Donovan Sir, The proposal to demolish three of rhe original exhibition galleries of rhe Natural History Museum was deplored by the Chairman of the Victorian Society in your issue of May 24, and last Tuesday you re¬ ported objections by the GLC his¬ toric buildings committee and , others. It is important that the proposal be seen in rriution tu the museum’s new exhibition scheme, which arouses concern because of rhe lack of any apparent policy for the use of the galleries. The galleries were designed by Alfred Waterhouse on a scale which would be difficult to emulate tmdet- today’s economic circumstances. They were filled with exhibits showing the whole of narurc in a systematic and static way which the Trusrccs regard as no longer appropriate. The Trustees have proposed (Report for 1972- 74. published 1975, page /?) to replace them with a new, much larger exhibition “designed to re¬ flect all aspects of modern biotagy The Report goes on to develop the plan in some detail, but makes nn mention of the physical housing of the new exhibition. It appears front subsequent developments that the Trustees’ present plan rs totally at odds with the building they have inherited. The current proposal ro demolish is the logical outcome of the recent reorganization in which original interiors have been played down (as with Fossil Mam mails) or concealed ' altogether (as with Human Biology). As a result trf these attempts to adapt the gaiieries for purposes for which they were not designed the layout of the exhibition is rapidly becoming a mess. One may therefore ask whether the present policy should not be reversed, the original galleries restored to use, and new develop¬ ments which are unsuited to them put outside the original building. Continuation of the present pofa'cy will result in the loss to tbe public of some of London's finest museum interiors. Yours faithfully, D. T. DONOVAN, Deportment of Geology, University College London, Gower Street, WCl. A male principal From Mrs B. Kennedy-Cooke Sir, As one of the first Lady Margaret Hail students to matricul¬ ate and to become a real undergraduate, wearing the then prized, and now apparently des¬ pised. cap and gown, I should like to express my agreement with the letter in today’s paper (July Hi. from Dr D. J. Sharp. It dbes indeed seem most curious that the FeHows should have chosen a man to follow so many distinguished women scholars. Can it be that they thought only a man could control expectedly unruly male under¬ graduates? For whatever reason, it seems to be a thoroughly retro¬ grade step. Yours faithfully, A. -R. KENNEDY-COOKE, LMH 1918-21 Little Thom Field, f!g»lrv4gnn Rnarl, West Wittering, Sussex. Havering From Dr G. H. Thomson Sir, The havering balance of Canada (heading, July 7). I am sorry to see you perpetuating the Sassenach mis¬ use of the word “havering”. To “ haver * means to talk wildly in a nonsensical fashion, quite akin to "blether”. The word which means considering in an indecisive manner is “swither”. Yours faithfully', G. H. THOMSON. 9 Fairhaven Terrace, Reddingmuirhcad, Stirlingshire. What makes a gentleman ? From Lieutenant-Colonel C. E. Jan'if Sir, Only a gentleman who ! s also an officer is entitled to tuck his handkerchief into his sleeve (Mr Phili_p Howard, July 10', for it \s as unthinkable, that he should place a handkerchief in a pocket in am- part of bis uniform as that he should be altogether without one. Yours faithfully, C. E. JARVIS, „ sometime. Commanding Officer. 1/lst Gutkha Rifles, Payne’s Cottage, Broad well. Moreton-in-Marsh, , Gloucestershire. iJ’Fi il LJ* fj& IO- I 14 THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 197S si; ar» yt lhi LI' Preaching from the Bible-and from some other texts COURT CIRCULAR BUCKINGHAM PALACE • July 14 : Tbe Queen drove to the Bracknell College o£ Further Edu¬ cation tills morning and was r:ceived by Her Majesty's Lord- Lieutenant for Berkshire (Colonel die Hon Gordon Palmer) and the President of tbe. Royal Meteoro¬ logical Society (Professor J. T. Houghton). Her Majesty declared open an Exhibition of the Rova] Meteoro¬ logical Society, unveiled a plaque to commemorate the opening of tbe Headquarters of tbe Society at James Claisher House and honoured the President with her presence at luncheon in the Fellows' Room. This afternoon. Tbe Queen visited the Meteorological Office and was received by the Director- General (Dr B. J. Mason). Her Majesty later walked through Charles Square and un¬ veiled a stone to commemorate the opening of Tbe Queen’s Silver Jubilee Garden. The Hon Mary Morrison, the Right Hon Sir Philip Moore and Lieu tenant- Commander Robert Guv, RN irere in attendance. The Duke of Edinburgh arrived at Sheffield Midland Station in the Royal Train this morning and was received by Her Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant for South York¬ shire (Mr G. F. Young) and .die Lord Mayor of Sheffield (Coun- cillor P. Jackson). After visiting the Science and Technology Fair at Granville College for Further Education, His Royal Highness drove .to the new British Steel Corporation Stain¬ less Steel Works and was received by tbe Chairman. British Steel Corporation (Sir Charles VlHiers). The Duke of Edinburgh unveiled a commemorative plaque and was later entertained at luncheon in Cutlers' Hall, where His Royal Highness was received by the Master Cutler (Mr S. Speight). This afternoon. Tbe Duke of Edinburgh left Royal Air Force Finning!ey in an aircraft or The Queen's Flight for Heathrow Air¬ port. London. Lord Rupert NeriU was in atten¬ dance. Tbe Prince of Wales arrived at Bangor in the Royal Train this morning and, as Chairman, visited The Prince of Wales’ Committee for the Welsb Environment Foundation. Projects in Wales. The Duke of -Edinburgh was re¬ presented by the Earl Haig at the Memorial Service for the Duchess of Sutherland which was held in St Cuthbert’s Parish Church, Melrose, tills afternoon. CLARENCE HOUSE July 14: Queen Elizabeth Tbe Queen Mother this afternoon opened Clayton House, the Toe I T nn4r>flit H Residential Centre, at Crawley. 1 ■MUHJH5UI* Hie Lady Jean Rankin and Cap¬ tain Alastair Aird were in at- tendance. Every now and then' someone revives the idea of Bible preaching. There are inescap¬ able arguments chat always lead to it ; preaching may stray away from the Bible, but it always strays back. TJje straying away is by no means a melancholy; long withdrawing roar; it often gives pleasure ro the social his¬ torian aod ir draws congrega¬ tions as often as the Bj We does. Sermons os Fridays in the mosques of Afghanistan a few years ago we re an apocalyptic version of the politics of the Palestinians; it is doubtful whether the congregation knew where Palestine was. It is not thirty years since the Scarlet Woman was preached about in a similar spirit in north Oxford¬ shire. In the 1950s it was chic to begin with “Words taken from this morning’s Observer". In the 1900s. Father Bernard Vaughan boomed his bell-voice for an hour on end against the Forthcoming marriages Prince A. Auers per g and Miss J. Griffith The engagement is announced between Andreas, second son of Prince and Princess Fnmz Auers - pen?, of Sch loss Goldegg, Lower Austria, and Julia, younger daughter of Brigadier ami Mrs Davfti Griffith, of Winchester, Hampshire. Mr N. J. Blandy and Mrs J. E. Stratum-Brook Tbe engagement is announced between Nicholas, only sod of Mr aod Mrs P. M. Blandy. of Exlade Street, Oxfordshire, and Janie, only daughter of Mr and Mrs F. G. fleams, of Hcrtypcrt. Berkshire. Dr J. S. Gran and Miss J. M. Denne Tbe engagement Is arranounced between Jam Sbair, orrfy son of Prebendary and Mrs A. S, Cam; of Rowan Wick, Wclvers Hill Road, Bam veil, Avon, and Julia Mary, caiy daughter of Lieutenant-Cum-' mander and Mrs J. R- A. Denne, of Granary Cottage, Laughton, near Lewes, Sussex. Mir P. J. Ookev and Miss S. E. Horrocks The engagement Is announced between Peter, son of the late Mr W. Clokey and Mrs A. Harrison, of HkLey. West Yorkshire, mid Susanne, daughter of Mr and Mrs J. Horrocks, of Sheffield, Essex. Mr J. F. G. Thompson and Miss M. D. Wotton The engagement is announced between Jcbn, elder son of Mr mid Mrs F. L. Thompson, of Tedding, ton, Middlesex, and Donna, second daughter of Mr and Mrs D. B. Wotton, of Richmond, Surrey. wicked upper-class habit of her- never slackens. Dorrne is more erhicaJ sermons in which a prep got it all wrong, ting on country house cricket .-theological, but still in the xii00] moTi \\ty burgeons like mattered least. preachers of *. “e “■"* Reformation in England were bone. The excitement of his st0nes '* ^ et 04 therefore severer soda/ critics than preaching involves an apprehen- endeavour in the consciousness Father Vaughan; their style siveness, which the constructive of this fellowship . . - to bat was that of the prophetic books marvelling at his architecture manfully in the ream of of the Old Testament, combed never completely quiets until Christ" Or worse still, as 1 out into simplicity add loaded the acceptance of his message, once heard in the island of with a reiterated text Solzhen- of a few simple sentences or a Lipari, just before the feast of itsyn in Unin in Zurich puts long traditional formulation. Saint Matthew. His lifesize, into Lenin’s stream of conscious- It was a fearful riling to hear virtually naked, statue in silver, ness me advice “ Keep bitting those sermons fresh, as it still with a gold crown and a sword, the same spot, over and over is to hear them read. They is polished once a year by old again, varying the words just have some continuous touches women in the nine days before slightly—that’s the first rule for of medieval learning and rbe feast. They hold spedal propagandists and preachers”, preaching, and to hear them is early morning services, they More recent preachers are more ro be enclosed in a world of sing' special hymns, and in like the letter-writing lady in belief that is too frightening their black, and the:; old age. Jane Austen, who had "a good for modem preachers. It is not cawing like a rookery, they amplifying style ”, which filled very dogmatic, but it does open sounded to me prehistoric. The up pages, though she did its clear, innocent eyes on young priest arrived twenty need to have some little thing death and rbe resurrection of minutes late, and preached for to write about, even -ro a niece, the dead. half an hour the la rest serai- Tbe fine Reformation style Without that, there can be nary learning, a modernist ctnu- of such preachers as Latimer no Bible preaching I suppose., memory on literary forms and works extremely well today. He So we are treated, as [ heard archaelogical. history. It was is near the bone, emotionally once in Chrisr Church Cathe- without subtlety, without tact, . and intellectually. The tension dral on a Good Friday, ro without relevance. He had even but that Tbe cosy, fireside manner which more and more preachers adopt from television is not the same as the old salty srimpli city of the humbler clergy. They had their dignity. The religious uses of television are many, but all it can do to the Bible is to show it, as a fiction among other fictions. The man ner of television presenters is □qc that of prophets: it is not even chat of Voliaire or Diderot or Bertrand Russell; it excludes true Bible preaching The conspiracy view of Chris rianicy, the idea of a special Christian community, a special sub-group, essentially linked by coffee mornings and sales of work, is another enemy, since it entails a chatty style, which is neither formal nor homely. There are sentences, in Latimer and Donne too simple to be said now. Peter Levi Mr A. H. Headman and Miss J. Kitchen The engagement is announced between Alexander Hubert, younger son of Lieutenant-Colonel 1. R. Read man. MC, and Mrs Read man. Glassing ail. Dunblane, Perthshire, and. Jane, youngest daughter of Mr and Mrs J. A. Kitchen, 41 Blue Gum Crescent, French's Forest, New South Wales 20E6. Australia - Mr C. P. Wilkinson and Miss J. M. Hollingum The engagement is announced between Christopher Paul, young¬ est son of Mr and Mrs J. H. Wilkinson, PO Box 24851, Karen, Nairobi, Kenya, and Julia Mary, daughter of the late Mr and Mrs L. G. HoIUngum and grand-daugh¬ ter of Colonel and Mrs G. O. C. Probcrt, Bevills, Bures, Suffolk. Prices for Old Masters surprise auctioneers Marriages KENSINGTON PALACE July 14: The Duke of Gloucester, Patron, The Sliver Jubilee Walk¬ way Trust, inaugurated the final section of the Silver Jubilee Walk¬ way, Chancery Lane, London this morning and afterwards His Royal Highness was entertained at a Reception given by the Right Hon Chairman of the Greater London Council. Mr H. T. Mote. Lieutenant-Colonel Simon Bland was in attendance. Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester was represented by Miss Jean Maxwcll-Scott at the Memorial Service for The Duchess of -Sutherland which was held id. St Cuthberr’s Parish Church, Melrose, this afternoon. YORK HOUSE ST JAMES’S PALACE July 14: The Duke of Kent, as Chancellor, today presided at ceremonies for the Conferment of Degrees at the University of Sur¬ rey. Lieutenant-Commander Richard Buckley, RN was in attendance. The Duchess of Kern, as Pat¬ ron, this evening attended a Din¬ ner in aid of tbe Spas tics Soc¬ iety at tbe Guildhall. Miss Jane Pugh was in attend¬ ance- THATCHED HOUSE LODGE July 34: Princess ■ Alexandra, Deputy CoWjael-tn- Chief, The Light Infantry, this morning pre¬ sented Colours to the 7th Bat- tullou on the Palace Green at Durham. Her Royal Highness travelled lu an aircraft of The Queen’s Flight. The Lady Mary Fiualan- Howard was in attendance. Birthdays today Sir Colin Anderson, 74; Mr Julian Bream, 45; Sir Douglas Busk, 72 ; Lord Edmund-Daries, 72; Air Marshal Sir Paterson Fraser, 71; Mr. R. Hammond Tunes, 63 ; Sir Percy Lister, 81 ; Miss Iris Murdoch. 59 : Lord Shackle-mu, 67 ; Mr Ron Smith, 63. TOMORROW: Surgeon 1 Rear- Admiral M. H. Adams. 70; Pro¬ fessor Sir Hugh Ford. 63 : Baroness Llewelyn-Davies of Haside. 63 : Mr Reg Prentice, M<P, 55 : Lord Wcstbury, 56 ; Dr T. X- Williams, 37. Brewers’ Company The following have heeii elected officers of the Brewers’ Company for the ensuing year: Mas:cr: Mr B. J. lUflbury; Upper Warden: Mr H. C. Whitbread: Middle Warden* Mr R Poor: Renter Warden: Mr K. S. SHowerina: Clm*- Mr M. J, Adams. - Lord Mayor of Belfast The Lord Mayor of Belfast and the city council were hosts yes¬ terday at the luncheon held in the City Hall, Belfast, when the awards won at the International Rose Trials at Dixon Park, near Belfast, were presented by Alderman Mrs Grace Bannister, chairman of the council’s parks committee. The Lord Mayor pro¬ posed the toast of the Rose Society of Northern Ireland, to which Mrs Robert Frizzel, chair¬ man of the society, responded. Dinners Spastits Society The Duchess of Kent, patron, was present yesterday eveiling in Guild¬ hall when the Chairman and tbe Executive Council of the Spastics Society launched the Save a Baby Campaign Appeal for £2m. The Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress attended. Among others present were : Tlit Eart and. .Countess ot Westmor¬ land, Earl and Countess Attire. Lord Barry. Sir Kolih Joseph. MP. Malor- Cenoral Sir James d'AvlBdor Goid- cmld. Sir John and Lady Mills. Sir Bernard ' and Lady Milu.. .Mr Lewis Carter-jonos. HP. Mr Jack Ashley. MP. and Mm Ashley. Mr David Jacobs and Mr Robert. Woikor < chairman ot tho appeal). Epsom College The annual Old Epsom!an dinner was held at Epsom College yes¬ terday. . Lord May bray-King pro¬ posed tbe toast of the school to which the headmaster, Mr 0. J. T. Rowe, replied. Sir Charles Taylor, president. Old Epsomian Club proposed the toast of the guests and his Hon Sir Carl Aar-told replied. Westminster School The Gowtaming Body of Westmin¬ ster School and die head, master ive a dinner party in College [all yesterday. Among those present were : Lord Urtgaa. professor J- M. Camcroa. Sir Ptior Carey- Lord Carr of Hadley. Hratcwor Sir Cnui iJialn. ProfnSMir R Cobb. Mr %. M. J. Cotocairanla. Lord Duncan-Sandy*, the Filoht Rev Lnuncolot Ftomlni, Dr J. B. -Curdon. □r Walter Hamilton, the Principal of La dr Margaret Hall. Mr D.i\1d Lam*, fhe Duke of Nurfollc. Lord Rea. Sir John Ralhenslctn. Um> Prtncloal at SI Awir'i College- OUlVd. LtiC South African Ambassador, Air Marshal sir John Stacey, Mr John Thomnson. th» Lord Mayor nr U'uslmJnsfcr. Hih Dean or WlTtclwAcr and tho Right Rev Kenm-ih Wouncombc. Mr C. H. Earn el r and Miss G. R. Grcig The marriage took place in the Queen's Chapel of the Savoy, London, on July 12. 1978, be¬ tween Mr Charles Henry Barnett, younger son of Major and Mrs B. G. Barnett, of Swifts House, Bicester, Oxfordshire, and Miss Georgina Ross Grcig. youngest daughter of Colonel and Mrs D. G. Greig, of Muirhead of Balgray, Ayrshire. Canon E. Young officiated. Mr David Barnett was best man. Mr M. E. Ezra and Miss S.- M. Bailey The marriage. took place on 5 a tin-day, July 8, at the Church of St James, Abbey Rufus, Reading, of Mr Mark slice Bara, son of Mr and Mrs Peter Ezra, of Hove, Sussex, and Venice, and Miss Susanna Marguerita Bailey, daughter of Professor and Mrs D. Kenneth Bailey, of Reading. Latest appointments Latest appointments Include: Mr Alex Lyon, Labour MP for York, to be chairman of the United Kingdom Immigrants Advisory Service, ‘in September, in succession to Lord Foot. Mr A. JVL Bailey, head of the Treasury group handling Indus¬ trial policy, to be tbe deputy secretary, public services, in the Treasury, in succession to Mr G. S. Downey. Dr K. S. Pease, FRS, to be presi¬ dent of the Institute of Physics; Mr C. A. Crofts to be vice-presi¬ dent. Mr Robert Hedley Lewis, an Ioner London Education Author¬ ity inspector, to be Principal of the Loudon College of Printing* Mr Alan T. Smith and Mr John Williams to be members of the Irtand Waterways Amenity Advis¬ ory Council. By Geraldine Norman Sale Room Correspondent Both the top prices in Christie’s second summer Did Master paint¬ ing sale yesterday came as sur¬ prises ro the auctioneers. “ The Adoration of the Shepherds ", a large painting by Noel-Nicolas Coypefl, sold for £24,000 (estimate £1,000 to £1,500) and “ Tbe A^el appearing to Tobias". by Carte van Loo, made £22,000 (estimate £3.000 to £5.000). Both paintings had been sent for sale from the Georg Schaefer collection, Schweinfurc, and both sold to anonymous buyers. Other¬ wise the sale followed the usual pattern,. with comparatively little interest in minor pieces. The total was £521,880 with 24 per cent unsold. The sale of 63 Oriental carpets and textiles at Leferre and Partners, in the Brampton Road, was 100 per cent sold with a total of £123,000. The top price was £12,200 (estimate 00.000 to £12,000) for a fine dehteenth- cennrry Kuba carpet, 10ft 6hi by 5ft loin, with a red ground to the centre and green to the border. An early irineteenth- ccotury Beshir carpet from Bukhara, 19ft 4in by .14rt, made £11,500 (estimate <10,000 ro £12,000) and an early riuzeceenth- cemury silk Kashgar, 8ft 4in bv 4ft Sin, £10,500 (estimate £8,000 to £ 10 , 0001 . Sotheby’s sale of English illus¬ trated books and drawings ' at Chancery' Lane made £30.670 with 1 per cent unsold. Quaritrh paid £1.750 (estimate £600 to £800) for the Beaconsficld Press edition of 1940 of The Ha&gadah. with illus¬ trations and decorations bv Arthur Szyk- Bonham’s had vet more of Queen Victoria's underclothes for sale- A pair of knee-length linen drawers were sold together with a pair of pink silk stockings for £120 (estimate £60 to £ 100 ) to Cant&field Old Furniture, of Liver¬ pool. A sale of studio ceramics at Sotheby's Belgravia made £31,555 widi 7 per cent unsold. A massive Doulton stoneware vase, a tour-de-force by George Tifl- worth known as the “ Historv of England Vase ”, sold for £1,600 (estimate £1,000 ro £1.500). At Sotheby’s in Bond Street Eugiish furniture and works of art made £60.488 with 10 per cent un¬ sold. A book sale at Christie’s South Kensington made £13,324 with 1 per cent unsold. There were par¬ ticularly strong prices for ornitho¬ logical works, even of the nine¬ teenth century. Lord Ilford's seven-volume Coloured Figures of the Birds of the British Isles, of 1885-97, .made £820 (estimate £500 to £700). Today’s engagements Tomorrow Recitals : London Collegiate Brass Band. St Barthoiomew-the- Great, 1.05. Guildhall School, choral _ and orchestral concert by junior music department, 3. Antique and Collectors Bazaar ■ Greycoat Street. Victoria, 12 -g. Cumberland Hotel, Marble Arch, 11-7. Craft fair: The Orangery Hoi- land Park. 10-6.30. Concerts: Bob Dylan, open air concert. Blackbushe Airport, Surrey, 2- Lectures: Dinosaurs, 11. Lady¬ birds, 3, British Museum (Natural History). Modern figurative sculpture, Tate Gal¬ ley, 3. Festival of Flowers. AU Hallows- by-the-Tower, 9-6. Horticultural Show: Lakeland Rose Show, Holier Hall, near Grange-over-Sands, 10-8.30. Husdrwaire Show. HusthwaHe, nr Easingwold, North: Yorkshire, 10.30. The Duke of Kent attends British Grand Prix, Brands Hatch and presents trophies to winners, 12 . 20 . Antiques fair : Lakeland Antiques, Belsficld Hotel, Boivness-on- W inderm ere, 11 . Garden open davs: Brooksby Agricultural College, nr Melton Mowbray, 2-6. Hardwick Hall, Doe Lea. nr Chesterfield. Derby¬ shire. 12-5.30. Lecture: Constable's Sketches, Tate Gallery, 3. Thomas More. Canon A. de Zulueta, St Andrew-by-the Wardrobe, 4.30. Ttairs: Alexandra Palace. Palm Court, 2.30. . Ipswich Flower Show,- Christ¬ church Park, 11-6. Lanlvet Agricultural Association Show. Forda Farm, Laniver, Bodmin, 10. Walk: Thameside, a riverside walk, meet Monument station 25 years ago Service dinner Shrirenham Club Tbe annual dinner of tbe Shriven- hatn Club was held last night aL the Royal Military College of Science. The principal guest was Sir Frank Cooper. Permanent Under-Secretary of Stare. Ministry of Defence. General Sir Hugh Beach presided and Brigadier C. Birtwistle, chairman, was among those present. Haitink gives up directorship , Bernard- Haitink - has given up his artistic directorship of the London- PhUhannoulc Orchestra, although he will continue as principal con¬ ductor until September nest year as originally planned (our Music Reporter writes). His announcement came after the orchestra’s board of directors decided to replace one of the players, and Mr Eric Bfavington, managing director of tbe orches¬ tra, -said he understood Mr Haitipk wanted to make clear that be was. not -involved in'giving notice tu tbe player. session of the Cbernoritz oblast „ - _— ..... committee . . . revealed big mis- wL* M I , * nes ot w « ,ne *»ay. Likes In the collective farms and adopted comprehensive decisions, -what these decisions were is not stated, but from the various re¬ ports in the press It is dear that many officials from other oblasts , , «®re found to have exercised papers. Including those- from the excessive zeal in dealing with the various republics, show that in local population, giving new July. 15, 1953 The process of changes and purses in the Communist Party machinery which began in Mos¬ cow- ■ immediately alter Stalin's death continues. Russian news- s pi a more 'thorough reorganization of the party and the administra¬ tion than was revealed by the original ■ reports. This appears to be -particularly true In the Ukraine ■ .where party- meetings were held In nearly .every larger dry. 1 Everywhere shortcomings were revealed and denounced and resolutions were passed recom¬ mending changes. A plenary excuses for dissatisfaction and protest. . Some of the guilty officials who have been dismissed are mentioned by name. Accord- ing to the Georgian newspaper Zary Vostoka, Beria’s serious cases of perversion of the Lenin- -Stahn policy have been exposed in Georgia. This is the almost in¬ variable formula that lus been used in other places where changes have taken place. May opening for Tate extension By Kenneth GosKng The Tate Gallery’s £2.3m exteo Sion will probably be opened to tbe public next May. The occa- sioa, the gallery says, w-Ql be marked by the most comprehensive display of the collections ever shown, with an increase of a half in the total exhibition area. However, tbe task of re lunging the whole of the modern collection Is so large that the hanging of the older galleries most begin this summer if the 25 new rooms are to be hung between their handing over to the gallery next year and their opening to the public soon afterwards. The gallery said it regretted that la consequence its display of twentieth-century art will ax times be “ unusually incomplete ” until the full display opens. From next Monday the galleries normally devoted to the modem collections will be closed, with die exception of three in the Henry Moore exhibition, while rehanging takes place. Duraig August those galleries will open as they -are completed. “ However ”, the gallery says, “ although certain rooms extend¬ ing tin's display forward in time wm open in the months ahead, it is regretted that the majority of the art of the last 50 years will for some months be represented only by a changing selection of a very few outstanding works,” Those works would aft first be located in the Sculpture Hall opening In late September. Opposing the view of the Stand- tog Commission on Museums and Galleries that the public should be able to visit them on public holidays, the CHfl Service union said that, in tbe main museums and galleries were kept open id the public for six and a half days a week, closing only ar Christmas, on Good Friday, May Day aod New Year’s Day, all spedal holidays that members could spend with their families. Most museums will open on August 28, tbe next Bank holiday, but the Museum of London will be dosed. £650,000 home Heath House, Hampstead. London, bought for £450,000 in April last year, has been sold to an Iranian businessman for about £550,000. It was the home of Mr John Suniey. Technology collection The Elton collection on the his- torn of technology, accepted by the Government ia lieu of estate duty, is to be allocated to Telford Development Corporation for ex¬ hibition at Ironbridge Gorge Museum. Lord Smith The barony conferred on Sir Rod¬ ney Smith, in the • Birthday Honours, has been gazetted by the name style and title of Baron Smitii of Marlow, in 'tbe counrv of Buckinghamshire. Latest wills Latest estates Include faet, before tax paid ; tax not disclosed f : CogilL Major Noel Hugh Vernon, of Biandford .. .. £163,004. Dean, Mr Basil Herbert, of WeSsi- minsrer, theatrical producer and founder of Ensa .. £95,527 Ford, Mr George William, of Retford.£242,339 Gooding, Mr Charles Herbert, of Colerne. estate agenr, surveyor and valuer ..- .. £156,762 Joel, Mr Hugh McCarter, of Chesterfield .. .. £175,534 HardcasUe-Lemt. Mrs Joan Evari- geline. of Guildford, left £416,376. Morris, Mr Fred, of Sutton Cold¬ field, company director £199,648 Taylor, Mr Robert, of Appleby, Intestate.£206,822 Thompson, Mr Edwin George Lewis, of Esber, market gardener £177.593 Tobin, Dr Aroaud Kenneth Parker, of Formby ., .. £116,513 Westbrook, Mr Harry Alfred, i.f Colchester .. .. £103,576. Harrow School . The summer tenn at Harrow School ends today. Mr T. R. Harris is retiring from Hie staff. Mr R. A. Delves is leav¬ ing the staff to take' up another wintmem. Mr R. B. Venables is Inquisbing bis bousemastersbip of Tbe KmH. and is being suc¬ ceeded by Mr 5, L. Parson son. The Cock House match was won by West Acre (Mr D. J. Parry), who beat Rendalls (Mr A. A. Bishop) by nine wickets. Tlie Tor- pids final was woo by Tire Park Mr J. G. K. Ingram j who bear Efmfield [Mr M. W. Pailchorpe) by two wickets. Old Harrovians who entered the school between 1947 and 1949 were entertained at tea yesterday after- noon by the chairman and com¬ mittee of the Harrow Association and later attended a concert of songs In speech room. Next term beans on Friday. September 15. Tbe Goose Match will be- played cm Saturday, Sept¬ ember 16. Science report Photoelectricity: Better solar cells Electricity from solar cells is A couple of years ago it was svS- cell than was the original blue used on spacecraft and in a few gested that by shining sunlight and ultraviolet light, which is an land and sea-based - applica tions on to a luminescent material added advantage. Most of that where the cost of other energy 1 rather than directly on to a cell; fluorescent light bounces around sources would be prohibitive. But the cell could be made to pick within the plate until it eventu- tha direct conversion of sunlight up _ the luminescence only, allv enters the solar cell. Solar Into electrical energy on a large elirainatiiig heating. Since then heat, on the other hand is dissi* vcalc 'for feeding into the grid tins suggestion has been explored pated over the whole area of toe still looks a. long- way off;, an (a. the academic and commercial glass, so toe. solar cell is kept often-quoted figure is that the worlds. Dr R. Reisfeld and Dr S- cooler. cost of solar cells would have to Neumann, ot the Hebrew Uni* There is still clearlv scope fur drop by. a faciuf.of a hundred verity of Jerusalem, have ■ in- improvement, even though! the for them to compete wild other vented a device that use* uranyl- present device offers, according generating system*. Clearly no doned glass, a relatively in- lo me authors, a big increase in one development .will - bridge the expensive material including won* eiT/ciimcv Larger arcus of -lass gap. but one idea. Just reported, radioactive by-products or. tlie more ' sophisticated doping could do something to Improve process by which ennehed materials, and improvements in solar-cell efficiency and- peftiaps u«niutn Is prepared. toe abilities of cells to cope with cut costs. The device can be thought of more - intense light should make IT you aim light from the sun « a glas platejUvered on toe the n a on to a soLair cell, heat from the bottom and around three edges. A practical possibility sun. which is also electromag- lung rfcJn solar cell occupies toe c N Mure . T i m es News Service uetic radiation -but at longer fourth - edge. Tb= sun shines m ^ mature nines news service Mill Hill School During tbe summer . Lerm, which' cuds today, the combined choirs and orchestra of Mill Hill and Belmont schools gave concerts in St John's. Smith Square, and die tenth anniversary of exchanges with the Institution Jorn-Lambert at Rouen was celebrated. At today's Foundation Day die guest of honour will be Lord Wade. Services tomorrow: Eighth Sunday after Trinity ,„ST PAUL'S CATHEDRAL: HC. 8: M, y>.M. Cmon L. John Go I Una: TD. Tomkins i Second Sen-tcd: HC. 11.Au. Schubert iSecond Mass In g*. a. ju»- lorum anlDMD (Stanford ■: E, 5.13. Rev P. Tun. Mao and ND i-BUir In B minor >, A, Yc nw am larrowfui i Bral,ms. Gorman Uoqulomv; 5. An OlTortnn nr LiLUrflical Dance by Uie Epiphany Dancers. _ IrtSTMlNSTOl ABBEY: HC. 8; M. lU.oU. ■OUTHUrARK CATHEDRAL: Eucharist. .Victoria Ociuam pJorlosam. A. Jnsu dulrts mclnorla iVictorial. ftUhop nf KiKhlnq: t, 5,'iO. Sumtlon In A. O Uml. give Uiv Holy Spirit iTnlll*> ; Uio l*lv>vorl. THE QUEEN'S CHAPEL ROYAL AT Sr JAMES S■ III'. H.jO: M, 11.13. .■ '5? .i'our luinds >Glbbuns>. Hcv A. II. H. llai-Vmlv. , yL '. E S* >, ' S . CHAPEL or TlIC SAW) I nubile wnknnicd ■ : MV. 11. in. Ip iSunlnrd In Ci. Rev J. Lewis. A. Hgre^yi^U'e counUT-v htsm (Cold: _ riOi'jL AVAL COLIXGC CHAPEL. GREDlVilCH fnubile wolcoroodl: HC, 8-30. iwont MP. ll. u\e cSiaplaia. GUARDS CHAJPET— WolUnglon Bar¬ racks: HC. 8: >1. 11. Rev R. T. J. X. Wood: He. noun. GRAY’S INN CHAPEL (public vH- wm«di: -11.13, Canon Z. James: X. Rrirfce In Urn Lord aJway f Purcell j; Multtgan Ssmioii, Rev V. Pllio. LDfcOLNS INN CHAPEL. pubUc ravlied i miry ir* iJncoln'a Inn riclda gatewnn: M. ij.no, canon n. Tw.ir- mon: A. IMA. Bi-nedKIua qul Venll (Id Itf v 1 - KMTOJjJR or LONDON'; HC, -|. IL. U TO laws Mlyv? |»n», A. LhrIM Je.u iTannuri, Aruhdaacon or Lon-ion. . TiyyiPI.C UHl.iHOH, I'lfwi Srrenr foulvlc WHcoiniUI HC. 8.10: MP, r V > ” Oa\ie^ In G UlyHjns _1n IS. A. Kino of glory iiialforri djiIni. me vaslrr. ..wi'-y- hospital, chri&ea inunnr S'.-rvIce. 11 - A. O lei me* Irrad In ihe rlnhl Evans, He. 8.19: Sunn DurhartM. n, oarLt riivrti M - Alkins - Avt U/K 1 'tilLES-OT.-THC-ntTLOS. St Giles High Street: HC, 8 and noon: lip it , frr JAMES'S. B.13- ., Sr -rn lA / , \VA? E f^ Ji ■„ W'cninlnslor: %f. miwr in Pi. \ aVntljjhoii iSEsstt-* 0 - i2i6 = er MARTIN-IN-THE-FIELDS: 1'jiM-y comrymton. wap, r.tv A Couch^ i Norman Ingram Smiib: E. « ^ ntv. L. Ualhrr. a •fo’rinnion: hq, 1 r °° ■ Eucharist. '<.30. L Ls Robson. O ‘W'lierf* shjf ^ r H*Kl d 'Bovw*>: k. r, luout '■«C^ f M Kaba ° n ' ^ a, ‘' ud mnim rntrills ■ p.Un.trlna ,. AnSv/hm, I> %e«* S,,r,,,,lhI,n ' Derm fl' ; f ill"-" Hr Sfr H L iSi v ^ 0 ^V PA J ,,SH . f;H,, n'-W: (If." ..J 1 ""-.] 1 - Pl^-bcndarj' I. E*'d'eya" 3 frt * on<l 1*°°"* lorgo >LuMtsi; nc r a ?5£? l<:r Souaroi HC. a.15. II. pwtih Cammumon. Rev Wrtfl'cr. E - 6 - »«■ W. R. hl ?n" 7**I27-'S. Wllion Place. KnlnWa- «»r dg Vi- M S» V Cucha- r tw-ilP?a» ' m ; JjckSDn in c. r Siro*g. covcm Cartcn. 3E. II.Jj: Ilcv j. Arrow- . . ST_. PAULAS, nobisrl Adam Strrrl: ’ 1 • Olshop Goodwin-Hudson; E. b.30, n ^_ r B -L<wdwln-Hud«in. o PEf® S. .Caron Sguarr: LM. A. I » and lO: SM. 11 fD:>rf-r rv 1» III lams >: „ ST SIMON aiOTKS. IBiel*»a- «(-. nr. a^R. 0 ^'^* 0 " tp - srr stcwil^'s. riiouc^aicr n^ri 1 LM. fl: HM ir. MlS^i ft maSStt r Mnv 1W“: I. .ina Bi n. F7oi' D. Uporun ST \HDAST. I'orvrp Lane OBITUARY MR OLIVER MESSEL Artistry and magic in stage desig; Mr Oilirer MesseJ. CBE, wbo. died at home' in Bridgetown, Barbados, on July 13 at the age of 74, was one of four men who determined the coarse of Bri¬ tish stage design during tbe first half of this century. Gor¬ don Craig, Charles Ricketts, Qkttid Low Fraser and Oliver Messel Jed stage desogu away from the overpowering natural¬ ism of the nineteenth century and raised it to its rightful place on equal level with the player and what was being played. As a result, Britain boasts of having had as fine a collection of stage designers as any country in the worid. something that might not hare happened without the vision of this quartet. Tbe youngest of these, Oliver Messel. after studying at the Slade fas a fellow student with . V /• . ■' . ■ 7 ’ Rex Whistier) was ^ven his tacie tack to theatre, 1 first opening in the theatre by * ^ ean austerity,-j Charles B. Cochran: Cochran evoked theoiurt masqi who gave more chances to promising artists any other Sadler’s WeRs B<a3Idtfs> showman in the commercial Slewing Beauty, wfckb- theatre, -ivas impressed by the the Govern Ga masks which Messel was then So perfecting,, arai he commit World War in 194B. . = j sioned a number, masks “ Messei was- a.-j of warioos nations, for his 1925 ^chifact 01 spwtade i he. revue at the London Pavilion. a , tiiagic n Two years later, in another ^® ss spectacular ei PaviUon revue, Noel Coward’s ™ _^ 3e , theatre.- In rte j This Year of Grace. Messei 1330s he designed a play., created brilliandy vapid masks rousjc, -Mother of ~ Pearl for “ Dance, Dance, Dance Little w ™ c “ be was caoed; upai Ladv ”, a number that sum- create an o ver* mate -bon marized the •whole attitude of 8 “ipit »uo and a very.mp. the mid-1920s and virtually be- smdio (white again). '-lia; came a si 30 atore tune of that scen . e «e broognt: a sen$e a era. There was even more ness touche d wa n ewganca; opportunify in another Cochran rajs * cl everything above revue, Wake Up and Dream. ms C e Pfonstoa of eimrona which used not only masks but tins was the haHniari dresses in all kinds of \musu 2 l work in the.-stri fabrics, such as rubber to sfiimti- tibeatre. Among the many j late porcelaui; they created ,® -designed, quue outstan magicaLeffects in several bean- “is nostalgic .Ring I it tiful numbers- ffte Afoon, seemingly msp&e lr 11 ^ lb* in Cochran’s SSSjfgS ’ 5 ST° li ’^ and - 1930 Rennie that Messei designed a number that wus to have a profound effect not onJy ? on his OAvn work but on decora- tla tivn as a whole. The finale was tEL Z* iZJaP*. ^ staged in “ Heaven ” with every- thing—set and dressea^-in C tk« ktI SS white. The effect was stunning ctoded ^ fae-S? since white had previously been fJq?fi d t 7710 Magic Flute ’ W* Bttr} * Offenbach’s La Salle Helene). wtote was predominant and 1973 or^ffri^ Helen’s white.bedroom was one MessePx - henius lav'-**' of riemost unforgettable scenes un iq u e q^Hty^f brin^rig n w a production that aM through nes ^ figf- a „ d elesance ““ J“ch Sm-ofS'SS sumptuousness. whether it be in play, dp This production brought back ballet, musical or film. X* to the theatre something that late 1920s he was.estabfui&j had been lacking there between the; foremost stage designs die wars—spectacle of great Britain and- lo have bis f ■* taste. In another age Messei attached to any proton would have beeo attached to a as ; great a .draw as- European Court so as to enrich appearing in it. royal occasions (something he Oliver Hilary K * I L I , was to realize many years later Messei was bom on January when he transformed tbe Royal 1904, the second , son| Opera. House for several state Lieutenant-Colonel • 'ixix, Safes). , _ Messei, OBE. TD, of Cud® In a revival of The Miracle, Bis sister became tiie : Cboir— an elaborate version of a of Rasse and Mr Messei .- medieval mystery play, he therefore unrie of the Ear. - ^ created a magnificent sombre Snoivdon. He ■ wenr fim-. ; ': sweep in his, dresses for Cocb- Eton, served in : the. ran s production at the Lyceum, World War as an Army. dipt, transformed into a cathedral for became : a FeMow of XJnim *« .- the occasion. It was obvious College London in 1956, and / that, with his sense of regaJ honorary -associate of grandeur, h e should be inspired Regional CoT-lege of Aft, 12 by the Renaissance in bis chestesy.in 1950. HUs books designing of MGM*s 1935 131m chided Stage Designs 1 of homeo and Juliet with Norma Costumes (1933). Shearer and Leslie Howard, Setting up home on the y, when he was able to expand his .coast of Barbados, he desvgi nsion in the rich tapestro of the orjguwj buildings for ■ ■ that,opulent and turbulent age. island of Mustique near-by' Again Messei was to bring spec- weB as houses in Bridgeton MR RICHARD SANDELL Awards and Tithe Appordt ments. AU who turned ro b for help in sbeir-researches; local-or natural history foa in him a rich vein' of knfl B.S v\Tkes: Richard Emery Sand el I died at tome in Pact erne on July 10. Dick, as be was to his many __ friends, was Honorary Librarian led^ and"encoOTagementllht of the Wiltshire Archaeological is eloquent testimony to 3 and Natural History Society for work in rbe ackhoi some 22 years. He was a Fettow "**> . him in many books ; ai. of toe Society of Antiquaries articles not least in tbe Victot (of London) and FeUow of the County History. In an age'^ Linn a eon Society. such virtues are becoming ra Educated at Sherborne and he has exemplified the spirit. Worcester College', Oxford, generous ana unflagging servi where he read history, he and wide ranging curiosity:, inherited a wine business in toe.finest traditions tif a learoj Devizes. During the war he society, served m tbe RAF. His per- He was unmarried. Tb-ou? semai interest in local history his work Cor tbe * Society ac : and narural history was stirnu- for toe diocese he made inota lated by his godfather. Sir er&ble friends who admired hi Emery Walker, the typographer for his steadfast quaKtie - : and surviving member nf Wil- waited sometimes anxiously fr liam Morris’s circle. As toe his caustic asides about too: years went by these interests who did not share his standard’ became toe dominant theme of and above all enjoyed his coa his life. He gave up his busi- pany and hi« fund of witl new and devoted himself tn toe remimscences. \Vito his modis . affairs of tbe Society and of riie sports car, bulky frame an diocese of Salisbury where he trenchant humour'he became a worked one day a ^ institution ki a society not toe Diocesan Library. He edi ted ing in memorable characters. - two volumes of the Wi-Ittoire He gave new heart to tbos Records Soriety on Inclosure who diared his sense of servitt MR JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER si jnget - - --- wavdengths, also gets on to the through the top face and the blue Source: Saturc, July 13 (274, cell. Cells in common use at and ultraviolet part Of the spec- 144-5; 1978) prosant are most sensitive In tbe trum stimulates the doped glass visible range ; tho heat not only to fluoresce. The fight emitted in 15 of no use. but also significantly t-ut process is ar a wavelength lowers the efficiency of toe cell, closer to toe peak of the solar 5" Nalnrc-Times News Servlet, 1978 Ivory bought by Ashmolean A rale tenth-cenrurv walrus irorv plaque of the Virgin and Child entori inert, discovered many years ago in a Betlfnrrf jirnk shop* lw^ heen bougiit for the dcpartmcni of antiquities Ilf The Ashmnlean Museum. Oxford. The plaque, .iliicii was made by Winchester cruiuunen. has been on loan to the •nusciim since 1956. The price paid for it was £35,250. Medal for violinist Mr Iain Kteg. aged 20, a violinist frvni Clydebank, won ttre 1978 Ci-'d Medal C^mpctiucu at toe . Guildhall S choc I uf Music and I Drama iu London yc«crday. iNttmiJiLVIiS iHAI Church 1 . public wclcbnii-rf; HC. B.AO: Jll. ll. "“Xu 1 ?™ ■V h3 Sf ,,n - a’-■lo. -Sfjy^-t. Duval. Hainnion Court ™'s« 1 ijutfle Wolconii'd <: HC. B.jil. Ir-- S A: M. 11. Hvn.iy S»uri b, r. A. T5£- 4«V -Jll ‘Bali-MOw I ; E, 3..-.0 iPnnecll In o uilnorl, A. Rejoice in Iho ijird aiway (Purcrtl i. * * ,n ..ALL 11 ALLOTS HV THE rOWCR: SwMdfeo!!!?; B,C VMma IM ALL. SAINTS. Miniimi Sirvor.- LM. (i'L. 11 ■ J . Shnnrt. Mlsv* h^iVi-s, n CUl >K-JV.-,.. Moan: will have saddened his British friends. He was the least well known publicly of the Rocke- sr 1 -KOAS 1 -. ror.rr Lone: sm. ,1 - fc c ,lEr brothers us he was a man l- ;non,_ MLk-, ^lomini- { oF a modest and reunng dispo¬ sition and shunned ihc lime¬ light. But he was a man of strong character and intelli¬ gence and pursued a variety of philanthropic and cultural The Hon Mrs Johnston die* on July 13 in her ‘99to ^ear Sbe was Margaret Henrietta 5 . writes: second daughter of the seventi The untimelv death of John Lord WaUingfaam. She mamen Rockefeller in’a road accidcm In 1912-Mr Bethel! Godefroj O qiLim iu u"lci\nt calls i-VUJana i Grand! . ST" ROLUVBA'S rr.iiurch nf s.-at> landi. Pont Slnvn: 11 ind 3, Rev Dr J. Vrasor MrLuiVey: b.^0. n cv w. a. C^rw. CROWN CO 11 nr CHfTRGH i r.hunrn of SeoUundl Riusell flrreni, Ojvnnt Gordon : 11. IB and O..TO, Ilcv J. MiTi«r Scort. THE OILITORV. SW7 : SM. II. Mtoaftrevh; In B flu /Moan. : v and B. «-v 0 . Mai, Dnlos Ciirlsio >(jinn- anii ASSIIMPIIO.V. Wjnvlct S?rr«-l : SM. 11 rLniln. Mij*-' hn-vls .Salhcr,® '• . ,?, ND CECILIA, KlrflV ,v >p.' wn-in: SM. ll, MhAj Srtll lam I Purl, • ,j7. mV. ’*■ '* cjr - sarum mituia AU t‘* lir.-w nvobbci. •5iroir‘ S |Vr N « ,, | i;l i V ia !'. w n&'rlT inunrti S”* 1 , '{f- 1 ”; l :*'„Sw.go..l- ,, i. || Jri- 1 . ll, • $• jia>. S-ilvc tlooln.i ,i AU rr. rt«. J,. ii. i.j.Iwii * l.iiib. S'lori s-r- rr nri'XDHKri.vs. uiv i-jm imi- '■'* rnrniim utniiM. lu>rn Clniu* . S.f. Jl 't-alm'Mo-? TitSlnilli <luno ,L Cui'i l i l rU| , ' C ,' ,l f-- H . ,,lf » r n V jjuLl: I nr IWo volcw-c ‘ iPrro>| ■ "moI l,.!irtji'> <lmi9 Eu.li.arMi, u i-,. cauuM n. Tvdi- nu-i.imi.n r.Mo.-art'. Mil. HOLY r»LNirv. RriM,inr.>n Hoad, if-' *' '■? Sun-j- HC. -i- ll. 13. i C, M» (,r °" 1 '. L ' ■»•••■*> LHC-. Rev HOLi- TrUNrn'. I'unce Consort no Hi. HC. :i.GO. i-j. j: \i. u. SI AIJIAN'IS. flolljom. LM. S AOd J|»<f uni: SM. o.Su: HU. 11, MIski O quani oTtfrio.-nim (Vhxar'ai. Choir of SI John. VancoUinr: B'Uim of Plvnrtra. sr bar rtfOLOMEiv - the - greit WtlOHV t AD S1331-. HO. 9: >1. IV 'GilMwav ihuni. A. Ttoj’ word is j Untom * Purcell >: me Rrctor. c. t.r.o . Gibbons. Shorn. A, Otnncs arnica iT-rV lfir Rncinr, MO. T.JO SI nniDC-S, nrci Strcri; Hi:. Ghoul >1 and I'urhtMVt. ll. R*v Vai- laue aoiiiton: Cior-,I Evritaong. nSi: Ih-rheml.m- Dcwi Honan sr GEORCC'S, Itanriver Sati.tr" cnunon oi oL'ii r_iDv. s< Juim's . Wmi.l ■ s>| rLdiini. [it. 1 KSSI7N L'STrAm.i.v om.-ircii : it a:n. u,4rnii».« bol« fl.ri-.lj ,nJ hu-iun- »Ms. IYJ Palate i.urdena terrace. Kelt. iTj.;lnn. 'TMC JtNUII- CJIHMCJl. I "Win S , r»;ci: lla'.-t. ..ill, R.30, 10. II. Mina Ijtln. L.ia,. a ic»: Noun. r*ih*p JoUn Traci'. II sj. "retihoiic SMuAilo CfcNTTlAL HALL. WiuttBilnsler ana/v-o. Bev K. Wjintits, KlrliiSWAY HILL. WC ill'TSl Lon¬ don MlMiont : ll and »i.o0. Bar Lord borv-r. CITV TEMPLE. Holbftm V>?4UCt : II 3ii.| «.atO. uov Dr B. Juharuan. iV&STMIS'iSnill nuel:ln«. ham C.iii* : 11 and O.30, Bev T. Omn .lf‘.‘ni. lffiSLCVS CIIAPPL, m-cllni al Si 'larMn *. Lu.’jdtr Hill II. He. Be-. Dr N. ADrn S'-RwhliUr. Bouwens, who died ■ id . 1942 . Two of their, three sons we« killed .iu action hi the Second World War. She 'married secondly, in 194S. Mr Cyril ; Fabian R?tcliff Johnston, wht died in 1958. "Brigadier' James Carr, CB& .. Commandant of. . ihe Royal causes with determination and School of Military Engineering, success. 1962^5, and a former ADC..to He was a judicious and Sis- tbe Queen, died on. July-12 at criminating collector of oriental his home at Selscy. : .... art: of Impressionist pictures ; and, btierly, rf earlv American a-. paintings: and at his home he '-■OrrecilOnS always disr'.ived a smfl num- The appreciation of Sir Deny* Pape which appeared’in yester¬ day's issue should have heel* attributed tn Professor Colin Renfrew. her of c.vquisite objects. He was a keen observer of British r-ffeira. and a warm and candid friend of this coumn - . Much sympartly mil be felt for his wife Blanchette, who shared all his cultural interests and is herself a collector and Chair- Professor W. D. ChestenUan, FGS; FRPS, whose obituary mail of the Museum of Modern a ,^ e .f ed Art in New York. details misplaced and others incomplete, graduated at Bristol -j, t _ University. . ITe worked , 111 Leslie Ashby MacDonnefi, industry.and at the AdmiralfTj CBL, who died on July 4 was and was later ’ Professor uf managing director of Moss Em- Physics at . the University «« pires 1959-69 and rendered Hongkons. He joined ’the sl 0 ,“ services to .-several imponant of the: University of Bath lD . Service Charities. 1066 . iV THE: TIMES’.SATURDAY JULY'IS 1978 15 PARLIAMENT, July 14, 1978, -rrtv. AfTniremnns .. lhat. In any event iho law on Haase O\^. 0JS ^ D . .... ; .obscenity was in Hopeless con- ■»jps .jvoliiu-lie under, -a '^gra ge— fusion.■ • * , UjnsicrO- if •*«£j 2 ThE Bn * fr**** 11 fWId porrio- Protactio q of Children Bar m jk graphy -and chfld prostitution. was present ftnn wwdtf d..*» Sbvious. ^^nnniosratrfwto increasing . 3ow ,on s would It be before E ^K.£ ) S?^hMren Sir E^oartJ ttie-WflKams Committed reported ? numbers^ofc ^ £.% Publishers were'awaiting me Gov- 52?iGSfiSuK i3S crnmcnt’S reaction, and If they ..-knovr --nothing would be done JJjeP V lords amendments ^ COI *^^nf>nt hail fn- 1111111 * at report was received and iL^fSL'SSJdKS acred on they wold have a free ffS 'rffSce^u ^ilBH indecent run. It.was : a Wllion-doUar Indus- JJJSiJoSS a child Sod to 1 jdis- • *»y »«* pornography was an mter- P™“ 2 KP i *J 1 „„ roWv-nhntrieraohs. national ■ crime racket. Having BnS^ov^aii satiated the adult, pornography *» the, publish- market they were moving towards gSX'JStoSS-^Stfd&E- PornosnplW. Zr in ’connexion with such photo- s r in connexion iraphs an offence. He said his amendment bad *ree- purposes—-to ■■ expose the Sneis of the -ML extend the irea of protection for - child re n , ind to probe tiie. intentions of *e Government should the B ill go Sirough in'its present form- -- He said the public were led to jelieve, largely by . the. *neaja, hat the BUI would put down -hfl d poroogrophers. As *“* second reading approached MPs jrere inundated with letters from ■onstituenis, anxious parents, teachers, churchmen, ana social workers urging them m that a vile and fntiiy. trade which required the sexmd .exp oim- don and corruption of children eouW be crushed. - • Unhappily' the Bin itl its present form would do no such, thing. Clause-.1 as amended by the Mr Zan MBcardo (Tower Hamlets, Bethnal Green and Bow. Labi said anger had been expressed over the BUI' at one point but this was be¬ cause some were willing to hare a rubbishy BUI without there being any opportunity, of discussing or amending jt. The Lords had shown what .a hopeless. Bill it originally was be¬ cause 'they bad made, such sub- tantiaj changes to it. Peer had done a great service. He was not tire greatest admirer of a second cham¬ ber and bis remarks did doc mean one was needed.. The only reason the Lords was required to do the job was because the Commons was too lazy, cowardly, or incompetent to do ft own work. Mr Michael Alison (Barkston Ash. C) said chat the danger to children was tiaeir involvement in- the cor¬ rupt world of adult exploitation, and ir was that world, lying behind Lords amendment, making . (T - an - -__ dwe to take" or permit to- be die, pfapeoyaphs qnd texts, which taken an indecent photograph of legJstatioa.had to reach, i child, to distribute such .photo- Over-kill rather than undcr-kill of children actually involved in defendant's reasons for possesion the taking of such photographs,. or showing of pbotossnphs.. - ind drat was-a step forward. But It was -Inexplicable that the Bill Meat no farther. It* was blind to the reason why such photographs, were taken in'- [be first place and the - clangers involved to a far larger- number [>f children. ;Erery child'in the Lind was possibly at -risk.- ; For. those who had studied -the . prob¬ lem in the United States and this country-aild that:, the .captions accompanying such photographs and the textual material they £Hu~- snared were generally more Miss Josepbine Richardson (Bark¬ ing, Lab) said she was still not clear on the tiefinitioai of the word “ Indecent and was concerned they should not provide a sort of catch-all situation wfotre people who innocently took photographs of their children, for instance on the bench, would be liable to prosecution. - * ft might be said that it would be left to the Director of Public Prosecutions to decide whether to initiate a prosecution, but that explicit, degrading, and torropdng might'not have prevsnted accusa- Sb the photographs themselves." Ko '"" —■*“ *'~ h *- - He had no doubt some clever .tiens being made, perhaps publicly. said lawyer would argue that.,-Photo-; graphs of nude- children,- caught' under this Bill, were not -indecent. No ftwy.er could .ar&ub so “con¬ vincingly - when. the" photographs. were used in conjunction with' a; .text - which - was deliberately ' . designed nor only to .encourage - *’-^perverted adults, to seduce , and' d'econupe children bnt to encourage l-ur;- » children who had been corrupted; proj^lbTKtace' others. , fT -The! number of -children at risk or uae courts i '"Tronr-this vile trade was tnflnitely -was legitimate. __greater than the number who-' There were major problems In wire photographed. Jt nilght. be : 'attempting to tackle texts and he ' 1 ^argued that the text accompanying had not attempted to reform the niC -«JCh photographs could be caught- obscenity laws which was a -* ; under-til* ObScene Publications matter for the Wfltiams Com- i ,v [-Act. . There was ho certainty' «C ntittee. Bexley heath. ■ C) said tirre “modest finger In - the dyke'* Bln was Intended as an iuerlm measure until the Williams Com¬ mittee. reported.' 'It would hot have been satis¬ factory to attenipt to- list in the Bill every conceivable use of such material. It would be extremely difficult to formulate evidence with greater precision so they mupt leave it to. the good sense of the courts to'detenmoe what Mr Michael Neiiheri lHavering, jtomford. .'O said Sir Bernard Braiue had raised serious doubts In 'hii mind. If people were moved-'to anger by the original revelations on this matter, and If they had; been reassured by the passage of this Bill, meir anger would turn to outrage- if it was found'subsequently that there was a loophole and these people were stiU getting away with promoting their Efithy trade. Mr Brvnmor John, Minister of State, Home Office tPontypridd. Labi said since the BiU’s. second reading there had bees frequent discussions, between . the Home Office and the sponsors at offi¬ cial and ministerial level. He commended the Lords amendment which .bad streng¬ thened and made more effective the first clause. He hoped the House 1 would give it its hlessing. At Ae moment Tor those docu¬ ments' which were themselves obscepe the Obscene Publications Act 'applied. Where material was Imported, under Customs legislation it was liable - to seizure if it satisfied the less stringent rest of being indecent. They were talking in the clause about indecent photographs, and the purpose of the Bill was to outlaw them. Tf they were indecent prosecutions..could and should foiow. Although words could make worse whar a photo¬ graph illustrated Sir Bernard Braine’s amendment would not serve tbe purpose that some MPs seem to think it would. hTe photograph the said) is tbe centre of this Bill and fhe indecency or otherwise of ir will be perfectly well understood from the content of the photograph, .and that includes al the surround¬ ing. material. Although he could- not guarantee what smart lawyers might do. the Bill was* the best that could be put on the statute book. He preferred the wording for the defence of distributing, show- -ing or: possessing photographs as “ legitimate reason ” because that would include the use of such material in psychiatric treatment. As Lord Scar-man bad said, it was a matter that could'be safely left to - the courts and juries as a matter of common sense. Nudity was not indecent, and was covered by the clause. The amendment was withdrawn- -tOher Lords amendments and new clauses were agreed. Lords amendments to the fol¬ lowing Bills were considered : Rating (Disabled Persons) ; Local 1 Government; and Consumer Safety. Hearing Aid Council Act 1%8 (Amendment) Bill con¬ sidered on report add adjourned. Civil Liability i.Contribution! Sill, Chronically Sck and Dsabled Per¬ sons (Northern Ireland) Bill. Industrial and Providanc Societies Bill, and Import Of Live- Fish (Scotland 1 Bill al) passed remain¬ ing stager.. Merchant Shipping (Prevention of Pollution 1 Bill. Films Bill, Liquor Prises Bill read a second time. House adjourned. 4.43 pm. Law Report July* 14 ;1978; Chancery Division Court of Appeal Burnley Borough Council v England and Others Before Mr Hugh Francis. QC, sit¬ ting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division. A bv-law nf Burnley Borough Coun cil prohibiting any person front--cnusiTig any dog belonging to him or in _hjs charge to enter nr remain in" specified pleasure grounds, other -than a guide dog in tiie charge of a blind person, was not manifestly unjust or an oppressive or- gratuitous inter¬ ference with the rights of others which a reasonable council would not countenance. His Lordship, so held -when bo ordered injunctions against two •doji owners. Mrs Mavis Thornton and Mr Frank Clifford restraining them Irom- farther breaking the by-law. Mr Kenrick G. Spencer gave an undertaking in the same terms. Mr Eric Goldreln and Mr Brirvn Leveson For the' council: Mr Peter Latham for Mrs Thornton and Mr Clifford; Mr Spcnccr jn person. HIS LORDSHIP - said that on November IS. '1975. Burnley Borough Council nude bv-Iaws with, respect to Its plkisure grounds in exercise of powers conferred on Ir by the Burnley Borough Improvement Acts, 1871 apd 1S83. By-law 6 forbade a per¬ son from taking part in a pleasure ground in any meeting or proces¬ sion or public discussion without the council's prior consent. By-law 15 prohibited a person from causing any dog belonging to him or fn his charge from enrering or remaining in" any scheduled pleasure grounds, other than a guide dog in the charge of a blind person. There were 33 scheduled pleasure grounds extending over about 141 acres. The disputed areas included Scott Park. Thomp¬ son Park and Queen's Park and the middle area forming part of Sycamore Avenue play area. The by-laws did not have effect until confirmed by the Home Secretary. The proper procedure laid down in section 236 of the Local Government Act. 1972, was Followed. Notice ■ of intention to apply for confirmation was put in the Dirrnley Express and the Bum- lep Evening Star on November 19, 1976. A copy of the by-laws was open to public inspection at the council’s offices. The advertised notice sated that objections to the confirmation of the bv-Iaws might be made by letter to the Under Secretary of State. The notice did not describe the bv-laws beyond spa ting that they were made in respect of pleasure grounds under the sections mentioned of the Burnley Borough Improvement Acts. On December 20, 1976, the coun¬ cil applied to the Home Office for confirmation. The by-laws were confirmed on January’ 17, 1977 and on January 19 the Home Office notified the council that they were confirmed and would come into operation on Feb¬ ruary I.. Earlier, on July 30, 1976, die council had said, in response to a letter from the Home Office, that tee parks and - grounds listed in the final draft of by-law 13 were comprised mainly of ornamental cardens and children’s play areas, and that there were alternative areas where the public were able to exercise their digs withirr a reasonable distance from the gardens or play areas with the exception of two areas which were deiered from the final draft. ;ei replace GCE 0-level and CSE examinations by common system ‘feasible? i.i i- By lap Bradley iii- * A coauhOH system of ex&jnra- ing at 16 plus- would be edu-' rationally feasible, a steering f ... ^rommiifee set ixp to study the . hi ^possibility has 'Concluded. - ..- L : . The .committee, under the t o.c-^baHTHansirip of Sir James Wad- Gn 5 £““k was set Tip by -the Secre- ' tary of State for Education and Science in - October, 1976. to study tbe feasibility of recom- mendations made by the Schools'- CpiEQCii; for a common exanrina- . 'f tion jpl replace the general cer- -dficate of education (GCE) O- crj :level and tfie 'certificate, of -secondary education (CSE). ■ r ; r A$: predicted in The Tirhes of i-sj^-June 7, the ^committee -says .a • ..5: " rammon system would depend • in some subjects of N. J papers; to be taken ‘ hy’candidates-of relatively high rela tively low ,ability. The- ..ig- -tnttodtictibh of a~co mmon .sys- would be likely to involve :;'r; -wire jeadsecs. in responsibility ' ;X& tor ^assess ment. of their pupils’ ,.f; c Performance-and lead to greater reliance oo alternative examho- . j T: “S techniques such .as course , a «esaaien)t ^4 Practical tests, r as on written pstpeps- w i co^nttee suggests that- > ° ew syllabuses might be intro- by .lhe autumn of 1983. laming to the first-examination ' 'i-s ? OMamm system in 1985. - ‘3* » a siimmary •’ -Committee’s report: '..is A common essence,-a means of - examinations for ■ ell for Whom. GCE O- - ; ; r 'i tSS' — E craminatioas are >'■ ™tHri ted and of awarding -- Sf® ttrtflfcateS witii the same VjT ^Uh grades on a single ^he ; ttmmittee considers such -tP/be - feasible In that- ■jj. • “Stiitioia ft the various wtiH<i that a common system can en¬ compass could enable all the otomdatts'to - be graded without the. e x a m i n ations adversely affecting their education. A common system of examina¬ tion win require a greater variety of' ‘ assessment techniques than either the 0-level or CSE exami- ations. There will be a need for greater use of practical tests and oral asses sm ent- Assessment over a period of time by the readier .--who knows the' pupil and his work was found useful In search¬ ing out skills and understanding, -not just among average and less able candidates bat also among abler pupils. Tbe committee judged that in some subjects (such as mathe¬ matics) feasibility depends upoa the use of alternative examina¬ tion papers designed to be of different degrees of difficulty-. Those 'alternatives require can¬ didates to make a choice before the examination and ta certain cases require preparation for tire examination to be undertaken by candidates in seperate groups for at least pan -of the coarse. In otner suojecis (such as biology) the evidence suggests mar a common examination, in which all candidates take the same papers or rests, although pos¬ sibly with differentiated ques¬ tions, is feasible. A common system must com¬ mand confidence outside the schools and particularly tbe con¬ fidence of users ■ of examination certificates, notably, employers, institutions of higher and further education and • professional bodies. Confidence is likely to be secured if the new system is seen as maintaining at leasr the same standards and degree of national comparability as the present exam¬ inations. The committee endorses the 'Schools Council's recommendation -that- the grading scale used in a common system should be such that die present standards repre¬ sented by tbe GCE grades A, B and C and CSE grades 2, 3, 4 and 5 should be those used on a common seven-point scale, and that there should be an ungraded category for those whose perform¬ ance does not merit a certificate. Criteria should be agreed nation¬ ally for syllabuses and examina¬ tions. Provision sbould.be made for both school-based and board- based examinations. Many teachers would want to maintain their in¬ volvement with syllabus develop¬ ment. In addition teachers would be involved with preparing the examinations for a common system. Arrangements for central co¬ ordination of 16-plus e.va mi nations should be strengthened and made the responsibility of a single body (probably the Schools Council;. Examining system : The committee concluded that a new sTrucrarc should be based on cooperation between the present examining boards arranged in groups. A group should comprise at least one each of rhe present GCE and CSE boards and should be identified with a particular area of the country. Examination certificates should be issued in the name of the group, not in the names of Indi¬ vidual constituent boards. They should be endorsed, as at present, by an officer of the Department of Education on the Secrecy of State's behalf. The internal structure of each group should largely be a matter for the group itself to determine, although ir would be necessary for the structure to take account oF the needs of schools wishing to develop their own school-based examinations. Each group should have a cen¬ tral councti representing the interests of teachers- the univer¬ sities, the local education autho¬ rities and users, including employers and parens. While, in parctice, most schools and colleges are likely to take the examinations of the group in whose area they are situated, they should be free to choose examina¬ tions from another group. The number of groups to emerge if the Secretary of State accepts the committee’s recom¬ mendations would depend on sub¬ sequent negotiations. Bearing in mind the number of GCE boards (at present, eight) and the lin ks that exist between some of them, the committee considers it unlikely rhat more than four groups of boards could be formed on a sound basis. In Wales, a single body (tie Welsh Joint Examina¬ tion Council) is already respon¬ sible for both O-level and .CSE exami nin g and it would provide the natural authority for the principality. Cost: fn 1976. the cost of 0-level and CSE examine Dons was about £ 13,5m. Had a common system been in operation that year it would have cost between £500,000 less and £3.3m more a year. The com mittee's view is that those extreme figures are unlikely to be realized in the event and that the change in annual cost wooid fall well within that range. The maximum once-and-for-all cost of changing to a common system, mostly incurred by syllabus deve¬ lopment additional to that ordinarily undertaken by the boards. mi~hr be about £500.000 a year for three years. Timing : Ir was important to end uncertainty about the future of 16-nlns examinations. In the com¬ mittee’s view the new syllabuses might be introduced by 1983, lead¬ ing m the award of the new certificates in 19SS. When groups of boards have been formed, the Secretary of State shoald set a farce: dare for the establishment of a common system. School ExiTTRinotioru. Report of the Steering Committee established to consider proposals for replacing the GCE 0-1evel end CSE exmina- tions bp c common svstem of examining (Stationery Office, Part 1. £1.15; Part 2, £3.15). Leading article, page 13 11 ;• Oxford class Msts j.'* ^ i 0 * ftmwfojg da» lists have been Oxford University. MOnfiftri'' HKTOHY and MODERN ^ , ■ * ® l EUnr " ""Widi Ct Susan L. Barrau, Gw™. ford S; M. A. Humphries. jMus. Ths T Tniunrcitrr noiic Kino’s S. Macclesfield: N. C. A. king, UBJVeKllY Q6tiS Kina. New Coll. Harrow: Lucy " McCall. St Anne’s, Cheltenham t-; Wa __J rlf HS: O. M. ■ -vo,«.uTi Parte S; D. G. ■ MfflwTT- J* U- Fettcs 6. Edin- , |“»P<.;ltaaHam ? J; F. Bromlwr. Leeds: D- n. Comlj 4 ^ St Edm H. Majwbrook tirim ®i,^2 8 “S)? ni: p - B. Hirsch. Nurun- ^^eShnlnsjer: D. J. K^ r, FC r, -g"9- WMibiBten HS: M. B. Is : Canrord S: Fiona 'Cwuti,' Doan. St ■ Hilda's, c. TutorlaJ Agency. Oxford: P. L. c- tovsu; rr. Bon. MbDpwr snsroRv and economics SrdV S P 'rf^\ Johnam,. K a D I - walker. Si p Snity Ws?-" ?■ Adanwon^ New 'coh. fcapsh ; M rs: SrsJw. ut£r - J. T. McGorran. sipaih. West Par* GS. Si Helens: C. L. Poltch. Uorc. DsTPngaA C. OS: Victoria M. SargcnU Si Anne’s, Kings HS. Warwick: M. Shaddfck. - Exeter. ChJypIng Sodbury 1 OS: J. M. Standees!!. BNC. K Edward Vl GS, Qiolmsrord: Gt M. Wynier. -ChCh. Rag by. Class Wf J. B. Child. BMC, HUtchlng- brooKe S. Huntingdon: J. H. Dow, Ball. Baynes Par* HS: A. W. Hall. Wore. EpSOttl C: H. M. J. Macnair. Wore. St Wilfrid's HCHS. FBaihorsionc; J. A. R. Pritchard. Wore. Charirr- hottso; A F. WalLho. CXTC, Sandhacli GS. EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY 'Clou 1: Wendy J. Ana ell. Sow, Ctari- - ton-lc-Wfllows b; ft. M. Lan>0i Wadh. TUanchosiep GS. ' ■ Class It: Sarah E. Anderson. LMH. Camden S: Jane M. Aallc, LMH. >tan- „ chapter HS; M» Penelope S. x. Baines. Son. Importal Con: A. h- Bcechey.. t'idi, tale worth GS: L- >- BrHTa, St'Edn H. Downside 5: haven .E. ChessoU. St Anne's. Methodist . 'Ladles'-C. W AustraUa; Kalhennc Fon- • IsuBh. Scan. Sutnon HS: J. M. Fisher. . Dnlv. Northgaie GS. Ipiiwlch: D. A. r.Utam. St f dm H. Downsric: P. ■ Hauierley. Wadh. KCS. Wimbledon. S. B. Heotkastan. Qurcn'4. Exrtrr S: SL J. Hudson. OBocn’e. St Anpurtlne s ■S. Manchester: «.• J. James, hyble. _ R MlHtarv .4c: D. J. Keeion. .Queen e. Shenfteld S; S. H. Kcwiedy. KCS, Wbrrwedon: Lwara H. Mnn La»- . man. Bt Hughes. Ileiiricna, BorneU h. Celia C. Kitzlngcr, St HddA's. Attrlenne .S M.trcus. St Anne's. MamrheMor HS ; W. S. Mefcwn.. Li al v. Dundee H =>- R, B. Millington. Wsdh. Chrlsi s Hasp: S. A. Moss. GbIV. St Nlcholn , Gb. Nonhwaad: G. V. Paacson. Unit. U«*e SFC. BUUnghtan: KjOierma _N. ScoU. . St Hilda’s. S Hampstead HS: J. C. Seion. dec. Nfcm Chester CS: Mrs Penelope J. Btmmpn-Welta. BNo. Cow- - bridge Gotnp S: Katharine J. Slow- St Anna's. Che&nl-HS: H- J. Sidk«. Nmv call, scunhird 9.* Claw ITIrK. R. Latng. Ch Ch. Hlflh ■ Wyuau be BGS: Mrs lu Raa. St Jluah '. Dtcfd Dept or Ed; Sian C. M. Thomas. < Jextts, nocdcan. Warwick Professor M. H. Miller, profe.isor of economics, Manchester Univer- siiy, has been appointed professor of economics; Dr D. J- White- house, present chief research en¬ gineer and' research manager. Rank T?yIor Hobson, professor of mechanical engineering, and Dt R. Ski del sky, head of the depart¬ ment of history, philosophy and European studies, Polytechnic of North London, professor of intcr- *tionaI studies; Bath First-class degrees ‘ European aiudies : Hi Ian' J. i'JBv. K Edward VI HS. EdghaJirei • '.Hrr_-inc M. G. Fairer. Herts & Ewri HS: J.nnt) R. M. Marmot. Ncwlands S. Maidenhead; Anna-Mar la Price. Cai- npwk GS. Buiflnew admmlsualipn : D. J. Lock. Hymondham S and Norwich Haines, Pr Henry's HS. Evesham: R. Mallby. NewVK! Abboi GS: N. J. Now- 1*1. Bristol Cadi S; N. P. Pfla^qjr. DiLnf.-Hs As and Woivcrion CFE. tngr.eorac : S. W. Joaes. H amp ion CS: A. J. Ur], woWm GS: 1. A. lar.dMy. Pr Henri-* HS: D. J. Scullcy. E.'her Ca GS: P. H. sorter. Cambridge CS: P. A. Shepherd. ChaUum Tech HS. Rolls-Ho\re Tech C: E. Al Tim. PBJ'. BnghUjn C ■ Engineer,ng wlin French : T. J. Wing. Si OUve's GS. brping-aa. MaihemaRcal studies : Alison %l. Bale. Binglw Pash Comp S; T. 1 . Mcutfe. Pengii ; s i_o?r.,-i S. A berm- '■■vth: Jov Sleeman, Utraeombc. S. Pharmacy ■ Valerie Ihjxan. Tecsdale S: D. A. Pra:er S-ju’hBaio S: Anne M. Shepherd. Kendrick S: Barbara J. Trtrtett, M'ltmslow GS. Open Mr Graham Martin,. reader in literature, has been appointed to a persona] ebair of literature and Mrs Naomi McIntosh, head of the i rise rational research division, is to hold a personal chair in applied social research. Sr c: ™Ei ! Law scholarships C-auaVS S; P. J. Masoley. Rairw»*F | . j and prizes Abbey S: J. w. RaclJiaiu. P. Symonrts C. Applied blolofly : Hoicn S. laiml, Preston SFC Biochemistry : m. c. Bird. T. Rotherham C: A, C Garrloan. Hov’SU C. Mauriuus: P. S. Jat. G. Ball our HS: I. C. Shaw, N Brcms-jra-.e HS. Applied physics : J- W. Bond. Nollhamplott GS: A. Medley. RydrhS S. Physics wUh goophv&ics : J. A. Austin. Xuica SFC. Economics ; Sarah E. A. Cannejr. Hiuimanlw Hail. Social sciences : W. D.. Locke, Latymer Upper S: Alison M. ft. Penn. Dame A. Hsrpur S. Electrical and alnetrotue «# : P J- Bwuis. Lainoon Comp S end BarWna C or Tech: s. M. Boon. Catholic HS, Stnaapore: P. P. Brinson. S:onChester Sec S and Yeovil Tech G; D. F. Bur¬ rows, Bs ms lari'* GS and N Devon C: j. But:. Fallbrook S« S; Men an Terit C: B. F. Forman. Boureivdlc S; T. 4. 1 The Council of Legal Education announces the following scholar¬ ships and prizes; Sea .-man Scholarships: 1 . £2.500. T. F\ G. Ivor;. - . LI: 2, £1.500. M. P. -H. Peoies. IT. Evnrard Vw Heyden Founda¬ tion Prues. Subject la confirmation 0 : arrar.agemsnis to enter pupillage: C. J- Greenwood. MT; A R. Williams. MT: *1. R. T. Howe. MT: and D. R. L*otJ. 'IT i.aoqt. Bnflov Low 5c*-o , arshp - S. Applah-Ampolo. GI. Cslyer preic in Law of Landlord and Tenant. Jointly- among R- G. Spencer. GT; M. T. r. Brings. LI: Eliza be in H. Ovry. MT. klnosl-y Prl-e for Draft¬ in';: A. G. L. Nlcol. MT. Prtzo for group E. Part I: No award, After confirmation, on or about June 24, 1977, the council put up notices at the entrances to the listed parks and grounds headed “Burnley Borough Council—No Dogs Allowed ”, setting out the terms of by-law 15 and stating that an offence against the by-law was punishable on summary con¬ viction by a fine not exceeding .£20- . ... ** The notices caused much distress and anger among dog owners in Burnley, many of whom then' learnt of the han for the first time. There was much pubhdfy (n the local press. The by-law was opposed bv the JBurnlev branch ft Pro Dogs (a registered Charity concerned wirh the health of dogs and with preserving and protecting the public from nuisance by pro¬ moting high standards of respon¬ sible dog ownership) of which the defendants were members. On the afternoon of Julv 26, 1977. a large crowd, without the coundi's consent, proceeded tftroutii Scott Park, accompanied by newspaper reporters and photo¬ graphers and a large number of children. Many of the demonstra- Tors, including the defendants, - were accompanied by their dogs. At a meeting on Julv 28. rhe Bdmley Dog Owners Action Com¬ mittee was formed and the defendants were elected to it. On August 8, a petition object¬ ing to the ban, signed bv 3,000 residents, was handed to the councii’s recreation and leisure committee. The chairman nf the Burnley Dog Owners Action Cnmntlrtee addressed tbe com¬ mittee, which however decided to . recommend to the council that no change should be made in the by-law* His Lordship said that he was satisfied that the defendants took part in arrangements for a walk with dogs through Thompson Park on August 18: The council, hearing of that, claimed an in¬ junction against the original seven defendants (aB members of the Burnley Dog Owners Action Committee) to restrain them in effect from committing breaches of by-lafrs 6 and 15. and from encouraging or inciting others to do- so. On September 1 Mr Justice Slade granted interlocutory in¬ junctions against all the defendants. On the evening of August 15, the planned demonstration took place. The crowd, some shouting “ To hell with the borough council proceeded through Thompson Pdrls', many accom¬ panied by dogs. The defendants did not take part. Tbe Home Office was bombarded with letters of protest against the dog ban from Burnley dog owners. On the first day of. the trial, it was announced that four . defendants would not be defend¬ ing the action any further, and that they would give undertakings: Mr Latham argued that bv-law 15 was void on -the ground of un¬ reasonableness in so far as it re¬ lated to Scott, Thompson, Queen’s Parks and the grassed area of the Sycamore Avenue play areas. The point was also taken that the confirmation of the by-law was the result of a mistake on the part of the Secretary of State, or of a misrepresentation on tbe part of the council, as to the nature of the three main parks, in as much, as the Secretary of State was led to believe that the parks consisted mainly of ornamental gardens, children’s playgrounds or S ila yareas and areas appropriated or sport—eg, tennis or bowls. whereas they consisted largely of open grasslands with scattered trees. It was argued that the by- ' law was therefore voidable at the Instance of any taxpayer. His Lordship said that on July 7 he had spent some hours in Burn¬ ley taking a view of the relevant areas'.' None of the three’ parks was very large—19.5, 26.75 and 27.25 acres. Each was a..beautiful park and Well maintained. ’The description “-open grasslands with scattered trees ” conveyed nothing ol their real beauty. Mr Mat' <ck, the council’s recreation officer, who had been responsible for the management of the parks for the past 23 years, rightly-described them as being mainly ornamental. Mr Mattock had spoken of foul¬ ing, damage ood -annoyance. Parents, he said, expected to-be able to allow their children to play freely on grassed areas ; children’s clothing might become ‘ fouled ; toxicara cards had received, publi¬ city in recent years. Dogs dam¬ aged flower displays and dog urine could cause damage to specialized areas like bowling greens. Small children could get knocked over by over-excited dogs. ' Dogs had caused problems by running over the finishing lines on athletic track*. Tbe defendants had said - that by-law 15 was unreasonable. Tt should have been limited to, for instance, ornamental gardens, chil¬ dren's playgrounds and sports areas. A toed ban caused grear hardship to elderly people. Mr Ernest Broadley, who was 68 , lived in Coal Clough Lane, a few hundred vards from -Scott Park. He visited it three doses a day with bis little mongrel dog. which he described as “ part oF bis life He liked to visit his friends !□ the park, but tbe alter¬ native areas were -not suitable for him because either he had to walk up a bill—he had angina—or they did not possess the natural amenities of Scott Park. It hhd also been said that the ban contributed to serious Inroad into the traditional and long-en¬ joyed liberties of dog owners. Among other reasons given were that no expert evidence of health risks caused by dog excreta had been given and that the by-law did not conform with Home Office policy with respect to the banning of dogs from parks. The role of the court in such a 1 context was explained by Lord Russell in Kruse v Johnson ([18981 2 QB 91) : “A by-law b not unreasonable merely because particularly judges may think that ft goes further than is prudent or necessary or convenient . . . [elected] represenotives may be trusted to understand [their elec¬ tors’ own requirements better than judges.”! The by-law banning dogs was not per se unreasonable, but sucb a by-law made pursuant to speci-fic powers could still be in- viJad jf it could be said to be so manifestly unjust or oppressive that no reasonable council could have made it, for instance a by¬ law directed against dog owners with red hair. By-law 15 was therefore valid, and the council was entided to appropriate relief to ensure its observance. There would be per¬ petual injunctions against Mrs Thornton and Mr Clifford and appropriate undertakings would be accepted from Mr Spencer. Solicitors: Sharpe, Pritchard * Co for Mr Brian Whittle, Burnley ; Bind man & Partners. Dominal Securities Ltd v McLeod Before Lord Justice Megaw, Lord justice Browne and Lord Justice Shaw Where a rent for a furnished __ flat was registered inclusive of “* rates under Part"VI‘of the Rent Act, 1968, and subsequently by tiie provisions of. the Rent Act,- 1974,. became •“ deemed ” to be registered under Part-IV of the 1968- Act, which provides for rent ' to be registered exclusive oF rates, the inclusive figure was not 'converted into an exclusive figure so us tb entitle’the landlord in effect to recover the rates from the tenant twice over. (The effect of the 1974 Act was to extend, tb furm'shed ■ tenancies (Part VI) the same' protection as afforded to unfurnished (Part TV) tenancies.) The Court of. Appeal siloweil an ape-ti by Mr W. S. McLeod, who lives in a. flat in.-Essendine Road, Mai da Hill, London, from the judgment of- Judge Leslie at Bloomsburv and '- Marylebone County Court on July 1,' .1977, in favour r r ‘’•■‘ landlords, Dominal Securities Ltd., Mr Andrew Barm for Mr McLeod : Mr Derek Wood, QC> for Dominal.' LORD JUSTICE MJEGAW -said ' that Mr McLeod went into occupa- . tion of the fiat originally under a three months’ agree men from May 13, 1372. The flat was furnished. Hence at that date it was not within Part IV of tbe Rent A-ct. 1968. Tbe agreed, ren was £81.90 a month. The landlords agreed to pay the rates. -So the provisions as to'rent was what was.called “in¬ clusive ", because the amount of the rent included an element for tbe reimbursement of the land¬ lords in respect of their liability to* pay the rates. On September 6,'. 1972. the ‘Westminster Rem Tri¬ bunal, on an application under .Part VI of the 1968 Act (the part . relevant to furnished tenancies) fixed the rent for the fiat at £52 a month, reducing it from the con¬ tractual figure of £812)0. The new ' rent was duly registered under Part VI. Although not expressly saying so, tbe tribunal must Have assessed the £52 on the basis that • the contractual rent included rates - and that the new. rent would so remain. . . • The contractual tenancy, after. renewals, expired on June 13, 1973. Mr McLeod remained. ,in possession. There was no sub¬ sequent application by Dominal or 'Mr McLeod to adjust the registered .rent of £52. Dominal continued to pay tbe rates. On August 14. 1974, the Rent Act, 1974, came into operation. Bv. section 1 the tenancy became a' protected contractual tenancy. On August 18, 1976, Dominal gave Mr McLeod nodee to quit. . He - thereupon became a protected, statutory tenant. On October S, 1976, Dominal brought the present- action against him'. The claim with which the court was concerned was Dominal’s assertion that since September 19, 1976, when the notice to quit had expired, they had been entitled to recover from Mr McLeod what they had paid and would pay in rates, in addition to their admitted entitlc- meztt to tbe rent of £52 a month. They founded their claim on section 5(1) of the 1974 Act: “ In any case where (a) immediately before the commencement date [of this Act] a dwelling is subject to a furnished letting and a rent is registered for that dwelling under the relevant Part [VIJ of the Rent Act [19681, and (b) on the commencement date that furn-, ished I acting becomes a protected ' furnished tenancy by virtue of section 1. .. the amount which is so registered under the relevant Part of the Rent Act [196S] shall be deemed to- be registered under Part IV of that Act as .the rent for the -dwelling-house which is let on purr tenancy, .and that regi¬ stration shall be deemed' to take effect .on the commencement date."- Part IV of the 1%S Act dealt with the registration of the fair rent for unfurnished premises. It contained provision for the ascer¬ tainment of such rents by -the rent officer or tribunal, and such rents . had to he registered under Part JV. Sectirn 47 of rhe 1958 Act provided.: .“ ... (2) Where any ratei . ... arc borne by. tiie land¬ lord . . ., the amount to be regis¬ tered under this Part of this Act as the rent of the dwelling ho use shall be tbe same as if. the rates were not so borne; but the fact that they arc so borne shat] ha noted on the register. (3) Where subsection (2) above aprfics, die amount of the rates for any rctttnl period, - ... shall be recoverable, without- service of any notice of increase, in addition to the sums recoverable from the- tenant apart from this subsection. By reference to section 47 (2) and (3) Dominal asserted that what bad hitherto been an inclu¬ sive rent had'been -converted-'by statutory provision into an exclu¬ sive rem, so that Mr McLeod had now, unless and until be managed to .ake some corrective action, to -pay -a rent which had been cal¬ culated as including rfiimburse- menr of Dominal Cor rates, and also to pay them the amount of the rates. • ■ .. The purpose of sectioch 47 (2) and f3) in [heir original context, applying-to unfurnished tenancies, was tiie sensible purpose of ensur¬ ing that, if tiie landlord was re- sponsible for paying the . rates,- it. s'Tould 'not be necessary to-have a " fresh figure agreed or assessed Tor the fair rent -with a change in the registration every time there was a change fn tbe amount of the rates payable. So it was provided that the rent to be assessed or registered should ignore tiie land¬ lord’s UabVlty to pay this rates. ' The provisions off .section - 5 of Jhe 1974 Act were transitional provisions relating to tenancies which bad begun before Augtst 34, 1974. There were other pro¬ visions in respect of post-1974 Acr lettings by vrfacb the method of dealing' with the liability for rates in the registration of rent should be the same as it bad been for non-Furnished lettings under Part IV of the 1968 Act. . • ■ hi his Lordship’s view, section 5 (1) of tbe 1974 Act was not inten¬ ded to have, nor was properly to be construed as faring, the effect for .which Dominal‘contended. All that it relevantly said was that .the amount registered under Part VT of the 1968 Act should be deemed to be registered under Part IV of the 1968 Acr. Utene trasi nothing to say that the £52 was to - be treated as being something which in fact ir was not: the lesser amount which it would have been if tbe rates had not been borne by tbe landlord. Lord Justice Browne delivered a concqrriag judgment and Lord Justice Sbaw agreed.. Solicitors: Mr Paul Boateng. Paddington Law Centre ; Kaufman, Kramer & Shebsan. This SummeqThe SundayTRmes invites youlo gettoknowBritHinbetter. Aa all-lhroti^i-smnmer series shows you the Great British Countryside in away you’ve never seen itbefore. Each week, contributors like SirJohnBefjeman, James Herriott and Chris Bonington will open your eyes to the unfamiliar delicts of Britain’s landscapes and waterways, forests and farmlands, country cottages and country crafts. The joys of summer in fee country...start sharing them this Sunday. Sunday isn’tSundaywrthout The Sunday'limes. The GreatBritish Countryside ‘ THE SUNDAYUMES ’• \ J 16 THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 Stock Exchange Prices Equities edge ahead f H M fii at Til P- m ul UI th M bi as ai M st th th ui CJ ai m Si Li ot Ul R w sc la to u; sr to G al re fo bi ta¬ in p: st • ui at ta dt ur si¬ lt m in. S' Hri ar ’ te Br; nt H-' pr tii Sc ca pa wl fu ot: [VI T\ it sti ra . St ba wi lo- vf. - in su ib ur sc tii ac of in di Bi rh re m F Di St re Rt Ei th si' m ca th si at Tl Mi 1 J M VI if «r « M' Hi Hr JG M. LI- pti m Hr IT. Ml 1 nr 'j ACCOUNT DAYS: Dealings Began, July 10. Dealings End, J-uly 21. 5 Contango Day a July 24. Settlement Day, Aug 1 $ Forward bargains are permitted on two previous days 1977.78 High Low Stock Int. firwn oWr Boa. ■price Ci'w Yield Yield HaffEHTCNIK IQO 1 ! 90»bExc 6 5fe 1878-78 W«* ftg 8.048 0=83 107 9»* THIS 1» 1073 J01* 11-338 9J» 37* MOjiTftl* 3 r » 1979 «S .. 3.137 8=33 98* 83* Elec 4*fe 1971-79 96* .. • 4.4S3 7=04 J(WH|» SS'sTreaj 10*fe 1979 100*, ft, 10480 10=79 97* Hi Elec 3*fe 1976-79 55* .. 3.831 8-7® Juft 8n**TrrasCnvB<*-1M0 9ft ft, 9=3419=70 Juft S?* Trees ftfe 1080 07* ft» 9.7U 30=^ to KM. Tress 5«jfe 1P77-M9J* ,, 3.733 7.04? ps* apufww' su*. urr^oow* .. #.ar* sot JI2*, 96* Each ISfe 1990 -UHUii-t* 12=37 LJ .138 308*, 92* Trcav IftfeJBSl JOOUu’V 1L4HJA.IK MS TTV-nTrejs 3**, J979-6190 •** 3.888 T.SM 104 M»uTreu We IMt K* ft* 10 .11713-328 sty* 9i“i*a*cn 6*r,jsn 63* ♦* e=wn.<io UIPii toSiExeti .JSfe-1583. S3* irft* SUMO 11.3*0 P2S «* Exoh 1B81 88* ft 3.478 B.1I2 1 Ill’ll 96* rich 32Vr 1W1 103* ft* 12=34 13.477 100* S3* Trek, Wr JMW-S2 9£«*i ft* 9.1 W 11.017 93* 72* Treai IMS MS -ft 5.5® 8J46 lifts 101* Trees 34*1’ 1W2 S3* SSn lb rr«M SSfe 1983 ioi* si* esch w« tyc S«Uu 86*1 Escb 8 V'. 1B83 ‘ ?7* 79* Each Sfe 1*** 314* 9U> Trcae. 12feJ993 301* B9* Trt-as We 1683 95 72* Fund We ItoT-M 83* ■*«* m* 77* Trees We 19W-86 87* ft 87* ST Fuad We t9Sf-87 76* ft S3* 68* Treu 7**> liw-se so* *ft 73* 46* Trans 3fe 1878-88 63 ft 73* 51* Tfcas V* 1PS4-S8 66". ft J50* 90* Treu 13fe 1600 1M ft 93* 87* Tress BSfe !987-90 Wi ft ■* ■»* 1677.78 High Law Cmnpanf Crou DVT Ytd Price OYffMi iw T.t +4 -V0 ♦1 111 SO* Treu 31V> 1WI 93* 75* 54 FUOd Wi IMT-91 «S* JIT 86* Treaa 13*<i 1902 Bt* S3* Tit as I0 «b 19W 1 13 89* Eicft 3S*Tc 19M JIS* 84* Treu 32>iV-3693 73* 51* 'Fund V. 16S3 338 90" Treu 33*41-1993 138* 99 Treu 34**V 1*94 114* M* Pscb lSh'i 1694 <•5* «* True 6e, 1S94 J10* 93 Treu J2V ISM 10S* 4*1 13.0WU.828 90* .. B.138 1L32S »i&il 4*u 10 06111.720 SO* B.SS3U.553 89* 4S 3.744 BJTTO] 101* .. 31A37 1L800 81* •*»! 36.143 U-804 6.699 8.776 9.688 10A33 K330 1DJ66 8.S74 10.034 4.770 8.6W 7.63 10JSU UAQ111337 30.422 10-498 02.297 12.455 a. *33 10.964 ••’l 3Z.S96 13352 . . 4»* 01.77812.308 102* -*4j 12.54612.913 P9*i ■** 0227012.578 63* *>l 9.730 ILK 308* ■** 12.02712.782 316* ■+*! 33.04512-817 303* th OiSaS 12.717 70*4 ■** * 11.481 33.043 65* •** 32313812600 COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL . A —B ■ 122 77 JUB 202 42- 20 AC CVS 38 100 33* ACB Krsevch 200 S»* 33+ APV Kldyi 227 73 43 Airoasoo Bras 68 US 62 .4CTPW 112 S3 32 Pb A 05 49* 11 Add* Int <4**0 ... 382 320 Adwwt Group 2G2 .. 83 34 Aeron'tftGea S3 .. 83 42 Alrflzlsd » 11*1 . 7t4 Abo 110 -1| 187 79 .uonsfat t W 387 k .. 163 247 AlclD c-rd 148 38 S3 • Do I0*c& fjl* 1« 71 Ho 946 Cnr 8145 300 205 AlcHate lad 279 77 44 Allen K Balfour 4T 25* Allen K. G. 9-3 0.0 M L4 4.0 7J 02 k « 10 A 6.7 SA 6.4 3.0 Ai AS 3.8 32 13.7 3.8 A3 S.7 11 uu 152 5J 72 33 AO 30-3 4.6 8.8 A» 101 88 * 51* 33* t'.as 3‘, 196+S5 44* t* ■ 6.738 9.896 91* S3* Ev-rh 30**p 1985 Wi U.UM 12.383 119* 87* Treu 12*fe 1995 102* -*» 1AT07!».«« 01* «T T«u 9-fcl«S«8<J* -»* 31.67112.170 133* 301* Tre»» J5W 1998 119* 13.187 12A68 12Jlj 89* EieB 13*«» 10W 105* -J* 12-80012.740 50 32 RdmpW 3'^ 1986-96 43* . «577 9.74. 321 87* Treu 33V«* 1WI 303* 12.8M 13.749 P8* U 6 ElCh auVe 1997 8»* ■** liCT 31511 *9* 6!* Trea* 8**-JW7 73 ** 31.71011178 73* 51 TrtU Wt> 199M6 62* -H 11.07411.W8 1A3* 103* Treu 35-»r 1608 122* -* I3JS812.974 97* 93* ETfh 12'* 3998 97* *H 31Q4 32.W4 W* 86* Treaa 9*rn.. 19W 7W» -* 11.968 12J73 91*i 83* Treas 20»J* 1999 36* ■->4 12JC12.&M 43* 3T« Fund 3*V19W-04 36 4* 9.737 31013. ar* 07V Treai 9-\-20P24>« 69 ** 3UW4 11300j 103 Wi 40* Tteu Wr 2008-1248* *1* 11.7141L968 «. IV XMr TriM 7W 2012-15 SI •»* 13.068 1X10 54* 26V CcmM4s 4', 31M •** 12^29 39* 29* Mar Lo 9* e 30V 4*. 71.496 39* 36 : * C<W|V SFr 34* 4* 30J75 2«* 20* Treu 3«e .34* ■** 34* 17* Con 80 la 2V- 30* -e* 24 17* Tre4*. 2Vt Alt 73 20* WO* 44* .titled Colloids • 73 74 43 Allied insulators 73 17 ' 7* Allied Plant 23 73 19 Alpine Hides '67 330 230 Anul Met*! 330 141 37* Antal Power 340 4i 21 Amber Day 40 26 8 Amber tnd Hldsi 28 96 4L Aneltor Ckem 67 69 34 Anderson strain 60 90 4»t Ail Ida TV 'A' 80 390 390 Anglo Aster Ind 360 42' S Ang Swba Hldga 33 100 ■ 49 Applcyard 100 43* IS* .VquURIUun 'A* 43 134 86* Arlington Mir 129 73 *38 ArmlUigcSnaata 71 73 39 Armst Equip 63 94 53* An Biscuit 77 250 a Ass BOO* 78* 48 Acs Brit Food 142 71 22S a 300 41 65 370 59 116 33 02.613 t* 11186 ■r* 122163 6.70611.633 • ® 7.855 11.326 7AM 11.766 7.78411374 174 219 347 as » COMMONWEALTH AND FOREIGN W« T9*j Auat Srf,T7<0 93 .. 3.92310AS6' t»l 09V All-.I ’ 3*'.- SI-82 U* „ 87* 65* An.t 6-V BI-83 79 95 77*4 mist 7 *b 79-61 30* .. 50 90 Chilean Mixed 60 • .. T9i 41* E Airlra 5V-.. TT-83 72* 4-M 1PI Ijerman *h'.- 1910 400 K 32>1 Hunpur 4*4v 1624 50 90* 69* Ireland TVrSI-MM* -* 3W 94* Jamaica TV-cTT-aei* 390 S3. JJpan An 47» 1910 380 -6 SPs 63 ' Japan «*.63-W6e • .. 78* 65 Kens* . S'* 75-83 T8* ?» 69 Malaya 7J-S2 84* ■ .. 6>\. 76-80 M* 7**.' £8-63 86* .. 10.79111446 7>i r e 83-86 "2* .. 9.177 11.040 IF.7W1 88 .. 6.73711.308 G-v 7331 58 .. 6.787 11.440 AO 142 9-Ml 81* S Z 79 51* .VZ . m o«* ns 91 7* X Rhd si 74 Kym JM 143 Peru __ 9Mi 82 SMfrlcg »-V W-61 94^ 70 36 S Rhd 2<l r e 63-10 5L 20 5 Rhd -«vt e;-n43 4* 8 Rhd 6<* 75-6181 45 snaniih so ■ 87 Tang 5V-. 7B-ffi 80 60 , Uruguay 3>i7« 96>i 7.947 10.4391 36 ■■ - 1 3* 6 538 1155511?? 8.836 11.619 *1“ G3MU.no! 53 S3 15 65 7.14813231 LOCAL AUTHORITIES •27 an*’ LCC 84* 64* L C C 93 72 LCC ■ AT* 62 ICC 781* 53* 1. C C 47* IIVLCC 7« 52* L«'.C 75* S3 QIC. 3W| 82 G LC - 187* 93* G LC 311* 61. OLC M* TlFi Coft, 97* 69* Ag Ml 77* Ml* Ag Mt 73>i BZ* AB Ml . 91* 73* Beirut 39»i W* BrlBhul . . . 99* 85 Camden ■G*' 1 - 77-79 97* 71* 73, Croydon «*'r 78-81 95* 991, 85* Ed In 77-79 98* :»3 80 Ulaagotf 9V, 80-82 91 700 m C.m-ICIT SV'e 76-78 69V 38r 1720 =J er.. 8083 79 PV. 77AI 84* 5>,«e 82-84 75 5*^85417 67* 6<* 76-70 SB* GW 8566 86* 6V* 90-62 66 **-* 8082 93, 4 13,'a 1982 101* 33i*. 1983 100* • 61,4.8042 83V TV*. 81-64 W>, TV«e 91-83 *7* GV* 85-90 65* 6V* 77-80 89* Pl'e 74-79 97* 4* ** ?V 33 437 .. 6.3=7 10.774 6506U.4S7 7.64* 10 J35 8J65 11.450 6J8I 10.351 10.135 12.128 30.65112.406 10 J»] 1.745 12 2M II.605 32J17J2J06 7 849 12.044 9.602 12.314 31.908 13.118 30-502 JZjOS 7.28111.024 C.GB210192 6.848 30.037 7.85712-123 6607 9JT9! A'j Engineer ■as Am FUherte* 2 tP- Aaa LeLntre ISO 221 .V, 7(»l 20 An Piper 66* Au Tel -A* S3 Asa Tooling 23 Aittmtr * Mdley 48 27 AIKlnS Bros is Audlotrome =2 AoltAVthers ns Aurora Kldga 30 Auat In E. BO AutomcilTa Pd 14>c Arana Grp 133 Arery? 74 Artn BuVbrt 23S Jj.T. Ind 203 Do Did 39 3BA Grp TL BET Dfd 87 BICC 61 BuC lilt 111 BPB Ind 56 26 BPM Hides ‘A’ 42* 37* BSG Int 131 -86 BSB Ltd 3,1 129* BTR Ltd [144 TO Babcock A V 21 Bagxerldge Brk 31 3 Bailey C.H. urd St 93 Baird V. 267 65 Baker Perkins , 93 28* Bucberien * 40 24 Bambers Stoma 83 3* Barker & Dbson 11* 240 344 Barlow Band 223 100 38 Barr A Wallace 307 37 Do A 106 56* Barratl Devs 302 28 Barrow Bcpbn 29 53* Barton A Sons 59 69 Btiwlt G. ]23 29 Batb A PTand 74 34 Beales J. 80 66 Beatsoa Clark. 185 25* Beau/ord Grp .-IS Beckman A. 372 Beech aril Grp 3®* Bejalh Grp 51 Bemrose Carp 22* Bent, 3 tT» 50 19 37 P3 « 84 39* “* 161 207 -J. J!5 SS 6 52 *1 107 tl 130 —2 77* t* 233 a +3 '51 41* 96 asi +4 132 4* k .. .7.0 3.7 JiS .. iso io.i 4.; .. 3050 13-9 .. .. MO 0.2 .. +5 31.2 7.7 S.0 • .. 6-8 14.0 9-9 .. 4^3 0-1 0-2 41 2^ 1L6 33-3 ■rl. 03 8.T 35 .. 3.1 7.1 OB .. 3.0 3,017 3 .. 34.0 7413.4 .. 8.0 9.7 3.7 .. 3.0 7.6 5. .. 0.0 3.0 49 .. 83 9.3 49 4*t 4.7 6.3 8.8 .. 8.T 89 3.6 “10 42-3 1A 6.0 +3 99a 09 K1 “1* 3-3 99 AO -»1 13-T 9J 9.3 .. 09 8.2 U.L .. 3.3 f-0109 .. 41 U M .. 6A it 7A .. 39 3.4 6.7 .. 89 7.6 3.6 .. 4.8 11 1 4.0 41 4.6 7.0 89 • 79 49 7.1 .. 4.6 7.7 09 *0 99 .8.4 7.0 Tl 39sl0912-2 .. 36 3.0 5.4 .. S.6 119 5.6 .. ' .. 4.7 .. 2.0 8 0 7.5 .. 8.0 8.9 49 • .. a.B 5.0 49 -L 21 29 8.7 “* 2.7 4.2 79 .. 89 39 9.4 149 6.3 3.0 22.6 79 5.7 3.4 09 33 S.t 73 0.0 20.T 89 203 S3 73 S3 119 53 49 43a 83 8.3 39 79 4.0 7.3. 7.5 69 22.7 4.5 6.4 8.0 69 89 3.5 11.4 69 03 59 133 14.1 8.4 BJ 6 5 69 3.2 4 0 10.0 7 8 10E 138 54 50 155 99 90 M 2 S3 71 GQQ 93 73 146 63 37 166 69 46 74 6 uT ftS 70 73 74* Bertlfd SAW 346 31 BeriaTurtls 26 in! A X»7 22= Bulobrll 28 Belt Bros M9 202 Blbbyj. Z6 36 357 AO =54 61 36 84 323 63 ; 30 28* Bifurcated Eng 40 50 Blnn'gham Mint 73 65 Black * Edg-ui 310 32* Blaeh»d Hodga 60 15 Blaclnmcd .Mt 26 .. 30.15* 11980 ’ 5*0 1— Blagden A x 250 6.766 10 408 l;n* w* Llcerpl 33W1MI 1IU* #** 1305817.083 W 22* Met Water B 34-63 281, .. JB.94412.628 01* 76*.M 6V;-7*-0P8l* .. 7.100 12.067 *3* «1 5 I 7»e 02-84 76* .. 997813-lie 8G* 63 JC I Weo Wi 8HH 81 .. 0.01111946 93 84 Sthena 5*1* 77-76 67* p .. 5 36510980 S3 60* Swark 6W 83-38 77* .. 8.663 U948 H*I 77* Surrey 6fr 7890 61* 0.39a 11985 1077,78 HI eft Low Company Gross Dir' Yld Price Cb’sa pence <S P.E Inersunent Dollar Premloa, inpy^fjoj*^ Pretnlnm Conrerslon Factor 0.B7V3. FOREIGN STOCKS 97 40* Bayer 119 J«* 'll* CommertbanJL £171, 32* 17t, cp Fn Paris £** 62 43 £BES 13* 24* 14 FriCSHMl 124 l** 287 -1 21 34 060 H 6 T 0 487 1 >» 3 “* Fmsldrr 1* Gramcrs IP Sti Ho»eh<t 447 8 MmlecJlInl E 12- 470 Bobvci, 11.5. 602 Its BolincoEub* fl 5 4® 36 Snta Yiaroia 65 T*, Thy men-n uate i to*, " - - 05* 3*8 9=209 45 0 29 19.0 J5* D t 6.9 301 5.6 80.1 2 5 30.3 “3 139 3.315.7 26.6 5.0 34.4 .. .. 60.0 99 42 Volkswagen DOLLAR STOCKS 32* 8 * Bravari 111 ** 12 6 *H,BP Canada nt*, 3Si|, M, CanPacOrd il3>i» ll?a 6 a FJ Paso £32* 4^i 27* Exinn Corp £33 TO 20 * Hunt ■ £29* 27 10“i,Ri-] linger £25* 24* Hull Bar Oil /=:* 36<u 34>u Husk? Oil - £25* 28* 9* I M O £12 31 : i* 6 ", 1 C Inc £ 8 ’, 3?* IS* Aaiacr Alum £73 52*1* ** Mwonr-Frra iPi* . 37i« ii", Xiktuh Mmoa £14 . 291*, 70 PacUlc Pel ml £26* 2 b* IT* pjo Canadian £33* Sttl 130 -Sleep Rock ISA 3=** S* Trans can P £ 10 * 42 IT* V4 Steel £ 20 * »—• 73 While Pus 73 Ui , 7 1 , 2apala Corn £ 12 * BANKS AND DISCOUNTS 3°5. 1*3 -Vfu Dticmintt 234 • 218* Allen H 0 Rou 303 3*8 W, Allied lnrh jm .-■ JW. -lW Arb-Lauum * 1S3 3*0 .192 Cm 27* 22 * 13* n.ink America £77* 3« CICi Rk ot Ireland 308. 27 14 Bk Lrumt Israel 18 £"U 3*41 Bk Lcuml Lit TRO 374 370 Bk or SOW MO &'*5 253 Bk ol Scotland 555 34* 2I*BnksTraNT £27* WO 257 Barela)* Bank 325 * 230 315 Brown Stfipics 225 313* 196* Cater Ryder 258 ■ 2»* ITi, Cbaae Man £24i. 20* Ik, CliIcorp £16 -I 01 51* Clle* DlBcrum . 77 SO 770 ram Bk o{ Am 215 270. 113 ComBkofSyd 161 23* 13V rc De France- £22V -J 3* * PI ml Sat Fin 2 * -J - 7S, c Fraser Ans 10 * S'O, JW . GrrrardA Kat J70 33 37 Gibbs X. 42 * K7 361V r.llleri Bros 223 -i 376 55 Grtndlays Hldgs 116 ■=*3 1A0 . Gamness peal 340 S' 13 Hambreino ,15 ~j~ JC do Ord 373 110 74 Bill Samuel PI 348 a«v Hour K « »»ng 321 70* 43* Jesaef Toynbee SO =13 Its J<n«ph !_ jin . -52 .71 Keysert-iimann 52 • M 42 Xing a Sha».v,n M I'l 76 Klein bun fen 04 274 :m l| u ;d« Bank f»o 377 ?2 Merrury MVS Ul i 3"d 25K* Midland 360 •C. .13 Mlneter assets Sja, 210 3bS Xu nl Auel 217 *1 31 XalCrm a* Grp 72 224 S/5 -Vat U"mliu:ir 340 ,3V 29 r>tlnoian 141 64 43 R«a Bna 50 T,' 1 !, 144*«noyfll Ijl cm IS^k 4W 2 M Fvhroders 410 iei ISP: Scrcmibc yar 250 ^ - i M* Smith Si Aubrn 70 *50 S3 standard Chart 307 ■ 2 U* I'ninn Dln,cunt 314 74 37 WinrruM £9 “»A =31 39 34.8 e* 80.5 39 3.S “* . -* 479 3.6 8.8 43.7 3.4 239 "* .. .. .. E3.7 i313A “* . ~* ‘. 7*. . .. 31.7 4918.1 -Hi 48.2 59 99 .. 87.7 39 -* 58.1 7.0149 “* 43.7 31112 ■H .. ... -* .. .. „ “l . -* . “* . .. 35 9' 29 21.0 .. 15.1 19 389 31.7 P3 31 =9.1 9.6 S.T 11.4 9.7 4.8 153 9.9 9.7 10.9 4.0 93 49.0 2.7 32J =.7 ft* S3 0.4 2.113 4 11= 7.0 14J 1S3 3.4 12J 36.3 0.8 79 101 9.910.1 203 b 63 59 141 63 73 23.0 30.0 .. 114 4.6 113, 019 3.4 30.9 7.0 9.1 5.3 9.4 AA 10.0 7.0 ..4.7 .. 95.0 43163 1=4 Til 4.7 33 7.3 11.D 23.0 103 5J *3 3.6 39 16 2 6.9 11.9 146, 9.7 .. J4.6 83 7J 74 83 73 77U 2.4 E.l 3.0 S3 .. 12.0 5.7 30.4 •7.0 2.0 T.O 5 5 8.8 43 6= 6.4 7.1 333 4.9 3 6 3.7 3.1 S3. 22.4 a 6.-2 5.4 ... 33 91 3= -7 8.3 49 8.7 43 5.7 5.4 e2 17.4 8= 33 .. 230 0.9 9 9 .. 23 5010.0 ~*u 71.8 3.1 23= 410 373 43-9.1 .. 203 .9.0 9.7 .. 7.6 30.0 .. .. 29.3 7.4 S.O .. 34.0 7.4 S.Z .. 4.6 AT 173 “L -3 43 41 1 VO 1 » 57 19L M 43 172 63 34 38 38 3-10 148 5T • -* 113 Blue Circle Ind 243 1= 30 Blundell Perm 71 13 7* Boardraan K. O. in* 73 33 Bodycote 30 =5 17 Bonner Eng 3 =60 138 Booker McCon X.3 212 M B’sey A Juries 387 381 87 Bool H. 359 342 115 Bool* 206 97 4B Borthwick T, 49 11* li* Boulton W. 218 160 Bowxier Corp 66 31 Bowllirpe Hldgs 51 100 6 = Braby Leslie 94 76 ■«> Brady Ind 75 54 Do A 23* Braham XUUar 17 Braid Grp 81* BraithwMta 4 V, Brammrr H. 38 Bregioer 70*. Brcni Cheat Int 3*9 25 Brent Walker 5S 23 BrtcMmuse Dud ' 42 90 Brldon 08 41* 2 P* Bright 7. Grp 5P>a 49 sa Brit car Aucia 45 246 137 Brit Home Sira 167 28 so Brit Leyland 23 120 * TT Brit X.nrtbrop 81 55 31 Brii'Prlntlnc 93 '50 Brit Sun Spec 124 68<1 Brit Sugar 70* 3CPj Brit Syphon Ind 61* -** 59* 30<, Brit Tar Prod 58* • rl » 36V BritVlu 30 131, Brittains 71* 44 Brock house ltd Brocks Grp 10 Broken Hill . 810 Bronx Eng 30 Brook St Bor 89 Brook* Bond 45 Srbofce Tool 36 Brotherhood P. 129 Brown a J*tsnn 134 Brawn A Inst 96 41 385 24 33 38 '.17 49 3 74 49* 90 m 95 66 4-3 23 3 4 0.4 .. II il 9.2 1 mm 3 6 4.612.1 .. 4 5 4 5 5-2 ' .1.7 ' 6 6 4 7 .. 4 3 7 8 93 34 3 9 1 7.1 2 7* 4.6 5.2 5.9 4 2 4 4 4 3 9.3 4.6 8.6 9.= 7A 6.6 6.013.4 ■3.4 5.7 8 2 - 14= 38.2 7.310.7 34= 5 8 6= 4.8 6.8 6= 1= Jl-8 8J 3 4 5.8 5.7 22 8= T= 10.7 4= 7.4 7.T 4.6 6.5 33.9 8A 8.8 6 0 1914= 9.4 39 2 0.7 1-7 10.4 6.7 14 7 7J B-5 =.3n 4= 8.0 8.0 6= 3.9 8.6 13=12= 8.6 10 = 10 = 2.4 0.4 4= 2= 5.7 5.7 ~ 31.7 9.0 7= .. 6.4 4.3 9.7 .. S= 10= 14A .. 4.7 2.612.0 .. 3.3 3= 22.9 .. 3 8 0= 6.4 .. 9= 9= 9.7 .. 3.7 32.4 10.1 .. 3=5 8= 11.1 »= 5=33.1 ..fe .. .9.1 11= 3= 4= 97 4= 7= 8.8 7= 7=b 6= 2.6 4.6 7.4 4.4 2.1 3.610.7 2.7 2.8 4.1 X3 8.4 7.0 .. 5.8 8= 8= .. 9= 7= 17.7 “10 39= =9 07.0 2.4 7.9 4= *1 6.4 9= 12= 4* 4.3 9= 3.7 .. 3=510.4 7= .. P 9n 7= 11.8 .. 1= IJ-U-S .. 7= 7.0 5= 1317,73 High Low Company Grass Ole YI4 Price Cb’ae ponce fe P/E 72 S3 Cornercroa 65 59* 32* Cdealt .56 221* 88* Castiln R. JJ« 46 8 CoGairmtda 45 133 73 Court* inn) JO? 109 73 DO A XV 109 136 M Conrimldi 3 21 73 30 Courtney Pope « 78 .3tf< CVan de Grant 70 44* 23 Cowle T. 30 44 IS CrdlM Bldgs 17 89 2S Great Mchtrlaou S3 72 • 43 CmU Int S=, 43 23 CToollC Grp 40 67 23 Cropper J. 87 e , 309 94 ermby H*e 30L 304 43 Crowley Bids 394 k a 98 48 Crouch D. 94 -ffl 73* 25 Crouch Grp 68 61 32* Crown Bouse 60 46 28 Growth cr J. 34 k .. 6Jb 9.7 13. 4L 3.4 6= 5.1 MUM -*a M 4.0 .. 9= U 6.6 .. 9= 19 6.8 *1 11.4 8= U.O . .. 3.6 5= 8.7 .« 3= 4.9 4= .. 2.7 7= 3.4 ..a .. .. 8.6 6-7 9.8 .. 3.3 8= 8.7 3.7 9.313.4 • .. 2= 3.4 3.4 34T as Cum'ns En Cr £86 194 0=i Dale Sec me UO 23* 14 Dana Corp £21* IV, 9* Dartmouth In* IS*. 140 To* Darien a Hew 330 » 23 Dam G. 94 238 190 Pity >nt 282 640 SCO De Beers Ind 830 35 ' 21 Hunt'S HldgS 35 04* Debenbams 89 123* De La Rue 363 283 DtCCk 412 118 363 50Q 565 SI 100 378 as 143 178 64 100 84 81 105 233 Do A 402 49 Delia Meltl 69* 66 Denbywarc 65 82 De Vwe Hotel* 180 20* Dewhlrrt 1. J. 65 80 DRG 119 57 Dipiotsi lav iti 5 8 Dixon D 70 63 Dixons nmo 139 20 Plane 57 40* pabaca Perk 99 41 pom Bldgs 40 Parana Hldgs ' 43* Douglas IL V. ■** 73 SO 95 a4* IT Paw'd A MUls 2*1 250 105 Downing G. EL 232 226 SO Powty Grp 226 27 12* Drake A Scull 26* 31 34 Dreamland Don 31 39* 27* Dufay - 36 123 T2 Dunlop Bldgs 81 37* 5* Duple int 37* 87* ai», Duport 72 134 41 puraplpe Int 177 81* 26 Bunco For 40* -1 37 21. Dykes J. Hldgs T. 353 329 £=4.1. 337 128 =2* EBF Hldgs 116 “? 35 E Lancs Paper 55 . +i 22 Eastern Prod 96 -1 «J 9=14.6 • 0 6.4 8= 4= 6=22= .. 4.7 7= 5= .. 1.0 2 = .. .. 315 3= .. . .. 4.1 2.815.0 -* 67= 3= .. .. 3.9 30= 4.0 .. 31= 8=19.9 .. 5.0 5= 4= +1 35.5 6= 8.4 .. 44.6 7= 11= 3.2 9.L 7= -1 8.0 9.0 8= tS 35= -4.2 6.7 .. 16.6 4= 11= .. lfl.0 4.111= .. 7.6 10= 8.T .. S= 9.7 .. .. 7.1 4.4 23= *1 3.0 3= 7.8 ■*1 10.4 8= 9.4 el 5= 3.4 30.4 .. 3.8 5.4 31.1 3.4 2£ 6-6 0.9b 1.6 5>J 8.1 6= 8.0 T O 8.9 IV.4 8.9 8.7 0.7 4= 5= 4.6 1.7 5= 13.6 -2 17= 7.3 3.5 .* 6 7 3.014 4 .. .. 4= .. 3 9 8= 5-7 ... 2.1 3.8 13.4 >5 5 0 9.9 8.0 -T* 1.0b 8.7 6= 1977.-7? - Rich Low Company Gras Dir Tid Price CVge pence fe PE -I 43 29 22 jTidasr. 27 75 3T Jackaonx R'End 72 li* P, James 3L Ind II* 358 US Jarflnr M’Hd 2M 197 96 JanUJ. 267 46 16 Jessups Hldgs 3k 69 43* Johnson if a S3 107 27 Johnson Grp 04 482 907 Johnson Matt 437 134 36 Job nam-H lend M 90 43* Jones Stroud 06 44 21 Jourdan Z. 40 73 27 X Shoes 67 32* 23* Kalamazoo 3P* U9 38 Reiser Ind 93 84 49* Kenning Mtr Tl* 44 21 Kent M. P. 34 80 13 Kitchen Ta, lay 72 Ui 52* Kode uu 130 51* 13* K*lk-Flt Hldgs 49* U7* 65* KwUt Sire Disc SO SS 82 LCP Hldgs 66 ■ 46 29* LHC Int 38 . 135 80 LWT Hldgs 'A* 119 34 88 Lsdbrohr - 187 59 S3* Ladles Pride 59 183 70 Lalng J. 181 178 68 PoA ITS - 88* 40 Laird Grp Ltd 53 65 43 Lake A Ellis: 5a 43 31 Lambert S'wtb 40 IB 28 Lane P. Gra 57 131 63* Laponw Ind 312 133 84 La lb am J. 135 136 45 Laurence Sea It 106 106 53 Lawrence W. 90 <56 24 LaWlex 33 ITT 125 Lead Industries 3U 82 38 Lc-BasE. 41 25 15* Lee A. 21* 120 22 Lee Cooper 220 i *1 372 OO* Leigh Int 345 rl 133 £0* Leisure C'ran 130 45 27 Lesuons Grp 34 e .. 283 213 Lep Grp 240 S3- FT Leaner o.-d IS 167 TO Leirasei 142 86* 30* Lex Serrlces S2 165* 21* Liberty Ord 1ST OS 33 LUleyP.J . C. 61 30 LEnCTo/t EJIg 121 C$ .Llndunnea 191* 100 JUnfood Hldgs 39 19 Unread 40 . 22 Lister A Cd 48 79 64 Lloyd F. H. SO 9 locker Z. 79* 19* 8* Do A IS 7377 T? High Dow Compear Gross Die Yld Price Ch'ge pence fe T.T 2= 3.7 .. I 85 15 Heed Exec 3.0 U Hi® -03 Heed In: 3= 12.9 6 = j 77 * 14* Reliance Grp 6 = 2 = .. | 43 73* ReTUnee Kn!t 13.6 3= 5.41 m *6 Eesniei Coca 2.6 6 = 5.6 ! !W 172 Re:Old Ltd 7= 11= 4.6 { » l 3.9 8= 8=. 47 .. 20.6 4.7 - 8.4 J «7 .. 2.7 U U; *» .. 6=9 7.4 6= ‘-73 .. 4 4 11= 4= « .. 3= 5.0 8= 1 — .. 3= 10= 7.01 94 .. 4= £J 4=1:4* * 8.9 0.7 5J( 97 .. 3.2 9.4 9= i fA .. z= = 7=; « 1 T.l 5= - 7.0 i m -9 1.3 2= 13=! - 5 •2 3.9 4=12= K .. 8=b 9= 5= 58 .. 4.4 JL7 8.8 J 767- .. 10= 8.6 7= 1 -83 -1 1L7 T.O FJ J 79" TL 2.9 5.0 T.4 ! 436 .. 4.7 2.6 T= -7B> .. 4.7 2.7 7.4 -L 4 1 4.9 6= I ■*- ■H 5 3 10= 21.7 j 40 .. 4.9 12.0 5= 1 80 .. 3.0 8.7 4.0 1 .. 10= 9=U=; 76 *5 31.4 SJ b=;-S7 .. 7.6 T= €=‘ 35 .. 9= 10.9 6.7 | =3 .. 4= 8= 3 6 « .. 21= 7.7 5= | •*» -- 2.8 6.7 .. ■ 31= 2 J 10.4 4.7 J 303 3.8 4=' « 6.6b 4.6 17= | 61 6= 5=12.7; x 2= 7.4 6.71 *-9 3= 2= 7.0 ■ 87 4.4 5.5 5=, ::9 iS 3 - Sl ^ 43 87 •51 193 36 36 19 .. 5= 64 5= 131 .. 4.4 3= 7.6, « 69 .. 3= 5.6 63. •- 53 .. 3= 10= 2.91 72 -44 -L 13.6 9= 3.9 j *= 142 -1 *4= 10.0 6 61 -7-4 -■<*• M'dg* ."•ft 3 J P 6 .. • —0 47V Seeuricsr Grp -16 -! 0=e S3 .. ‘ ■» D j XV —2 S .1 1 L 8 8 = ' 55 SteKjUfT 35 Hrn:eai Grp 17 Benwlcjr Grp 43* Serein 37 nice 33* Ricardo £n* 37 Richards A «*U 82 ; pi Ficb'd-lTerrrll no 35 Rlimas-dsms ol 71* B«rlkara Grp 1?2 53 K -.’is-n Mci«ra 25 Kenner Hldgs 24* Do A 4:- Kcrglll Hlega -J ”o:aflei 21 23 Relapnr! *7 32 reihmns Int 'S' 51* 90 Holer* Ltd l!6 83 PanUrdgeAK JK> 49 Buvliaaor, Can 100 2= Bov siree User 3» 86 Howipq Hotels 130 84 Royal Wore* 14 Ruyco Grp 15 Puberoio 57 44 Bnghy cement 73 3s SLB Grp ' 136 ri. SKf B‘ £70* 32 Saatrftl 163 »s Sib ah Timber 7.1* 330 f sln«bury J. 2M :j* 3: Gepala 113* Ssle Tllr.ey lid Samuel H. 313 Dn A 4L Siad-rrcr. Bar 70 fiarderso: Mur Gl 27 Finger J. E. 2S 74 Stagers 74 20 Stray Uriel 'A* 77 69 Scape Grp 51 733 Schoiea G. 3. 219 41 Sooicroi 74 LE.LT. ei IT* £co: Rentable :-2 2} Scolds: TT -V 16 S3 Cco; Cnir Inr 72L 17 63 740 —2 S3 -* 42 69 123 • 34 4= 6.6 9.0 12Jb 3.7 8.7 60.1 2.613.5 4= IL* 3.7 9.7 16.1 2= 1* 3 U= 7= 2 4 4= 73= T 5 3 5 3 3 3= 7.8 8.0 6.4 10= 6.4 4= 2=14.4 6.8 fU 3= 49.6 2.6 13.7 6= 1L3 S= 80 6 1 4.0 7 2 7.8 9.1 3= 8.0 4.3 3 2 9.0 ■ 4= -.b .. 3 5 6 = 7.0 4.4 ia8 6.3 31 5 4 3= ; 3.8 3.0 6.8 Ai 3.4 10= 3.7 3.T 6.3 1ST7.TS _ High I«W Company GrMa DW Yld Wee Cb*?e pence % P.B High Unr "Company 151 33* -* £6 232 310 309 62 —3 72.7 A3 9.7 ... 9.5 6=14= -*1 0.7 6 4 32= 3.0 1.0 9.4 3.1 9.2 9.0 FINANCIAL TRUSTS 285 173 A kray d A Sm 210 •uO 200 Aanm Trdng ■fl* 3S0 » 17 BounwA 49 28 6 Brit Array 16 183 102 Challenge corp 140 ® 45 CharterbH Grp ■ 8* 49* 27* C Fin de fine* £43 343 233 Pally Mali Tsc 378 3,3 210 Do A 328 299 JM Paige ty 274 40 13 Pawn ay Day 43* 13 Zdin ind Hidp 13* T9 Elcctra lor 114 IS Bxplorsuon 23 ” f c Elaancn • 73 2* Flnrw Inr 19* 14 Goode DAM Grp 23 443 233* Incbcape 405 129 60 Lioj da A Scat 96 0 Un A Euro Grp 23 . 61 UAGGrpiHldgai 120 28 Mans on Fin 45 61 Fm FIO Grp 93 4Si film* Dirty 104 27 smith Bros «o 631 Tyndall Cseas $00 14 Ltd 0«m Tit 4J 45 74 ■ ' Cram ’■ Dir l . Wed Cb-ge genes, f 25=12.1 2= 3= l.p 3= MUM -3 114 39** 31 6.6 4.7 7= .. 51 7=»4 •J* „ • -MO 2L1 6.4 M3 • -H0 31 .V 8.418= -1 19-5 7= #.fl 4* = 3=17= .. 02B 1.1 30,7 T= 6.621= .. O.S 3.4 8.1 .. 3.0 4.314.7 30 r= 61 310 05 25* 21* Wagon Fin 5 = 7 9 9 = ! 872 33 YnJt Gatin e= 3= 9= i INSURANCE 47= C3 5.1 7= 4= 12.5 ] 2= f.S 43 l. 9.2 4.6 8.2 - [Ul 6B Bo Wring 106 38 30 Bren malt Beard 30 84 112 Britannia 164 172 101* dun Union 150 130 -107 Eagle Star 141 194 114 Equity A- Law 100 284 181 Gen Accident 210 294 375 Guardian Royal 220 935 :w Ham bra Lite 332 S 3 | 293 158* HeaUi C. E. 272 g - | 201 125 Hogg Robl.-uon 134 *2= 12= I ;9 ‘-* 1« Bowden A. 166 9 J m 9 =r« 1* .lanlAGjn i» 25= 9.2 12.7 ‘ ’ 49 8614= i*" 7= * 3 4.1 | -« 63.7 2= 12= 13.3 6 L 0.9 15= 4.9 9= 15= 4-9 9.7 | 6 8 10.7 7 5 | 4.7013.8 3.8 -s a a u.6 8.7 43 M j 7 6 B 4 4 0 1 * 9 1 "« ! ^ 2 0 5.2 13= ; 3r - .35 34 5 4 . 200 780 00 ‘Leslie A Godwin US 91* LnndoD Aldan 338 57 Ldn Vld Ini- 162 Manbevs Wauri lie iOO knnei Hldga im Moran C. 80 Pearl 43 252 l 322 1W Fhoenir 3 8 3 4 $.4 I 1= 6.8 7=! 7_0 I 3= 4 - - - i 330 41 23* Do A E : : Sekery Int 5= 4.7 8.7 - r.r ’.130 103 Ldn A M-iann .. U3 7J S.J „ . 5.6 84 3 4! = -0* SeJnceurt .. 7= 5.6 :•=/ -■ 9en-.er£r.r Stiv Cacpeix Sberpbridgc 2)0 56 Eaatwood 7.3. 134 h -l -3 wl 205 Ed tiro 187 19 El era Hide 43* 313 EIS 52 89 Electro comps 476 -fl 28* 15 Electronic Mari) 24 131 48 Elertrinlc Best 132 111 05* E 111 oil B. 131 44 14 Elliott Grp 17 ’ -3 97 86 BUS A Ern-ard 03 21 14* EH Is A Cold 25 -* 102* 37 Elson A Robbins 89 21* 30 Bswlck Hopper 17* ■** 202 82* Empire Slorca 1«D -2 4 3 5= 3-7 4?* £3 Ldn A KT’Uiert 2?<l .. 2.9 10= 7.9 im 44 85 SO ldn Brick Co to -1 4 9 7.7 3.0 ' - - 34.0 :dj m. 217 BI Ldn Pror Pral :7S .. 14.7 •= 6-b‘i » 4.2 3.S 5-6 73 31 Long! on Trace 62 .. 5.4 8.7 3.6 1 00 9 1 5 8 87 60 Lonrho 55 — 9* 17.1 3.S. -4-5 • “Z X 39 Loasdsla fair 87 .. 7.7 5 9 6.7 ■■ ;« 4.7 8.4 67 26 Lookers 65 fi 3.9 6.8 3-5! -*® 5.7 9= 90 « Lovell Hldgs S3 ..5-9 6= 4.0 L78 £50 Los- A Wo car 196 “1 L8=q 9= «■ -•* 327 2W Lucas Ind 304 .. 32.8 4= 7.6:.:® 75 £.8 63= 128 47 Lyons J. Ord i8 .. iL=bl3.0 .. , >3 8 2 7.4 M —N 1 ^ 3L 107 L6* MCI Turt -.07 .. 3 2 S : 27= 54 . -. e - S3 214 87 ViK Elevu-lc 1» • -2 S3 5= 8.7 1 J15 61 23>: 3 6s 2= 8 4 20= f* 1 9 7.0 3= 1 -* 1 3 7.4 7.6 9.9011= 7 = 29 9.9 5.9 . 6= 9= 9 2 I 4J0 [ 43 S’-rbc Corh-M 7t2 ’ 510 prow Lite ■=• Do A B: Do 9 Do B Br 116 Tneler.ua! 94 Refuge Royal Sedg. Forbej Steabnusn Sun AHianco Sun Life Trade Indem'ly 173 Vlllls Faber 255 3u0 190 100 290 290 224 89 385 60 112 39$ 230 246 150 150 750 534 150 3JS 310 412 102 514 100 7.6 8.211= 2.9 11 6 10.6 5 0 5.6 7 0 1= F= S3 4.012.7 =.3 2.0 6= »! 4* Energy 5erv 35* • -* 0= 2-9 13.3 36 22 England J. E. m .. 2= 7.7 fi.I 17.7 7= 4= 34 3S English A O'seoi £8 .. 0= 3.115.6 5.6 106 50 EnelUh Card Cl 85 • .. 4.5 5= 4.6 309 69* Ena China Clay 77 ■»? S.O 7.7 8= 21= 9L 5L Erllh A CO 01 .. 8= 97.13.4 5.6 770 322 Eeperann 336 -*10 8.0 5= 3.0 4.1 7.0 6.L 79 42 Eucalypuw Pulp CO -L 7.8 32.6 2.0 7.0 6.1- 128 54 Euro Ferries 128 f* 4.2 3= 8= 5= 7.0 43 307 ££ Era Industries 93 • 73 7= 4= 4.1 5= 3.4 21J 3=1 Erer Ready LOT -2 6= 4= 7= 47* 21 Erode Bldgs 38 .. J.7 4.8 6.2 S.l 37 1ft Ewer G. 77 .. 2.6b 6.0 9.B 74 19* 7* ExcaUbur 1ft .. O 6 4.7 6 S 43 134 48 MLRIdgi 122 TO 37 MT Dart SB 288 138 McCorquodale 280 49 • 15 Mclnerter Prop 45 • -2 19 10 McCIcery L'Amle 15 4B 29 MackayB. 45 M 60* McKee Lime Bros $9 45 1?, Macklnaan iSmt; 40 60 31 McXriU Crp *0 13, 37 MacpDenra D. 79, 217 . 113 Magnet A Slhni 190 SWt 29. Msllinien benny AS* 78 50 Man AgcTMuie 71 36* 15 NancO Garages 36 347 117 MaaCftlp Canal 2=» 100 14 Mang Bnmxe. 81 53 27 Manordale Grp 50 19 5* Maple Hldgs 18 313 314 Mircftwlel S-A 6 4 5= 10= • 41 1.6 6= 45 1 52 -5 2J.5 9.0 7= t 113 2 3.0 8.712.4 I ~ .. 0= 21 - ; 155 .. 4.9 10= 21= . ib* 3 7= 8= 5 0 . <,-5 .. 2= 6J 5-2 j ~y. W 4*5 6= 7 . 4 ) tf 5“«2=Uk: Sir-»n Er:g Simpsiti S. :-o \ Sirdar eoc Cr op fUa.iri-.iej- 'Sal'aui- [* 2 :* yr.a.-. j. 29 smith I> S. S¥i Sclih A l.’cp.i fl* Sir.r_7 V. R. -A' 149 10 ::o=a 40 41 11H TO 1 , 9.1 # 7 10.9 6.0 4.4 10.1 4 2 7= 7.4 | Ti 5 = 3= j INVESTMENT TRUSTS :: S 5.2 8 0 ! :c 104 Aberdeen Trrt 141 3.ft SB 7= I 220 166 Alliance Trust 221 5 9 6 1 7-7 ) ail 31 * Amcr TruKi 45* 7$ ,Vr*-.\rrer Sra 14i 32 Anglo Ini Inv 87 L'ti ,4 m 31 .tnglo Kept 3 Oo 7 4 7 1, 11 * 9SI* A-lvdown inr 4 0 3Jf 9.0j 71 33 ABC Regional 8: 3.7 52 8= I 99* 49 AUjntic .Unci* W{ 0= 0.9 .. 22.7bfi.fi 9= , 6 = 6 = 12.6 »= 4=13.7 4« 10=15= 7.4 73 S3 1.8 1.7J8.7 7= 12.4 12.7 46.4 5= .. .. 30.7 3.1 7.0 9.5 5.1 2.8 9.6 -1 4.5 4t mm • -2 2 0 6.7 9= U.9 LS .. .. 31.-6 7.7 .. .. 9.3 8.0 .. .. 10.1 6= .. .. 32.4 511 .. -2 13.4 T O .. .. 30= »= .. -6 7= 2.710= .. 9.0 4.9 10= -3 10.6b 8.4 9= .. 8.7 S.6 .. I -1 6 8 5.7 13.4 .. 9 8 7.1 .. 6.4 3= 9.1 -3 233 8 4 7.7 .. M 2.312.4 .. 5 0a 8.3 6.d -2 10= 83 .. -2 13.7 -6.4 .. .. 12 4 0 5 .. .. 124 9.5 .. .. 1LA 9= .. .. 12.4 93 .. .. 30= 5.7 .. -2 103 7.0 .. W5 24= 6.7 .. .. 14.5 3=13= .. 0 .1 6.0 7= .. 32b LD .. Wl 52b 3= .. .. 127 7.4 .. .. 13.6. 5= 1 *<ll trf ITT S HaadPrap, 277 „ so oo n on-ids Ex ss- v it 194 fii EMbarg Gold 109 +1 i-ii s* f s CKWid . nsuji nig-nr M3* 94* Gpevor 'Tla -JJ» ..' 7 =. 17* 12 'lienMining £17 - ise , »2 03 Grocrrial - 03 wl- my SID 360 BamenieF 230 •' -3 133 77 Hampton Gold 134 • 3= 4® 239 Harmony 371 44 53= r 14)*z 7* H«nabeert -r** la! 15 10* Jo’burcCona £13* 391 200 Binran 315 578 290 KJoof 5a3 92 20 1=5110 44 604 175 Ubuon . 200 16 43 LTdenburC Flit 64 243 123 VIM Hldgs 208 eS 38 31TD iMangula) 30' 415 230 Malajaa Tin 405 in 46 fiiarirnld Con 04 193 71 Menlo* Trans 86 41 30 Metaia Espior S3 =30 123 Middle Vita 113 396 123 Minor ro JM 400 24? SlilgotB Explor 4U7 73 2S FnlsaAg Cons 72 K5 345 Peko Wallaend 519 life 8i Pres Brand . BShi •:: *« ■w 25-1 '♦I 6= - 623, :: '■% .. 355* - 153 -2 fij 42 333 * 31- 4 .. 116 .. 3 = . .. 8=. *h» 3= ■*£ 14 4 -1 -c :to 44 1.1 si £.? P6 7.7 es 7 4 st j 2J 5 7 4 1 I 44J, 330 ft=i‘Jl» ind 84>, Ss-. Jrii-. 15 ScSran.g J3 Do KV 42 Soliuliori Lav l~i £n-_1tb; p. B. ::o 71 23 Si SO 41* 6 8 120 5.4 ■ 1" Fpes.- A Jackson 121 - '*■' '— 1 *■' PC 111* IIS =6 65 78 11? 63 Excfa Telegraph HR 55 Expand Mclal TL -H Fiic 1 KPA Coni 25* Falrbairn L‘« 37V Falrulough Coax =9 Falrnew En 3.8 M 4.1>:u 3« Spear J. W 23.6 10.512-2 i 7 Spelter Gear* 29 3.5 3 5, 3Vl WKm E S 724 41 , T» -To SpIra-t-Sarc* • . e .. .. I 87 £7 Spuoaer Ind _ ... _ 5-2 1.7 6=:;5? &s Mafia ?«:* 2.0b 6.9 9= 1 170 93 Narka 1 Spreeer Ji<« -1 6 4 4= 15=: ii 7 vaffex Tci OS 4.7 6.3 i 99 46 Harley Lid 78 .. 3.6 4 9 4.9! 4<fe Slag Fu.-^li'X-e 1.1 6= 62 32* 12 S:x»!8 Re.S 8.0 13.1 6 S : •=: 42)t S-aniey A. G. t' 9 : ? ;! ! ^ :n 'uvc>yi.ic 47 15 »l 73 113 125 100 Firmer SAW 124 301 81 Fare el I- Elect 390 47 33 Fed Uld A Build *3 “1 43 CO 22 BB1L . 54 27 12 Brawn Bros Cp 24* 402 ' » Brawn J. 40= 124 85 Hrunioox 203 SS 17 Bryan: Ktdgx 47 143 61* Bui lough Lid 140 79 28 BUlmer A Luob 98 120 • 87 Buazl Pulp 104 81 '35 _ Buko Dean 76 52 22 Burges* Prod 43 183 . to Burnett K*eblre 193 193.' 63. DaA.Nr 102 39* 16 Barns And’ioo 3S 17* 9 Burrell * Ca 12* 1B6 330 Burt Boulton 115 1)2 51 Burton Grp 219 130 30 Da A 116 Y 68 30 Buuerfld-Hany 63 ->1 C —E • . 35 14* CH Indus trials 59* 33* - Cadbury Sch 131 '63 -IS 134 J2L • 82 K 138 102 90 95 -72 51 33 - 55 Calfyns 11* C'brrad Bobey 6S BREWERIES AND DISTILLERIES 370 rid 1:0 124 ITT 98 2M M j*;3 40 100 5ft Allied 83 al, 27 Bat* Charrglud J35 36 Hr III* ven Grp M -1 7ev Bell .4. 231 .. M* Badqtnxtnnt 105 -2 64 Hr own U. 110 Bulmer HP llldgl 121 -l kurtuRkood 156 ■ -l Cnr ldn Did « . .. DecMisb ■ IS* 30 :* 213 L'lamlen; 3*7 -1 119 50* Grccnall 114 373 352 Green* Ring 771 -l JM 124 Guinness 338 -1 in ra h«4j* a li'mx its • .. 139 33- Highland 313 .. 103 33 Inrcrgrrdon 3<J1 164 4i Irish Duullcn 133 Tl 31 JJirwon w> Tl 40 Scold New cattle 63 * »*U 13* Fcagrxm £ 10 • .. S3 40 5A Brrserles Sff, „ 212 AJ Tmnalln 313 -J 124 57 Vauw .. M4 361 58* Vhllbread "A K3 S 4t* l'i3 n be B 95 -1 94 55 Whitbread In* » 212 Ul Hqlteriumproft 204 -9 6.2 7= 11.7 7.0 4=10.4 7= 31 9.4* 4.0 5M6J 6.1 UU9 4= 3= 7= 5.3 3.3 9.2 3.6 6.12J.S P= 9.6 9.7 21.0 3.6 1LS 4.1 3.6 11-5 12 1 4.4 13.3 31.0 7.0 7.4 10» 6.3 116 4.1 2.3 19.8 3.4 3= 9.7 6.1 4 Q 10.4 2.7 3 3 10 0 5 S 9 2.6.1 43.7 2.9 13= 1.0 8.7 4= 4= 4.014.0 .0.1 SJII.9 «.« 6.4 9.P 6.0 6= 2.7 6= 8=31 = 3= 4=12=! 30 Campari 64 Do B 45* Cimrex HltJgs 36 Canning V. 67 cape ind 37 Caplon Profile 33* Capper Belli 33 Caravans int 35 .Cxrelo Eau 20 Car Ira Capd 9ft Carlbwi Ind Carpet* Int 3«* 10ft -63 63 376 100 «* ?1 31 U li ■Jg 1.6 «.«135 .. 13.2a 3= 4.1 .. 2D.6bl0.4 9.1 .. 3ft 7.6 9= .. 93 6.7 5= >83 4 7 = 4.8 .. 7= 7= 4.6 ■rl 65 8.3 ■ 3 J . 7= 7.4 .. 4= 2= 9-1 .v 43 23 5.0 .. 23 6.0 6= .. 1.4 1L«120= ... 233 8.7 6J> .. 23 15 .. -1 2.3 iO -. .. 3.40 5 3 8= 3.0 3= 5.6 4.6 8-4 7= 9.7 8= 7= 23 4.016.4 3 0 2.6 6J 36 23 Fetdox Ltd 130 Ul Fenner J. H. AID 45 Ferguson Ind 83 19* Fine Art Dex 390 37-0 Finlay J. S* 8 Finlay Pack SI* 10 First CssUe 400 243 Elions 79 45 Fitch Lovell *3* Fluidriro Eng 20 Fodena 76 Fogarty E. 93 6a 345* 26 =6 239 32 146 310 ro MO 2* K 363 63 80 03 ISO \ 2 7.7 9.4 } 27 9», Marling Ind 27 *; 56 78 92 SSc 31 Manbsil Car 5*>y , 50 27 Marshall T Lot U | 4e* 26 Bn A 47-1 .. Ac* 26 Bn A 3 0 S 7 3 ? I 1C* 95 Marshalls fair I6D .. .. T= ‘ *?' 42 Marlln-BIacA 52 7 6 73.* 5 = | 9P* STarUn-Xe** 231 S 3 7 3 8 3 1 JTl 1,1 Marlonalr • 169 * “ 48 . Slay A Hassell 61 60 Maynards 323 *4 Mean Bra* 14 10* ModmbNIer 2* 50 Melody Mills SI 9 Menunoca MIC 10 30 Jfeutle* J. 160 246 MeUl Box . 324 68 Metal Clwurcs JOL 3** 100 57 MV 3 304 ..*0 5 6 7.6 d8i 4.2 30 0 3 4 12.0 85 35* Folks* Heto XI' 30* -l Ford IL T. Ford. Mtr BDR 1*0 28 ISO 46* Form Inal er 3S5 213 321 Foseco Min 276 130 39 Foster Bros 330 . 18 Foster J. 34 69 Folherglll aH 102 28 Francis G. R. 4d Francis Ind 71 Freeman* Ldn 322 French T. 02 French Rler 35 Fried land Doggt 65 GUI Int -59 32* Calllid Brindley 55* 7* Cart ord Ullry 13 67 Uaruar Scoiblalr 96 282 163 GH<3 270 104* 06*. DoF Bate fWh 27 13* Gen Eng iFatD 17 330 385 Gen MU- BDR 233 204 JT4 Gestelncr ’A' 370 83 32* Glbbooa Dudley 83 100 33 Sieves Grp 86 120, SC* GUI A Purina 133 33 1M .48 74 326 327 70 40 25** 14 90 53 83 48 67 13 104 3.5 *1115 £ .. 2= 6= 6= 11 • *15 30.3 7.2 30.0 .. 9= S3 7.2 1 jsj f* 2= 3=11.0 • -2 22.7b 6= 5.7 .. 0.9 33 8.8 *t 3.0 7.7 10.0 -5 19= 3= 7.4 .. 6= 9.7 7.9 b .« 5= 6.5 8= .-l 3 8 6.0 4= -3 3 9 3= 4.7 3 1 7 5 4.7 -1 3.1 11.4 9.4 -S 9= 4.6190 -»3 6 0 3= 7.4 -l 6 9 4.1 11= fl 4.3 33 12.4 .. 3.8 U.L 4= ■U 29 12=13= 1 103 43 64 61 44 113 199 ae 91 49 ra ■ 68 40 122 1IQ 12 * Mcialrax 28 Meltoy 44 Meyer U.L. 19* Midland ipd 3S, Milbury 25 Mills 4 Allen 90 Mila Manners 25 Mining Supplies to 30* Mil Com Grp 41 to* Miu-hellSDoea 6» 43 Mltconcreie 82 23* Modern Eng 37 97 Mollnx 126 23* Monk .4, 54 42 02 79 41 » iso lvs i ? lai.U Ul. ■ ------ 4 4 4 = 64 ; 3» 79 Biribrrl i T.tt 180 1* 9.7:3= ***» -- ^ 3.0 2.2 8.4 • S- - 4 SiMSg A rilTer . S 22.7 7 0 5 2 ■ :» SjnS.-am R-sey 6 4 63 5.4 , 53 29 s-_lri.-£tc r’r.an * 1 6 3.7 51 • lu>i 6* ftHTre Pacific W 151 3 2 5= 4.4 : ?L 9S } —in'li £=g LO 6.9 8.6 3=1 1.6 X9 6.0: 73 7.7 a 5 ; T — Z 8 6 4=1-0* r - ? 1 -r - 0 1L9 1 :a3 =* Taksda Bd: 5 2 1=6 5= 1 Wd 3 Talbe: Grp 4 c -I :o i =3» itv TarmacUd 4= 7.5 10 = i 2W -« TJIC A Lyie 4.1 11.0 8.0 : is* 50* 33 Al'sanin 5fe Lo £43 “8 -24 54 6& 120 71 67 as 26 fit 109 116 138 52 572 40 368 120 :» I U 4 1109 I 23 " 68 65 23 Glltapur Lid 73 ■ 80 Glass * Metal 27 13 Glass Glover 867 400 Glaxo Hldgs 19 Gleesoo U. J. 34 Glossop b VTJ. 06 70 Clynwed 103 39 Go I dbg A Sons 74 •4L Bonne Bldgs S3 60 Gordon A Goick 78 li Gridan L. Grp 25 47 Grampian Htdpt 56 42* Granada ‘A’ 104 63* Grand Met Led JOS 77 Grattan Whs* 317 318 383 Gt L'nlr Storax ' 254 344 373 DoA - 284 IT* Greenfield JOII 4P to Grlpperroda 44 248 GKX 261 « HT\ Grp :so 71 Baden Caste; 97* 53 Raegis J. 314 GV,. Ball Eng 3U2 0.4 9= 8= 220 PS Do 5fe Cnr CIS -.L 500 —■* M 4= .. 5.4 13.4 7= TO 05 Monitor! 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E. « r-J 3 0 3.1 «.« 107 55 Newest Boln 3era -2 7.0 6.8 4= 329 60 Nona M!g 129 f2 4 5 3.6 7.3 13 45* Nurdln Apeacck 75 .. 2.5 37-8.0 26 17* Nu-5wlll JM ’ 25* .. 14 .8=1=1 8.0 8.1 5= 9= AB 5.6 38 34 123 57 X 201 70 45 18* Carr J. (Don't 43*- 22* carrion 1 ly 110 8J* Car rail P. J. 45 to CaAet S Hldst 39 a 7 Court on Six J. 37 163 83 Cawood* 239 M* 12 rrtev.no 30 57 32* Crrtient Rdsteoe 97 64 23 Cea A Sheer to 60 35* Central Man 54 203 69* Centre*,r Lid S8 3= 34 Ch'mftn A Hill 50 *8* .SB, Chamber]'n Grp 4S 33 Pi Change Vares 2C* il 1 ; 17 -Do Cnr Cunt 136 31 Chloride Grp Christies Int Christy Bras Chubb A Son* 122 Church A Co JS2 Coalite A Cheat Coales Bros Dn a Coala Films Cvie B. H. Colie! t r'ana Collins V. 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M» 8 8.9 11.2 .. 5= J= 11.2 .. 22 5 7= 11.0 32.3 7.511.8 .. 7.7 7.4 S.J .. 8.6 PJ 9 4 .. 7 2 3.1 10.4 *1 23 3.0 P = .. 3.2 4= 9 3 .. 03 1.41!= .. 0= 2.1 13= .. 5 4 14.116= .. 2= 0.5 .. -7 0.2 9.7 4.6 -*» Jl 2 2 0 25.3 .. 1.1 4= 7= AS 4= 2J 7.8 -3 3.0 =5 7.7 j Ms 14 107 195 150 :£ 112 100 937 I—L 130 73 -45 '4 l'~ 31* I DC Grp :«S IMt ■»* IbatoCk JnbM'a 164 -r> - n IS I09IOCB jnnni n 10A -7 S B u: M5* Imp Cbetn lod j*5 cerart Badl<n'n US 2? 93 o.S I J31 4.9 5 0 : 1 = J7>, 20 M 16 65 IT 38 114 CeeipAIr Comp ion Webb Cook W. 37 cone A 1 im m 9 Copint P. 35, Corah 8ft Coral LA 11 , 94 to 30 S3* 13 35 H mm 3= 3.0 U.6 vl 5.7 6.1 7= 40 mm M 53 8.7 mm a 2.0 8 7 63 76 ■»I«X S3 8 = 6.4 133 m w 1.1 7= 7.8 82 ft 2= 8.0 4= vm -1 I.Ls 8.7 3=1 Imp Cold Store 117 G Imperial Crp IP; 17 Ingill Ind 27 Ingram H. 40 Initial Sen Ices 41* IntFalxt 70 InL Timber 47 Inrerrah.Gtp -3 ■*S S3 38 75 73 331 78 £»»B fii II.fi 17 5= 13.fi 12.0 201 31 ft.a 7.4 03 s.; fi! ffi.0 6J 8= 8= 71 4.7 .. *.fi 10.8 <Lii 2.8 1 : 3 0= .. 4= 11.2 9.0 - *« 8=1=6 • l 3L* 44 5.9 10.7 8.1 3= -1 *7.4 0.7 8 8 .. 16 0.9 .. ss Lfi =fi 63 o — s 10T Sft Ocean >'jwr>ni 93 11* . 55 Office & Elect 110 f'9 M Oft-EX Grp 95 46* 31* Ogllvj 1 A M toft 87 43 Owen Owen 86 69i 7 dairy Printing 66 Jto* Cft Parker Knoll -.V :trf US 00 Parker Umber 90 « 14 Pateraon IL 41 730 126* Paterson loch 190 223 U7* Do A XV J85 US 63* Pauls & Whiles 113 397 103 Pearson Long ITS 3=3 1U pr arson » Son =w 37* 24* Do 4fe Lit £<l 30* 140 Peuler-Hatt 1C3 39, 6 Per. 11 and Ind 31 * »4 42 Pentos 07 90 6.3 PerkUS 13 4fe 16 6 30* Perry H. 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V.3 :i.i I :vp 102 LTesii lit Japan 2v7 -* .’•3 i.o 3 i j i: is Crarai.m to J4 9 S3 81; 29-, 14* Cumutu: 73 .. 7 6 .. V -.40 SO Delia In* 533- 66 J2J 3.1 I =3 332 Dert.y Tst-IdC* 122 . 4=13.0 4 2 I ::0 ba Da Cap J44 40 67 b'ajlj:. 1W> 7>rajirnCom 130 - i . .! I-ST i:s Drayton CrtiX 14fi* 2 0 lO 21L0 ! 196 1.70 Vn premier 193 -1 ■. <5 4iP; Dundee A I do 621, ft: ”6 65 Edin Asher ,V*P 130 -*i ! -Jbi =*>4 Edir.btTgh Inv 230 11C4 Hi 77 30 Elec A Gen 77 J58 1.161.8 <rr-i i**En«iint oo*, O f b 4.2 1&6 79 50, Eng A V Vorif 7S 14= 9= 7 2 w* M ‘| fcrtaie Duties W: .. 20.1 til 4.01 97* 69 Flrra Sent Am 97>, ft i * 102 12.4 | 717 Fi.reiyn A Coinl 168 .. Gl Japan Inv 737 -L Gen funds ord' :ci Du Com- 12 ;* 741, <7cc I tie A TsW 1W 63 Gen Scviilsh Ss Glinderon 96 .. Gl-'be Trust r.6* Grange Trint T7_ .. Great .‘.'nrUiern JOi" .. ft 7.7b 5.4 27= —L 20=11 4.7 30* .. 2.1 4=33= .. IS 4 3 3L7 .. 49 US 13.0 13S* ft . 44 .. 2.fib 5 8 £8.6 =3* » .. 6 3 =,0 28.? 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I C4 371, city Ofriciri 54 i.S 5 0 27.2 f 174 114 com Exchange 170 ?9 5.0 3.4; 27* :7 Country A New T £ft J 7 3 S 23.9 I 0L 33 County A DIM to 2 7a 3.2 4S.fi . 05 72* Daejan llldgl 91 . 3.* £7 Ecg Prop 41 M5rl.fi ‘ =3 IT Estate*g Gen 20* 0 7 4 9 3> 9 1 103 .-2 E-.-ass of treas S? < .l31» £00 C'.FurUsad 2zA i «, = ;| F *=. GulidllaJI 74 ■ 2 4 A J- 3 995 319 Hammers on *A* 500 ' ‘.£69 132 Haslemero EaU--=12 b3 54 59 b< .. 20 4 9 2 19.1 6 b 5.22S3 ‘.t 4 9 27.6 . 1 £31 56 "t 1^.6 IJ5 10= 5 3 26= L-j: 3.6 6.7 26.8 ima 17 ii£ Land Src- 7Mi |=w Land 46* Ldn A Pror Sft 40 Ldn Shop 69 Ljo ton Hldgs 4b MFPC "- 69 McKay Sec* 9* Mirier Estates -l ■fi 10 2 4.4 32 5; J.V - WdlraniT WUItej 41 2.4 Vll..»;]3 id Muchlmr A A J. 113 .. 3= «.4 21.7;2» Jta Municipal 230 :i C.4 7.4 «.0l 1H M ji 5 33 s.6 j :«i :w S.3 6= T=| 121* 73 3 9 5.2 6.0; WS 7 3 S3 5.0 W . 0 8 6 5 E.8 *0* to £3 S3 8.9 —* TL 1= 3.4 fi.fi ~ 49 6.5 7= 5.1! 110 73 JO 114821 ?S 3 9 3.3. 39= £= 3.4 39 L 4 3 4.4 3=3 5 7 7.4 44-4 2.1 1 4 75= T l 4.4 43.5 17.4 4.9 0 8 ! 0 4.0 30.0 5.5 4.4 30 4 11.0 8.4 6.3 0= 6= £5 1= 6.6 IS 6 4 is! Lit JuJ ui 4 L 8.6 6.2 19 2= 8.7 4.7 S 5 4 8 0 6 6= ■ 7.8 7 5 11= 9= 4.8 6.9 US 3.8 4= 3= 3 1 4.8 3.0 4.4 S.0 6= 3 4 3= 8.4 7 0 8.0 4.4 13.4 G O 9.1 32.0b 8.7 4= 10.6 6= 7= J.l 9.4 fl.P 17.4 9.5 fi.O 6 1 4.3 5.4 3.6 4.8 4.4 I b= 0 9 13 3 7.7 5.4 9.9 13 3 9 4 7.6 8.2 8.1 7= 4= 7= S.C SOI 30 P3 123 4.6 6.7 3.70 4= 14= 4 1 3.0 9 2 I 2 10 7= el - 3.4 7= 8 0 .. 9= 10 4 S3 21.3 6.2 6= .. P.L 3.0 12.9 .. 32 73 4 4 .. 7.9 6= 5.5 .. 17.9 10= 4.7 42 13,0 8 3 12.8 14-9 8.7 6= 4.9 11.3 6.3 7 0 4 0 0.4 5 0 7.1 6.4 8 6 BS 6.7 L7 L 0.0 Lfi.2 J.7 6.2 7= 8.0 7.5 4.5 , 31.3b S.fi 9.1 1 1.4 11.3 3.5 9.1 7= 5.£ I 3.3 4.2 6 6 ( 95 3.5 4= 6.6 I -to 6= 71 8.0 | 73 6= 90 7=: 171 1 9 8 9 4= fill, Grucnfriar 37 27 GreshJRi Hie 84* 57 \iuarrllnn 97 61 Ha.-ibn* JW* 122 HIH V. Il»v 7? 12 riuir" HMiS A ■"■J* 2tf* Indus A General 53 S£ Internal ln7 8 V 1 Invest ui Sue J?2 Inr Tit «."orp H 9Vt Inr Can Tnir 165 JOft Jardlnu Japan 167 J0.1 Jersey evt 94i, 60 |=»e View Inr to 165 -63 Law Deb Cor? 105 1171, 84 Ldn A lloljTond 1171, :W 139 Ldn A Montrose J'9 Ldn A Pror Tst Ji I* Ldn Merch Sec S0 Di- Cap Jf .76 44 Ldn Pru Invest Tfi 99 621, Ldn Trust 99 4<P* 26 Mercantile Inr 49 7fi* S3 Merchants 7m:l >5, S3 47 Jliwixe lev 65 07 60 Manrrtdo Trs, 9J. 11* Ncs> Throj ‘Inc’ 17* tvi Cea iM-r 114* to I'M 34 100 31 *L ar 7? iro 27b to :-a Jfil 6 L 6.7 2J.fi 3 l 5= 25 = 2.6 2.7 «T.6 7 6 03 20.2 3= 1= £4.1 6 1 6.S26J 2= 2=4S‘» 4 6 5= ES 4.1 5.0 29 6 5.7 5= K= l „ Tl if ®7 i RUBBER 2.7 3.0 25= 230 103 Municipal 83 24 Peachey prop 515 3& Trap A Hcver Da ., Prop Bldg* , Prop Src Raclx-t Prop Regional Dn A. SIS 179 347 £Jo 156 44 fi* 87 =1 :u 129 26* ‘J Si 30 2> Hu«il A Tompkins 1 ifi 39 ; , Sci'l Mel Props 167 77 Sleuth ESU 118 IM Stock Cent £«9 90 Surlier B. SS 5 Town A City 41 Tralfwd Par* 10* CK Props 7* Webb J. Lfi* Waaler A C’ty 1-J .. 4 0 3.2 23= .. 4 4 £=47.8 b «** 10.2 .3.7 39.6 .. £ 9b JS 4G.4 .. 13 OS .. -i,’ 3.6 5.9 33= 6.3 ft 5= 4.6 32.7 -2 93 4.4 53.1 ft 5 2 4=33.7 .. 2 1 2J -I* 0 ?, 71 * ftt.rih Mta-.ilc IT, -2 76 ’28 144 •A ;« 76 140 M* 75* Northern Amer 103 64 Nurihcrn Sec 1 L 4S Oil A ATOCiated 57 S» Pen: land IS4 M P-ogresitre Sec 4) 9‘j Haetiurn i-'7 103 Piter a Merc :7: 65>,. River P?aT4 69 Rr.r 1 .Cr 7 Trust 204* Rhfl.ecl-liC • 44 Sa.Vffuard 93, 37* Scot Amer TP, 3M: 5cn;tC.iR!l1ri- 1 ji 49 fici.| 1 Merc ".V" lid 102 Scot Earicrn US 41* 25 Sent Eur-pean U* luT 73 Bent In*, esc HO-, lift Bit; a^..t M-.riRjee ::t 152 1:1 A:m Sas!n.-al - ;51 104* 70 V»»! Northern 3«* 52*1 57* lolled «=, SOL III SC”-. Vv'.wi LOO 97 64* D.. B JM, :Ss 143 Sec Alliance :“T s:* fii* s*c g; Ncrtcem fi 57 * ss t-o b to lli J.7 Sierung True: :ii of* firtMuiem ■ 971, 67- T1ie« fn -l".p- :o£ 42* IT.-ngmlii Trui: T0-: 1£J Traiivdlceanie 170 Te 53 -j Tribune In-.- 77 3.0 4 6i:=i iTT 1 ; 4ft Trlrlercel 'ire* Gri, 4 0 7.7 6= l' 1 to C . -'.ap 4 3 5 7 26.9 6= 6.5 23= 1 9 4.7 2C.fi 3 9 5=25 9 5.S 6= 20.9 : _* 7 3 7 8 1S.fi! ttA 2 1 13-2 11= J 300 ' 14' . !5J 5! 4 1 4=22= \ 309 K 4 3 «= 34.3 1 J« 3 2 4.! = J,;« 3= 14 27 L ' “ : 3.0 3>?= 4 £ 6.4 21.4 5= 4 8 30 3 P 3 6.9 T 4 0 4= 32= 5 5 4 4 £fi.2 6 7.4 JJ.l 3=b 4 .4 .. 1J 2.4 15.4 4 "» 4 7 21.3 C.S 4.7 £4.0 ; £TJ £ J 3= £4.4 4.2 4 il 30 5 100* 54 Angla-Indonesla 93* 63 J? Bride-all F115 82 3UU 82 Castleaeld 255 49>, 12ij Cherxmr>e a«Sj 47 1ft Ctoit Plan! 4M, C5 13 Dcranakande 61 12* Jd, Grand Central 10 378 335 Culfcrie Corp 350 i:0 46 Harrisons Malay 113 1:3 3d* Highids a Low 110 193 67 Hongkong 195 243 123 KtUinghai: £*7 firi, . 22 Kullm Malaysia lift -L 164 41 Lda sunilira 161 fl 7£* £2* Majediv. 48 IIP,' Ualayafam M 12* Muir Rlier 01 34 Plan' HldH 82 IE* Eungrl Krlan -1 B.ra . , -1 r.6.4.7 \ : .. 11.<1 S*rW 17.3 T.l ■ told 1 iiti ■ £44 102 -VTram Frontier. 305 - Assam Jnv 120 Cktuvlll, Inv 3*W Deundf 150 1 McLeod Bused 225 Moran 269 fiurmah Volley lid Warren Plant £26 MISCELLANEOUS ■ :i 75« r AlK.,n:aCenali- lift 79 49 Cilcuri. Elec 7= ?£», 42 KSurrWVrlfife L» 2D>* 31* EwerWlrTSCi W; 65* 47 Mbn Tctc I92‘i 41u a "0 Imp Cur.l Oo' iUJ 3s J2 Mid Feat W-.r TXPr 4V M'lfia-d 1'uif.i 90 140 N'lfitriwi Elec 241) Xf-t =1* Eundcllad Wlr J2 hP, 2i.b 81. Ju.6 fch- 3.1) l« 4.9 3= 3U.S* >■! 227f 62 Id U fl 22= ' 98. ^.0 II • n.o i9 I mi> 3.0 14= 1 191 111 3C-1 M . SOD :i» 4.1 51.. 20.0 83 . 5JS 148 8.fin 4 3 r:= 3 2 3 5 44 as free, y Price adjusted fur lale dealings. | aianuicani daia. so 4 11:= 3 6b Z.7 Ma 4.7 0 9 19.9 2 0 3.0 8.2 S 5a 6.6 fi 7 3= 7 2 7.4 4.2 3.8 JT.3 92 7r->' «i »: nrp • '.t, *71, Tjncilde lev 7Z7-: 7‘irl l',e Brit see ■•ft 7V, V'.il valet Deb M 1 ; i» J42 '.'id siatra ijea 329 104 KV* Viking Rr-, fiu 1 , Sal 34<i TrutL 197 W llvn Ih? 93 Dr. n e ’. Ve.-man T-: £7: V.rl-i 1 Line. "JO'S 1 qua; Co Icy *9 fii ££'. 17 £.0 3.5 3 3 | 7.9 6= B • I Th 7.4 fi V 14 7.4 7= 2.3 4-7 8 0 3 2o 8.1 37 J 4.8 U= 9.1 , ..C .. .. ; 2= 0= .. 1 3.3 9.0 S3.' SHIPPING • • :■ j ::i =i3 r-ri, r. coma £?n ■ 3 10 4 3 0 |;jj w j_ :.r,g 13 := ;.1,7u WT l irt.crt ^ TO 8. 3.9 Ju'. 1!S Hur.-,ng Glbvn ill 20= 10.4 4.4 1 ll* £4* Jacob.'. J. t. 57* £"• I,/in 1 il'irai ft SJ £7 11 2CB a l luces 52o !79 Iu3 Tr-iLs :vs 172 eJ Plv -Did" m SJ 9.0 8= MJ 9 0 0.5 £.1 04 pn JM 9.3 0.» 13 2 9.0 7.4 1000 II £ .. 4.2 9.3 3= £.4 4= 3.4 4.7 8 0 10 £ I 3.7 6.1 10 1.3 70 1 4= 9.7 U'f&ji 4.4 6.7 11 k JOS 2= 9.0 I. 1 £.0 9= 6= 151 a a 0 7 8.7 3 0 6.3 4.8 J. 3 12.1 27.1 4.3 0.8 11.7 7.3 2.7 *2 3 3 3.7 3.1 „f .. ,, 1=* 3=12= MI71ES fl£0 .GO Ang’u AH ■ naj C£0 342 m Algid AH Corp 214 in, II* .Ana Ani Gold £I6>*4 41* 19 And- Arti Inr C«X, ft ft Anglo Trans*. 1 fl* ft 6 Do A 17* .Varc-i 171* Ayrr Ihtom 37a ‘-fl Di BernH Tin 52 417 £19 nlVT/wp. Ada 44 12 Hulwsna 1WT '-O us fV Rrararn Minn 73 ;rr u; mi *vu:n iiu tlfti 3'i. fidf!-l«f-jn'rm II": !5t 1 « 1 lisri. r ''..ii. IIJ 30* no finnv'.iid Melda il'j 4:2 79* Dr Beer> ‘Df/!’ TV? 33l 145 * Panrrfcr'rin £u9 796 J37 Puriian Itnod- £M) 33 9 Fs« D»«* IS 777 423 L Drlrlonirln 720 64 94 ;r.: J -1 7 6 4 a 3n 0 I .. £0 £.4 44 0'. :: b .: TV i ** « 4 4 6 32 i. J -:-i -\S 3.0 =7.4 .. 6 7 5 ; ?1* 0 .. 5 3 MIS.}! 9.2 4.9?!= I .. 1.7 :.7 6J.i ! 1 .. 7 6 3.4 41.6 t* 3 3 2 7.. .. 0 : o: .. •ej 6.; ;; 7 .. 2 3b 7 4 52.: .. 5.3 6 3". 9 -7 14 0 5 0 *.£ ., 2= ;.S 7= 12 4 5 3 ez 42 .... . 2 S 8 5 135 .’. 7.7 S3 £0.': :!.4 j;= 3.7 93 ;:.a 4 7 =3.26 ^.4 :?i >i.= >n p.9 72.5 91 9.S : 9 77.C ’> i >1.7 50. i 19 4 THE TIMES SHARE INDICES .. 7: ■ Ttaa.Snxre Indie's f-.-r. 74.07.71 ■ >a*.. d.»c June £. IffiA original 6S-C date Ju:ie£. 2Pa->.-.— •Indr* p-r.:.ra- Index ?..... Yield ices Nu. Yield Pt.j-.WU* • IrteaV TSr Tlmr, laaub- trial.fibers Inlcs £17.74 1 Ijrgml l"»rv ‘ 172 46 CaP.lbl Inlnii*- ££9.1-5 C-.-i-'nb er Gi ods £:y ■« firorc baires 177.7-1 7 orge.; fioir.rUI s'i—-re 221.01 l*-sr>- flonrlil U<! i-PiusKlal Slams . 211.75 6.JI IMS 3TM ' G.PI T - '-i5 27 7.6? ls.J" 701.71 T.I6 ::.JM 237.49 fl.to 17=7 2iv.l5 2 6.42 8.47 77/73 3 *3 — =»•>* g;| - (*£i=<iiii:jiiha.’<rs 27=9 s :3 77 07 risso 1 -l .Vising 7.0=1 9 7= 7725 ill.>9 - I 10 1 Ik. 0 Cr’irr.lurc s i6<*3 ?'4 77 647* — V-.73 l.Fit • p.-rterercfrincls =4!? J2*,9* - :,e * ".Vsr Lean 3tfe JJ.jD* — A 'e.-.iri »f Tif 7imcs Isdiu.7r.s1 ill*."* laiiris i, given Jwli**.— Iti.fi A-.-X* ZS0*i!lpn77i •vT :;.3 !? •; 9 9 13.7 7.7 31. S 9.3 31= n a -71 as a 7.1 1*7* ivk 29 75 i f 74 27*779 WiS e:j..a.5!i B1LW ■ I4.tW.77 1 177.07 >|C.yJ.76i JS..C2 <!« !I.TSi li- ig .2P.lG.7ii JS9 J .-.2.01.771 60 79,.;= ”741 jM.iri -■Cf.J Lii.-a •tr.p • S.,.4? iW> di 7"il pjl-.S >:2.i£.74‘ :a>.» iii.jr.TO ■ . nai laierexl : Ir.d.. 1 jereonalr ivestment and nance, ages 18 and 19 {} U> Ij THE TIMES. SATURDAY JUtY 15 1978... _ BUSINESS NEWS • - z -. i clV ... -■_* ? d‘i-'.V ’! David 31ake . ■inomics Correspondent •: -iritaifl had a trade deficit of > '601 in June and the earlier ;S diction of a £750m current • ■Sunt surplus for. 197S now ! ks all but unattainable. .nstead, The oraall .current "ount .is likely t»' aid the ‘r with’ only a very small *!plus, ■ While visible trade "[ cpcmiue —in .substantial . fnt in June’ llieFe 'was an 'rail current account surplus V tI4m' after' allowing .for-a.' .» Ora invisible surplus. '.lie trade' figures' for June, i,' jHshed . yesterday,' tell the :aJ' depressing story of a ■sur- singiy iada volume of iin- v is, upsetacg hopes [hast; the ; - meats position was aibous to -1 !.>rove substantially. 5* .ie June figures - were an . Kroremeat on the -very .large .icit of £218m recorded in j-, but die improvement was -• King like - as large as had '■ n hoped... 1 n; the eariy ibonths. of this r ir was possible to explain - 1 iy. rite, siqtrp increase in-the nine of imports as being • sed by a rise, in sami-mano- ! mred ^oods of the -sort 1 xh are used'as pare "of a era! opium - In output at ■" ae. : V ' .lowever, in the last two 3 tbs it is dear.that imports , finished manufactures have rtakea other components, h an increase of 4i per. cent 'the yohime of- such imports the second quarter after vatic " items such as oil - TERMS OF TRADE rfoHowlrig are flie'uhit volume »x numbers for visible trade sonally- adjusted- and • ihe ns of' trade index, - nion- sonaily adjusted, issued by • .^Department of Trade yester- Torms of Trad* ■ ’ • " Inor ■ 1975= 100 - (seasoo- ..." Export Imports. ally rolumo volurna admitted) . 6 01.1 196.2 .100.3; .99.8 02 109.8 1069 .' 97.9 Q3 110.0 108.3 98.7 Q4- . 113.5 107.3 97.3. 7Qr 115.7 109.1.-, 09;O 02 1110 109.8 100.3 • Q3 ..124.1. 108.4 1D1.0 CM 117.9 .102:6 102.4 '8 Q1' ‘ ISOS 114.3 105.1 Q2p 122.8 r 110.2 104.4 7 t • 119.4 101.3 101.7 rigs are excluded.. If those items ace .'counted in, the in- v crease is 'IS per cent. . No one is quite certain why manufactured imporrj are ris¬ ing- so fast, although some comfort is being raken ‘from the fact, that most of them are concentrated in the capital goods sector. This would sug¬ gest that they are bot being wholly diverted to fuel a con¬ sumer boom.- - At the same time as the im-' ■ ports -are -shooting -ahead, the .volume of exports of manufac¬ tures is growing, only slowlv, with a. 1 per cent rise in the second quarter over the first. indeed, the only component performing really well on rbe -volume side - is in raw materials; where imports (par¬ ticularly oil) are falling quite sharply though perhaps not durably. ... The June trade figures were affected not only by changes in volume,' but also by a deteriora¬ tion in' Our terms of trade. -Imports rose'more - and exports remained static. The terms of trade index fell by l.'pdr cent, which' worsens our trading performance now ■ but.'may' improve it later by making' imports less competi¬ tive, . In rbe first half as a whole there is now estimated to have been’ a deficit of £81m on tbe current account, compared to tbe Treasury forecast ■ pub¬ lished' at the ’time of the Budget of a £250m surplus. This , was caused mostly by im¬ ports and a worse' than expected Invisibles balance brought about' by large pay¬ ments' to tbe EEC. UK TRADE ’ ■ The following are. Ihe May trade figures seasonally adjusted and corrected on -a -balance-of pay¬ ments- besis with allowance for known recording errors: / 115.3. 98.4 102.4 J. '118.9 108.1 ' 103.1 *8 i 112.2 -'114.6 105.5 i r -. ■127:4 111.3 104.8 reft 121.4.. 116.9 104.8 rilr 126.1 1043 104.0 yr 120.1 114.3 105.1 wp 122.1 112.0 104.1 reyrcsd a no visional >1976 1B77 1977 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 1978 Qt Q2. 1977 June July Aug Sept Oct . Nov Dec 197* Jan Feb March April r May r June p f revised p provisional Exports Imparts Em Em 25,422 28,932 32.176 33,788 7.502 8.449 7.930 8,694 8.540 8.486 8,204 6.159 B.441 9,015 p 8,803 B.939 -3,510 -1,612 - 947 - 764 + 54 + 45 - 574 - 136 + 68 - 76 - 333 + 43 - 279 -r 188 - 218 - 106 Third World protest over Geneva negotiations From Melvyn Westlake Geneva, July 14 A large majority of the nations participating m the world rrade talks, here has de¬ nounced the partial agreement hammered out in intensive bar¬ gain ing between the big indus¬ trial countries during the past | few days. In a strongly worded state¬ ment issued today the develop¬ ing countries expressed “ deep concern” and “apprehension” about the way the negotiations are being conducted. The statement came just 24 hours after rbe key industrial¬ ized participants had finally reached agreement on wbat is officially described as a “ frame¬ work or understanding”. This >s tbe document _ that ministers and senior officials from tire United States, Canada, Japan and the European Com¬ munity will present to the seven heads of government when they , meet on Sunday for the econo¬ mic summit in Bonn. It outlines the limited agree¬ ment reached in establishing k new world trading system after five years of bargaining, sketch¬ ing the areas where progress nas been made and revealing the issues that have to be resolved by the end of this year if the negotiations are. ulti¬ mately to prove fruitful. Today’s statement issued by the developing countries, which represent three-quarters of - the participants at the 100 -nation negotiations, was .unanimously approved at a two-hour meet¬ ing of the Group of 77, repre¬ senting the Third World states. Their spokesman, Ambassa¬ dor Petar Tomic, the Yugo¬ slav chief negotiator, claimed that the developing countries had not been con¬ sulted on the “framework of understanding” document. He said that the document was “optimistic” and said tint tbe Third World countries did not agree with these kinds of interim texts. Today’s statement from the developing nations said that the framework document issued by the industrialized nations “ does nor accurately reflect the present state of negotiations on certain kev issues, such as agri¬ culture. wheat, meat, dairy and other products". It said that a complete and balanced assessment of the .current status of the so-called " Tokyo round of trade negotia¬ tions cau-only be made with the full participation, of all the countries involved”. The balance sheet of the negotiations could be negative in some areas, it said. The present sratus of the current negotiations caused deep concern a as regards tbe most important interests in the international trade of the developing countries However, the strong resent¬ ment and frustration now evident amongst Third World delegations has uor yet reached tbe poinr where they are threatening to wirbdraw from the negotiations. Western leaders hope to agree on a broad declaration of principles Business confidence is summit aim By Our Economics Correspondent Leaders of the West's seven most powerful industrial nations meeting'for the econo¬ mic summit in Boon this week¬ end all admit 'that their talks can provide no- quick solutions to the world’s problems. In¬ stead. they hope 1 to agree 00 ■broad declarations of principle on a range of 1 -topics, -with action to follow later. In addition, they hope to in¬ crease - . confidence among businesses and the public in ■ the idea that someone is seek¬ ing . to coordinate the worlds 1 . economies. But no definite. action is expected to emerge. Tbe fire, major subjects to be discussed will be growth without more inflation, cur¬ rency stability, the developing countries, protectionism . and trade, and energy. Agreement on all .these issues is likely in the sense thar ail of the'participants will assent to a joint communique at the end of the meeting set¬ ting out .objectives. However, there have been growing signs of friction in recent weeks as the countries taking part have sought to assert their positions in the run-up to the meeting. The most striking example is the obvious friction which has clearly existed between the' United States and ks trading partner? over the questions of the dollar and the payments problems facing America. Germany, Japan, and France have made it dear that they each feel the United States Admin i st rati on has been much - too slow to act to reduce energy imports in the face of Congressional un.willingness, to implement President Carter’s energy programme. There has been considerable ill-will also over the whole atti¬ tude of the - United States Gov¬ ernment towards the dollar. The Americans are thought to have allowed the ■ dollar to elide in order to mike their products more competitive. Japan has argued pointedly that its own huge trade-surplus is caused as much ' by the higher dollar price it is receiv¬ ing for its exports as by a growth in. their volume. Although both France and - Ger¬ many say that their proposal on _ European currencies is designed to help tbe doUar, im¬ patience with the United States attitude played a part in push¬ ing it forward. .^ America, on .die other, hand, increasingly has come to feel that it is receiving the blame for all the world’s ecoobnvc problems. In recent weeks United States officials have pointed out chat. most of the deficit, estimated at $25,000m this year, has been caused by 'imports- ■ of manufactured goods. They - criticize Germany and Japan for not doing enough to stimulate domestic demand.. More definite advances are likely on the issues .of trade and development The heads of tbe seven nations taking part (Britain, America, France, Ger-- mauy, Japan, Canada and Italy) will hear a report oii the multilateral trade talks. Patricia Clough writes from Bonn: President Carter said at a staxe banquet in' bis honour that he approached the summit “with optimism”. Together, be said, they must seek to reduce energy consump¬ tion and encourage' energy - exploration- and production, seek a monetary system strong and flexible, enough to sustain growth and boltser confidence and put an end'to rising pro¬ tectionist tendencies. ■Earlier, after a Jong talk with Herr Helmut ■Schmidt, the -Chancellor, President*' Carter said he could deteot no differ- ; cnee in the ultimate goals that the two men hoped to achieve. 1 Germany tones down idea of quick impact Dr Emminger against From Peter Norman Brussels, July 14 West Germany as the host nation . has been making strenuous efforts to dampen down expectations that the sum¬ mit can have a major immediate impact on tbe world’s economic problems. Bonn’s original idea that the summit might see tbe emerg¬ ence of an agreement, ia which all parties gave and, therefore, took somechiBg while benefiting the world in general, has been quietly pushed into the back¬ ground. ■ • ■ This concept envisaged that the United States should reduce its oil imports, thus cutting its current account balance of payments deficit and helping to restore faith in die dollar. Wesr Germany would, in turn, overcome its reservations and introduce another pro¬ gramme to stimulate domestic economic growth, despite the failure of the nine previous programmes introduced since the oil crisis, to bring growth back, to the level heeded to create full employment. Japan’s role would have been to ease its barriers to trade. The weak countries in the EEC, mainly France, Britain and Italy, were expected not to favour protectionism. All par¬ ties were to stress the need to continue the fight against infla¬ tion. According to official sources in Bonn, the package deal con¬ cept “ is not dead. It just has to be filled with life”. How it can be filled with life when all the indications are that Presi¬ dent Carter will come to the conference table viftfa 00 new proposals on energy conserva¬ tion remains unclear. * In the drcumstances it is hardly surprising that German government sources are resort¬ ing to tbe argument that 'the summit will be- valuable simply because it takes place. Frankfurt, July 14.—A wid¬ ened European currency agree¬ ment must take into account domestic monetary stability as well as stability on foreign ex¬ change markets, Dr Otmar Em¬ minger, president of tbe West German Federal Bank, said in an interview reported today. The inflation.differentials be¬ tween the individual European.’! Community members would' probably mean thar not all the Community^countries would be. able to join. an expanded arrangement in the beginning or would, have to accept large fluctuations in exchange .rates during the adjustment period. Dr Emminger said in an inter¬ view with UWD, the West Ger¬ man financial news service. When asked whether' an. ex¬ panded agreement would lead to more inflation for West Ger¬ many, as many critics* have alleged, he said that would only be the case “ wfaeh individual countries do not pay attention to the rules of the game, such as when a country tries arti¬ ficially to keep an unrealistic exchange rate with the help of abundant credits ”. It was important, therefore, that countries, were completely agreed on the game roles and that springs of credit did not become too large, thereby male- ring stability'risks too great, Dr Emminger said. Caroline Atkinson writes: Cen¬ tral bankers . who., met .in Basie .earlier this, week : all agreed that there 'were many obstacles to be overcome be¬ fore. a nety zone of European currencies, could'.be pot .into operation.- However, they recognized that the German and French heads of state were extremely serious in their commitment to such a zone. German and French : central bankers were much less enthu¬ siastic than tbeir respective heads of-state about the scheme. Price panel inquiry into Procter & Gamble By Derek Harris Commercial Editor Only a fortnight after- decid¬ ing to investigate price rises proposed bv Lever Brothers, the Unilever subsidiary which has about 49 per cent of the washing powder market, the Price Commission - yesterday announced'an investigation into price increases pre-notified by .the other dominant company in the market; Procter & Gamble. Procter & Gamble, although based in the United States, manufactures extensively in tins country. Ir has around 42 p*— cent' of the washing powcw market In the United Kingdom. It is the first time the Com¬ mission will have two major investigations, token on its own initiative, running concurrently in the same sector. They will form the first major inquiry-of the washing -. powder market since the Monopolies Commis¬ sion inquiry in 1966. The Price Commission yester¬ day reiterated its particular interest in knowing how tem¬ porary price reductions are applied in this market. Cash-off offers are a common promotional gambit' in the detergent and soap powder market in which Lever’s Persil Is - brand leader followed by Procter & Gamble’s Ariel. The Commission presumably wants to assess how far price rises are justified -during periods when a manufacturer is running cash-off campaigns: . - Procter & Gamble had told the Commission * it wanted to raise prices . by an overall weighted average of 5.5 ' per cent on a wide range of soaps and detergents. These include Tide, Daz, Ariel, Dreft,. Bold, Fairy Show. Fairy Liquid, Flash and Camay- and Fairy toilet soaps. Tbe company was.last night considering whether to ask for interim rises under tbe profit safeguard arrangements which apply during the investigation period during which the pro¬ posed rises are . otherwise frozen. Boeing gets record $1,600m order from United Airlines Brussels says it is far from satisfied with ariff reduction offer made by Japanese Michael Hornsby jssels, July 14 ■ Respite “some very difficult iblems ’I _ -remaining--to be. red, a balanced and satisfac- y conclusion by the end of : year to the Tokyo round of rid trade talks in,Geneva-was ‘‘ reasonable expectation ”, a lior EEC negotiator «ai j here jay. -ommenting on the document 3_pted by the major 'trading ions. Sir Roy Denman, the ropean Commission’s direc- -general for external affairs, gled out agriculture, safe- irds, subsidies and-coumer- Img duties as the most portant items of unfinished sin ess. 5ir Roy also' said that the •C had made' clear to the 3aaese that “ we are very far ' satisfied ” with their tariff tuctioa offer. The EEC had ‘ en the Japanese a list of the xJucts that would be with- iwn from _ the Community's n offer . if they did not prove theirs, substantially. Cars, on which the EEC at . present levies an 11 per cent tariff, arc among the items on .the. list, according to in¬ formed sources. They were included at the particular insistence of Britain, where Japanese car exports have- a 10 per cent markec share, by far the highest -in the Com¬ munity. The EEC estimates that the. Japanese offer on industrial tariffs amounts in real terms ro a cut of only a Iktle over 20 per cent, compared with the Community’s own offer of 40 per cent. (AJ1_ cuts - would .be phased over eight years, with a possibility' of postponement of tbe final instalments after .the fifth year.) Although there was still no agreement on safeguards, Sir Roy said, other countries were now giving serious coosidera- tioii to tbe EEC’s demand -for -the right to use Article 19 of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade selectively against individual exporters. At present. Gatt signatories may use Article 19 to curb im¬ ports only if the measures taken are applied, equally to all ex¬ porters of the products iu question. Also, ail countries affected by the curbs are accorded a right of retaliation. Britain and France have been, to the forefront in arguing that it should be possible in future to use Article 19 only against those countries causing market disruption. Sir Roy said that the argu¬ ment in Geneva wa-s now less about the principle of “ selec¬ tivity ■** than about the circum¬ stances in which it might be applied. j On agriculture. Sir Roy said that tbe EEC had accepted the need to define more dearly the meaning of Gatt rules govern¬ ing subsidies on agricultural exports. These lay down that such subsidies must not give the exporters “more than an equitable share ” of world trade in the product concerned. low the markets moved The Times index : 207.74 —0.07 ! The FT index : 474.4 +0.8 i TIIE POUND .‘chain 7p to 6 fi?p lam Grp -3pto68p. ton Percy , 5 p to 175p tdford Prop 1 6 p 10 2Jbp imer & Lumb 3p to 5Sp 3y Mail Tst I Op to 328p iner JH 18 p to 14Sp rdon & Gotch 8 p to 7Bp OILS rtetner A little Corp aih CE ghlds & Low lOp to 864p 5p to 365p 24p to 176p Sp to 350p 5p to 272p 4p to 119p . Howden Grp Inv Tst Corp Hat Carbon Norton WE Prop Sec Royal Schroders Tube Invest Boechst Jardine Arson Fdilly Theatre Rank Org Ord Shea Trans Slme Uirby uiiles edged higher, t-edged securities were quiet Dor prerainra 503.5 per- cent feco‘ve rate 47.54 per cent).- Hing lost 40 points, to SL8S25. 5 effective exchange rate Index i«62.0. 7p to 71p 5}p to 276p 4p to 42p to 49p 5p to 153p 5p to. 370p lOp to 410p 6 p to 368p 5p to 4fijp Bp to 284p 5p ro 330p 6p to 241 p 6p to 564p 7p to 104p Gold lost S 1 ~ 2 S .an ounce to S1S5.U5. SDR-5 was 1.24645 on Friday, while SDR-E was 0.659916. Commodities ; Reuter’s index was at 1443.1 (previous 1442.5). Reports, pages 19 and 20 Australia 5 Austria S< h Belgium Fr Canada S Denmark ’Ir Finland Mkk France Fr Germany Dm Greece Dr Hongkong S Italy Lr Japan Yn Netherlands Gld Norway Kr Portugal Esc 5 Africa Rd Spain Pes Sweden Kr Switzerland Fr US s Yugoslavia Dnr Bank buvs 1.71 29.25 64.25 2.17 11.00 8.23 8.70 4.05 70.00 9.10 1545.00 405.00 l 4.37 10.55 86.00 1.97 144.73 02 3.60 1.94 35.00 Bank sells - 1.65 27.25 60.75 2.10 10 JO 7.8S 8.30 3.83 66.00 8.65 1560.00 380.00 4.14 10.10 81.00 1 —S4 142.75 8.32 3.36 1.S8 34.00 & Other pages Wall Street RuId» for irojll acoanurjbbn b&al: i*o:ci onlj. as .,u,-u>iicd j-pjertia* EarcUj <1 Rant. inturnaUanai t.:d. 0i!le«nt rales zpol" iravcllira UK 0 ua« 2 nd other forcior currency bu.in»s. Bank Base Bates Table From David Cross Washington, July 14 United Airlines, che world’s biggest air company, today an¬ nounced the largest aircraft pur¬ chase in the history of civil aviation. After a board meeting in Chicago the company said it would buy some S1,600m worth of aircraft from rfae Boeing company of Seattle. The deal was a severe set¬ back for West European - hopes For a stronger civil aviation in¬ dustry and for the European A300 Airbus being produced by a Franco-German consortium. There are two parts to the purchase of 30 Boeing 767 wide- bedied jets at a cost of some SI,200m, and 30 Boeing 727s— of which 1.500 have been sold— at a cost of 54Q0ra. “ Exhaustive technical . and economic analysis over the past vear proves that the 767, which incorporates the latest aviation Sir Hugh ~ Fraser fined total of £600 By Ronald Faux Sir Hugh Fraser, the head of the House of Fraser an-d vice- chairman of Scottish and Univ¬ ersal Investments i"Suits) was fined a total of £600 at Glasgow Sheriff Court yesterday for offences under the Companies Act. Mr William Forgie and Mr Angus Grossart, both Suits ex-directors, were found guilty with Sir Hugh of failing to .give a true and. fair view of the company’s affairs in the 1975 balance sbeat. Sheriff J._‘ Irvine Smith, announcing his verdict 00 the trial, said be was not prepared to go as far as saying there had been a case of wilfnl sup¬ pression of a £4.23m loan _ to Amalgamated Caledonian from the balance sheet It was not a sin of commission but of omission. The significant loan, of whose vulnerability and pres¬ ence they were all" aware, was not mentioned. w By so failing, they failed to take all reason¬ able steps to secure the pres¬ entation of a balance sheet which gave a true and fair i view", the Sheriff said. Sir Hugh was fined flOO on the balance sheet charge and £500 after pleading guilty to a restricted charge involving share deals. Altogether six members of tbe Suits board were before the Sheriff. They had pleaded oot guilty to tlie balance sheet charge. On the second charge of fail- i.ig to notify share dealings Sir Hugh pleaded guilty. Mr Forgie pleaded nor guilty but was found guilty on two dealings, and fined £35. He was also fined £75 on tbe balance sbsai charge. Mr Grossart was fined £75 on the balance sheet charge, and cleared on the share dealings. Mr Nicholas Redm.iyne was lined £100 on a share dealing* cbu'ge. and cleared of balance sheet charge. Mr James Gjss- mao was found 11 not proven ” on the balance sheet charge. Mr Edward Gamble was cleared of this charge. technology, is the best new air¬ craft for United”, Mr Richard Ferris, president • and chief executive officer of United said The t company had been examining a number of possi¬ bilities besides the. Boeing and the European Airbus for its fleet of the 1980s, It had also considered tbe possibility of doing without a new generation -aircraft and ordering still more 727s or McDonnell Douglas DC IDs. w But”,-Mr Ferris said, “this decision was made on tire merits of the aircraft in meet¬ ing Umted's future needs and not on the basis of national source ”. He went on: “Yet we are pleased that United’s order will belp maintain commercial air¬ craft as the country’s number one industrial export. That means ooiy good things for em¬ ployment and for this country’s balance of pavments.” The first 767, which will be slightly larger than the 757 in the construction of which, the British hope to play a key role, Is due to be delivered and in service by June, 1S8?. ‘ All 30 are expected to be delivered by 1984. Tbe 767s, which are still on the drawing board, will each seat. 197 pas¬ sengers They will' be powered by two JT9D-7R jet e n gines, manufac¬ tured by tbe .Pratt and Whit¬ ney aircraft division of United Technologies Corporation Also they are expected, to he nearly 35 per cent more fuel efficient per seat mile than the aircraft ' they will replace. “ That means ”, Mr F.erris said, “ rhac on a 1,000 mile trip, tbe fuel savings will . be about S 6 per seat.” The order, which is as usual subject to final contract negoti¬ ation, includes spare engines, parts and support equipment. Mr Ferris said that “ intern¬ ally generated ” funds will finance a substantial portion of the order, with money for the remainder coming from United’s “traditional lenders”. Kenneth Owen writes: Boeing regard the go-ahead for the 767, made posable by the United Airlines order, as potentially as. significant as the _Haunch of the Boeing 707, the most successful of the early big jet airliners, in the 1950s. The concept is of a new family of commercial jets. Initially this family will con¬ sist of the 767 end the.777 . 1 each carrying about 200 -passengers (the United version, of the 767 wpH fear 197).- The "767 will be powered by two Pratt & Whit¬ ney engines^ each with a thrust of 44,0001b; while the 777 will have three 33,0001b engines. A body-width in between that of the conventional (eg 7071 and . wide-body, (.eg 747.) jets has been chosen for-.the 767 and 777. Passengers will sit seven abreast, with two. si isles. The third pew design to which Boeing are committed is the .757, a narrow-bodied, twin-engined machine which would carry 160-180 passengers. This is die Boeing candidate for collaboration with British Aerospace. Rolls accused: Rolls-Royce was accused yesterday of violating international agreements in.the sale of engine for use io Pan American’s Lockheed L-1011 airliners. Mr John Moore, President of the United States export-impon: bank, told a hear¬ ing in - Washington of a House Ways and Means subcommittee that the deal violated tbe letter and spirit of agreements of the Organisatioa for Economic Co¬ operation and Development. He said that Rolls failed to demand any down payment, exceeded a' 10 -year maximum term "for . repayment and violated, an OECD, understand¬ ing limiting local cost financ¬ ing.—IReu ter.- Opec experts discuss how to offset decline of dollar An expert committee of the Organization of Petroleum Ex¬ porting Countries met in Lon¬ don yesterday under the chairmanship of Shaikh AJi Khalifa Al-Sabab, the Kuwait oil minister, to discuss ways of compensating member coun¬ tries for the decline in -the value of the dollar. The currency meeting has no power to alter prices itself, and can only make recommenda¬ tions to oil -ministers, but Shaikh AH Khalifa is thought to have been given the authority to recall a full Opec meeting if necessary. Building society intake falls to £147m Building Societies’" net re- - cep its in June reached -their -lowest level for 18 months when they fell to £147m, compared with £212m in May, £335m in April and a peak of £590m in October. June. is seasonally a bad montb—withdrawals are always high, particularly because of holidays—and tuis year com¬ pering interest rates _ were raised whereas the building societies’ new investment rate did not come into operation until the beginning of this month. The setback id- net inflow of funds has nor, however, signifi¬ cantly reduced' the amount of lending undertaken by building societies. In June n total of £749m was advanced and a further £701m promised. Ford president ousted by Detroit board Mr Lee A. Iacccca was ousted on Thursday as president of the Ford Motor Company io Detroit by a unanimous vote of the board of directors. The decision was confirmed yesterday by Mr William Clay Ford, wliose recent elevation to a top executive spot in tbe auto¬ mobile company headed by his brother, Mr Henry Ford II, fuelled speculation that Mr Jacocca was on his way .out. “The vote 00 the recommen¬ dation of mv brother was unanimous”, Mr William Clay Ford said. Auiomotive Neivs 1 reported. that Mr lacocca’s departure' will take p^-cce on October 15 —has 54th hirlilxlay. Hambros plays down shipping loan debts There is. little in Hambros annual report to indicate the scale- of its shipping loan pro¬ blems save a bland statement that “ major provisions* have been made against tbe relevant debts”. Outside estimates put - the 'level Of specific provisions variously -at between £ 20 m and £4CFm. But bow this has been apportioned between the profit and loss account and -inner re¬ serves is not disclosed. But judging by the remarks about the rest of its banking business—acceptances are up by £40m to £256m .and all other areas have done much better —profits excluding provisions would have been sharply higher than the previous year’s £(».3m, compared with the reported £5.2m. As it is the group balance- sheet shows no scars with capital and reserves up .from £53m to £65 uj and for tbe bank up from £ 44.6m to £4 5.3m. which coTy serves to underline the shortcomir*.' 6t umlied 4i«- - closure of bank accounts. I 15 point Wall St rise surprises analysts ■ Wall Street surprised' Inves¬ tors yesterday by rising 15.07 points to dose at 839.83. Analysts said there were reasons for die market to hare sone down; the huge rise in the bask money supply yester¬ day and the nation’s industrial output rising only 3 per. cent in-June, the third .successive month of narrowing : gains. However, the gain was broad- . based as 421 issues closed higher and 385 finished lower on trading of 28,370,000 shares. WE RE RICH! JOIN US! We, Peter Whitfield and Bob Tanner, starting " with £75 each — have made millions in shares (Clubman's Chib, Orme Developments, etc.). We are now joining forces with Peter Welham (Questor of The Daily Telegraph) to produce Equity Research Associates NEWSLETTER, a fortnightly private investment newsletter. . Equity Research Associates will seek'undervalued investment situations— and tell you when to buy and sell. They will give positive advice on bids 2 nd hew' issues and keep a keen eye on shareholders' rights.. its distinguished list of contributors will include acknowledged experts on all aspects of investment. Ensure-that yotr receive the.first issue (Sept. 4th 1978) FR£E by .completing the coupon (below). For details of FREE TRIAL OFFER, write or telephone now: To Equity Research Associates . Wardrobe Chambers 146a Queen Victoria Street London EC4V 5HD Please send me details of the FREE TRIAL OFFER of the NEWSLETTER Name CAFIIALS PLEASE Address or phone 01-2487012 J THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 197S PERSONAL INVESTMENT AND FINANCE Banking Get a Ioah wK ile the going is good Those smiles that should have dimes for another month or so greeted you in .vow- bank., ear- personal customers v^ilfchave to Her this year-may wplT be ctyrn- bear,Thtrbr unref the? cutbacks: ins into frosty, stares. The Already -head offices « .the chances now ofTXOPpins.tip^vdur clearing' b&nks'Tm-e’rfftiftRietf ' ’■ overdraft or even beinS-Riyen managers ,of the. guidelines • Che more, expensive, personal which say mat lending to ttraiiu- loan to cover the summec fioli- facturing companies has ' day, say, are becoming slimmer priority. There is now talk of every day. . . a tighter credit squeeze. At the very least you will So, if you intend- to borrow, have to cotne up : with' a more my advice is to go to your <coiTvuicins ‘ reason for tout manager on Monday. Even loans, ■spendthrift ways than simply to from hire purchase companies ______ indulge a whim, although you may soon be harder to.get, with ' Barclays mav sail gee a sympathetic the companies owned bv the big __ 'bedring for things like home - ciearers governed by the same . Midland improvements. But even here restrictions as rheir parents and M a »j on ai bank managers may-not have the., independents, -like United . w es | n ■much leeway for much longer. Dominions Trust, already hav- • At the heart of die problem ing .to review tbeir level of new p . ' ■ - . is that -managers have been a business. Housing market June was a goocf month for selling BANK CHARGES Westminster Minimum balance I or free tanking Cloo min -. of £200 average £30 £100 min Notional tnieresl allotted on current accounts balances longer term is Llovds' decision ^ - to cut the cos? ofjising its cash '' hQOS dispensers, since for the-nrst BliO Fl I fi TQf UVtwa time this offers. customers a Mnnthlv in EhoTce between wins faceiess ^■ 7Iw *77 machines or an acrossine- SSlfiilCI ( Dec counter teller—in effect me . W : SSf? S 5 S rJ _J£L 1576 £f ■_ .One of my worries. however,- is that the concentration on Timet , Ha li t as. .house house price moex Monthly index of average prices of second-hand* (Dec 1977=100) ■; .. . .. . Average price - % change over _ index _£_ 1 year 6 months . 3975 June.. .... S6.0. 12,643. - - I 7.. . % " Sept ‘ 85.4 12,562 ■ > Dec . 85.3 12.533 . . 1976 March 87J 12^96 ' June 92.1 13.544 Sfept 92.0 - ^ 13,531. ', ... Dec 91.2 13.413 • • 5% . . bank diarges, where *e bankS J. nde * g 0 ' -- 1 - ci?45Tb n e S P^eCoSSSSn month]/ rise' stocl it was }% under deposit p _ launched in January—showing “ *r era * e house P rice « f ---—--—--T- vn* HIVII* lUipuuwu UkXLlCfl 2 > etc 3 Ql 1% under deposit of interest to customers, namely an average bouse price of little, too successful this year in Rather unfairly, the banks persuading customers .to bor- have to bear the brunt of com-. ' row more and this threat of a plaints of customers about .* 7tp for cash dispensers. the quality of service offered- by the big banks. The verv success of the However, because of seasonal. factors, the index shows a - --- —F* 6 ■ ‘moneb-oa-month increase of 4- 1973 “ an per cent after adjustment ;fb ■ runaway growth in bank lend- curbs on lending and the fact f ew weeks ago she compli- -If this encourages you to r ? e rather than almost 6 per cent. ■ t22? 2*jL*E™*& ‘men ted her ba£k on the cheap- change banks, it could be that S Since, the beginning of the year prices of existing bouses. been, one of the chief worries jumped by more than a half for ■' the. Government . in its since the start of the year, when economic' planning- m fact these are . the direct you have'not been gening the K* 0 !* 1 ness of tha service it provide^ ^ S S WS ct these are . the direct Jo any case, with three out of chansed before. Courts, . suggest: that many are . . . . economic'planning. ra fact these are . the direct In any case, with three out of Ranged before. t-oures, suggest that many are wJlH ne , v house price rises Last* month' the authorities result of government policies. 'five customers at the banks - not bappv with the service pro- s i, ov .. a remarkablv similar ■ rein back per-. So it is-perhaps unlucky, for qualifying fovfree hiking, you a « U J^ wh Ve f S“eve%S ** ^ of 11 "pi ce. r ow K ssa.-'ssfw.-is ^*m ris. b £&?&2 r rF : Uland by the >u»am.. chlrges. Bank charge *re such Tl,e scale of. increases that slSV^d'.'S ,OUr ^ PteMems faentg bnnta ns.. Bat g " a,e6 ° Figures from the booking an etnotiye topic diese daysthat National. -Westminster and X ’ ^ a' ? dekf'^fe Ow the 12-momh period svstem this week, however, it ^fiems harj o ctiscuss ihem Lloyds have recently introduced What- the rise, in bank a l ™ new houses are 21 per cent ■show that che big- dearing ia-rataonal terms. Mv own feel- looks stiff and these will almost charges shduid lead ’to, how- wm °° ° 0 w toi improve ser^ higher, compared wirl* a rise of- banks in particular are not find- mgs, which seems to be backed 1 certainly be followed by Bar- ever, is changes in the way jiTS 16.9 per cent for second-hand ing it easy to get below their up by. m«rjcet research within clays- and Midland in the new current accDunis-m-e-used. One ^ nrnnpr homes. Biit the last quarter- allotted ceilings. What seems- to the banks themselves; is that year. NatWest has increased simple way of cutting down the, si“P^ element of a proper pj aun? ^ r^rersed; new house 1977 March 89.8 ■ 13,197 2.3 —225 v June 95.3 14,011 3.5 4.5- -July- 96.1 ; 14.122 1.9 ■5-9“ Aug' 96.8 14,234 4-6 8.6 Sept 96.9 .14,249 5.3 8-0 Oct 98.0 - 14,402 7.8 5.8 - Noy 99.Z 14.580 7.5 • 7.0 Dec , 100.0*"' . . 14.701 9.6 4.9 1978 Jan Feb 100.8 - 99.4 14.824 14.610 •11.1 11.5 5.0^ 2.6 March .. 103.7 15,248 • 15.5 70 April 104.3 15,334 . 12.6 6^ . May 105.2 15,465- 13.5 6.1 June 111.4 16,381 16.9 11.4 for your other problems facing banking. But ?- v fl ^ t,vo categories of hous- • .-the big. banks, still .seem to “turn r ,, A rise iti ' bank a deaf ear .to customer soRges- ne ^ houfe^ are ^ ^per^nf ^ nons on howto imorove ser- bercom P a?ed wibariW 1976 Mar Quarterly index of Average Prices of New Hogs ' , . (Dec 1977 = 100) _ iuarter . Index Average Price Vo change ovarp ended £ • 1 year . Quarter ended i975~Sepr Dec oanKS U1 particular are nut naa- *u S a, wnicu acetui. w oc uuciscu cenamuy oe louowea vy oar- ... ^ ... - ,j. | ib.3 per. cent tor Secon' ing it easy to get below their up W market research within. clays-and Midland in the new current accounts are-used. One homes. Biit the last q allotted ceilings. What seems- to the banks themselves; is that year. NatWest has increased simple way of cutting down the, simple expedient of ai woper m aure ^ rerersed; new be happening is that big com- they are not the touchy subject' debit entries from 30p to 15p number of debit entries is to ^“IsLfSIL'prices rose bi- 4. 4 per pany borrowers who had they are made out to be. and Lloyds from Dp to 12Ip. use the hank aro system to oooa “e imasunauon ot more , wlliJe existing'houses pui ' already arranged big overdrafts My colleague Sheila Black, But even those who pay charges Pay several bUls—gas, elec- th an a tev» oranc e->. sport and jumped bv 7. in case of controls on bank who knows a thing or'two about should find themsejves paying tricity and telephone—with one 1 I n II cent lending ate,now tunurvg to their value when she sees it, must only about another £5 a year at cheque. KOnOlu I UllSH The message is ciearers again and if this con- have spoken for many when a most. More interesting In the enough: new house 13.211 13.311 13,537 14.200 14.491 14,417 14.685 15,089 15,733 16.435 17.484 18.252 Grouse Dr Peter Williams, a London f C general practitioner,-pays £8 MI ^ a year to the General Medi- : " cal Council to retain his name M’l on its, register. If he did not g ■ ■ ■ ' ■ do so, be would be unable to Decimalization in 1971 pu practice and would lose his an- end to one of the country’; sole 1 source of incomb. So. most' popular' hobbies—thi .Collecting Coins are not the easiest way to make money Insurance Decimalization in 1971 put coin the better its condition for the British collector”, he i- end to one of the country's will be. . says. , . _ sole 1 source of incomb. So, most' popular' bobbies—the The choice did not include “Quality British copper at While .it may be true in in- i such an increase. Lots of fac- quite' ‘rightly, .the £8 ..is search for the elusive 1933 rarities, though the most the moment represents the surance that’you cannot have j tors are at' work here—not allowed against income tax. penny. Only six had escaped expensive coin in the collec- best investment for the collec- too much of a'good thing (pro- ] least the delayed impact of the ■ „ j ti a ^° to c,r cuiatiod and - if you tion—an • .Elizabeth I gold tor with £1,000 to spend.” vided you can pay for it), ii t earlier reports of rising house mr Horace liromiey, found one in your change at sovereign—was quoted in . 1975 ■ As .with stamps, you must be does not always pay to have 1 prices. This takes time to work Tunes Business News LiDra- the pub you would be rich ' at £1,400. It would sell for the prepared to spend if you wish life assurance' in too .large J through to the average bouse rian pays £32^4 a year in enough to buy the place—rdtac -same price today. tQ turn, your hobbv into any pieces. Flexibility is becoming j bought by people of modest union dues to -his union was the rumour. Condition metal and raritv sort investment. The artmud increasingly important and this I incomes. Topping up has many advantages prices rose by A. A per cent. 19 77 Mar 89.4 14.685 3.48 while existing houses put on a June 91.B 15,089 6.26 - spurt and jumped by 7-4 per Sept 95.7 1 5.733 . 857 “nf . Dec 100.0 16.435 ' 14.00 . *ooS|h: ”ne.f ge |,ou« priSI 1978 ]??{ ] 7 -^ have established a lead over June 111.1 . 18.252 21.0 second-hand prices, but it is unrealistic to expect it to widen further, indeed, the gap Average regional prices of second-hand houses ua-s already be^un to narrow ---;- — --—--- and further narrowine can be ’ J 4T e April t expected over the next few _;___ zl _ £ months'. North 13.616 13.333 12.989 rian pays £3224 a year in enough to buy the place—rdtac ^asne’price today, union dues to his union was the rumour. Condition, meta prices. This takes time to work through to the average bouse - June £ May £ - April 1 £ out North . 13.616 13.333 12,939 Yorks and Hurabqrside 11,735 • 11,118 11.292 North-west 13.553 12.460 12.937- East Hflidlands -13,137 12,233 • -12.354 West Midlands . 15,405 15,231 15.038 East Anglia 14.362 14,348 13,987 Wales . . 14,126 13.505 13,251 • South-west 16.563 15.985. 15.071 South-east 20,983 20.197 19.651 Greater London 20,899 19,482 ..19,825_ Scotland 16,884 16,093 - 15.853 - union dues to -ms union »«.uisnn*«ui. Condition meta! and rarity sorT OI mvestment, me anmuu increasingly important and this f incomes. nt/TC r * • Natsopa. His membership of In fact, the last 1933 penny -are the rhree factors which expenditure, Mr Finn, esti- can be achieved by having a j The index is based on the Klvd SUTVCY Ofl VlOUSC DHCSS 'the \iPion is a condition bf sold at auction fetched £7,000 govern the price of coins and a,aces - for serious collecting.of number of separate policies. housing market as a whole, . his work, but it is not allow- and did not come to light on. the would-be collector needs to * op condition coins is a min- able against tax. Yet he earns the bar room counter. be aware of them dl. If the those s Deo dine r_ I -_ A.1 __ TUa rn Wfirui 1C f-o hp a hnhhtr onri X>lll eveii IOX" LDOSC 50 cDOJug , *ut name aiKUiucuL iJUJUo i . , T - n of £2,000. goQd with personal pension ! " ha . r statisticians refer- to it-even for those spending policies for principals • as “ e leading edge” or mar- ily. coin ’ collecting can partners, the self-employed and } S’ 1 ? 31 movements signalled by r -nsks. Not- least among anybodv whose employer is not va!uers , reports. In ocher _ ever, ^urviveu cue trauma at ami «uy tumiu ui a i »suu«t/te tr : — . If you are a doctor, lawyer decimalization and the arrival return only “extremely fine” collector vervIlrmJv^ placed S,on ’ -or architect the fees to your of modern money. will do. Fo That is the advice df Patrick rui mviuisi .1 Ult U> ui UHJuera muuey. wu w. nf ; n ^cf ‘ professional association are has pro duced many myths.. *? a ^J* ce Patrick menLi ih e price of coins ?'£ T allowable. Trade union dues, among them the belief that in- a S d • depends on the dealer’s judg- f which can be equally un- vestment in coins is always a Son, the Koyid com dealers. He ■. mentj particularly as regards p^ranahlp ar(> nnr nrnfiiahl^. hnhhp Ri.r «/irk explains: • The grading- of ,i, a : * iunits. ■ forms of invest- r h; I L 0 r#*nrp<pnr , - h ?ii^ r ^Ihnm "rh^ while the average movement 1939-1959 semi ■ 21 - 32 34 -13 price of coins fn^ ^ much more moderate. Post 1960 del'd 25 35 27 12 - the dealer’s judg- S!!l f ^-:rh[n But by now some of die Post 1960 semi 24 36 28 12 . ^ oiarly u Wrt> d.^ok of rtfSSS - ~ 3 __!_ ®- arA hnnrirt h!I . biuiou is payable from gross ** t£S 2S f ‘? UfBS show P erc ®n^tie of estate agents who find ttlt- ^T£pUy ife ; one ^^71 mp rail ^ frem Prices have categories ,i StB cL ] elation of Numis- fan^V’ffinvou'dSde . Another reason for the index Hm-time buyers than those those who prefer an be Bntish N tun is- fo Snw xL pSSSiwi “at^nl Jump is. ironically, the Govern- - trading up ”. housing market, tha ^™ at rft n ' «iiinp time benveen the ages of 60 Moving on to. the estate more properties are no escapable, are not. profitable hobby. But, .with the h the explains:• “The grading- of coins, co ‘ os ** die most important Very much higher ie*S> or more) "b Much hiQher labour 5M «i) Slighl |y higher (about 2 *-o) Si - Tho 1 Pre 1919 terrace 6 15 . 42 33 ; Inter-war semi 13 32 38 18 .: 1939-1959 del'd 19 33 33 15 1939-1959 semi 21 - 32 34 -13 Post 1960 del'd 25 35 27 12 -- Post 1960 semi 24 36 28 12 • -r New houses 33 • 33 26 S their condition anomaly appears to be, the j^ one Revenue defends it. It says i east “Since a closed shop is con- term. , .sidered to be in existence beToreT father than'during M SS, “• ft aSTS^S SSMS. aWSK. *££ the.coirae of work it cannot “^Se^aS t/r« yS%““7 J™,?"?'?- J™* _,^, d ■ When it contes to seliing. Sd 73?°^? Jtk '& be “ t* se !“«*“*. »"ich wa. an allnwahlo pmpnefi in mine HctLf thA 1QW should keep a regular check v0 u are -again heavily reliant ot “ c ? r ‘ oe “' designed to prevent a house ~-_-r v , . , IUCU1UU ui C1UIC1 hiic mrei- I __ The coHeaor should adways national Association of Numis- n H wh-^ ot- hrs -guard that he is .oot mat i Sw or the British Numis- ^ ^ iriCf o 4 f ink» 1 rnm or art __• m_i J . s __lO Qflu^ D£!\SiOll Vdt 3llV an allowable expense in coins listed in the 1975 cata- •be course of work ”■ On" the other hand the Income and ■ Corporation logue of London dealer Seaby. . npir< _^ _. - iumi , ... ... mm me- miu^uii .t/u S ci nuiums - Seaby’s -combined ^ selling P since coins'have been struck Hon C Ando V not ^or^et the I * or tiiose born in 1916 or r ^ e f ^nncenfrarinn lhe °r>’ holds good here, too. hope of bigger gains tat pace id 1975 for this portfo- 700 - f npaipr^ 1 “ turn ,,0t With most Jater -< tic contribution limit is -\n RICS roembers able to dis- the increased flow is s. s SoSs iKritiv^s ^s, ce subj^ts el s- s h Ss.tSr.oS2? to ^ to ca “ Io * ue » 1 manv and atwavn onld l?™ WL- Si,, a nrfc* imum contribution .in any year through the system at large. Bui-ers, however, are snoo d keep a regular check y0 u are -again bearily reliant T u 01 on the catalogues to compare on the dealer for the right cnan 8 eu tor a ‘P'S?.’!! _ price—unless you go to auc- su PT r r . hfl ciar, be ex- ?r*f antt agents’ impression of the bous- ing oo to tie market -free cash ^fr^^iln^nn e ' eu a .b° use ing market, it is immediately Prospective vendors Pri c * exp o mo n. apparent tbar the “ margin " longer holding back - vestment . permutauons are you can reckon that dealers r“nronertv Bv rune the message u u L »««««»». many Md i, is not .lways sold buy b»ck from von M. . price hKt'ihroujb w .IlssTtor! ni through the system «t argt bnytrs, hnwerer ate which will give .the best some 20 per ■ cent . below the the marker that funds were A ^ Ie . 1 scv . e,al mouths of f i IFB - Dnuiodenuzed n return. An “ extremely fine ” selling price. • . ,- .. . feS “ Plier are Sign ^ iCant,y acarce. .with the result that. ”»*** T, f 1860 Victorian bun penny,-for Com dealers emphasize that n „ nnU . ar . ■ - _ although demand remained ® 2.“ Sli.®” Taxes Act, 1970 allows -fees samp coins, in the same condi- - ® }n ' forms of-alternative investment subject to a and subscriptions to profes- tioa- from the 1978 catalogue.. , penmmons are you can reckon that dealers S5S??ont?ibuSn S an Sional. bodies and- learned today's price is £4,003. ™£?£ and .}J ,s ” Qt aI ways gold buy back from you at a pnee f £ 3000 -j-j, limits f or poinc out. though, thai E! 1 tsr- SB,™iS? am PmSJT* y0U ?h T^ d - l east flve 186 ® Victorian bun penny,-for Coin dealers emphasize that ; , ciU, to be tax deductible; years before judging your m- example could be bought from Electing con be a praficabie “»7 P^P 1 * a J.. , ! ■ In other w.ords, a subscrip- ■ . 1 . Seab?s for £8 in 19?r Today hobby, rather than an expense, non for a professional maga- .. Some coins have increased »t would cost-£12, a rise of<50 Bur, so with any investment, iraum It ^ ^orth b^£ b Sot G a sub-" At Mr Finn shares 'Sail 5ord chn. P " so^w tak^msSS^' r Sf on nowSSi&SSSS:. • -‘Roger.Beprd ' work POSSiOie to would have happened had you silver, is-die most popular are_a _• _:-sS— dates that anvone who i ■ w , ; . , invested in these corns three . .. employed' can hot' fd Isn’t the Revenue jp dan- _y ears ^ a ®°- .... .. SELECTH)'LIST'FROM SEABY CATALOGUE future earniugs with-ac: gef -of applying a'* double' "■' 7 Thu .;W3uld"'have made 9.3 ' * ’ 1975 price 1978 price aod. so, as. a -concession, standard—one for the profes- -P 6 *. 5- en l- t prone . oyer the --■— : ------ mium • can- be.'ailocared sidbs aad‘the-other. for the per cent a ypar. ■ r ' particular tax "year at an; ' resl of the populdrioh whosfe Allowing; for inflation, though King Alfred penny, fine 260 275 within six months after . ^ y° a wouId teve lost, and your William I. pax penny, fine - 30 35 ines for that year have ping-up ’ these contributions, mdrket”'uf the 3 DrnJ-rtv mLv cent-more in the case-of post- • most popular category oi so as to tak_e mxcmium advan- „u;_t . ,® f t,, e war homes, and only'. slightK ing and one- showme tiu tue lniana Kevenue appre¬ ciates that anyone who is-self- employed ' chnhot' • * fdrecasr future earniugs with'accuracy • scent f» ca ui ring.-certain skills longer period the rewards! are by others .besides doctors 'likely.toJbe:greater. tu wars, due cney | ist oF historical English ue o r 9 e spaoe guinea, very nne uu cannot at jpresent claim,for if. coins-known to be of intm-est G ®orfle III silver Bank of England dollar. Worse than that, the. In- to collectors. very tine 35 land Revenue keeps-a-.separ-. They coyered a period from 4797 cartwheel 2rpenny, very fine 6 ate list of . organizations ,^ le Great to the George HI 1B17 sovereign, very tine 125 • whose subscriptions It deems' Victoria £5 gold 1887, extremely fine 525 .tax-allowable. No outside Sf fine, verv fme and d extre- Y ic toria gothic crown 1847. extremely fine 250 . Dody is involved. Is it really me i y fine condition. These are Vtooria bun penny 1860. extremely fine 8 , Ul ? . the Revenue to decide the terms used by the trade to. George V. Jubilee crown 1935, extremely Tine 6.; : professioiiS 3 ^ Wh3t -^ e 5 nd l ^ neraJ , ly Elizabeth H gold sovereign 1962, extremely fine 26 C . £ • King Alfred penny, fine 260 275 William l.. pax penny, fine , 30 35 Edward 1. silver penny, fine , 4 4 Henry VHI. young head groat, fine 16 20 Elizabeth 1 30s gold sovereign, fine . ' '1.400 1.‘400 Elizabeth 1 1601 silver half-crown, fine 140 200 Charles I'Briault crown, very fine 350 500 Charles H 2 guinea elephant, fine 350 325 George III spade guinea, very fine George III silver Bank of England dollar. 130 125 1 very tine 35 60 4797 cartwheel 2rpenny, very fine 6 7.50 George HI 1B17 sovereign, very fine 125 125 Victoria £5 gold 1887. extremely fine 525 550 ' Victoria gothic crown 1847. extremely fine 250 .325 ■ within six months a-jter cam- could ings for tbar year have been - agreed by ihe Inspector of A good plao is to " top up ” with a single premium contract Growth on which it • lent, which has ho “ es ' « nd ^ '“8. .«»showing *• affected the average price the more ^ an tbe - v were 10 lhe T*W pnee increase; tn . index represents. - - case ol mrer-war ones. there is even a forecas There is also : a tentative hint Tbrniighoui the country_ * Prices for thisf range of that"the Tefcent increase'in the RICS mernbers are reporting ecty mignr rail sugnay mortgage interest rate, which that _ prices appear to be next quarter, admittedly does not appear to stabilizing ”, “ slowing down ” K A i Ci affect demand very much, and “ levelling off”. The other JViQrQQrSt Ol. could deter more ' potential heartening piece of news, for ‘ ^ „ Unit trust performance with u single premium coiuract Growth and specialist runds (progress this year and Uic past tlirec Allied Metals Mns Cm 12.6 j each year and there are three years). Unitholder Index-2.210.4 ; chanty* from Januar> I, 197S : ■+S.**.%. New Court Int • ■ 12.1 v main advantages. In the first Average change orfer to bid. net income included, over past 12 months : Target Financial 11.8 1 place each siocJe Dremiuin 4J2.1®* ; o»er pasl three years : +45.0°i. Key Fixed Interest 11.3 contract ts "a comDletelv sc Da- Statistics supplied by Money Mana-emem and Unitholder. Grcvsiuue S St P Japan Growih L* Place, Fetter Lane, London eC-fA LND. CriMxnt later • U.O contract is a completely sepa¬ rate policy and so you can top up to the maximum overall contribution for the year. If, Hambro Smaller Cos 42.0 however, too much is paid in Hambrn • mailer See 33.6 one year, tbe balance can be 8rir Status Change .34.5 carried Em-vrard to 1 U 0 n^vr Ciwfedcradon GronKh speaking, the more modern the carried forward to tile next Con "crontii Sis Each year you .cun choose J? * G fpSEd* 27.7 this type of contract and the New Court Sraal Con 2G.0 individual company for the Oceanic' Performance 2.t.2 “top up" poiicv. Id a vear Unicom Recoven- 2.3.2 i - . - - t.hii,hnm Crmi'lh ?-» ? p. - i • *■ have a uiiit-.inkiu prlicy. If in- 'Reliance Onpwrtuniiy 21.1 KOUnd-UD . .. • ter f st rates should be parucu- Perpetual Growth M 2».3 * " . larly high, a nun-profit policy Oceanic Recovery 19.u .. might be a sound choice. Antony Gilifec Gmwth 1S.8 -More about bicycles and school leavers MCSwrl 12 ?SI£r,|! in^iranre^ha p, ' e Kad° n l?ic T- , ' le for in * ur ^’ debits or statements for a year Liberty Life claims that - it terest. And a non-profit policy- •‘5ti»^Ser S Oiphai >< F •• 1^9 insurance, has had cycling and goes up by ^Op and 60p after opening rheir TSB has a olun to make sure that may also be best if you expect. .Brtdcc Ganltal 14.7 . enthusiasts racina to tell ^us. jumps per £10, respectively. acounr. The conditions are thi, do e , no! Snen in .l! to take the pension quite ioom .GT Capital ' ua of the soe^ial cover available Guildford insurance brokers that they open the account !i. At other times, a sound pro- Ke Y Equity A-Cen 14.4 to members of the .Cydsts’Graham Brown, who arranged either before they leave school ^ tit-sharing pol/cv can 2Sg3Z£tj? C r V ±\tt Touring Club. Amonc_ other the spec j a | scheme, tell us that or within six months of doing f Z? nc hJ11 ’ v’ Jji* 5 ^' 3 taken, rn anv weiil, it is prob- S£S* n? m^ I ^hiD 0r fe^ e rhev £; ^2lve T ***“ bal t SectQrs are S ° and lhat rhe y kee P in credI t- 1 u nlf-lS-ed tin "Scheme ab, - v ' vise for a. certain amount SmSrTcrairth ‘ iT.x membership fee they receive for theft —b growth area. To back its campaign the of pension to -ome from this LcoCaplrat- U.« n ^l! rc * P*rty cover up to. There is one point of caution. TSB has also snnnsnrerf^ hand h • b JryK?irrrll li ' source, in view of the securiry Sekford Trust II.I £300^00 anywhere in die-world; _ Acdording to the 'conditions of £21 m SmSStabk'from 5,nsJe vvoman - ’ whichit provides. Siockhnldeis F 10.4 pronded tli^r are resident in tig scheme: you. are covered tsb Central Board 3 Comhall ^ ,e ^ issued in £1 The third advantage to be Henderson CapuaJ in.o :Ch ThS a ’^neeiai arr,n,e t?™* **'• ° f -™ r W^le. JSSiS TlLSZ EC2P"Sab P nils «* be reduced or gained from arranging Individ- !.’f Through a special arrange- but not against the theft of £2.50 paperback, £4 50 hard- ,ncVea5ed according tu the uyl policies is tl»ut the benefits Abbcv Cupirat 9.u ment with the Corahili lusur- an«hing.from it- . tack. woman’s circumstance and'the need not all bp taken « once. w Crescent Intel- 11.0 Britannia .Assets 10.9 . R Pearl Grov.ili —0.3 27:5 Britannia Geld & Gen 10.9. 166.8 Emion Dudley -0.9 15.G Charterhouse Europe 19.7 147.9 Stratton F -1.4 22.1 S & P Financial 10.3 ’ 7 r i.l Ro”aI Trust Cap —4.1 18.S Henderson Australian 10.1 ’ • 75.6 Midi Drayton Grn-th —5.1 22.0 London Wall Internal 9-4 39..1 Scbrodcr Europe M 8.S..' 185-6 SPtCLVLIST Gartraore /nicmi 8.7 .- 111.3 M - Sc C Far Eastern 42.4 73.3 Bishopssatc 1m F S.5 IS7.4 Mid Drayton Ccid 41.3 37.3 Hend«r>on Firan-tial 56.3 Hcnicrjon European 33.0 18.1 National West Finan 7.9 70.7 M & G Cummuditv 32.5 — Sccurin- Select F 7.4 33.3 OT Japan & Gen 31.y 110.0 <: & p' Scotbits 7.8 — Allied Hamtiro Pae 31.1 7S.6 oceanic Overseas 7.6 87.9 Target InvestmenL 26.2 41.9 London &. Brussels. 7.3 • 71.9 Arliuttin.it East ft Ini 26-0 27.2 Britinnw New Issue 7^ . b 3 "- 00 , M ‘rts 23.0 — Gt Winch Overseas M 7.4 io.n Bnunnia Minerals 2j.U -56.3 Target Gilt Fund 74.3 GarLmurc Far Eastern 21.7 — ...wwaMwi .cc u,cj .c«..c tor mett—o growth area. To back its cam pa Leu the dirert"H' « of Pension to <om« from tills Leo Caplrat- cover up to. There is one point of caution. TSB has also snnnsnrerf^ hand cinnU^^^. 1 ,h ' !lH JryK? ‘ rrrll li ' source, in view of the securiry Sekford Trust £300.000 aovwhere in the^rid; According id the conditions of £2k m SnSSShk'from s,nsJe wumn - ’ which'it provides. Stockhnldm F ■SJ V I?iSJ? l ?ii.Sntii reS,deilt iadlg . K^nie. you are covered TSB Central Board 3 Copihall T* ,e P°’ ,c > 15 iwued Iu £l advantage to be SSSra'Accumdai • rt Thrmi2? p .nlrSi against theft of your bicycle. Avenue, London EC2P 3AB; uniK whi ch «n be reduced or gained from arranging Individ- N??cX„n rJSI? meS trirh 5.P. fWhhfT^SS" but J* 01 ?eamst the theft of £2.30 paperback, £4.50 hard- ‘"^Veased according to the ual policies. is time the bena/iis Abbey Capital ment with the Corubill fusur- anvthiag. from ic- ance group members can also Details can be obtained from '" __ death cover can be transferred Normally, it is' not possible in Midland DrayKiii Cap x.s 2l'„J nrrtjmia Krvn_Ti;. 1 j.B 21.7 • Chieftain Jniicroat -0.3 take advantage of preferential the Cyclists’Touring Club. Cot- *““■■** to her husband should she take part of. the benefits from 5 * P Seiner mt „ x.k 21.1 Intcrritior.al 15.3 J.o Ridgefield Internar -2.2 ' cvclc-.insurance. ■ This -allows terell ■ House, 69 Meadrow ^ ,, . ,.. . .- niarrv. a -iincle Police (although Lhe Nat & CirniPi Lautial F S.. 3..-0 Ausu-iiw 33.2 jj.d liamlim Secs of Am -2.fi them to insure their machines Godaiming, Surrey GU7 3HS 0n Monday Liberty life re- * - - .Scottish /kmic-lble has '‘j con- V^aguard Grn^-ih r.. , 41.1 Pri^.ls . F lll;’ n f -’’ , ! A, Z 512 s^hiesioiser NU Vidil -3-2 •a^ physical The Wm Savins Bank thi. g F back To "^1^11 "limK, of .mill s^ulife Cr,“-rli £* \l 4 . 3U BS^iSfckw =M ' There are two schemes, week continued- irs drive tor “* one m 10 ,s lud -> enougli to jjek, to herself. If she marries Ifj ho|VCVer d self-cmployed 5cWnii'-er Mki Ldr» ~.6 — rmsrnisiunjl i.i.v _ rjrect' Pref-nmcc ' -3.G 1 ;ip- , emnity and cost for cost, new custom b>- announcing on hare average persona! savings Person hold* a number of |ili- genel Capiral .7.4 - -V*. f .12.9 23 1 ynicora Worldwide *9 for tV, e indemnity scheme- Thursday a free banking °* P ut ■ wa 5> at tJle ratt tlinc. to the second husband. c ies'from different offices, he Gartmure Insuraiwv - '■'J *5" r *' , »n \.i.s 6.H evurterhouss Inter -j.9 1 >r-rt Ft £5 .for £50 insured, scheme for school leaver*, ft of £9^0 a week. But this .s where the transters C a»i start to draw on them by p unh-^-r Cru-tb i 4 ^ \S?mc S \H 5^, P , l ' s . Gr S, wlh , “of - ■with 20o for each .further £10 already onerates some 5.000 The other nine were rather slo P- stages _ .. Srionnfu SllieJd .L 7 i«S CWeftain Amerfan -J-J _ un to £100.' Above this,-the school banking schemes among worrying. They are the “finan- The death cover canmit be What it. more, you choose Britzamu Comm & Ind :.fi Briunnia FinJ Sec^ Tt StSlirw iS.il-MS ' rate increases to 40n for each 500.000 school pupils. cially battered ” wives. They transferred to .i third husband, tiie most uppropriate policy to Britannia Growth 3.n 44.4 "■* “ Britannia rw Amrcn i. .a further: £10 insured. Pupils seeking work this nave uo money tf tlieii own. ihe but the main benefits remain, use at the tunc- ' Target Swrrinl Sit*: 3.4 ■ x.'» -J C-'u'nge j#hlv juh: ih, 1977. offer io bid. income rcliuvst^ _ The cost for"cost. or new for summer are offered free bank- survey says—certainly less than A lamp sum terminal pas-ream i.a»won Growth 3.: -i^ '■ ■' tine.; juh: to, 197 offer u> fn'«t, income rtuitciwif- e> Old, scheme .has 3 premium 50 ing with nn charges for their own children have a week or a pension for thoi« over 60 PV, TiroeLGrowti. l'i ' '■!.- n : '^! IZ'ln!" per cent higher._ 11_ starts . at cheques, standing orders, direct for pocket money. are available. John L/rUfTimOnCl wccmlHlv Capital -0.2 M3? I- : Inin ,rrri-« woman’s circum tance and the 1 need not ull be taken ax once. Sctiag CanitaJ stages _ ...... Britannia Sliieid 3.7 Whftl IT. more, 'you choose Bntzapia Comm fi Inil !.fi tiie most upnrooriate uoliev to Britannia Growth 3.G 44./ Lawson Gill 24.5 21.4 M & G AustTaljsiju 24.1 4-.JJ Target Com modi l v 23.2 _ Endeavour 22.7’ 29-- ' Britannia Invt>t’Trust'22.T lAeini-- lnvcsnnent 21 ,q Britannia Fjr li?>r j$.9 2 - 1 -.Z Occjnic Jinaou^i- 19.S _ vna S & P 11,1 1L-.S S & P Commodity .7-2-2 Target Ameren Ej^le l^.s ■‘■lie Arbutiinur Fin & |'n»p js.ti ^ Alihe.v Investment 18.3 ,,, M tf G Imesunent 18.2 >8 0 ncnJt-rton Interrur 17.8 ^■ T Brinniua Cmd Slurbs 17 .fi 4S*7 Atijutluwt Cm bhar«» 17.3 ■Su'w HenJerron Far E.is: 17.2 55 7 AriuUiinot N Am Int t 6 .b 5l!» 1‘rjLti. jI K.J 29 bnumu Fn.'i-eiT. I5.B 241 Mercury Inter rational lj.3 Unicorn Auuii-ilia J 5.2 At.t Unicom Fiiunkbl H.7 b.i.l Briunnij inr Gi-ev.tli 14 .7 Chjr[-rlir.u-,e Fii 14.1 33.8 K’m-jv IniLmalfniul 14.1 77.3 "JI & G H.l — gj mi?rm:iynj| 13 .V — 5 & P Eur.-peju 13 .fi 24.0 Arbutiuiet F«ireign \; s r,n.J Louden VVjIi Filial li.J 4 ,,r: Cjpiul 13 !u 20.8 hill sjiuuel Fin f ’7 — Britannia Final Secs L 2.7 — Tu’ryet Inrsrnational ‘ 6.2 33.6 “Hambro Overseas EarQ 5.8 19.3 L & C fortraaDunal 5.8 65.7 Hill Samuel Inr . 4.6. 47.4 Kuv . Energy . 4.6 — Hendersun Nat Res 4.4 15.3 M & G American ? -4.4' 17.3 KPI Overseas- 4.2 5.2 GI .liS ft. General — -4J 31.' An torn- Gibbs Far East 3.9 4b-J Stoirart AmexiCun 3.S 21.9 Arbuthcut Preference 3.2 13.2 Grantchesicr 2.5 41.9 Allied Hambro Int 1.9 37.u Rowan- American ■ 1.5 49-2 Schlcjin^er Inter Grw 1.3 49.fi Garimore American 1.2 81.7 Henderson N American 1.1 82.6 VI ft G European 1.0 6.4 Hill Samuel Dollar 0-S J l..» 5 i P Energy 0.5 21 7 • Chieftain fnicroat -0.9 lj..1 i.u Ridgefield Internat 13.3 3J.d Hambru Sect of Am -2.fi 14.7 31.2 Sjhtewiniicr Nti Yidil -3-2 14.7 29.1 Gmcorn America -3-S M.l 34.9 Mid Dravton Inter -4./ 14.1 31.3 Ljwsun American “4-8 14.1 31.6 Briunnb Uni Energy -4.S 1.1. V — Target Preference -3-fi 1.7.9 2A 1 Unicura Worldwide tl.S b.H Cturtcrhuuse Inter -j-3 13.: 30.S 5 & P l : 5 Growth -6-6 1.7.0 19.4 Chieftain American -9.1 13.7 24,2 Sc ::iesl riser Am Gr -1 f-§ 12.7 — Britannia N Amrcn -I.4.J l THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY iS 1978 xdfibn EDITED ; BY MARGARET STONE FINANCIAL NEWS AND MARKET REPORTS Stock markets ' 7 Index continues modest rise lily company i feader tells me he is soon B^terd5e a right to buy shares, company fit which he used g e m P tn y ed ^ he wonders — _ t'ie tax outcome will be. . writes: “Some «ven ago' ray employer offered the opportunity- to; buy in I some shares, in pie com- r at the Price ruling in 197L i: v‘gs were registered m ray '■ rj '.is for the consideration or i: lich as-a rights payment . r - ;In 1976 the 'company had-a 7 s Its issue and# although by r J - ; time I- bad-left their era-. Q - r- by virtue of my lp paid bs I was offered the option I S>uy further shares, for lp. -se latter shares '-rmn -.ww- ;y? fibase in 1975 at . the price 'f : bailing in 1976. .- ■ ip’ -Soon it will be time ta eom- 6 ° ,:'e the purchases. .- What wiM "the tax position? Do ; I that I pay -capfcaLgams ces n< ii nn the difference between in i "^tbv’s price and .the price rul- :.Z_l _ the rime the shares were =e ° 3 cbajta" stered in my name?” - _lyeat 1 Hie position is worse than- • because section 186 Taxes 1370 tells us: "Where a- ——»n realizes .a gain by the ^-rcise. or bv the assignment ■elease, of a right, to acquire ’es in a body, corporate oh; ed bv that person as a direc-' " —-,-^or'employee' of that or any * f : x -body corporate, he shall -chargeable to tax under edule E on an amount equal.-.. — _J_- 3 he amount of his gain - •*/ •rT'Yhat the jargon means, so as rids reader is concerned;, hat on exercising his right the shares- he will have. 2r_Er.: -is*' r : • • As f^iofor insurance •• :: f/hen it omes to ;; taking i claim wnmW of motor insurers — •iSteafcgj adopong-a tougher attitude ,-artLs daims;- partly because a of them ar<“ worried. ~ ,v> SvS&ut the level of . fraudii- t .Tclaims, although they nit- that they-do not know at, proportion of the claims itfa they settle are not mine.'. • —.Also*? as motor insurance -tomes even more competi- e, many insurers are having • watch their claims costs — efully, to- '.make, - savings ■ ere they caiu.. An insurer - •oting the cheapest premium unlikely to be the most gen- ... jus when it comes to settling . -. ims. . . . •=.- Equally, some of . the tradi- W^rrarafcaUy generous insurers (well household names among. orance companies) are find - ... ..that they cannot secure the ,ume of business which tjiey . • id if their premiums exceed . • ’ ‘ r Jse.of much, of the rest of the • rket by too wide a margin. •Jhfortunately, whfld yoii can --• ; d out a lot about an insurer iqre- arranging, your .in- • r " -ance, discovering attitudes raids claims is difficult. In i event, to some extent, the . komcat . meted ; out by • insurer may vary in dif- .- - rent parts of the country. . . Nevertheless, there are some- •'sic points which can. be ablished at .the outset, with . insurer. Does it. .operate a . ecomtnended .-repairer ” . leme of any kind ? . .. Under snch a scheme, you ty be advised 'to take the car a repairer on a- list with .uch the insurer has special rangemems. : : Iha't is- not ce^sarily a. drawback. It can .. - - ivesfors week - - to' pay income tax (not capital gains'-tax) on the difference be¬ tween, the. market value of the shares, at the time he exercises the right—in the reader’s own words “ today’s price ”—and what hs actually paid for the shares. The difference repre¬ sents remuneration and-will be assessable under Schedule E for 1976*79. In addition, when tbe shares are sold, a capital gain will be taxable- (unless it'is within the £1,000 exemption limit) on the difference between the proceeds of sale and die aggregate of the -price paid for the rights and the shares.plus tbe gain taxed under Schedule E. These rules apply to all employees whatever their level df earnings. The same principle applies where no rights or notions are involvedbut the shares arc bought, outright at under-value. Again there is a Schedule E liability on the difference be¬ tween, the market value .of the shares at- the rime of purchase and the amount paid for. them. When the shares are sold capi¬ tal gains will be assessable on the difference between sale pro¬ ceeds and the Total of cost plus rite Schedule E gain. Under rite new sebeme de¬ tailed in the Finance Bill 197$ (and misleadingly referred to as “profit sharing”) relief is to- be jpven-2-in certain, circum¬ stances—from the charge to in¬ come rax on shares acquired by employees in their employer COTnoapy.- ‘ ; • The scheme comes - : into operation, on April 6,-1979, and the rules are somewhat com¬ plex. To give a broad idea, the company must establish a British trust with United King¬ dom resident trustees- Funds are then paid into the trust by the company to enable the trust to buy ordinary shares in the company. All full-time employees must be eligible ro participate in .he scheme on similar terms and —here is the crunch—-the total market value allocated to each employee must not. exceed £500. An employee must agree to his shares remaining with the trustees for a minimum of five years. When tbe fund vHocates the shares to the employee there j*» no income tax ar this stage and, providing the shares are retained for a total of. 10 years (as originally drafted the period was 15 years), no income tax is payable. If the shares are not held for the full 10 years there -..ill be a charge- to income tax on a percentage of the original value, tapered according to the the length of time the shares have, been held. On the sale- of the shares capital ?ains rax will be pay¬ able iu tbe usual way on the difference between sale pro¬ ceeds and the market value of the shares at tbe date that Lhcy were allocated to the employee. Any "dividend received on the shares will be taxable on tlte employee under the normal rules.' r 'Vera Di Palma be argued that the* arrange¬ ments are such -diet a recom¬ mended repairer will have the necessary facilities ar.d so ; that car should be back on the road . more, quickly than if the work bad to be sub-contracted. • Does - the insurer make a deduction . • for betterment ? Ibis - practice is fairly wide¬ spread,. and it can prove expensive, since it means tbat yon may- have to contribute ro th'e cost of repairs, besides the amount of any excess in the policy. Typical cases of deductions for betterment are if, as a result, of an accident, new tyres are fitted or, tbe -whole car is resprayed after the fit¬ ting of,, say, a new panel. The argument runs along the lines ' that one’ is getting new tyres, instead of • tbe worn tyres which were on tbe car before or that the car has been re¬ sprayed and thus is in. better condition. The insurers expect you to contribute to me cost. Obviously, there can be advantages in dealing with an insurer which does not adopt that attitude, even if the pre¬ miums are higher. . Practice among insurers also varies if a car is stolen. Naturally, no insurer is likely to pay out straight away, since there is a good chance that the car may be recovered by the police. The question to ask is now long will you have to wait in this situation before the claim will oe settled ? Some insurers insist that you wait for six weeks (without pro¬ viding a substitute car), where¬ as others may agree to pay out earlier than that. Traditionally, motor insurers have not - provided cover for “loss of use”—ie, the cost of hiring a substitute car while your own is off the road after an accident or if it has been stolen. That is no longer a universal attitude. For some years, in all its comprehensive, policies, tbe General Accident has provided free hire of a Godfrey Davis car in such circumstances, for up to a'fortnight. A few other insurers provide some form of loss of use cover and others offer it as an optional extra. Another point does cot in¬ volve claims but can be very important if you expect to take the cor abroad. How much will it cost to extend the policy for continental use, with the issue of a green card and so on ? Here again, premiums vary quite widely and the cheapest insurer for annual co.ver.is not necessarily the cheapest for a continental extension. There are. therefore, a number of questions to be asked. I wonder how raany brokers know aU the answers for each of the insurers with which they place business ? JD “ A few other insurers provide some form of loss of use cover....” \ lack of buyers cend sellers te stock market is nearly' sribund. Business is now so d that several stockbrokers ncentratingvon; United King- m ordinary shares are failing. ends meet -If people ■ no-- buy and sell shares again on, we may witness' another ive-of stock exchange resigna- jus and. mergers. Yet .the. 1*T■ index .danced etrily during the week from >5.6 to 474.4 and observers iked excitedly about the way e authorities once again had e- money supply under' con- ol, about the slowdown in uraal inflation to 7:4 per. cent, wur the good trade figures on ridgy, about .tile ending of vidend control on July 31 and ■en about how the raiTwaymen e willing to keep: a social con- act going with a Labour, (but Jt a Tory) Government. I doubt whether any of it had ivthing much to do with the ay potential buyers continued - express unease or with the ay potential sellers held off • the conviction that ordinary lares give good value—and uch more now than for many :ars. The difficulty here is with what one is comparing the return on ordinary shares. The shares in the FT index yield on average £5.60 for every £100 invested and they sell at 7.8 times the earnings attribu¬ table to each share. In other words, if annual earnings stay vdiere they are, a buyer of a share on a p/e ratio of 7.8 gets his money hack in 7.8 years. -Many brokers keep charts of what shares return over the decades and there is nothing outlandish about them now. Judging by past standards, they are fair value. But so What ? The way accountants and companies State their earnings has changed enormously over the years, so that the p‘/e ratio is misleading if not useless. And yields need to offer good value, because shares, as most investors now know,- are shown to have been poor - protectots against inflation. It was also supposed at one time that shares offered a way into- the genuine growth of profits. But the ' economy has for years shown little or no ee/s Year's iflh - low 72p 130p 02p 231p 9Qp 71p ' 51 p 127p 96? 32So MAIN CHANGES OF THE WEEK RISES - Company-Change ■ Comment Assoc News Brown (J. 1 ) Dunlop Fenner J. H. ICl 03p 149p Gestetner 15p 1B2p - Ladbroke - 31P I4p Mears Bros 14p I76p Whitecroft 79p 72p . -‘“W”‘Ribbons 5p to 170p Hamilton oil find . 22p to 4Q2p Dividend hopes 8p to Sip Far East speculation 15p to 146p Hawker'slake 23p to 385? Recovery hoops FALLS . 17p to 176p Bad profits Up to 167p Gambling report 6p to -14p Loss: no interim 14p lo 196p Profit taking 7p to 70p BSG stake placed growth and profits have been knocked by hostile govern¬ ments. So the returns on ordin¬ ary . shares have become more sober. Bur some care nor for shares, drunk or sober. Why. invest in shares yielding less than 6 per cent when a fund manager can get 10 per cent on his money deposited with local authori¬ ties for a week or more than tbat in tbe inter-bank market ? On gilt-edged the returns are better still. Obviously a once- and-for-all jump in dividends, when they are set free, will help close the gap, but whai then? Tbe key could be held by a Tory Government in power with a working majority. This, the City believes, would actually cur government spending and tbe amount of money it needs to borrow or print year by year. If so, inflation fears would ease. Such a government would in theory also be good for in¬ vestors in shares, people not normally in receipt of benefit from Labour governments- Any ether outcome of what one pre¬ sumes wiH be an October elec¬ tion would not be so valuable. A Tory government in office, but not in power, would be a tempting target for trade union militants who would do their bese to unseat it; and a Labour goverameor with a working majority would un¬ doubtedly bring our all the City's deep-seated fears of Mr Benn and the Labour left. We are in an election market, so why not stay out of it? Peter Wainwright For the first time in over direc months, the .stock market went better for die five con¬ secutive trading sessions of a full week. Nothing, it seems, -can* brake tbe buoyant sentiment- of tbe buyers and any lines of stock coming up for sale are placed with ease as the inkitutions be¬ gin to build-up equity cash - piles. Yesterday was no exception, with not even trade figures, showing a visible trade deficit of some £106m, able to knock sentiment. ICl has been a buoyant marker this week, despite the issue of the workers’, participation shares. In the past this has tended to depress the equity, but this year there were, plenty .of buyers fur. any sto’ck coming. into the market: Only same 700,000 shares, of a total issue’ of 4.3m, are thought .to .have been .sold, a lower percentage than previously. After being down by as much as 1.6 by rrid-afrernoon, the FT Ordinary share index reversed the loss* to end with a gain of 0.8 at 474.4.- On Thursday, some gloomy predictions on the figures be¬ gun to circulate in the Stock Exchange so - that anything better than the gioonHJy fore¬ cast £250m deficit was bound ro instigate a rally in a market looking for good news, even in bad. Gilts took a more cynical view of the situation. In quiet Trading, shorts went only a frac¬ tion better, ending with a gain of an eighth on the day, while a: the longer end stocks, which had beeD an eighth up before the figures, doubled this gain by. the close. A couple of bullish circulars on 1C I has neld the stock up well this week aad it ended at 3S5p. a 3p rise on the day. Other leader stocks to im¬ prove were‘ Unilever 2p higher at 536p, ' tieecham, which climbed 7p to 667p, Metal Box 4p better at -124p and Glaxo which gained 2p ro a/2p. By -contrast, Fisons at 365p and Compcnv Sales let o>- Fin £m - Chadticsley Inv (F| —/ — l Debenture Corp (I) —t —) _ Elliot I firoup IF) 16 1(28.9) 0.18a(1.13> Gesteiccr -1) 12S.91121.4) 13.6(15.2) Harris Lebus <J) 7.94(6.34) 0.34aiD.13) Rotbmans Int lF) 1.800.2(1,491.9) 80.6(66.4) Scter Electrical (FI 1.8(15) 0.13(013) ' Wallis Fashion (F) 13.2(11.41 1.03(0.73 1 Dividends in this nble are shown net of tax on pence shown on a gross basis. To establish gross multiply tb earnings are net. a>=Loss. Rank at 24lp lost 5p and 6p. respectively. In electricals, GEC held steady aT 270p but some buying of Tubes added 6p to the shares at 368p while disappointidg finals from .suter Electrical ' trimmed a Vp from the stock at . 18 ip. Trading news produced two outstanding,'though contrasting,' features. A surprising 10 per cent profits down-turn at the half-way stage and z cheerless current trading comment sliced 24p from Gcstetner - ** A ” at 176p as investors voted with their feet. However, Wallis Fashion found plenty-of buyers. Follow¬ ing good results and a 300 per cent rcrip issue the shares climbed to 146p before dipping . ro end the day at 140p, with a aet gain of 3bp. In tobaccos, results at the. top.end of expectations nudged Rotbmans International l\p , higher to 57lp while Imperial Group, which reported earlier •in the week, held .steady at '79\p. Bats also marked time at r 315p. ”•* ' Distillers eased ’a penny to lS7p following comment on its results, while Howrien Group went 7p better on reflection of record figures. J. H. Fenner was excited bv the 19.per cent stake taken bv Hawker Siddeley. and climbed ISp to 146p. while Siddeley added 2p to 212p. Dunlop fell back, losing 2p to Sip, following comment dis¬ counting' anv bid for its Far , East . interests from Simc Darby', iiself 7p lower ar 104p. Guthrie, the other alleged potential Sims Darby candidary. fell 8p to 35Dp as speculators took their profits. Pilkington Brothers was also hit bv profit raking, easing 3p to 544p, while in engineering John Brown held steady at 402p and GKN added 3p to 2S4p. The chairman’s encouraging remarks at WGI pushed, the shares.4p better to 107p. but Watson & Phillips continued to be depressed bv earlier results end slipped 3p to S3p. ■ A full-year loss at Elliott of Latest results Peterborough left the shares (anguishing 3p lower at 17p. ' North 'sea oil potential added lOp to Daily Mail Ordinaries at 328-p, 3p to Associated News¬ papers at 170p and 4p to National Carbonising at 42p,- but Thomson Organisation slipped 2p to ’Z75p. Fears that .OPEC might raise oil prices combined with pro¬ fit-taking to Jop lOp from BP at 864p and 6p’from Shell at 564p. Second-liners did better with Oil F.xploration climbing 4p to 22$p- and Ultramar 2p bighec at 2680.^ The week’s newcomer. Hunting Tctrolemn ended the day 2p lower at 86p. -Speculative buying added Sp to Nicholls (Vimto) at l81p and 6p to De La Rue at 363p. "Investment Trust Corporation at 276p climbed 5’p now that the Barclay’s deaf is secure. Barclays ended 5p higher at 325p while' Midland at 360p showed a similar gain. Lloyds' and National...Westminster, -at the same price "of 2S0p, added 2p each. In properties. Town & City dipped ip to 12p despite be.tter results. Takeover speculation continues to surroimd Royal Worcester, where. ■ United. . States group Carborundum jointly oicms the largest • subsidiary. Royal Wor¬ cester Spode. Over 500,000 shares, from several sources, passed-", through, the. • market. earlier . this week at around 150p and it is thought that this 8.5 per cent holding went to one buyer. The name of .-a. former Slater-Walker man ’is being -linked with the group , hut last night Royal Worcester denied any bid approaches.- Still unsettled by tbe Royal Commission report on gambling,- Coral at 9^ and Ladbroke at 167p eased.a penny. ' Equity turnover on July 13 was £81,712m .(17,343 bargains). Active stocks yesterday, accord¬ ing to Exchange Telegraph, were ICl. ShelL Dunlop, Bats dfd, BP,'Marks & Spencer. Bats' Ind, Gestetfter • ■'** A Wallis Fashion. Fenner Hldgs and Howdcn Grp' Rothmans exceeds profit estimates Although tile pace slowed considerably in the second-half, Rothmans .International has out¬ stripped market hopes with a profits jump of' more, than,*- fifth to £80.6m in the year to March 31. - ; ; Following an interim rise of 39- per cent the' improvement, slowed to 14 per cent - hr the second, as ‘ Rothmans ran up against the effects of a stronger pound and higher smoking takes on the-continent. However, although exchange movements cut into export earnings, overseas profits re¬ ceived a £3.3m boost on rrans-. lation after taking into account bond interest. The group said yesterday that- sales had increased by a “ satis¬ factory margin ** with the. best performance coming from inrer- naripna-] brasids_In the United Kingdom where the group's emphasis on Idng-sized brands gave it a head start over rivals when price differentials shrank, Rothmans claims it has in¬ creased' sales by 26 per cent, lifting market share from 12 to around 14 pec cent. A fina-I dividend of 1.76p cakes total dividends up bv tbe maximum permitted to 3.07p gross.giving a yield of 5.3 pec cent on die shares up l£p to 57(p yesterday. However the group has given a strong hint that-relaxation of controls could mean a higher payment;' pointing -out that the present .dividend is now "6.5 times covered..' Shares-in the group have been restrained of late with the mar¬ ket awaiting the outcome, of Canadian takeover talks. The plan is for Rothmans' German subsidiary, Martin ■ Brinkmann,' ro take over the Rupert Groups' 86 per cent holding in Roth¬ man* of Pal! Mall Canada. - \ ' - No details of the takeover plan have been forthcoming’ since .it was first announced at' the beginning of June. But a group spokesman said’ jester-' day that final, talks should be completed “ wirbjjj 9 few Sir David Nicolson, chairman of Rothmans. 1 - Currency changes squeeze Gestetner’s margins Profits £m- 0.033(0.003) 1.04(0.09) 0.183(1.13) 13.6(13.2) 0.34a 1 0.13) -Earnings - - Div.Pay Year's - per share pence date total 0.55(0.08) Nilr—) — NUf—) —(—) 0.8(0.75) 31/8 — —(—) 0JtS(1.67) — 0.25(2.7) 11.9U12.88) 2.12(1.921 -5/9 —(3.9) IS- 7 a(6.1) —)—) — —(3.27) 13.3(9.9) 1.32(1.18 ) 2/10 2.05(1.84) 1.63(1.93) ' 0.30(0.27) — —(0.27) 30.0(26.2) - 3.0(1.51 — 4.0(2.5) . per share. Elsewhere In Business News dividends are e net dividend by 1.49. Profits are shown pre-tax and By Our Financial Staff International currency move¬ ments are ravaging margins at Gestetuer Holdings. As* a result, tbe duplicator group has seen, profits tumble more than a tenth to £13.6m in the six months to May 6. . in a Darrow . marker, Ges- terners “A” shares, fell by more than 20p, after chairman, Mr D. Gesterner, warned that tbe -first-half trend was • con¬ tinuing according to -prelim-' inary results for May and- June. .. .. ‘ With more than SO per cent of its sales overseas, Gestetuer is. stil-I suffering a u hangover ” effect - from the pound’s strength' last autumn, as adverse, exchange movements have eaten into margins on high stocks held by overseas- subsidiaries. Turnover For the six morths was over 6 per cent up at £129m and would bare been more like 11 per ' cent, the group says; but' for currency moves. " Now wifli, continuing dollar weakness, a' rising pound and strength in the currencies of two 'of Gestetnerts- ■'supplying ■ countries, Germany and Japan, the group. fears that even the introduction of several new products will fail to provide material benefit in the second half. The group has recently in¬ troduced -a new plain paper copier to the international market as well as updated off¬ set machinery and a new elec¬ tronic scanner. During the interim period, the group also suffered ils« effects of falling interest rates on investments -and deposits. Town & City’s £27m sale of properties By Ray Maughan Town & City Properties has sold or contracted to sell a further £27m of properties, with a book value of 223m, sines the end-March balance- sheet date. “ A satisfactory volume of sales”, chairman Mr Jeffrey Sterling tells share¬ holders in the annual Report, “ is in the pipeline.” While the disposal pro¬ gramme can still be described as almost mountainous, there can be- little doubt that debt rescheduling by Barclays Bank and Prudential Assurance has given Town & City an import tant lifeline to eventual stabi.- lity. The annual loss before taxa¬ tion, shown before the transfer from capital reserve in respect of development outgoings, wa» cut from £25,270,000 to £17.320.000, but more important, perhaps, is the new borrowing profile. the balance-sheet shews a medium and long-term loan increase from £78,630,000 to £119,450,000, yet short-term- debts were down from £121,770,000 to £95^9,000, and current liabilities have been reduced' from £114,240,000 to £66,400,000. Total debts have dropped from tbe March, 1977, level of £317m to the current balance .of £232m and apparently the capital values arising on recent disposals- have been unaffected by' the rise in MLR and a mooted easing of investment yields. With a contribution of £4.720,000 against £3,390,000 pre-tax, the contribution from the service industry division has once again been a blessing, but attention inevitably remains focused on the dis¬ posal programme. In that con¬ text, while cenrral London pro¬ perties are generally _ moving well, the Brussels interests remain an imponderable and progress in provincial United Kingdom centres invariably rests on the growth . of the national economy. Yuie Catto’s lip a share capital repayment Yule Catto is to make a capital repayment of lip a share to shareholders in place of the interim dividend which would have amounted to lp gross. The reason for the payment, said the board, is that it is conscious tbat the effect oE statutory dividend controls during a period of markedly increased profits has been to deprive shareholders of tbe benefit of improving results which they might otherwise Kavs expected. However, pre-rax profits for the six months to April 29 are down by £239,000 to £685,000. Profits for the second half are expected to improve, but it is not expected that they will exceed those of last year. Newman still trying for Wood & Sons Wood & Sons (Holdings) has already rebuffed the 60p bid from Newman Industries, end directors speak for 39 per cent of-the shares. As this bid was rejected eccentrically, as lack¬ ing industrial logic, even though “ fair and reason¬ able 71 . there is little Newman can do in reply save send it up. In the circumstances, there is also little point in offering more money, or so Newman and merchant bank Guinness Mahon say. So Newman has written to Wood holders again, addins die morseJ that Wood directors’ fees and emoluments last year were £89,072, whereas Wood shareholders only got £2S,4S9 and can expect only £6/,000 this year. CH Industrials Our report on CH. Industrials yesterday was incorrect in that it should have made dear that the rights issue forecast of £S75,000 was projected before tax and the exceptional 'costs of reorganizing the paint companies and amalgamating the decorative trim intercuts. On this basis,' CH Industrials comfortably exceeded the fore¬ cast with a profit of £908,000 in the year to March 31 last. LWT-HUTCHINSON . LWT (Holdings) offer for pre¬ ference shares of Hutchinson declared unconditional. Accept¬ ances received for 90.11 per cent. SUTER ELECTRICAL ' Turnover for year to April 1, £1.77m' "fFI.47m). Pre-tax profit, £136,000 I £128,0001. Earnings a ■share. 1.63p (1.93p). Interim divi¬ dend of 0.3p net; should there be a change in legislation, hoard hopes to increase - this with a final, to make total- of 0.5p. Total net dividend for 1976-77 was 0.275p net- MERGER CLEARED The acquisition by General Oriental Limited of Hongkong of the issued share capital of Argyie Securities (Holdings).. whose wholly owned subsidiary Is Argyie Securities, is not to be re-, ferred to the Monopolies: and Mergers Commission. Life Business Good first half for Abbey Half-year figures for new premiums at Abbey Life show significant advances over the same period in 1977. Single premium business rose to £24.3m—an increase of 178 per cent over the same period in 1977, while new regular pre¬ miums rose to £113m—a rise of 38 per cent. The increase in single premiums reflects greater interest in die unit-linked funds and regular premium business 'has benefited mostly from the surge in pensions business which alone rose by 48 per cent during the first six months of the year. What Sime Darby loan will be used for Singapore, July 14.—Sime Darby Holdings’ proposed $475m (Singapore) loan issue will be used to redeem its 10 per cent unsecured loan . stock and for investment purposes. Sime said some $75m (Singa¬ pore) will be used to redeem the Sime Darby Holdings' 10 per cent unsecured loan stock, maturing on December 31 this year. The balance is being raised " against future, requirements for investment purposes and to. ensure the orderly financing of expansion opportunities as rhev occur ”. Sime’s subsidiary, Malaysian Oriental Holdings, will raise the loan. Asked to comment on press and market speculation tbat the funding is related to plan¬ ned acquisitions, Dunlop and Guthrie have . been market favourites, -tbe company said “ there is no announcement of importance pending ”. The com¬ pany is conrinuallv examining a large number of investment opportunities both within and outside tbe plantations industry. However, die group has plans for substantial property de¬ velopments in Malaysia and Singapore. Sime will raise the loan in the Singapore and Malaysian domestic markets.— Reurer. Options Decision next week on new option classes By Alison Mitchell The London traded options committee will announce next week whether or noL five new option classes are to be intro¬ duced. The matter has been the subject of considerable specula¬ tion over tbe past few days am d yesterday the committee chair¬ man, Mr. Peter Stevens, admit¬ ted that the subject, was under discussion. However, he denied that any companies have been put on an options short Hsl Option dealers are currently being asked to submit the names of stocks they consider suitable and, among those being put forward, are Rio Tinro Zinc, Iucbcape, Rank Organisation, Beecham, Glaxo, GKN and BOC ' International. If the committee decides to go ahead and introduce the new classes it is unlikely that trad¬ ing will start before the autumn because of the technical!?'limit¬ ing factors of space on tbe tele¬ vision screen and stock ex- cimnge floor. Business on the London traded options floor yesterday fell back to the abysmally low levels of earlier in the month with turnover languishing at some 395 contracts. Elliott of Peterborough’s Middle East write-offs By Pete. Wainwright . - The shares in Elliott Group of Peterborough fell 3p to I7p yesterday . as dealers surveyed a .bleak set of figures for tbe year to March 3l last. ' The shares have already. dropped from a 1977-78 peak of 44p since the group announced £54m . of orders from Saudf Arabia ’ which failed to materialize. That in turn aroused interest in large share sales bv three directors, and led to first, a stock exchange inquiry, and then in May to a Department of Trade investi¬ gation. Institutional pressure also led. to some boardroom changes. •The latest figures contrast sadly . with the pre-tax profits of £1.13m made in the -fiften Three-for-one scrip from Wallis Fashion Against a background of poor trading within the fashion in¬ dustry, Wallis Fashion Group, has managed to hoist pre-tax profits for tbe year to January 31 from .£732,000 to £lm. A final dividend of 4.47p has been recommended, making a total of 5J6p gross, against 3.78 p. This .large . rise in th.e dividend ' is allowed owing ' to tbe group’s status as a close company. Shareholders will also receive a scrip issue on rbe basis of three for one. Turnover last year increased from £11.4m to £15.2m with strong performances from its Eire and European outlets. Looking to tbe future; Lord Mancroft, chairman, said the group'has shown a ^ considera- able ” increase in turnover which, if maintained, should re¬ sult in a marked increase in profits. months to March '.^l, 1977. Elliott has chosen to deduct “ exceptional and non-recurring items” costing £212,000 before arriving at pre-tax losses of £S9.0no for 1977-78. These items .-refer to re¬ organization costs -and tender¬ ing expenses relating to certain Middle East contracts which will nor be pursued. The im¬ plication is that without these exceptional items Elliott would be in profit. . However, lower down the statemeut^ alter tax, -the group has set aside a further £174,000 irr “ extraordinary-items ”. Elliott aims - 'to continue recovery “in the slightly im¬ proved- • trading - conditions ”. There is a 0.38p gross final dividend..There, was no Literim dividend. A B Foods’ attack on price controls •An attack 'on the “ folly-nf successive Governments ” has been made by Mr Gary Weston, chairman of'Associated British Foods, who claims tbat ‘ the bread industry had been “-bled white” by continuous-periods of price control. •The past 12 months had seen the closure of one major middle-sized bakery-group--and the industry has been involved in the worst period oTTifdustrial unrest on record.'.The pnblic have seen rhe only gain during this period, than-ks"nr competi¬ tion and price-cutting which •had made nonsense of inflation. AB and other'bakers had now informed the Price Commission that they intend to return to their December, ' 1976, trading : terms to allow -modest margins on profit. After a slow start AB had' picked up and this should be reflected >n the months ahead. BOOK 197 8/as*^ M&G> Year Bo'ok, designed as an aide-memoire for "professional advisers, is ' SS f - # V ' .iiow available for private. • MB l J ^ l^gprsmterestedm ^To: M&G Group Ltd. Three Quays. TowerHil^^f^R" nr™] HI I London EC3R6BQ. Telephone: 01-626 4588. “—“ I ! Please send me a FREE copy of the M&G Year Book 1978. * I mss I - SURNAME fUlL T FORENAME S»1 I SinhibpUcahfc ft? Eirr. SY [480718 J ar I n.- VI it.- 20 THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 197S >*■ FINANCIAL NEWS AND MARKET REPORTS Briefly EUSTUN CENTRE PROPERTIES" Pre-tax. revenue for' year - to March 31 was £2.6ni against £1.5m a year earlier. The dividend takes £l!£m‘ compared 'to £792,600. WEARRA .GROUP Turnover oF half-year to March 31 was £3.4ra (G.9m). Pre-tax profit was £178,000 (£102,000). Interim dividend is Q.65p gn (0-59p gross).- COPPER _ was stea—Aflwruum Cash wire ban. J3l4.Sfclj.00 _ metric ton: Oirco monihs. £736-35.00. Sales. 4.500 tons. Cdsh cathodes. £711-11.50: ihrwi months. £731.50- .•53.00. .Sales. 30 7 a ns. _Mamlnq.— Aua. Cash wire hare. £718-IS. 60: three months. £T.TB-ftB.-Vl. Scillemont. 371U.5U. Seles. 6 .SU 0 tons. Cash oil hades. 7714-14.90: three months. £73450-35.00. ■ Settlement. ' £71,4:50. Sales. .750 ions. SILVER losi atom 2p In tit* ring.— BUHion market Uixinfl levels).—Spat. 3S0.TSP per vrov ounce tUmlod Stales cofila cttulvulent. 028.6) 1 Ihroa (nortUis. HS7 no-1638.8 ci : six months. 3°5.&£ i55l.Uc'i: one year,. 311 .60 Commodities CHQWN SECURITIES . Accounting period is to he ex¬ tended from June 30 to Decem¬ ber , 31. . .This will enable the accounts and balance sheet to re¬ flect the reduction of capital and share premium account approved by shareholders aod which is sub¬ ject . to the confirmation of the court. BARCLAYS INTERNATIONAL Barclays Bank International opens a new branch in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, on July 12. The branch wifi provide a full range uf domestic and International banking services and is being established to supplement the existing West African network of the Barclays Groop. IRISH OIL & CAKE MILLS Group has agreed terms to acquire British Margarine tor E 4 . 51 p cash a share; ratal con¬ sideration, £230,000. ROWTON HOTELS Rowton Hotels have exchanged contracts for the purchase of the motel complex, known as The Golden Galleon Motel, Lowestoft, for £295,000 cash. Rowton believe this to he at least the value of the assets acquired. The current net income from rents and pro&e is estimated to be about £34,000 per annum. BRITISH TAR PRODUCTS Acceptances have been received In respect of 1,342,144 new ordin¬ ary shares, representing approxi¬ mately 92.6 per cent of the total number of new ordinary shares offered by way of rights. NEIL AND SPENCER HLDGS Sales for half year to May 31 were £6-8m (£4.7ml. Pre-tax profit was £363,000 (£281,000. interim dividend is 1.7p gross (Up gross). SKETCHLEY In respect of the 2,497,195 new ordinary shares offered by way of rights applications have been re¬ ceived for 2.314,062 shares (92 26 per cent). 573.7c i. London Metal EmAobao.— Aftomoon.—Cash. 370.6-i9.9p: thm months, 386.3-86.7p. Soles, -7o lots ol 10.000 may ounces wdi. Morntno, —Cjjh. 280.5-80.4a; three mouths. 'J87.4-87.5p. SNUMnant. 280.40; Sales. 20 tats, TIM was barely steady.—Afternoon..— Standard cash. £ 6 . 610-20 a metric Ion: three months, £6.595-60. Sales, 750 tons. High grade, cash. £6.610-30: three months. £6.565-80. Solos. 150 Ions'. Morning.—Standard cash. £6,620- 30: Lhroe months. B&.573-BO. Sei Ho¬ rn cmi, £6.630. Sales.- 1.100 tons. High grade, cash. £6.620-40: ttiren months. K6.585-6.600. SoiUcment, £*.640. Sale.' nil tons Singapore Un ex-works. 5Ml.750 a Picul. LEAD was out el tr steady —Afternoon. —Cash. £31 j. 50-16.50 per metric ion; three months. £524. *>24.75. Sales, 1.500 Ions. Morning.—Cash. £516- 16.50: three months. £324.QO-2o.UO; Sc 1 lTem 4 .nl. £516.50- Sales. 3.800 tons. ZINC was quietly -steady.—AJtemcon.— Cosh. £314-315 a metric loo- three months. £324-24.50. Sales. 300 tons. 59. uu. April-June. 60.75-60.90: July. Sept. 63.5062.70: Ocf-Dec. 64.40* 64.55: Jan-March. 66.1u-66.o0: April- Juno. 67.80-68.10. Soles. 11 lots at 5 tonnes: 121 at 15 tonnes. rubber physicals were inactive. Spot. 54-55. Gifs. Aug. 56-56.20: Sept. .56-56.50. corpse: Bobuitas were sharply down, arabicas were dull.— ROBUSTAS |£ nor metric ton): July; 1.552-56: Sept. 1.2B6-S7: Nov. 1.318- GO: Jan. 1,176-80: March. 1177-42; May. 1.115-23: July. 1.095-1.100, Sales: 1,761 lots including 53 options* ARABICAS tS per GO kfloej: Aug. _ ■ 143-48: Doc. 134.50- >lomLig.—Ciih. £315.50-16.30: three months. £326-26.50. Settlement. £516.50. Sales 575 tons. All artarnaon prices are unofficial. PLATINUM was at £134.Go <5245.50) a trov ounce. RUBBER was quid fpence per kilcT' a,Aii• a,,, «■ n.-i_ Aug. 54.43-04/60: Sept. 55-55.55: Oct- Dec. 56.75-56.90: Jon-March. 58.93- 159-62; Oct. 143-48: Doc. 134. 57.00: Feb. 125-30: April. 123-30: June. 134-28: Aug. 120-26. Soles; nil. cocoa was study f£ per metric mm. —July. 1.6S5.50-86.OU: Sept. 1.703- 05.50: Dec. 1.705-04: March. 1.6ya¬ ps- May. 1-680-82: July. 3.660-65; Sept. 1.640-35. Sales: 2.699 lots Including 5 options. ICCO prises: dally. 159.63c: 15-day average. 141.13c: 32- day average. 139.55c iLTS cents per 1b). SUGAR: The London dallv price of ■■ raws " was £i lower at £85: (he " whites ** price was £1.50 lower at £95.60. Futures were woafc i£ per metric Ton i.: Aug. 85.90-S5.9o: OCI. . 87.60-87.65: Dec. 89.60-89.65: March. 95.w5-v6.i>0:-May. 98.50-98.75: Aug. 101.75-02.00: Oct. 103.30-05.70. Sales: 3.164 lots. ISA prtcct,: 6.37c; 15-dav average 6.79c. SOYABEAN MEAL was alaadr <£ per metric tonV—Aug. 117-17.30: act. 118.60-18.70: Dec. 117.-50-117.70: Teb. 118.30-18.90: April. 119-31: June, All per lonnc law: silicra. BARLEY was unquoletL elf UK nnhws stated. London Crain Futures Market (Caftai E6C origin.—BARLEY was steady: Sapl. £79.10: Nov. £81.90; Jan £84.60: >Urch. £87.16: May. £89.80. Sales: 87 lots. \VHEAT_was_ steady: Sept. £84.05: Nov. £86.65: Jail £89.50: March, £92.i5; May. £94.85! Sales: 43 lots. Home-Grown Cereal Authority.—-Loca- llon ex-farm ypol Prices.—Feed BARLEY: Kent. £79.50: Unics £83.40. Meat Commissi on; Average fauiack prices at rvoresenUllve markets on July 14.- — -- IW f —0... kg Ea new _ ___ per kg nt" <—1.31. England and Wales: Cattle numbers down 9.5 per cent, averag.? prico 71.13p i— 0.7V*. Shipp numbers up 3.3 per cent, average price 14o.9p ino change'. Rig numbers down 1.5 per cent, average price 63.6p f —l.S.i. Scotland: Cattle numbers no change, averago price 72.14p I -0.601 Sheep numbers dp 70.7 per cent, average price 137.4p t—6.7i at rvoreseniauvc markets on 1.—GB: Cottle. 71.2*> per Kg ).75i. UK: Sheep. 14o.7p p>-r DCVT. i—0.2i. GB: Rigs. 62.bp Foreign Exchange Forward Levels The dollar finished ‘slightly dearer to most centres in extremely quiet currency trading yesterday ahead of the Boon summit. Sterl¬ ing opened quite firm, bat drifted gently down to close just off its low point of the day at $1.8825, a net loss of 40 points. The effec¬ tive exchange rate index closed un¬ changed at 62.0. Most dealers in London con¬ sidered the June trade figures-to be quite satisfactory, although a general lack .of interest and a modest firming of the dollar com- - bitted to lower the pound. Gold lost 51.25 to close in London at $185,125. 1 month Now Yort .*4- J4c prera itoatrex! . 60 -.Me pram Amsterdam 2VlVrpr«n Brussels 30-30cprem Copenhagen l-3ored)sc Frankfurt 3-Jpfprem LI shun Milan Oslo Paris Stockholm Tirana Zurich , „ Canadian dallar 50.8OTT-0.3B. disc IDeprara- TOcdlac IVMsLr disc por- 2 ura disc lijJjc prstn lWe protn- Vore disc lftftgrapresi m-3>scprein 3 months UM. 13c pram l.eO-UOc prom Mhepren MVSOrpram aVSUore disc Tvswrprcm lQS-MBcdkaC pir-SQc disc bank balances that came long way above target. Money Market Rates 47-Rilriilsc Jir-lPj are disc 3>ri4«PTra 9 rl>>ora pram Bank ol England Minimum Lending Bale 10-;* ■ Last changed F.'OTSi Clearing Banks Base Bate 10*o Discount Hkl. Loans '* Weekend High 10 Lou» { Wee* Fixed; 9*a*‘i ale 4M5gropi*eci 8VJ*iCPf*m annul US dollarl. Burin? 2 months 3 rnoolhs Treasury Bills. Dl**r I Selling BL * 2 man lbs pis Vh. 3 mttiUli §«is Euro-S Deposits ic f > calls,TVS: seren days. TWa: one month. 8 'u'- 8 a ii: three months. 8 'iefl u n: rik monihs- 8'u-SPu- Prims Bank Bills i Dls^-iTrades i Put'c 1 2 moalhs 9V9V 3 ramilu UP, 3 monihs 9'r0>t 4 monihs im, 4 monihs 9“ie»K 6 monuu 1Q>« 6 moaiiis IrM Gold Spot Position of Sterling Cold fixed: am. 4186.00 .an oimcei; pm. Kniacrrmdd aper eelaa: noo-rcslden r. SI91-183 i n 01V1 (£??•: re^deal. J194-1S8 i£10>-104i. SsrrreicnS iae»c non-resident. 5SM8 II28V an r. resided L 43S>»-aTljif2SP»-30^.. 1 month 2 muaiUjs 3 mmilu 4 moniha 5 moniha 6 munUli Local Aulhorllr Bonds 104-1Q SV4»i 9V96 6V9H 9W. * moniiu 9V84 a months SMS 8 mouthy 9V»>, 10 moo ins l OVDS 11 moniha 104-8» 12 monihs 10 V 94 Secondary lOrl fCD Patas< c .-> 3 month 10 *is-lD*i,. 6 monihs 10 V 10 3 monihs 10 tis *10 32 mcnlh* IlPi.-lBI* SECURITIES UTD BRITISH TRUST Gross income for year to end June 30 was £3.3m against £3.0ni. Earnings per share were 4.44p (3.98p). There is a second interim dividend of 4.7p gross, making a total of 6-6p gross (5.9p gross). MARLING INDUSTRIES Turnover for year to March 31, £14.3m (£11.5rn). Pre-tax profits £399,000 (£476,000). Earnings 4.39p (1.98p). Final dividend 0.94p. This dividend is declared in anticipation that present restric¬ tions on dividend payments -will be released before payment is due. Market rales ■CiuWl Jul;14 si.tuepe.sw *C. 1145-1133 4.I7V1SVII 61.OS-131 nijVi-aBih 3 »7i 85^S-We I43TS-J?p lhST-VTIr 10.1TVintk h.3e>r39>if B.sd-vm 381-3837 27.90-28 OOlrii . .. _ 3.41*421 ElfecilveexckadEC race ronparadt* December *1.1*71. waa «*.» per cent na- ckaaaed. Market rates ■ .lo;-s range, July 14 Sl.SSlS-STJS Montes xl S2A14.V1263 Ct.00-25, 10.3S44H. J 47-»SH;m 93.4006 40e 145.T0-I46.25p lI«-16C3lr 10.174-22*:k Stockholm 378=8Sy 27.00=8.OSach Zurich 3.40>r43f Discount market 2 di;i T da>a 1 monih Local Authority Market <*»■ 14 3 mem the 9t, 10 6 monihs 10 >i 10 ' lyrar llAt It is reckoned that the “ call '* due on the long “ tap probably amounted to about £400m and that would undoubtedly have been the major figure in the factors against the market yesterday.. Other adverse items included the Trea¬ sury bill take-up, very large out¬ flow of notes for weekend spend¬ ing, and repayment of very large MLR loans taken on Thursday. Agaiast this combination, the 1 ntcreu k Market ■ r « i Weekend: Open 10*, Clow 10 1 week lOVMB* 6 months MPu-HPit I month 'iCPirlO 1 * 9 mootti* lOVIVs 3 moniha 12 mohltu KFu-lflit Flrii Class Finance Bousesi Mki. RJle'r> 3 moiilhi 10% 6 months I (Pi Finance House Base Rale 104* Treasury BUI Tender Applications 15T3m allotted X300m Bldaai I9T.6«i| received 89<V Lasiveek bit. to* i reralvxd 90*v Average rale 92446Cr Last keek 9 27984- Neal Keck E300m replace 1300m j. & H. B. JACKSON Pre-tax profits for six months to March 31, El.2m t£1.17m). Earnings 2.38p t2.31p). Profits for full year expected to be modestly in excess of previous year’s record figures. BRISTOL CHANNEL SHIP Bristol Channel Ship Repairers* profit, after all charges, for the •ear to March 31 rose from £182,000 to £337,000. No tax l same). Total gross dividend raised from 0.39p (adjusted for scrip) to 0.43p. One-for-ten scrip issue proposed- • ARMSTRONG EQUIPMENT On behalf of Armstrong Equip¬ ment, Lazard Brothers & Co, announces that acceptances of the orfer For the 50p preference shares in Comercroft have been received in respect of 144,321 preference shares (72.16 per cent) ; offer is now unconditional and will remain open. Armstrong now holds or has received accept¬ ances for 1.61m ordinary shares 164.48 per cent). The ordinary- offer is unconditional and remains opeq. Wall Street Allied (hen .Mik'd Si or i-i Alllrd Suoenoki AMI* Chalmure Alcoa Amax Inc Hess New York, July 14.—The New York Stock Exchange posted a surprisingly strong advance today, even though anaJysists found plenty of reasons that it should have gone down. The Dow Jones industiral aver¬ age shot up 15.07 paints to close at 839.83. The gain was broad- based. as_ 421 issues closed higher and only 385 finished lower. Volume rose to 28,370,000 shares from 23,610,000 on Thurs¬ day. ' Boeing and United Technologies were big - winners as a result of a mammoth new aircraft order from United Airlines. Boeing stock surged higher on the news, closing at 59] up 2J. NAL’s stock gained 2 to 31J. United Technologies, whose Pratt and Whitney division was selected to provide the engines for the 60 planes, rose 2jj to 46 in heavy trading. Amerada He: Am Airlines Coffee dips 4.95c . New Vork. July 14.—COFFEE futon-, hovered near the limit down through the, close after trade selling in llie near topu-mbe-r prompted a sleep early afternoon decline, traders raid. Uoskng loose, ranged 4.95 cents ui spot July to two cents In- July. 1979. July. 140-10-1. UOc: Sept. l£7~igc;; Am Brand* Am Broadcast 49 Am Can 42>. Am Cram to Id Am Elec Power 23*« Am Haim.- 39S Am Meters S»i Am Nat Res -C Am Mandtrd 14*i Am Telephone 60i» AAIF lne 13 Armco Sieel Asareu 14*1 Ashland ri|l J4 1 , Allmle Richfield -iw'i Avcu -6* Awm Products S3 Rabcock A M cox 2Sh Bankers Tsl NY 33*i Ran* ol Ainericn 34*1 Bank of NY 34*. Realrlec Foods 3 Bril & Houcll 19*. Bendlx A'i Bethlehem Mrd r>, BiM-Ing 59*2 Boise Cascade 2sh Borden _9'i b.>n: Warner aft Bristol llyrrs BurllngtoQ Ind is Buriinmoa Mhn 33 T , Bun-ijuglis T7, r'ampbcll Soup 341, Canadian Pacific IP* Caterpillar 38 ■ Ceianew 4C*i Central S.iya 13*i Charter .NY 30 l i Chase Manual 32U hem Bank XV July FM Penn CorP Ford OAF Corn Gamble Skoyrao Gen .Drnamfcs Gen Electric ■Jen Fields Gen Mill* Gen Melon Gen Pub fill XY 18*. Chesapeake Ohio 3o>, Tin buffer stock prices lifted The lateraational Tin Coun¬ cil yesterday lifted the floor and ceiling prices for its buffer srack by 5M150 and SM200 per picul to $M1^50 and $M 1,700 respectively. . Producers had sougfat a new price range of SM1,500 to- SM 1,900. Consumers bad vol¬ unteered a new range of SM1;300 to SM1,700 and yester¬ day’s agreement reflects an ex¬ pected compromise. The middle range was set at SM 1,450-1.600 against SMI,300- 1,400 previously. Dpc. 119.00:: March. llo.'JS-iir; May. lly,£5c bid: July. 1 u8.5i.i-9.OOc: Scpi. I06.50-8.00c: Dt-c. 106.00-7.00c. cocoa fumres won: July. 145.70:: Sept. I5tt.7.5c: Dec. 135.-»uc; March. 135.50c; May. 131.20c: July. 12y.45c: Sopt. 127.60c: Dec. 125.25c. SUGAR (mures in No 11 contruct were: Scpl. 6.01-53c: Oct. b.4-3-47c: Jan. 6.7G-9Cc: March. 7.10-lbc: May. 7.51-32c: July. 7.oa-A9c; 8ent. .7.69- 72c: Oct. 7.7H-S0C. COTTOH futures were: Ool. 59.90c: Dec. 61,71-BOc: March. 60.40c; .May. 6 4.3.5-4 5c: July. 65.33-44c: Ocl. 64.70c bid: Due. 64.78c _bhL SILVER futures closed l.olJC IO 2.2Qc down.—July. 524.00c: Aug, 526.30c: Sept. 530.30c: Dec, 541.90c: Jon. 54o.90c: March. ‘ S53. , .’Oc:- May. 562.60c: July. 571.30c: Sc-u. 580.luc: Dec. 593.50c: Jan.- 598.0O.-i March. 607.00c: May. 616.20c. Handv and Harman *5.247 i previous £5.281. Handy and Hannan or Canada. carc>5.901 i ppoutoui tUnSo.947 .. GOLD [inures were: NY CO MEN.— Julv. S186.00: Aug. 3186.60: Scpi. M88.4U: Oct. 51H9.5D: DOC. N1V2.60: Fnh SI HA kl). 4 rj-U S T <15*1 70- lime Feb. $105.60: AprH. 5198.70: June. 8201.90: Aug. 8205.10: Oct. S308.3O; Dec. S211.6U: Fob. 8214.70: April. S217.60. CHICAGO LMM-—finl. S186.00187. UO: D?C. 5192.30- 192.5u: March. 8196.90 Wd: June. 5201.70-200.70: Sept. S206.00: DOC. 8210.70. copper futures closed steady IO to 20 jxrtnu down.—July. 61.9Uc: Aug. 62..>Oi:: Sepi. 62.80c: Doc. 64.60c: Mtlvurp Hlln. Jwn lee Dark Equip Coca Cola •Ailcate tbs Columbia Gas ConibUktiun Ena I'uimrlrn Edison Cons Edison funs Foods cone Pun it Continental Grp r-nilncnial (III Control Dais Corning Man CPC (nun >.'raau •Trucker Ini. rru»n Zeller Dari Ind Deere Del Monie . Della Air Deiroll Edison Diner Don Chemical Drwker ind Duke Power Du P..ni Easlvru Air Eastman Kodak Eaiou Cnrp' El Paso Nat C»> Equitable Ufe Em ark Evans P 0. Exsup Curp Fi d Dcpi Mores Firestone Fm Chicago Fsi Nat Boston & Gen Tel Elec Gen Tire ■Tent ecu Georgia Pacific GcUl Dll Gillette Goodrich Goodrcar Gould Inc Grace CtAiltc* Pacific Crej bound Grom id an Curp- Gulf «>» Gulf A West Heinz H. J. Hercules Honcru-oll IO Indk Inaetioll Inland Steel ibm : lot Harrester IXCO lot Paper Ini Tel Td Jewel Co Jim Walter Johns-Manrllle Johnson ft John Kaiser A lam I a Kennemtt Kerr McTee Kltnberi- Clark Kraft co Curp K Man Krsi^er Lluei Group LTA Corp Litton Lockheed Lucky Stores Manuf Hanorer Map co Maramon Dll Marine Midland Martin Marietta McDonnell Mead Me moral Merck Minnesota Mur . Mobil Oil Monaanla I Morgan J. P. Motorola ■ NCR Corp XL Industries Nabisco Nm Distillers Nit Steel Norfolk West Mf Bancorp Norton Simon Occidental Pet Ocdcn OJln Curp : Owene-llllnotk RsMbeon HCA C«rp Republic Steel Reynolds ind Reynolds Metal Ruckvell Ini no)-al Dutch Safewaye st Regis Paper Sanu Fe Ind SCM Schlumberger Scott Paper Seaboard Coast Seagram Sears Roebuck Shell Mil Shell Trans signal co singer Sony sth Cal Edt.iun 3P, Southern Pacific 31 >e Soulhern Rlr sperry 5°nd std Brands Std vil Califnia Md Oil Indiana std Oil unit. Sterling Drug Steven* J. P •Slide Worth Sunbeam Corp Sun Comp Tried ntc TenneLO Texaco Texas East Corp Tcsai lust Texas ruliuet Tex i rat TWA Travelers Corp TRW inc CAL Inc Vn llcver L:d On I lever N'V L'nlun Bancorp _ I Union Carbide 38>i Union Ull Calif 4“, , Un Piri tie Corp I'BirDjil Untied Brands I US Industries US steel Utd Technol , Wachovia Warner Comm I Warner Lambert 28>i W ells Pargo 77H I W«ai'ii Bancorp 36*t I Wpsuighse Elec 3? WntrMimr >Fi. 1 Whirlpool White Mdtur WuolvorUt Xerui Corp • ! Zenith E 44 ’ 19 3M. 144 CmmUm Prices Pacific Gas EIcc 224 Pan Am . _ Penney J. C. JTij Penozoll 274 PcpsIco 304 Pet Inc M4 Pfizer 34t« Phelps Dodge 2)4 Philip Moms 68*s Phillips Petrol 314 Pularold 404 PPG Ind 254 Proctor Gam blc 904 Pub Ser El ft Gas 2S4 Pullman 334 Rapid American 104 374 274 5 s1 * 34 204 75 Abtllbl Alcan Alunun Al^ijoia Steel Bell Telephone C.jrninco Cons Be inarm • Falcunbrldgr Gulf Oil Hawker Sid Can BuJson Bay Ulo ITS lludein bay Oil 4S4 imisci- Imperial Dll Inl Pipe Mass.-Vergm Royal Trust Scacrorj Steel U« Taicurp Thomson N 'A' walker HIrani WCT 2S o.*i ss IS, 124 234 384 7.7S s & 18", 154 ir-. 18 - 18 244 X 234 Vt 14 334 114 J- 334 U4 Bank Base Rates ABN Bank . Barclays Bank .... B. C.C.I. Bank _ Consolidated Crdcs. C. Hoare & Co .. Lloyds Bank. London Mercantile Midland Bank .... Nat Westminster .. Rossminster Ltd .. TSB . Williams and Glyn’s Jan. 63.20c: March. 66.30c: May. 67.30c: Julr. 68.30c: srw. 69.3Lie: Dec. 70.70c: Jail. 71.2GC: March. T2.-JOc: May. 7-3.20=. CHICAGO SOYA BEANS-—Losses IR Oil ranged from O’-JQ to 0.13 cent a lb. Meal prices tell 51.80 to SO.70 a ion. vriih only tho nc.-rby closing fractionally higher. SOYABEANS.— Julv. 6o0-33c: Aug. bJT-SO'-.c: Scot. yXLh'~ c: Not. 6J5‘.c: Jan. 617-17 1 c: March. 623*^;: May. 6U6'e.S7c: July. b'-'lGc. SO-.ABF AN Oil__ Ho. lOc; Aug. 24.55-45c: Sopr. 23.53-50c: 1X1. 22.75c: Doc. 22.15-2 5c: Jan. 23.15c: March. 22.U0-1OC; May. 22.10c; July. 22.00-21.90:. SOYA¬ BEAN MI-A1_July. S171.0O-l.5O: Aun. SI n8.80-9.50: Scot. 169 L0- 9.30: Oct. S167.50-7.20: Dec. • Ex dlv. a .Naked, c Ex distribution, h Bid. k MarkM clmcd ■ New issue, a Slock spliL i Traded, f Unquoted. Foreign exchange.—Storting, spot, 1.8855 11 . 88601 : three moniha. 1-3T56 1 .1JS73H ■: Canadian dollar. 8°.V X 488.95 *. Tne Dow Jonea spot commodity index was 330.52. The futures Index wax 540.13. The Dow Jones averages,-—bidus- trlali. 830.85 >824.76>: tTOJiSporlMIcm. 225..9G. 1223.07.: ulllUIOS. 100.65 1 105. la > : 6o stocks. 288.91 .285.12 • New York Slock Exchange Index. ■>A.K io 4.12 >: Industrials, .vi.qo t oft.771: Ira ns portal loo. Aft.38 «4o. 87 ■: Ulflufc*. 59.32 f 59.19 > financial. 0 B.O 9 .57.26■. July. 314c. CORN. July. 232'.- .20-9.50: Seal. 238' 9 -4c: Dec. 2ft5»,.',c: r July sSSJft xiJi-SftC: Mav^ JjT'.c: July. Scf»t. 513-1 A*«c: Tpee. 224 c: Marcii. o2*-2^' s c: May. 321*,. si 65.TO-5.ao: Jan. Si66.nn-5.no: March. SI 68.00: May. 5169.7 Julr. $170.10. _ _ CHICAGO _ GRAINS. WHEAT. _July. 239’rC. OATS. Jul* . 126c asked: Sepl! ‘ . 232c: Dec. lftl'.c; March. 148‘jc: May. 13lc asked. Eurobond prices (midday indicator) US STRAIGHTS (S) Y 7 day deposits un £10.000 and under 1 to C2-J.OOO. 7 1 ,*, £25.000 7\r.,, Australia 7‘, 1984 Australia 8'» T9UA AUDI Mining 94 1992 Avco 94 1983 . . Av» 9' a 1980 .. Barclays 8*j 1992 Bo water 9‘. |wj British Ga* 9 1981 Citicorp u\ 1980 Citicorp 7 1981 CECA 84 1997 DYM 8>« 1987 . . EIB 8'- 1988 . . E1B 8'. J»95 . . Lurullmn 8‘< 1988 Flsoiu 8V 1993 . . IC1 84 1^87 1XCO 8‘. 198ft . . IN CO 9 1993 . . ■U7\ »«{> 99 1 , 94®, 97 ' 0 IOO 96 95*. 94. 9S«. 95*. 94*. 91 " 96 90'. Offer VJ'a 92'. .9T>- 1UU . 9o l . 98 IOO 1 . 96'. 95 T . 94 1 , 96 96'. q 9?: 91*4 «9i». Bid 10V. 9T. rrEL 9*4 1988 .. IV o.scaa 5*4 I9R7 Llohl-Servlcos 9 1982 . . V.-cV.man Bloodel 9 1992 9**. .Midland Ini S - . 1992 .- Vft*. NCB 8 1987 . . -. 92 Nat West 9 1986 .. )00'. NZ Fores I Prod 9 1986 IO 1 P 4 Vo*. jl:H;NightmgaTe> Co. tiimited ’ S"'62V63".Threa(Jnc.caJTe.'iSIrect-;London ;E C2 p TJtl P ~’Tc 1:.• tfl 63 THe: 6 ve r -1 h e - Cou ntet (VI ar ke.t >vi * -t 1V7T.-7B Higli Low Company „ Ceoss Price Ch’ge Dlvi YW Airsprung Ord Airsprung ISi ‘ 29 306 25 Armitage & Rhodes 105 fiardoc HiU • 51 Deborah Ord 10S Deborah 17{ D U CULS 120 Frederick Parker 135 George Blair 3S Jackson Group -5 5 James Bur rough 18S Robert Jenkins 9 TwinJock Ord 54 Twin lock 12 " t ULS 54 Unilack Holdings 57 .Walter Alexander 63 CULS 201 42 163 115 230 130 148 52 106 315 20 SO 83 105 5.4 1S-5 33 12.0 5.1 17.5 12.4 15.0 5.0 6.5 - 29.7 8.6 9.2 7.8 7.4 4.4 7.6 9.5 10.1 9.6 6.1 9.4 83 17.9 8.8 9.3 — 1 -0 7.4 6.4 15.0 S.9 ' 6.1 5.V 53 G.1 9.8 5.2' 17.8 8.9 7.7 Nor>k Hydra T-» 7982 Occidental a«- 19SV Occidental S-. 1987 .. OH short- Mining S', 1983 Ranh Hoyla 0 . . R. J. Reynolds T 1 , 1982 Shell S', 1990 . . SSCF S«4 IMI4 .. Sparbanteraav 8'* 1988 Sweden 7 T - 19S-J Sweden 8*4 T"-*37 Tburrnautotdhn 8', 1987 Waller Kldde S', 198G .. FLOATING RATE NOTES Ahde^banktn 7 l\ '16 ^ 198ft .. Cci 7\ 1933 . . IBJ 7 11 16 19H2 T.TCB 7 13 16 1983 .. OKD 7 J 4 19R5 . , WllUjms Glj-ns a 1. 16 Canadian dollars Avco 9«- 1993 .. .. BM-RT 8'. 1982 Ford 3 1 , lG«ft .. British Columbia MPA y 9.1 . 96’, 96V 93’. ?4‘e ???» Of Ter lMO : . IV, 98 9V, 94 ’ m 9.T 100“,, loir J 4 96 Plil .. V5' a -- Ui 78 94’ '■6-, 9&\ 9ft 7 . 94 Po 1 , 96 96> 95 £ 9ft 1 , 96 1CI 6% 1987 .. INA 6 l*f*-7 inch ch ne o ’4 1 9 , <! rrr a-, 1987 .. J. Ray McDermott 1*'«7.1JJ MILMH Real Estate 6 1 h 92 1JM J. P. Morgan ft*. l"o7 . . nv. Nabisco S’* 1988 .. uij J. vl. Punnoy ft*, 1987. . 7-V* Rerlcm J®. 1987 .. lUO 1 , Reyn olds Metals 3 1983 K!', Spmj' Hand -i’, 1988 . . “3 ‘j Squ'bb ft 1 , 1987 .. 8-5 Sum Homo Elec 6 1992 . . 1-16 Tovjco ft' r 1988 .. 78'j TUCO 5 19R8 .. .. 77*4 Union Bank ol SwILzer* land 4', 1987 .. 14ft V.arnur l-amh-.Ti a’. 1987 AO Xerox Corp 1988' .. 77 Offer 90'. 97 115 TV, 1 JO 101 «7 lOl'i Authorized Units, Insurance & Offshore Funds 1=0*24, Sales. J*’"* *teauy 119.50-22.00; 102 lota. WOOL: Greasy fururos, __ ■ pence per uioi.—J uly. 23006- oci 240-42: Dec. 244-46: March, 247- 60 ‘ May. 248-52: July. 249-62: tvt. 24a- 51: Dec. 248-55. Salt*: nil. JUTS was 8VC*dy,—Banglaflesh whim ■G‘ grade. Sepl-OcL 3475 per imn ton. • D 1 grade. Sepl-Oct . S 459 Calcutta was steady.—Indian \oot Rsbbo per hale or 40Wbs. Dun doe FOW. Spot. Rs650. “ OD0 CRAIN tTTie Baltic) .—WHEAT._ Canadian western red spring No l 13'□ per cent: July and Aug, 591 uj THbiny. US dark northern apruu No 2. 1ft per ecru:. Aug. ao.ftj ^ a p|" ” traits-shipment east coast 1777 78 . Hlch ho* Bid Offer Trust Bic iiflrr Yieic 197779 High Low Bid Offer TYust Rid oner Yield Amhorized Unit Trasu 1177,78 Htirti Low Bid Offer Tni« jtid Offer Yield I97T.TB Illrfl Lnw Bid Offer Trust BIB Of- 1 191.3 t:s 3 Japan * Gen Inc 1M.Z 177.7* LS7 1 217.3 1CL3 U.gnum Fntf 211.5 238.6 3.7E u.Sd Abbey L ett Trust Mmirrt, 75* 8 IM.n Do Aceum TSftA CiUMUK ftl. .Vilrsbuir. Bucks. °29C-MA7l 170.1 55 3 1SM1 (Its .M.l 7*7 Abbey ».4?ll*l 37.5 33.n *.1817*1.4 1*!.3 Du Aceum 4BJ 3S.7 Abbcv General 45 9 *7.8*479 MG 75Jl XA.ILTF * 11 J Zl.-t Dn In-one 39.4 4! J 5.74 !22 .6 37.1 27.6 De Idtc:' 37.1 39.5 4.29 137-9 A lb re Trust Musxert Lid. _ 923 Durrani H«c. ChLsvell L E.C.1 Y9T7 01-53*6371 SJ-2 793 57.4 Alben Tresr ■!> 71-° T8J i’-il • " OJ* 7ft3! 202.6 C6.S £Hl-50 sellrrs. MAIZE No 3 yellow American /French ■ July. £105: Aug, £98-76; Sgp|, £W0 iraiuv. shipment eafti coast sail era. South African while: Aug, £69 LlUi?o5u Glasgow sellers. South African yal- Aug. £69 Liverpool, Glasgow 47.9 Do Inc* i3. 61.2 tilled Hambrn Group. Huabro Hee. Uulion. E*f te | 164.3 *2.! Do Accum K.l Pension* «1" X3 Recovery inc 73.4 Do Accum 115 J Second Gen 146.6 Do Accum N 7 Special Trn IIH flu 79 146 HI'a fH'a Kidder Poabody Securities 98*. 99°. **9’j 90 TOO )5?C 100 . um 1 . 100‘ a Recent Issues 9VL 10UV 97\ 97V VO 1 , 98', 98'. 9o\ Ram: 9'- T’aa Y.'atlrr Heller 98’. 98’. 1V84 DEUTSCHE MARKS CFP 6 ': l^Aft . . . . 103 IC1 G». l r, 37 .. .. IU5\ New Zv-iland 6’. IVBft lOJ-*, Phi-Ti 6 ', 1989 .. tOl’a Qoeocc HyOru b'a 1*137 102 US & CONVERTIBLES American Eiprosa J'. _ 10B7 - . - - .. Ri*, Bcjrncr pguds ft*. 19’<2 Beatrice. Food* G‘, 1991 ill’. Be^diam fr A |092 .. Wl RcrJ-t 6", lf"l .. lrfci’j C irnatlon ft .. Til i-hcvrnn j ]«ga .. 12 .) ...... 97’ UR’, •■ 3 ", lUi’. 1'«4 ID.-. 101 ’, 1U2 1 , l:jrnn I 7 G", IpyTifp**. bramxll C D 73s Ord iTa. I ■JiiiU'irKl. v.-.r lvs3 •lli'fi. Kiir.-lherm Inl lUp unl'IOn. h scbunui-r 1 C'.. 1 'JAJ iOUIi I tihrunrr If, an3-l7 lEXii Fair, its 13Lb5 L>. n umi-i ■ acrmidi liv, IHiim.. ihinnns Puirnkiim v-rr i“j> p'.l.lrsi.n hri.N 11'. PI >ltiui fill Tjui-ldr is,r- l«i, mn*. TI.juk.v p|,.d ip i.rs . 31 . Tint" -*n.| Hear 17*, lid Lll> I’jj.: n'.u-Gd w Hunt Wlr iTlj , Db lKdiiUlu-i Liusinc 171**1 rau. l»S I'D hig-s iWrl I7IV4; r«7). ”il-7 lit' 76.1 3.42 67.0 3 SB 3J.7* 523 35.7 4-95 43 6 5.3 6A9 773 40 3* 7.16 SJ 25.2 2-41 TV 6 75.6 S.09 1«3 9 I’-'-h 3.13 Mj M.2 3J2 3€1 3*.6« 4.79 119.3 ZT7.7 LSI 4*J *7.* 5.07 ■■ST* 7.03 *L3 2.07 fit.** 1.72 771.5 2337 5J{ 44 0 9-39 59.7 9JK 59.2 9-3& 27.9* 12.M .6 r«id, Cl 1 ! 83 n;; 113 JOG’, 1GR Eaytmsn Kodak 4«- 1’>H8 Paircla-ld Camera o 4 I'JU’ 84’ Ford i T**B8 Ford & 3 ->K6 G-orrjI EIccli •il RIGHTS ISSL'IS ANJ! 'to >117 73. |ir.-.V*-T—.1.259 . Imritnnutli In,-. 15: ■ (•'.-III ll'.pper.li; ■ |[vai/ijui>iiaM3d:. II. ill;:!**.. N.irtnrW.r .'35: ■ becurlL'.ir'j:U>U5- > n*» . •■■curir wnlmiUri I—A-tC-j ■ piiicllffr vnojl ■ Ju:. Ijtesl ilnlc uf runiin \>:c 7U ■>ms 16 Alia* 16 Ins 4 AUB 25 Au* !£ lux 2 u AU* J » nrem-3 • *{ prtni'l'.* Jlj prrni 3 prrm J j 14 nr.m*l 1211 14 prem 14 pvcM 14 prem 14 prrdl 14 c r vm 94 pr.-m GUlcno 4', l*jfS7 (iculd 5 1^>?7 .. Gulf a Wcrlcrn n HoncywrU t> iVBtj 4*, 1«*BT «n Rl’ 119 H-V- 8 u " VJf”, ST 1 . to I-’i.t- ptli- in parrnihcvi. • Fa dl-tdcod • IlKih-d by trader. 7 Ml paid... IlOp.U.1 hot p*.i«l r 111 p-ld. d Ol p,.M. e 12 S paid. 1 S*iliy ["Id. j XU iMl.l. B Ci UAtd. i 143 p.ilil. 1:6 p.itd. 53.6 .Ulled Capital 67.6 50.8 Do 1st •77.2 45 5 Brit Inds 31.0 27.$ Gro«-7h ft Inc 33.6 24.0 Elec & Ind Der *1.0 32.4 He! \! In £ Cm dry 012 45.i flt^t Invora* 34.4 732 Equl'.r lacuiue 35.3 2.4 In t cm ailon al TD .6 44.0 BlEhYirldFBd J08.9 79J Hambrn Fnd Si 3 52.4 Do rtecoTery 36.1 17J Do Smaller 123.1 59.7 Do Accum M-3 31J 2 nd fma'iw 56 J 45a. Secs of America 46.7 31 u Pacific Fad 39.5 45.9 PTcneK I .id 22L5 17SJ KxenptSmaller ' AfbaPnl Securliln Ltd. 37 Queen SL London. EC 1 R ’BY. 01-736 32S7 115.9 1073 Extra Income IW 6 712.7- 4231 31^ Hlch Income 55.8 2-6 L’o Accum . 55.9 53.9 S*fe ***draw M.3 23.S Prrf fund 383 33.1 De Accum 'll 29.8 1£3 Capital Fuxft 613 45 .: Corjinodlir "i* 89 1 bi o Do Accum i3i 33.6 *1.9 HKc W*dra» .J- IS O 72.7 Arb Fin ft Prop *7.6 n.V Giants Fund 48.4 34.9 Do Accum 33.3 33.L Grow-U] Fund 41.1 29.6 Do Accum 37 0 19 3 E ft lot Fund 21.2 13.7 u- 'draw 22 9 33.6 X Ante: Inl.n .31.7 Bard a *s Unicorn Ltd. J53 6 Romford Puld. L-.«do=. ET 36 8 39.7 UnlcornAmer 332 ft) 0 44— Aim Income 39 J _ 76.2 55.4 Do .'.ecttri 75.4 -81.4 1.911 67J 52J L'nlcTirn capital 6 SJ 7L7 40: 1112 77.7 Gienr: ■ :0! 7 1 : 3 .: 75.4 :9.9 Ctira Income dl 4 49.4 Financial 73.9 f.0J I'nliLim'cOO' 31.1 23 0 General 43.Q 3 ?— Gro»7h Accum 95.2 6L3 In»-.'rie 42.7 2T.5 neewerr J1JJ 83.6 Trustee 51 9 45A Wurld«:de 01-358 2851; 706.7 113.0 Do Accum. 77.9 76.0 4*3| 14*9 97.7 Trustee Fnd 253 -3 174.7 Do Accum 294 1 283.6 3.74 14)1 lei.fc* 7.05 2W.0 JO] .0 7 00 PM 9Ji 122.4 BA1 133.7 I4L1 9.88 75 8 89.0* 1J8 82.4 87.8 4.26 ITT 9 187.Se 3.08 762 6 SM.o 5 .OS 164.2 174.9 4324 206.4 720.fi 4-4 144 9 195.0 6.44 3WA 6.4* Midland Bank Creep 1'nii Trun_Man>| Cnurl'SDod Hse. Sic ■n l eti Tran Maniren 1 (field. S13 RD. 07*2-798121 I Ltd. inoj* 1CSJ 100.9 I0« 30.2- 3 J1 33.0e 3J1 76J- 3JO «.0 6A) 38.1« 3.10 4X2 SJO 6S.S 5 JO 89.8 8JO Sfi.4* tM SL3 6,*S 30.9 231 MJ 231 8.96 9.96 ^ 72.4 capital 31.3 23.1 Do Accum 71.8 4t2 Commodity S2^ 498 Da Accum 383 94.3 Growth 113 30.4 Do Accum 65.1 50.0 Hlch Yield 66.0 50 0 Do Accum 92.7 35.4 Income 60.1 403 Do Accra 30.8 40.0 International 53 4 42.9 Do Accum 112 A MJ Exempt Equity 1173 003 Do Accra National ft Commercial, 31 St Andrew Square. Edinburgh. 631-896 BUI 158.6 112.0 Income 143.0 150.2 6.00 2U-2 145.2 Do Accra 195.9 203.0 6.00 1313 100.0 Capital 1227 .126.8 3.71 157.4 119.0 Do Accum 149 6 155.3 3.71 National Prortdeqilar Managua Ud. JS'^u’ad: * Gracecturcb StreaL EC3 01-623 4200 ju4»t_.au ^ f +ij SPI Accum fl8* 3B.0 E6 6 4J0 ii'i iV 49.4 38 3 DoDlstiU' 49.1 42-0 4.30 S*7 133 5 1223 Do tl'acaa ACC 1333 1UL3 230 See SJ| 7=3-9 UJ! Do O'seaa D1S 125.9-1343 230 1 )i« 1 National h eslmleater Felt Treat Me: Loth burr. London. EC2P7BP iota STa . 513 80.7 Oro-.-th 96J v 4 '-•heapsldc EC2Y 6EU __8.5ft Bqlv hn. Exec £11.42 13.08 13.38 10.85 Prop Bn.Exec £ 13 36 14.14 13.13 10.2* Bel Bn Exec £ 13.12 1358 I1M UOJ D*P Bod 177 0 J23.0 Equity ACC 12.76 9.73 prop Acc 7JD9 1751 Man Acc 9*£ Sf.9 Mid Equity - 104 0 100.0 2nd Prop 97.8 83.0 2nd Man V. 0 100.0 2nd Dep 89.4 33D Std Gill .... . 95 8 39.1 2nd Equ Pea Acc S3.1 100.6 IU8.8 100.0 2nd Prp Pen Acc 108.6 114.9 l"0.0 08.T 2nd Man Pot Acc W.9 105.7 93.0 1IKL0 20dDcpPenAcc 93.0 104.8 95 8 93.2 2nd Gill Pen Arc 89 A 9S.1 38 J 28.3 L ft E SIP 38.9 40-3 Z7.S 21.0 LA ESIF 2nd 27.0 28.0 111.3 117 8 176.0 .. t 12.76 .. 1JQB 03.2 98.6 3M.9 111.0 * 97.6 103-3 07.0 102.7 83.6 94.8 Schroder Ufr Orann. Enterprise House. Portanoinh- 229J 153.9 Equity Fnd f24 221.0 187.4 Krrtrlty 2 1202 105.7 Equity 3 <2 147.7 125 1 Fixed lal i2 1 15S.6 134.6 Fixed lot 3 i2t L3S3 U4.4 Inl V T •?> 158J* 129.3 HAS GlU l2i 134J 1I2A KftSGvtScciSl 131A J05.7 Mon f Plcl 1 i2i 144.9 179.0 UanxAed 3 '21 6 «« Valuallonliaveorhingdayolnjttim. 123.6 03.7 Ut Unite ■ 133.6 129 7 54.7 47J Prop Units 54.7 57A City of Keetm Ini ter Aasnrance Ce. , 6 While horse Rd. Ctaydon. CRO 21 A. 01^84 9664 Valuatimi ." 225S . 3».i a US.9 S?3S »3fi S 344ft 13 107.6 105.3 Money Fund i2l 107 6 « 117 7 115.9 Money Fnd 3|2) 117.7 12 vo.4 ino.o ucerMai mi n.i in 135.8 127 5 Property Fnd |2) 153.6 18 153.2 ia.1 Property 3 i2i 1532 1« 12L2 108.9 B S Pea Cip B 131.2 u 132.0 1125 B 5 Pea Arc B 132.0 a 200.6 1492 Man Pea Cap B 300 2 21 2332 16* 4 Man Pm Ah B 238J £ «.ono_n.»n 95.7 It V* dtuUlOT lM( tr«Wnyd*rof mbflUl. 60J 50.4 West Prop Fluid 60J ®.g ■- 73.5 134.3 Managed Fund 171.7 180 T .. 95.7 98.0 Ft Pen Cap B M.8 6L2 FI Pen Arc B 98.0 100.0 Prop Pen Cap B 96 J 100.0 Prop Pen Ace B 05.8 100.0 .Mon Pen Cap B 96J 100.0 Mon Pen Acc B iJ J * 0 * 965- 1C 95ft U 96J U 173.5 58.6 _ 73.0 50JJ 121J 118.8 Moony F 57 J DO.2 Gilt Aid 173.0 135.3 P.U.L.A land Fund Fund 57.3 73.0 77.7 UIJ 127.S 61.2 «7J 160.7 173.0 Snltlfb Wldoiro Feed ft Life Aran PD Box 003 Edlabunrb. E3U6 oa 1W.5 77J lorPoUcy lOSft it 100.6 77.2 Do Series >2i 00.7 U 01-259 7500 5S.0 . 37.6 , 20.4 22J 5.7 IJ3 53J Extra Income 28.0 tncume 30.6 Financial 57J PortlollO 30.0 Universal Fund 01-626 5410 133.5 B2.0 169.0 178.0 „ . N'.E.L.Trtm Masaaer* Ltd, Si.lt JUj MlllfiB Court. Dorklnr, Surrey.__03p6 50U 52.7 Nelsur 4 .ft Do inc -IfL JTJi NenrichUnleaLasuroeeeGroup. *3 A 'jg-j" ? 331 pr. Bov 4. Xunrich. XR1 3\U Oe/XJ 22200 «A rale M* 3 * S -~ Sl l±.' 3r ?'V T * Fad - “•! 0-OS 73 » 79 S 3: * 33ft 49.7 44 0 For Oceanic Group see Broun Shipley. 46.5 B*:n !n r rad 62.9 6 J i 00 5 Dn .Xcc_t: 7-..S 74 9 Bridge Fond Managers Lid. 0-5 Mlnctnc Line. LC3. 50.8 34.6 Bridge Inccmr K2 23 1 D.. Cap inc-2 Pearl LnliTrnsi Manners Ltd. 232 High Hulbc.ro. V.'CIY TEB. 01-405 8441 22.7 24ft 5.44 27 0 2D 1 5.44 . 318 34.2 7J6 l 37.1 =3.4 Truet • 35.1 J7.S 3.01 < n. ■ 46ft 26.3 Da Accum 45 J 4BJI 3.01 3 in 1 Pell ran Celt Admleinntlen. Founialn Vrrol. Mancbeaier. 061-236 5655 ii i je ■, . nun Muioc.ro. v. civ . bn --C S*" fr. 3i - 8 203 Gromn 1 i 20 -« 3 inl 2?-^ 23.0 Du ACCUm *11? K.'. 2 ^' "i 21-3 In cume 49.9 23.-: 37ft 393 410 =e.o 27.0 29A 1S T :? 0 07-323 A9511 54-2 ' " 3.02 lie Cap Acc 2 26.6 ail Do Aarrrjx 17ft I3.T he lr: inc .?> 137 113 Da lor Arc BrliaaalaTnrit Masagemeni Lid. 3 Ldn M all BICq, B2211 3'JL. 723 SJ C Awll 74.4 40.6 Financial Fees 53.7 112 Cipltxl .lerm 60 2 43 9 t vaini ft Ind 80 4 60.0 CnnmudUy 47.3 =0.3 Dufrusllc 115.8 66.3 Fierip: 3V.7 29.9 cs'ji lr.come 223 IT.) Fir Eas: Fnd AJ.4 25.1 Unf trsal Fr.c Si 4 35 1 Pelican "" ' S4.2 90J - f n Perpetual UallTra*! Maaageateet. i n.. 43 Bari 5:. Henly on Thames. 04012 6868 3*571 46.0 1? 9 Perpetual Grid 30.1 42.Oe 3JO S«' Practical leinteient Co Lid, 3 j 3'*4 91 cort'bnrT Square. MCI. 01-623 8803 i r. I -Ju 4 113.) Practical Inc 1338 183.4 4.26 , 220-3 733.6 Do Accum i3i 2=0 J 233.S 4ft6 01-539 W75 9 ^ .. £1* "»«“■' “ *-14. 7 -; 771 5 1 * — SldmmoK. EC. 01-247 8533 42 ~ fij's. 4 if. I Prolific 83.4 OBJ 3.13 S 4 s'.vr I 212J 71.6 Dn High Inc lid.5 118 “ ~ 55 ;,, s?ja 4 .T 7 I_ Prodeellel Unit Trust Manayera. 106J 107.5 113.1 09.2 104ft UOJ 116.0 M>'- na'ba i’w 7 • Bnlburt: Bars. London. EUIX 2NTT 01-406 9222 ~7, Nft il T-2,; I 132.0 04.0 Prudential 1=5.3 133 0 4.43 IZli 727fte .713in Rrtlancr LaIIMaBasrrsLtd. «2.1‘ TJ.5* 42 * '(> R*ll»nce Hse. lit Ephraim. Tun M*ells. D882 22271 ij'j So; I 420 30 4 Sekfnrde Trt 42.0 44.9 6 03 Jo, 5 = 3 1 42 U =5.7 Do Accum 43.0 46.0 6 03 6 e*e*s 00.7 41.0 Opp Accra. 2 > 66.7 71.3 3 JJ 4 944e 2.92 !-_Rothsehlld Asset Management. 96.0 82 2 8.23. 31 ' ^1 I«ft 53 4 In: Gro<--:?i 3U3.6 72.2 Co!J ft Gtccroi M.7 63ft Go.Mth 7) 1 5) 1 laconic ft C.-.72 49 I 34 I tr.v TV. Shares 40.0 27.0 Mineral: Trt 977.0 30.3 .N« H 11 :t Inc 3? S M 9 Ncv Ls-Ue 32.6 27.6 North lr.iTSCaD 523.7 322.7 Professional J-.O 3.3 Pr.ipe.rt." Shares 50.8 34.2 Shield 31.4 I"" ^TbcBittllb Life" ■' ~ ' “ ~ tglJBil 7351 Pellxncc Hse. Mt Epf.-atir. Tun Wells. o*K227:’ ?7 - 22 6 Capital Unite a: wft tr.ui 2 u*c 47.9 34J Balanced.2i 44.4 322 Dividend •: 73.4 1m income S7J 03Je 1.62 72.4 Int Accum -■ S9.1 P4.T L62 86.7 Smaller Co*» 154.4 164J 4.99 507ft 5=2 “a* 73 : Save ft Prosper Group. “3 2.57 M ,? " al 01- Helep-s EC3P SEP. - 01-088 1717 2:.4 JO.ia 5.03 ! 32 *1 34ft - S7 (4 >>rexi >I. Helen s EOP 3EP. - 01-088 1727 s 3 ft 2 .De.Iras to 01-554 6 W 0 ;r >.0 2 ) 5 . 0 ; j cisttnt JJsr. «8-73 Uaeen St. Edlnnuntb. EU24N2C 34.7 39.4a 3.14 ft si • 5 .T 5 : =6.1 20.5 I.T.U. 26.1 29.0 4.01 4*5 5 T.= 5« no 7 SU 4 1.*nlTersalGro*UI 96. i 73 ft 1.1/7 42 4 3.4 9.£P -7.4 )3.7 Hl£h Yield 33.4 ■ 57.4 7£5 Brna a nhlplcy Unit Fuad Managers. I ’J-O ^9 1 !P. C ? D, 1 *S-i J2-3 P.>unarr's Cmirt. Lcnnbury. EC7L >r.-«C0 95201 *5-2 HtKh^Beuirn -33ft 68 St 8.72 225.5 131.6 B. .4. l/alt?«.' 230.9 220 a 4.72 j--= Aj.3 U.K. Equity Fnd 43.9 47ft 5.U7 1610 Do Accum ■_ 63 6 Occaclc Esrrp: 23.6 DO Finance D i General Do G.-ath Acc Du Gn»LS lac Do nirii Inc 16ft 10.6 Ift 31.7 K?-4 JSft 22 T 13ft Do Prrf or Do Index D-- Re .01 try _ __ Canada Lite Unit Trull Muaaert. 2-6 Htyn st. Po::-rs Bar. Herts. P Bar 57722 iO.O 30.4 Canll.V Gen 37ft 3-) 9t 4.37( 49 0 35.6 Du ACvUs: 46 7 49.2 4 37, 36.2 27.1 ln-.-orrv Die: 33.5 35J 7.bV| 45.0 22.7 Do Accum 43.9 46ft T.49| Csprl (James. HanagamaaiLld. 55 4 22.7 3.« 2u.7a 3 6ft> 4 44 _-v 26 6 a ) 24 "12 22.5 5 91 5t 5 93.0 _ JK33 lUft 0.74 74.1 TV.7 1.27 77 1 83.2 4.C0 70ft 75ft 1.80 71.6 76.9a 3.07 996.1 270ft 3.24 53ft 56.2 5.45 73ft Ruropc Cravib 72.3 -span Crnsrth 64 9 U.S. Crow-.b 60.0 Goiumodlli 59.7 Fjlergj Cl ft Financial Secs 96.3 Select Int 51 G Du Incumc _ Srolbiu Se no-lUes Ltd. I 103.9 101.0 34 1 scrub: 15 38 0 40ft# 3.9t| Ulft 101.3 196.4 Scnici'mpl Grth 246 2 259.9* 2oM 1 97.7 100.0 179.9 Do Yield 165.5 173 4a 7.38 4>/.6 Scutahares 36.6 60.6a ).T3 40.1 Sent vie Ids 30ft 53 0 7ft2 Scbleafater Fran sianafers. 'Trident Fund*. :*0 5>ulh Sr. Dar. 57.7 3ft 100 ord Broad si. ra:: iso o: sniol 16ft Dft Capital Fod-22> 6X5 *7.9 5 02i Tft.l 49.6 Income Fnd .22' 79 3 *3 3 T.72 :o: 259 29.3 43.2 23.8 52.3 26.1 19ft Am FTxVhd 253 Amer Grunth =3.0 Fa High Yield 24.0 Ex Mart Leader 2).. Extra Income 33.0 Income Pond 26 2 10*.- illuidral 4J.2 Ini Gro<*ih 23 6 Inv Tat (.'nits 21.5 27.0 257 25.7 28.9 36ft 3.0 46.2 26.1 3.1 27J 22.9 23ft 27.i* Si 0306 80441 72 6 2.91 29.0 1.65 ?7.1a 8.41 27.0 4JO 31.1 9ft5 41.2a 9.92 31.2al0.00 51.8a 3.04 26.1a 4.41 31 3 4J6 3.4 .. 24.0al2.60 71ft 2ft6 29.9 2.W 23.4a 5.14 20 6a 0 14 Carnal Unit Fuad Managers Ud. Mllbunt fUe.Neacmstle-upun-Tyne 063C2U63j 69.6 50.1 Carllrt.f- £9ft Tift 4.0c! 83 4 57.5 Dr. Accum S3 0 855 4 'X- r*. S 41.7 28 1 D-> Hl6h Y5d 41J 44.0 Sft7l 3f V»*«,Le*dc 31.9 218 Do Accum 57_S W: 9 27| . Jl -2 SS S ^ ^ Cbariaro Chart tics Narroarr-Bangr Fuad. I 31- Sl'5 gTOf AGOlTund 13 M-orskt*. L..cdon. t'.ft 0’.-C'3 4ftH jl-J .7? ? ? rop . i ’, bl f“ 725 5 95.2 incrune ■ 31 ■ .. 7 77 6 l(r “1' j- 0 aPccbd sits Tst 754.C 102.4 D.. Accum. 14 . 750 6 70 71' 1.2 UF Arc Units Cbaritlrstifdrlal lairstmeat Fund. • - 13 J'i- Du DIM Inns r London Wall. London. E«.2 OlftO 1«I5 ... . . J.HeurrdcbroderMmACa. Lid. 137.0 103.7 in,--24- .. :*rt 4 6 TO:- 2 ® Cheap,lie. London. EC2 01-2*0 3434 256.3 *£ft A&UC- •=«. 23i: | IfM £7 0 U*pllaJ 2. 103 < 107ft. 2.31 ChancrtMHeJapbet UnitMaaisemem Lid. • ‘r 5 -? .™f, Dt. Accum 1 Fi I rrr osier Hum. London. £C*. b!-24* *Y» | *>T 5 {‘J.* hio.-mc -2. 24.) VI .2 Int ft > 22.0 13 n :.£•)! -■«•? 3^.9 Do Accum 7S.4 24.3 Ac cum .3. 27 2 Z).4 1.97: H.O General ft. M.0 27.2 Inc ft. 33.) 34! 7 54i !£*? £2 7 _ 1 'o AdtUO 26.3 24.0 Knr.. Fin ft' 2e-*. 24 * JftT J- J STft EiLTupe«23« 2ss 2 : 3 : Fund lav:. 23.6 ::: jisj n. 20 .. r-. .u-cum LbIrf tain Trust Managero Ltd. L Era'll** EqhlUblr Fun 17 Nc» 8L Lield'in. s'.X*.. 4TP ■>:-293 2632 = r‘ Nndrew*. Soy»rc. bdJn _ 20 20ft Amerti-n Fnd =!.5 2ift l <6 37.1 EnillGble .2. 49ft 52.7 5.21 27.1 D.7 h«.*c Fxtvurcn 27.9 *2).M 4JU ^ * W : l’P Actum 56 B 60.1 5.21 49.1 27ft Hlih lnt«r-.e 4*/ft 42ft ».4s .. .. *e»“TL» ITnt«i»aaageraUd. 23 3 23ft lnurr.s-.luna*. 24 4 2T 2» 3 24 1 *5 CtlMluVtu St. Edinburgh 031-726 3571 Kmassrood Urmceat Unit Trust Manager, Ltd. .£ 5 S*5 SJ?" 1 .™ i_ n J ,S*S ,S*i H; KT20«EA- 4 Meltille trescs-r.l. Ldlnburgh n31C26 4®S1 *35.o 86. Bril L\ip l^d 134.U 145-, 4J4 *g« imj 29.0 20ft Grnnth Fnd 57 1 29 1 4i*3 sno Alliance Fund Management Lid. • 911 4S.9 InltrujJunxI 57ft 67.7 0 7 b!*»!» Alliance Ha«. DorolKiRl. SutlSL W« 6U41 43 2 4.J4ft**- 1 ® IW.10 Exempt Eqi39>£214.n) 2S.S0 4ft3 46 2a 8 9)| »7.7 75ft F-Cl!l> F*Und 07.1 103.2 3.55 12-J 125.4 2 2) 1S6J 103 U» 6.98 276 s 2S6.3 6.99 ift.O 8«.4a 3.62 103.6 167.9 3.62 37.4 33.4 2J6 . _ 34.7 36.9 2 3d uultablr Fuad Managers Ltd. Muxrc. tvdln burgh. 031456 91UI Funds currently dosed Id near Investments 38ft 30.1 Speculator ■. 31.9 204.8 120.7 Performance 2OL.0 ULO 100.0 Guarantee 190-0 ■ Cdmmerrtal Ualna Croup. SL Helen's, l L'naershifL. BCl 38ft Vartabta An Acc 18.1 13ft Do Annuity Cora MU Imam 32 Cnrnhlll. London. EC3. Valuation um of month. 123.3 81ft Capital Fnd 55.0 34.0 GS Special 170ft 126.0 Man Grorth i2Sl _ Cruwn Life iBsaranceCa., crown Lire Use.. M’oUnp: Surrey. 04862 5033 158ft Hta.0 Crown Bril Inv . 142ft .. Cruaadar Insurance. Burning Bldgs. Tower Place. EC3- 01-628 8031 Valuation 1st Tuesday'of muotb. 71.T 83.0 Crusader Prop 70.9 80.4 .. Drummond Assurance Society. 25 Worship SL London. KC2. 01-487 3S82 33.7 Wft Fund A 30.1 31.7 .. 20.3 26ft Fund 0 27.0 28.4 .. 31.7 26ft Fund C 30.9 32.6 .. 31.8 36 2 Fund D 28ft 30.7 .. 27.9 28.2 Fund E 27.9 29ft .. Eagle Mar Inaoraaceittldlaad Aasursnee 1. Tbreadneedlr St. E.C.2 ot-SOS 1212 55.1 39.3 EasteTJIdiand 5X3 54.2 8.04 Eqallr * La* Ulc Amnraacc Saelety Ltd. Amorabaoi Fd. High Wycombe. 04B4 33377 115.8 luo.o Equity Pnd LUft 110.1 108.7 09JS Properly Fnil 115ft 96.0 Fixed Inl Fnd »9 2 100.0 Guar Dep Pnd IIOlT 100.0 Mixed Fnd Fid el lay Ufe A tsuru ee Ltd. Surrey Street. .N'cnrtch. NRl JNG. 06Q3 6B3241 28ft 25.2 Flox’ble Inv 27ft 29ft .. 45ft 40.4 American GrwUi 42.4 44.7 .. 58.1 51.9 Trust of Trim la 3d.9 36.9 .. Grosvraer Ufe Aasarapre Ca Lid. 85 Grosvenor 61. London M'l. 01-493 1484 32.8 28.0 Managed Fnd 12ft 34.3 .. 1H2 4 101.4 Do Capital 100.1 105.4 .. Guardian Beya) Exchange Asadnuce Group. Royal Exchange. London. ECS. 01-283 .147 176.0 147ft property Bond 176ft 184ft .. 189.8 113.2 Pen Man Bouda 169.1 178.0 .. . Baubra Life Aaauraace. . 1 >- 7 C'ld Park Lane. London. WL tfl-499 0031 125 5 122.7 Fixed Inf Fnd 125.4 133.1 177.4 123.2 Equity 140.) 107.4 Managed Cap 173.2 126.2 Do Accum 165.3 137.0 Property 125.1 57.9 Oversea* Fnd 124.2 100.6 Gilt Edged Acc IDl.S 100.0 Am Acc 127.7 125.1 Pen Ft Cap 149.1 138.4 Do Accum 202.9 IH 4 Fen Prop Cap an.4 aos.a Do Accum 208.6 156.9 Pen Man Cap 285ft JDl.T Do Accum 1J0.3 104ft Do Gilt Edge 133ft 104.4 Do Accum un..) loo.u Peo DAF Cap _ 102.8 100 0 Pen DAP Accra 102.0 IWft Hearts ol Oak BrnefHSeclrlj. Euatoo Rd. London. VMT. 01-387 5639 38ft 54ft property Bond 38.5 36.4 .. Bill Samuel Ufr Assurance Ud. \T-t TM-r. AddIacorn bc Rd. Croydon. 01-686 4355 IMA 133.0 fro perry L'nlta 154ft 182.6 101.9 luO.O Do Series A 166.7 126 6 Managed Gala 08 5 93ft Do Senes A 00.6 92.0 Do Series C 120.7 118.4 Mousy Ynlu 07.6 87 8 Do Series A B6ft 95.9 Fixed Int Ser A 147.5 103.7 Pens Man Cap 184.4 102.7 I)n Man Acc Du Gld Cap Do Gld Ace Do Eq Cap Do Eq Acc DO F inl Cap Do F InL Acc L>o Prop Cap Do PgUp Arc _ _ Huger Ufe AmnranceCa Ltd. 114 718 St Mary St. Cardiff. 53.1 ll-'dKC Bonds 59.9 Takeover 25.0 HOdge Ule Eq 25.0 Mortgage Fnil 25.0 Conr High Yld 25.0 overseas Pnd Imperial Life Ataurxact Co sf Canada, Imperial Life Rae. London Rd. Gailford 73ft 54ft Growth Fnd <5i 73.8 79.1 67.4 45.1 pension Fnd 67.4 13 2 Colt Linked Portfolio helm* Life Ansranre Untiled. 167 ChcAPsIdc. Londun, ECS BDC. K 139.0 1W.0 Solar .Managed s 137ft v III.8 100.0 Do Property i lLlft I] 183ft 09.1 Do Equity a 162.3 u 122.4 loo.o Do med trn i iaj u 11)0-1 100.0 Do Cash a 100.1 li 103 4 100.0 Solar Inl a 9TJ u 128-9 100.0 solar Muagedp 126.8 k 111.5 IDC.b Dn Property p 113ft 5 J63ft 69.7 Dn Equity p 143ft E 122 ft loo o Do Fixed imp ii4ft j: •-).S 100.0 Do Cash p 90.9 U 103.4 100.0 Solar Int P 07-3 h biandard Ufe UurunCt, Pt'1 Box 62- 3 Georgs Sl Edinburgh. Off Ulft 8L3 fnl*. Endowm'l .. U Sno Alliance Fund ManagamraiL Sun Alliance Rsc. Horsham. Sumet. c 159.40 115.30 Ea FIX lot 139.1 1352:00191 11.77 9.99 Int Bond t .. £ Sub Alliance Linked Ufa Inanranee Sun Alllancr Hse. Horsham. Snstt. { 119.6 100.0 Equity Fund 114ft ■£ 105.8 100.0 Fixed Int Fund I04ft £ 109.0 loo.o Properly Fund - 112.6 85ft Int Fund 9d.9 11)0.0 Deposit Fund 1D0.6 98.7 UanjgedFutid _ Sdb Life of Canada (VKI Ltd.' 3-4 Cockspur SI. SM~L g 139.4 103.4 Managed (5) .. X 210.3 133-3 Grunth i3l .. X 133.1 >95.9 Equity f5i .. 1- 206.2 142.7 Personal Pm f2> 3 Target Life Assurance. Target H*e. Ayleabury. Bucks 1012 100.0 Deposit Inc 114-9 ins.4 Fixed interest 117ft 102.0 Man Fnd Acc 101.9 BO.6 Do Income 108 0 88.0 Prop Bnd I rrr 107.8 95J Do Income 138.0 106 0 Do Aocum 63ft 4S.8 Ret Ann Pen Cap 109.0 i 104ft ft It 1QS.9 L _ IMJ 140.1 14Tft 173ft. 182ft 162ft 171ft 121.6 128.0 123 6 130ft 97.1 102.3 127.7 134ft 149ft 137.0 202.9 213.6 36L1 775.2 2QJ.fi 212.3 299.7 273.4 121-1 1=7.5 127ft 134.3 202.1 103.5 _ 56ft Do Accum 133J 105.4 Rei Plan Acc 1=9.6 102.. Do Do Cap 142ft 99.6 Gill Pea Acc 140.8 95.0 Gill Pen Cap Trident Life. j Rcnslkde Hse. Gloucester, i 1=1.1 109ft Trldonl Man 133.5 128ft Dn Guar Man 148.4 119ft 03 ft 79.9 113.7 99.5 142.6 117.0 130.00 106ftp GUt 12L0 L* _ 1164 U Do Property 149.4 L' Do EduUF'An 54ft I Do UK Equity. 106ft X 93.0 100.0 95.0 Wft 95.0 100.0 95.4 1(0.0 96.0 100.0 1018 107.4 183 9 179.6 94ft 101ft 94.2 99.2 130.7 127.1 97.6 I02.7 02ft 97.0 137.1 144.4 144.9 152.8 103ft 111ft Ulft 117ft DC.5 100.6 95.0 101.1 94.3 99J 04 9 100ft 95.4 100ft 06.0 101.1 1=3.0 119.8 lUft 83ft 131.9 135.8 1=4.4 32ft 104.5 bt: 130.) 131J . ... Equity. ... _ Da High Yield 138-6 I- "MBIT £8S edifi Do Money Do Int Fond DoFLsealFnd Du Bond* Da Gl Hands 93.0 Trident Growth 65.0 Do Accum 120.7. _ 123.0 X 10L2 11 Ulft JL* 35ft . 102.3 100 0 1UB.6 100.0 113.0 100.0 117 7 100.0 13.1 X 125ft X 111.9 L 116.fi L* 102-3 It 106.8 L* 1130 L 117.7 L- 751 75.9 =3.7 23.7 73.7 23.1 78ft 23.7 =3.7 23.7 33 . ■ 783 82.7 23.0 23.0 25.0 35.0 4257 95.1 88.S MU Fund 90.1 100.0 Fixed Int Fd 96.2 100.0 Secure Lap Pd 97 0 1O0.U Eqnlly Fund Itidual 1 I8an 197.7 =388 74.2 4 41 4=J 44? 4i Blrtu S ) Sritr.i Fr*d .0 Rich Dlst )) 7 Kqnllaa ftecu rftlea Ud. tv. Lend-.n. ECS. .©71 ]=:.= iw.d ill.O id ) :=5 ) ? ::; 4a 6.« i:d.6 2.77 :ju.3 :37 67J t, °5a? l prop-«»lve 00.0 7(.i 4 03, Eqnllt k Las Unit Trust Manager* Lid. Amcrtham Rd. H Vycwmle. BluRs. (K64 3=313 ©ft 5i5 LqICY A Ur* «ft ui 7 ) U Framllaaiaa Unit Trail .llaniyemcnt Ltd Framllncl.m Hse. 5-7 Ireland Yd. l*‘ 4 i'l-246 31.6 - 0.0 .Imrrtc.tn )5ft 6'J fi lapllal 15! ft SS.d Ircuni.- !M.t 63 o Ini i;rt>'« :b i<x>.$ 30.0 Dn.UriUb 113.0 _ -- Friendf Prtnldeat Unit Trait Managers Ltd. Pltheni End. Pork Inc. iurrer. u3ufi-3u33 43 7 30.1 Friend* Pror 42 8 )5.7 4=1 57.L 37.0 Du A crus: * 55 3 «• y 4SI Fnndf In Conn. Public Trustee. Klngsnav. KC2 n :-403 43£") 100 6 76 0 Laplijl* tnO.6 103.1 4=7 5l.O 56.0 Grirft Income* 75ft 7!.3a «ftO 90 J 66.0 KiJh Yield* FT = p.' = • =3' (. asd A fall Trail Manager. Ud. 5 Rayiclgji Rd Hutiun. Bases. 0=77 =7J00 33 4 =3ft fill _ r.) 34 6* ) 70. O.T.L'BlI Mao skits Ltd. 16 Flrtcbury tlivu>. ETC2M TDD 86.1.1 S3.) l»T Cap 54 0 lU3ft 74.1 , D-i Accum 103.2 l^.e 110 9 Do fncume 163 0 ISOft 136.7 Du l'S Lett Pod I lift __ 3)4 ft =12.2 pi. Japan Gen 3=7.8 3*5 n 132.7 1=5.) Dll Pension Ex 130.7 137 2 37 J 48.7 Fnur Yard* Fnd S3.3 l*..* 130 ■ 105.4 IdicrnatlunoL 130.2 lM.o i/artmurr Fund Mtnsgerr. 3 Ft Mary Axe. EC3 4 8BP. •W.9 =3 0 American Tit X 1 31.0 ErtUsli TkI 164.3 J 15.9 Lummudlly 37.6 24 0 Far Eastern : 54.9 3»0 Rich ln.>.me 7*4.4 49.0 Income 73) 14.83 12.11 Ini AgcDClev I 13 74 35.0 36.1 International i ,i3.j S3 ) 79.0 Im Erentpl T4.7 Grieresoa .Massy M> Grei.lism S'. EL2P 2Di- Tartel Trust Managers Ltd. Ml I Taravl Ilse. Aylesbury . Bucks. 0294 33)41 i7.g ».M LuniluuHtl 37.3 40J 3.67 C ■ 45.9 Financial 40 9 31.0 Equity 219 ? 1+) 2 LTi rppi =57.7 £-.. Accum i3i =4.0 Grnarth 06.0 flit Fund 23.5 Ictcriiallonal =5 0 Do Re-lmest 22.5 Invotmeni 119ft Profcsslanal >3i l**.. Income 12.5 Preference 17.5 fiprrtsl bits J=.i J=-6 32.7 163.- »).i 37.3 40J 59.9 64.9 4.88 36 5 39.2a 6ft9 204ft 2K 9 6.73 277.6 =57.7 - — =b.3 30.) 113.1 1=1.1 26.9 28.9 31.6 21.2 =9.4 32.7 1“4 259 13ft 35.2a 3.41' 10.7 1.31 31.1 8.19 14.daU.90 21.2 4.01 Target Trust .MaBageniScelfudtUd. SS.fi 21 6 Am Logie =9.=a 1.45 )3.1a J77 fiSftall'.Ofi Pt-*ft? Sl.’l, “1.4 3 40 100 7 173.4 IjU.= 3.40 4.=0| 27 9 ~s .. 01-=S3 3331 30.0a 0c7, .wo W 7 =ftS 1*72.6 174.»a 3 14 .« ) O 72 83.1 3.33 75 9 it; 14.7m y ;3 33 6 Ift! « 3 f- O0| ■cot Ce Ud. UI-006 44=3 219ft l©ft Barr’ntn Fnd <3 . 202.3 =ll.4a 4 67 233.8 169.2 Do Aruum 177.5 115.9 Hlch Yield 204 I 1=2.7 Lb) Accum 206 7 15= 3 End cat our 214.0 157.S tM Accum Wft TP.3 Gr.tnlc0cttcr.3i 103.4 81.7 Du Accum 71 2 6)ft Ldn A Brussels 73 9 (Oft Du Accum J =£.*.] 176) 19*.S =02.9 21=3 206.7 216.1 = 11." =3.7 95.4 1.60 4 25 Guardian Rayai Exchange Unit .Man Ltd. a) Erclt-neu. Uoulon. LC3 O', l lull t.7 6fi.7 DuardbUI 00 3 93 5 4.341 ResdcraoB AdmlalstratlaB. RajlelEh ltd. hultun. Loses 0277 2273U0 11 Austin Friar- i-mdun. liCftX 2Ef.» 26.1 Ausl Tnl 33.t> 02ft Cab.a f. 1 n=s? 30.,) Am hmall cc*s 43 3 27.? Ljp Grunth Inc 42.9 43.0 4 9 Du Accum 43.5 23.3 Ffiirnpean M.O Far Last Trl )u.l ~"..o 76 9 24 5 13? 0 120.5 Ml.7 5i.i Hlrfh rat-tinip 60.7 22.13 Ins A Awi* J2.1 24.6 Inicrnailpnal 11- 35.7 1 75 38 8 23ft Ull & Nat Rue 27.4 624 54 0 W'Vld Wide 74.6 79 .S 4 49 93.) 97.7a 3.iH) lb Can) nee Rd. Brlstnl. 97.0 l'jt.4 3.00 104 9 75.4 Income 'Ji ‘ 103.1 INS Du Accuru *3> 128.0 0 =.= Csntlal i3i 179ft 124= Do Aceum-3i I0«t 4 74.4 Preference l=jft 83.0 Dv Accum <3i LL3L4 76 8 Exemdl - *40. ISJ.U IPu.U Dn Accum .*0 222.6 190.4 lot Earn Fnd< J. =7dJ 20J.4 D" Aei.uni.3i 14I.it 914 Son C-p i3 IdSft 10-9 nil! Samuel I nn Trust Managers Ltd. 43 P recta .91. EC2 PCUE 82 0 67 4 Di.ll.tr =s 7 33.4 In'rrnxliiiiisl 163.1 121ft British Tai 10.1 1=1 2 Dr. Guernsey ~ - Zl.o Capital 100.3 29 U 30.1 74.3 Plnancl-l.Ttt 21ft Inruoie T>l 20 6 RIO. Vivid 4).I errurtlr Tel Key I und Managvn. 2- Milk si. K'.*=V WE. C9.S 44 5 F.qult- A r.cn 05.1 "0 6 u? 7 Fn eryy titd Knd ” 5 1-3 U :=7 f:i.'o.pi Fltdi36i •1.) 52.* ine Pud _ul -.=« 8011 76 3 ‘1.7 2.79 36 t) Sffta 2.1H 151.3 lot 9 5.451 131.) 162 6 =9.8 31 H Or n 2 r ) *.<rr - 0 22, 3.59 W 6 3-' 2 53 9 OI-W7B70 T2.S 1.77 F2 4» 341 1-1 0 If'l.da dftl T^.l «4 A1 8 u.5 he:' Flr.d Int 00.0 63.4 ltftT ’*. ) 5) 5 Su.-ii.r«*.■ Fii.1 97.» inj.u bus Melina art Brains l oll .tUnitrr ni-SL*l9*» h’i.2 3 8H 12.5 5 80, 2C i 49.4 ■i'.ll I'.S 44.: y. 2 d! 4 37.7 ’l-=36 5SSI =5.9 Oft*)' 26.9 0.50 40 7a i.*9 47.9 it i 20 Fen-rhur.li >'lr.rl IU7) 47 = :a a iOi t nit Fd lne *l.P i«7 os ) hb un: M A--c loj.d _ Laasnasernrlllei.. .77. Ijuccn'a 8». London LC)R 1BY ' 21 1 Ine.TI' uo Fnd =j.9 _ ..i-cunt =*.7 20.6 oIIia'i jrraiil 3* 1 Hlrh Mr lit-knit 47.i', J... ftrv un, 25ft fix* H-b rials =6.t D>> tnuin 49.) Growth 32.3 l>» Accum . , Legal A General Tyndall I ond. 16 Idnj nge Rd. Urteti.l U272 3221 &J.4 36 h DLsDlf.nl Inn ■ 40 1 37 2 0U.8 3JJ .2.4 13.9 Du Acs‘iir.ii)0. 71.S 7i!.0 SJ3 U<) dr Bask Unit Treat Huitm. -. - - - - Ot-«23 IW __... 27 2 33.2 Thistle 40.1 6*. 0 46 0 Extra Income 584) TSB Hall Trusts, i. ban try War. Andarcr. Hints. Andvvcr 62'8J 46.2 34ft General 4SJ «ft 3.78 57.9 IT.: De Accum 57.3 6L3 3.7b 62ft 50.2 Income ®.3 83.0a 7J5 64.1 30.2 D>. Accum 61.7 63.7 7.35 34 5 063 Scolllah 92.1 87.4 3.66 90ft Ssft D.. Accum 97.9 03.6 2.86 Tran sail on Ur k General SernrtDet. 99 Nf» London Rd. i.'helnwftird. 0243 51631 79 3 57.5 Barbican .4, 74ft 79.i» Sftt) 115.1 82J Du Accum U5.I 122.4 3.JO 8J.9 73.5 Buckingham *«» 79.3 63.> 4.9C IOu.7 88ft Do Accum 127 4 94.= Culeme... 133.5 1U7 6 Do Accum 60.0 46 0 Cumberlnd Fad 4C.b Dn Accum 40ft Glen Fund i2i 49.3 Do Accum 46.0 M irlbureugb 62 3 Du Accuru HTU Yam; Growth 45.2 Do Accum 37 0 Yung High Yield 43.4 Yang Trustee 43ft Do Acvum 47.6 It'lckmuur 33 4 Do Accum 47.4 Du Dividend 49ft Do Dlt Ate 70.7 79.3 See-Iso Ortaravm Munxgcment Cn Ud Tyndall Managers Ltd. 62.7 33.7 69.0 32ft 39.7 52.4 63.8 72 I 48.6 40.8 64 6 74.0 70.6 Td.5 1M.1 134.6 133 3 1C7.4 30.8 93 6 95.3 53.4 65.6 Sift 58.6 19.1 fi". 9 70.1 43.2 44ft .0 5V 56.8 3X3 50.9 52.1 l».0 73.* 99.0 100.0 .. 96.1 101-1 .. 96ft 101.3 .. . _ 96.2 10L2 .. Fur Individual Life Insurance Ce Lid. seeSchrudrr Ufe Group. Irl'h Ule Aianrnace. 11 Flnahury Sq. London. EC3. 01-628 8=53 J39.0 prup Module* 100.0 1»9.4 .. 182 7 Do Gn"Hi (31 • 197 7 30».l Id3.0 Managed Fnd 2M.0 238 7 59.6 Blue l hip FTtd 74ft 7B.1 Langhsm Life Ass oral cr. Langnam Hse. Ilolmbrook Dr. NW4. 01-203 5211 741.3 127 3 PfOPtcry B-wid 111.8 149 3 73 3 « ji W isp iSpecMan. 73ft 79 9 .. 64 ft 64.1 Loti Ufa om A Plan 62.2 63ft .. Legal IiGraeral (lull.LaanranrrlLld. Kmaswood Hue . Kluge-nod. Tad worth. Sucrei. Burgh Beath 53456 ..._ .0 Cash I tilt lul * ‘ 97 4 rnu.O Dn Accum 1=1.1 100.0 Equity Initial lftjft IDO il Do Accum 117.2 100.0 Fixed Initial 119J 100.0 do Accum- luu.4 99.7 Inl Initial Ujn.6 99.7 Dp Accum 118.1 iuo.0 Man midw 1=0.2 KM.3 Do Accum 99.4 1W.0 PrirP Initial 101.0 100.0 Da Accum _ Legal and General i Gall Pen atonal Ltd. 98.4 10U n Bx ’-’ash Inlt'l 90.4 101ft 98.0 100.0 D" Accum 121.9 100.0 Ex Equ Inlt'l 123.9 IOOO pn Accum 109.6 100 0 Ex Fix IlHIT Ul i 100.0 Du Accum 119.0 IPO.O Ex Man litUT 121.9 JO0.O Du A team W.4 100.0 Es Prep IflltT 98.u DM 0 Du Accum Unyds Ll/e Iwaitin Ud. 20 Clifton street EC3. A4HX. Ift2.fi 88.2 Mull Grain Fnd Do Guar Dep Do Accra Do Pen Prop Do A ream Tyndall Assurance. 18 Canyngc Rd. Bristol. ( 1C3-2 133 o Bnfid Fnd <40i .. . n Ifid.l 112.0 Equity FndtIOl .. It 165.4 83.S Prop Fhd i'40i K 12A 6 03.8 3 Way Fnd i40l .. E 78.3 61.0 O'seas Ins (40. Vanbrugh UfeAssnraart Ltd. 41-43 Maddct fit. London. WTR9LA- t 144.2. 117.7 ^Imaged Fnd 146ft 11 236.1 159.6 Equity Fnd 22L6 142ft Fixed Ini Fnd 179.7 119ft Property Fnd 118.9 115.0 Cash Fund 104ft 86.4 Internal-! Fnd Vanbrugh Pensions Untied 97 2 99ft Managed Fnd 07ft 11 IU2.0 100.0 Eqnlly Fnd 96.4 96.4 Fixed Int End 97.7 100.0 Property Pbd 9.73 6.08 Guar Fnd Krt Welfare Intonate. The Leas. Folkestone. Kent. - . II lift 3 74 fi Mmn U.tpr .. .U See also ‘The LpuduB' fit Manchester m: * >au r. 141.9 la 118ft V 100.7 102ft II •5.6 H 97= It ( Burgh Heath I M-i 1005 07.4 103.6 i&f ss m 96-1 101.2 » d 101.7 117ft 123.7 119ft 726 2 90.0 104ft 101.0 106.4 96 0 103.2 Ulft 128.4 123ft 130ft 109.6 U5.4 111.4 117ft UOJ 136 ft 121.6 138.3* 96.4 101.5 98.0 lu3ft Offshore pod IntenuifitaiglFad ArbathBot SecurlttestCll Ltd. pr. Bug 294. St Heller. Jftirer * « - 122.0 84-0 Capital Trust U6.0 □ 118.0 107.0 Esaieru -Int 114 9 jj Barbican MaaatenlJtnayilld Pd Bus 83. St Heller. Jersey. :.f 97.7 89.7 Ell rop'd Sterlrt BSft* lf Barclny* Calcsrn imeraatlranl Ktl 1 L'hanng Cross, fil Heller. Jeriej- , _IB 55.8 44ft Jer Guer O'seos iBSira 100 39 100.00 L'Blbond Tat Iirai J71» 11.29 10=2 I nMnllar Tst S lO.W'TI RarctiTs tnlrurn Internal tonal {US I Tlj.'imas fil. L'uUglfiS- lUM . . 35 1 39.4 L'ntcura AusExt 02.5 5 22.0 Dn Aus Min 33ft 1 Da Inl Incnme 39.7 .4 DnlsleofVaa 44ft 4 Do Mans Mul VL3 :1 Dv Great Par 63ft t'l Britannia Trust Manager*iCHUi 30 B.ith it. St Heller. Jersey. . 0 25.3 25.5 (,n,MTU <1> 3JJ 3 S*.3 62 3 Infi md Hi Jffft S 159." 130.3 Jarser En ,11 136.1 24 53.1 61= Worldwide ,1* «= * l .00 1 .W High lul SlS’1 ’ i «.9T - 2 3.96 =u Unix S Tsl |3, S.l7 ! . 242.0 200 0 Du Fling '3, 218ft 22 t W I 00 lot High Tsl'1, J 0.07 1 J4.fi 40ft 50ft 36.3 83 0 31 B 42 1 = 2.6 43.* Calrln Bollock Lid, (0 BUhopsgale. London. EC3. ' 91 10J8 7.44 Bullock Flld l 9.79 J 613.0 447.0 Canadian Fnd B7O.0 M 536.0 245.0 Canadian Inv 315ft' 32 2-).0 170.0 Dlv Shams 208ft 3 11.44 7.W X.Y.'.Vmore I 10.68 » ChaxtcrbBUscJapbH. _ I Pa'.ernonier Rut*. EC4. 01. 31.60 30 00 Adlropa DM 31.40 33 302U Adlrcrba 3=-M) 30.50 Fondak 23.W =C,.W Fvndla Ift.0= 41.72 HUpano CBrabmidsuraneelGnagnsBylLu - _ FU Box \57. Si Julians Ci. « Peun-G.*,; % DM 30-10 K DM 82.60 34 DJI 22J0 23 I 30.72 4J „ 168 0 138ft Inl Man Fnd,20« 184ft 171 V8B CBIsamfeAasnelBUB. 42 Csscs NL. ll C= 71.05 63 82 First 01'. 131 I 134.5 160.2 147.7 121 8 4.83 4.S5 2.98 2.98 3=51 31} 8.E1 91.4 Dpt 5 Equity 120J 136.2 .. lid 4 Da Property 134.5 131.1 137.4 Du Hlidl Yield 155.1 163= .. 114= Du Managed 147.5 IBJ UN.3 Pa Dcpcnll 121.8 138.3 .. 142= 131.0 Pea Dep Fnd 142= 149.7 .. 300.0 1N3J Do Equity Fnd 300.6 31«ft .. fOfi.O 143 7 P„ FI Fnd ISfiJ 190.7 .. 214.6 149.3 Dv Man Fnd 214.6 &S.9 .. 136.6 127ft Dp Prop Fnd 136.6 143.8 .. The Lond*n ftManckraiev Group. Tho Leas. Folkestone. Seal. 0303 37333 227.2 124.7 Capital Gnrlh .. E7.2 .. 113.0 71= Plrslble Fnd 113.9 .. 129.5 70.7 Int fttd 136J .. 83.8 59.S Prop Fnd 82.8 .. 31 an nfacinrrrs LI fe Insurance. Msnullte Bat. Stevenage. Hen a. 0438 56101 01-247 7690 '91 Pembroke 1=9.7 . | 69.3 46, S3 Pan Am CieasS .. "|Ji *1 ff ( ^ t . Klrat General Volt Man if vs.. '-i*li i ^ l t ; j >e Rd. Bailshrldsc. DubUn t » ‘ ‘ * ’ i.7 Bnf. Ilsl Geo ,Ji 88= .3 163 5 I2lL3 "Dr" UK _ 146ft HI Garun ore lavrafineBi M u eg ernes tl 'Victory Hie.. Prospect Hill. DoucJag. Ift t ==.3 17.4 I ol Inccm«i3* 51 ft 3 I In, ft 43.7 DoGroKlhilOl 66J 79 HamferrafGueraseyiLid. . . PU Box Bfi. At Peter Pori. Guernsey. *} , 122.3 110.0 Channel Isle 138J145 Util ham oel ten Trail Co Lid. POBux 63. HuHellur. Jersey. K 129.0 72.4 Channel Ule 117.6 UJ 43.5n 6.00 5J.fi JI.S Investment 100.8 100.0 Managed 97 7 IPO.O Property 100.0 98.3 Equity •V 4 100.0 Gill Edged in .1 rnu.o inienuuonai 96.6 100.0 Dopplll 41.7 43.6 96.8 1QL9 97.7 102.8 100.0 10GJ 9C.B 101.9 Ul.l 117.0 96.6 101.7 a* 66.N 4.= fiftO' 125 HighMrorl. Croydon. 04.4 -.1.1 134.0 118/9 Properly Bond 76ft 5.17. 161.0 119.0 Du Puulun 0272 32241 96ft 103.4- sftfi 180.0 189.0 F=fi| 124 6 131.0 b 4=6. 175.4 184.2 4Jfi| P8.0 103.fi 7.82. l&O 128.2 L10.4 I16.0 156.0 163.9 247.U =30.0 =74.5 299.6 13B.0 145 0 164 2 172 6 63.7 44.0 Equity I IBU.'J 120.9 Do Pcn«fon 149.3 113.9 Mooe- Virkel 192.7 137= pn Pension 1=0.0 13(1.1 Con'DepBud 140 5 124.7 Dv Pension 10fiJ 81.1 Manured Bond 130ft 100ft Do Pension 107.4 100.0 Int Equity ■ 105.0 100.0 Int Mans Red M& G Assurance. 124.0 161.0 57.6 162.0 140= 1S2.0 129 0 140.5 104.6 136ft 105ft 1CG.6- Bkj sndmy BtnnuflsUanutmtallA Allas Hse. pu B'«: 1020. HamBum 5. Bi . 2=6 1.87 BldUKitaN.11 .. 2a - 78-2 lift 1U Kemp-Gee Manaietnrsl Jersey Ud cnarineCron. St Reiter. Jerrar. “ 91.9 M.l Kcmp-Ge* Cap Mft :g. 67 5 65.6 Kemp-<3re Ind 68ft 07. Rletnuun Bengea Ud. _ ' 20 Fenchurch Street EC3 O 3 *® I. «S 107 00 Eurlnresl Lux F . • I0M 63= oift Gucrorey Inc. 63= .67. ■K2 85.9 Do Accum II. 53 9= KB Far E JUS 11.97 10.23 KB Int Fd Sl'6 3- 49 23JI RE Jap Fd *Ua' .. as ll.W 9.96 KB L'S Ulh JUS .. ll-J r 03 4.09 Signet Berm JUS .. ** KB acr a sLondanPaying seents«)li 20.10 16 00 L'nlfandS'DM.i J8J0 UJ 3UG Group. .Three Quays. Tuner Hill. KOR fiBQ gf. I 12*.0 80.9 island Fnd 7 128.0 138- 180.P 100ft Dm Accra + 1W.9 U2. ' 2=5 2.01 Atlantic Exp 1 2.84 7-1 2=6 1.41 Ault A Gen S 130 Jft .. yt Hw« Ikiusitlwii Fnmf ' 7.86 Three On ays. ToFCT Hill. EC3H SDq TJksI 1M.S 101ft Equity Bond <41 138.9 5.151 82.1 67 0 D® Bonus 8S 8C.7 82.7 84.5 37ft 17 ft 20.7 03.7 32.7 31.6 84 5 J7J 43 3 lift I9.0 61 4 5J3 58.4 90 4 4P.0 li. KN 46ft 9 Ml 16.6 5 Ml =V= 5.18j 66 On 32 4 3.0=1 fi.S DuAcium.3 90.2 Scu! Inc >-■ L.ind»nUalt Group. 41.0 Caniial Grouih 41.0 Du Accum 27 3 Kura Incunte 21 I D.i Acrum 9ft Fin mMlt) 10.9 Du .locum 33.7 It lne I'rlorliy 24 s Inirmuit'.nal 14 2 .fipeclrl 9.*:s l nil Trust AccnuulA Man age meat. 5-8 Mincing Lane. EtJSI. 01^23 49511 153.0 1UOO Frinrs Ilse Fnd Ilf 0 lft*7 "> 4.611 lb.a l4.o ut TttBcuestar 17.1 la.t> 3211 20.U 17.0 DaVimnt 20.0 =18 4ftu InsraiKe Brads sad Fuads Abbey Ufe Assurance Co. Ud. 1-3 8 l. Paul-. Yhuriliyard. I=.*4P 4l»S 01-268 9111 30.7 88 = Equity Fuad ■=■ 35.8 37 30.9 UJ tin A-.-cnm '3' 3,1.7 148.6 128 3 Prop Fund i27i IM 7 130.0 L»„ Accum,27 8P.3 “0 ♦ M«cl Fund ,3, 1=1. i 124.1 Cum Fund 121.4 116 8 Muitey FUD,I 174.7 145.0 P-rul.mPrup.27 163 2 =7.6 Du Equity 84.8 65 3 U» fich-cr , 3 . 1W.7 in 9 H.i ■lecnrlly I7A4 135.7 D-. Vaniq-.'d 54= 2=.9 Equity series 4 127.1 100.4 Prep Vries 4 112 0 |A*.,= Cum i-fi.i 1 tir., ) 106.7 Muncy .-.cries 4 134.9 101.2 M-li " 92.8 y*.7 Extra Yld Bond ... ... 108.0 104.1 Gilt Fund 106.0 111.4 -, - - - - -.... 104.3 84.8 I nil Bnd.V 104.4 109.7 159.0 166.0* U=i 162 0 9". I family Bnd 79 80 162.0 . 184.0 122= Du 1981 86 If 1.0 135.4 175.1 Managed Bunds 13S.0 143 0 5 151 Mil 53.1 233.8 159.1 44 3 Mirror Honda 732.7 Peis Pm -5. U7ft Prop rnd "4> S3.7 Amer'.cun Bud 41ft Japan Bad 49J Rucoierv Bnd 159.1 W.6 56ft 43.1 .\.L.t_ PeastnaiUd. 33.1 233.6 t67.1 55.3 59.4 664 OllscrHealbftCs. 31 Mates. St. Castle 1 pun. tOU 121 4 94 6 Bril Cnnv Tsl M.O 83.0 Cap Scc'tf Res : 01 .A 02.4 Manx Ex Fnd 4 lrt»h Pla-ic. Glbralur. 110.7 115.1 Gib Ir.vTu U9.U P6.0 Key 1.117 inv 004 1I8J 1XJ 70.0 -Jri 101.6 J«- MF.O Si TSJ =1 4 33)1 5 U3: Mltton Couri. Duritlna. Mirrey. 32 I I4B.8 1=6.3 154.7 162 0 •W *.- >1 111.I Lkfi.u l.*1 4 I77.fi 171 7 1-0.0 M.S 130.7 175.1 l^T.j 112 u 107.4 145.2 U3P IP 9 47.9 48 II 65.6 73JB NHcx bq Cap 9fi 0 Do Aenim Dn G I Cap Do G 1 Acc Do Mixed Cap Dn Mixed Acc Du Money Cap Do Hcnej Acc 4fi.fi 4fi.7 30.0 ill.O 52= 30.4 _. Norwich L'alo* Insurance Grunp. p,*i ftns 4. Nore Icn. NRl 3NG 219.7 lMl i Nnruli -,1 Man 342 9 209.6 P-> Equity I24.P :tJ.!r Do Properly I44.n :i9.« Dv Fixed In) 105.9 102.1 D" Deposit 205.1 103.8 Do L'niti .33, rrarl Assurance it'nit FundULid. 252 High R-dborn. WC1Y 7EB. U4.ii 99J Equil/ Fnd 172.5 11.4ft 112.4 100.0 Mniuled Fnd 111.3 117 2 1=3.7 M3.2 Prop A. c Vnll» 123.7 130= 113.7 107.5 Prop Dial Unit* 113.7 1±3 7 rh-rnli Atsurmncr. <2.3 43.7 Ifi'arcull Fnd _ ■RMhartUd Aiocl MsBigemcnilC.Lh p.t'; fox 58. hi Julians Cl. Guernsey. ,** l»lft 1=1 4 Did 'll Comm -.46= 144 J J?5 Old Cl Eq:r.3«, 32= 170 9 lulft Ire»n,e Fbnd 152.fi . 1.35 1=0 Du Int. 1 35' t 1.23 JJJ 0306 SOU I 146-3 93-4 Do 5mall 4 * 0*1 14= IBLS '*■ Saveli Prosper iBlerniUBBil..—. Prals. IT Broad hi. Si Heller. Jems- 3 5- 9.72 EhiUor Fvd Inl S 9=7 7=1 u.l. Int Urutrui 3 7=1 ‘•g* 40.18 33 20 Far t-nern 1 46.13 y.td 3.64 N. American 1 3.C7 14 3« 1= 63 B'cpru S 14=8 10;^ =36.4 191.7 Channel Cap h 238.4 Ml* . 143.6 ino.T I.'hannel Isles k HL7 IK* »fi03 2=200. M5U II7JF Commodity 12QJ 137^ 21(19 227 0 .. ] 12b- 111.I hi Fixed Int 71= USft 358 9 256.7 128ft IJ5.fi I37.fi 159.3 lOOP 111.4 208 1 113.6 1195 100 3 III.2 47 fi 31A 4i.fi =1.1 47ft 50.4 44.0 Sl.l 61 .F 65.0 65 6 690 UM \lbany Ufe Assurance Ca Lin. 42] OU 0.4A fil" 2.98 tt.7* 2.M 70S 32= Cl' 1 h-.7 11X2 ■Sl.l 67 J 50-3 53 P» 4JI a’J.0 71 1 4=1 .•■=.4 56= 2.6fi Lift 70 •» 2 e .t 82.4 Sfi.b 6.14 112ft Ulft 6.13 58 J *=.2 8.13 67.0 72,0- 8.P 53.3 -4 J I I iiinbco-a .V, Lund-,n. ).C3 ».l .T»J 1st Oatanccd 51.8 Du If cunt *3.4 2r,il Capital 9 Dr Acouin . 63 7 Vd Incunte hl.fi Du te-rtii,, « I 4lh FUira Inc . - tfi 1 p.. Accum .... __ L«csl Autharliles MbibbI (uicaunrur Truxt- ■ l.undon '.'.all. Ft.2N 1UB 01-526 jKLfi *7 *t.2 Narr>>«**34i .. finft. 193= 151= O lder liner->34' . 103= 10S 0 801 1’rnpprl;" 1.741 188 0 ti.DO nil. Mnrtlln. Thr t .- Qua". T-Ucr Hill. IXJE «B0 01-6=6 45i^ . K.7 4H 0 .unur 1 l.efl Inc 4s.s 13.0 105 J'.O Australnslm Inc 5*.n i.unitnod A I7efi 5*4 r«u \ccum 77t.fi (;„mp„tmd’ 47.fi Y.kjv T*| IIiHth 63.6 Du Iiic-intr 151V loi.n rhartfiin-l' ■=■ 1-12 115.2 l'uAiCttm.2 120.5 TS.9 P|i Pnd 2£IJ I3E.fi Do A cum 4') ) 45.3 Kies 5 Gen In. 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C UenllQ^ MMj e PdcgL r - f Cr.*4i rjfiur lur tm premium-. all* lik'd f Cr.vh V»!ur Ijr C 10 O 1,5 b'.afi'. b FMlniaied iKld. k neld befeP^L7 ta< p Periodic preLilum. xSlnglr FD™’ 131 prcriuaiir premium- . - K L»r-iJlnc or mluarion -Ij “yf.rfij T-J ■■.to/. <3> WednesdBy. ,«;'n,unda>. , a ‘ ^ !»>• JHI* IV.<9i July 25 ,10. July J Jul; SK.ilfiiJull lS.iW , '* , «i.‘=“J l -~,5. 0 iSd : • 21. =nfi Tb'jrvli*. nf aceib. '“'JJL r**,; ‘ dni-'-dsy v rinnntb. I=3> 3W: of nWUlri- edaj nf atfiiliT. ■*' *00 mt.nl.*,. i3j . . l-.MKe-7ln.gdny 1 st ..'r-rtlnft day of himi n- IM day Sf Feb. MM. ^fz^So.,1 1 4»y et aoDta 3 14th 0 : roiitlt. 'Jfitin of caeb i"J2“udjj" V*. edr.esfie, of mpnlh. 'D 1 2Bd BednlP*™ month. ,4ui 1 alued attniibb Yj&£> Cy 1-1 THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 -1978.. 21 himself for iron men I jjeter Ryde • : • /'«er«riSI1 .jt'ois 'lO, two are-British. -’'■^•'.V-buiSr .«ayliJS With, a naw. : ,r-';-3aica;- £ at 4hs rop of the ,'£ -with iait year’s -ctcper, '• -v •’no.-but .<aoJ£?S on fixe dour Hs old 'r:*a1. NitffcUw. Faldo ;■ ■ his place, twa-ofa-ufl the j: -y. to a. rouses “ e : . bit one‘or two loMft shcli. ; ' Had -hua> on . well. and., bis *• wishers waitid. have settled ena-oeextfjflj’ firtsb at uir three holes, bat he finished *£»U. of Jspao. ^ • ' ‘ ;ifi-.L f 'at • the last Uol*. jao !»' Aofci lejf that fire Japweee " • »• y been able to. “akf . tnetf •' ta “*tLence fell' because they...bad > 'cd earner and practise hard. '. .» progress was made in par tm.,.'/ - ;. • jg !•<* Hiv bv the leaders; and - fill that the cfcjjnpiod- ‘ > committee had allowed them "• -.r r cf the course, to play In, .. . :• r had been the tightness -ushout of their pin placing;., ••. ...\a -N result of which he<thought •■''.t .t people were'putting from .'•d. 30 feitall ihe.tJine, sutheogB , f.'wnts overtookifljt tiie^-Dumber '' . Vtimes he- himself ;had missed 12 to IS foot »«?»:. *' ■-- is remarks about .die noise of • helicopters taking -off beyond '• .*?• 5. far end • of thevCOorge wore • . ‘ 3 complaint tliatr being.drawn • •: C t :: conversation. Aircraft, .whoso ;• is constant! do-'not'.UrtinV : . :. but be notes every changing: .- fh - of. thd bdicojJtia*'\ and ited 11 take-offs ai# kfrufings.: r - . -o : - t is ammunition for; those j*bo ;■ - his. concentration . is- ; hot. what . T'ras., ■ • ... *- ' r- ‘ Vetefcopf. .and - Baeesceros ^:bed the heights, bat tbe '.'.' 11; '-jTt, ericafl for the third-time this k failed to jnaftitfthi his jjlace Jog. In, and’ Ballesteros. after ■icg-the. lead, again fell' fool • , the "seventeenth, ■ .taking six -’'■a: ■!. lV ^j. ficishfnj. oti the road. Per- s his courage there will be ■' arded one day, but it is cost- ‘.him:-dean. —- -- ' *-t jhe tail-end Crenshaw, who _ • sed"two putts of less than four . - at the third and fourth, ran ,.i a rising wind and had to take average of rwo club* -more i!ng in -than -the dwv : before. '~w * final cut whs‘64 on 222,'which itn.lbat four amajours, Brutbe, ■ £fov, Miller and Godwin have- aed the distinction of playing *od Iciuat^-the .tost. day. ...... • . . osiertnns bus- great power of. rival, wbeh ' things are going -lest him. but he seemed yer.ter- .- to."have played himself back . >.forab.'-After watching him for •• :■ • . ,Mt:on. lie . Ocst day. I had Ided -tfti*- was not to be his . sk, ^and hie admitted yesterday i the' Brst round had been a .jgfiie. But his :69’ was nothing: s a scramble. He holed from t at itht fourth and from lift the eleventh for' birdies, but thing • else of length, and he . .. v. -wed from four ;feet.for a birdie the nintiJ. • ■ —. . de has made some slight adjust- • •nt bn the practice ground icb has provided a peg for hia . indencc* but surrounded : by . o men, as he is,' one wonders . .-. ■;ether bis finishing jean' "find r something extra it has always ided. It is four years .since he 1 an important victory.-although ■ 't is not as bad' as it sounds. Anglo-American drive : Watson (top), carries the flag for US, and Oosterhuis for Britain. for he lias during rhar time been that rare object, a Briton who has survived on the American circuit. ■; Tbe" wind has not ! been strong enough to trouble him and. like others, be found that its. slightly increased strength made it pos¬ sible to hold the ball better on the green against the wind." One can only repeat wbac one seems to say every time Oosterhuis plays in a major championship—that it is uncanny the way it secips to draw-die best out of him. Pi-rhapa It is because he can approach such events with the same calm that "he applies "to everything he plays •in. * If he wins, he will nor hu\e done so for Britain, -thobgir there Is no duubtios his nationality ; in Ms own eyes fie will have .brought a long drought to an end. But If the final .act was to he a grand finale it needed the pre¬ sence of a. principal actor who was still- in ihe" wings, with IB players ahead of him when he started, resterdav's round. For a time it looked as though Nicklaus was stuck in the old groove and that .instead of playing well, he was- going to take two putts on all greens. The thought passed through his mind when be mi.-sod from J2ft on thc-Hrit green. At the second he pitched so close he could hardly miss, but at the fourth, after a six-iron, he holed from ISl't. He missed his birdie at the fifth when his nvo-iron failed jidiTotviy to carry over the last hank. - He was out in 34, missed from 12fc for birdies on the eleventh and twelfth, and left a 3Uft putt on the brink at the next. But as the air freshened on the incoming ride* his sound goif was at last re¬ warded as he plavcd the four¬ teenth perfectly, holing from eight feet for Hi i birdie. His pint for a birdie on the next was somewhat longer, and he holed one from 12ft to save Iris p-ir alter hunker¬ ing his approach to the seven¬ teenth. Dropping one at the seventeenth was almost routine, although his two-iron from licht rough nearly scrambled op to the upper surface of the grten. He fcjl dropped back to r'-ur uudar par. but b>- the erri of the day cniv Watson and Ooster'ou.s were ahead o' - film, and he bad gained 14 places. It was not the best of days for the Japanese, except fur A old. iviio with his cusroman- sieailiness Iiups on. finishing two heh»nd tho lead. Oaki was going well until ai^'-ivr struck him ^t tae road hole when lie Ivxist c\peered it. He was one under at the time and on the greet) in two. but his pan curled away into the bunker, from where he took four to extricate himself. Th«t mv.<ot a nine, inn he was still round in 7f. Aola is the more seasoned plater. mUu lie reckons his fellow country¬ men's pronc-ne^s ro disaster tit was he who took 13 at the a {alters- j is simply due to his lack of world experience. Card of course Hole Yds Par Hole Yds Par 1 370 A 10 342 4 2 411 A n 172 3 3 371 A 12 316 4 A 463 4 13 *25 4 5 534 5 14 567 .5 6 416 4 15 413 4 7 372 4 16 382 4 6 178 3 17 461 4 9 356 A IB 354. 4 Out 3.501 36 in 3.432 36 )wen cruises home at helm iter calming the oceans Lewine Mair * '„ ■ .^yvith. his hair, newly curled and ~ r swins sffaightcDed out, Simon - ,‘en, of-New Zenl3ad, yesterday . .ne bomnUng tto-ougb the. field - th «67 to go four under par for J championship.. When, after a astrous 81, he -failed to qualify the Stm AJBauce toumamcau at Imahoy. .Owen moved the- ball _ little farther forward in bis nee-—and at once-found inmseir r& to give haH “ a hit.more , .a hit,” Ever since he won the New aland PGA cbamjxtejKbip at tbe ' rt of tire -year. Owen had been alng Us game at this champion- 0- -His . performance in --the infying rounds was not. exactly' . pirmg—he made ir with onlv a' n to spare—but he has sinre e m swi nging the cinb with real tharity. He had "been led to be- ve, over the years, that the 'OTd urse 1 was “ a bit of a gout trie ", but when be came to St urrews he whs impressed with at be saw. “ The fairways may wide, but ytrti have to tfrive ■alRht. ■ Ttrefe is' 06 : ritargiii for ror with tile irons—and,, as for 5 Rreens.' they are tire best i « known iu-yeaw.” Owen., who spent a yeajr study- I accountancy and -a further six' >nths working lu *_ tannery fore turning . to. 'professional If,, had^never had a. good roartd ■ a British links before this year. * had, be «tid, spent most of s life aiming down tree-fined leys in New Zealand, and, when : came to a coarse such as this, ? used to find the. lack of defTtri. in more than a- -Kale - disconcert- 3- However;- ap .at Birkdale. we he.finished eleventh In the jA ..championship,' he eu- iavoured oq each tee to aim at' certaia spot on the horizon— 1 it seems to 1 have .worked for' m. . . The .difference between Owen’s 75 in the second round and Ms 69 yesterday lay chiefly on the , greens. Where, on Thursday, he three, times root throe putts; yesterday be bad a lovely touch on these oceanic putting surfaces. He had turned away- in dixgnst as bis port ■ from JSft sac down on the edge, of the' bole ' at the aeveutli, but. as the crowd’s sym¬ pathetic murmurs switched sud¬ denly to roars.. he looked back to see that the ban bad dropped. Winner of the Double Diamond Individual to Pm ament at Glen- eagles in 1976. Owen all but drove the green at the 342yd tenth on the way to a three. At the twelfth be bolcd with his putter from off file green, and, at the fourteenth, where be bored his way through the wind with a driver, a threc- wsod; and a three-iron, be hvled from 15ft for hi s' last birdie uf tbe day. ,-Not that- his par, four at die -'treacherous seventeenth was any less satisfying. Having driven ■ dean Over that ■ stretch of rough on the left which Peter Thomson deems, unnecessarily tough, Owen wa-s aWe. to get a 'two-iron to the ball, and so make the froot of the green in two. Indeed, look¬ ing hack on his run of four, five, four at cbe Road Hole over the three days, he declared that it felt " like two under par ”. With a four at the last. Owen was home in 33, ai)d quite pre¬ pared to bee that, with the rising wind" no player would match or improve upon such a tally. Pate drops out Jerry Pate, a former United States Open champion, has with¬ drawn from the final round with a septic toe.' Andy Bean, a fellow ■ American, who was paired with Pate, will pley with a marker. Looking for birdies there where the curlews call By John Woodcock For anyone u-ell-wrapped up and even remotely interested in golf, tbe 5rand behind the green shared bv che sereutb and rhe Iltb boles at Sc Andrews yesterday afternoon ■was a glorious place to be. There, spread out in front, was the loop, comprehending all the holes from the seventh to che 11 th. There was so much to sec. all happening simultaneously. While wa:cbing \irklaus taking two clubs too many for. his approach to Uic seventh 1372 yards), it was all too easy to nuss Gallagher holing for d rwo at the eighth 1 178 yards). To remain in touch was like trying to juggle with five balls At one moment three British amateur*. Miller. McEvoy -lid Broilie. stood within half a dozen iir-okc* of the leaders well into the [bird round of the championship. For them, like everyone else, che Iflrh 1342 yards'1 presented che best chance of a birdie out or these five loop holes. On Thursday in a lighter wind than yesterday's, Ballesteros drove the green there. The 11 rh 1172 yards) wa* al*o down die wind, the eighth and runrb rJ5S yards 1 iaro it. It was round the loop that the leaders were hoping to pick up a stroke or two against the long slog borne. Four under par when he entered tbe loop. Onsrcrinus was five under and sharing the lead when be left it. He gut a rwo at the 11th. Thomson, bis partner, looking full of £•■»• gained two strokes on this network of interlocking holes, with twos at both the eighth and 11 th. The great men and their success¬ ful strokes were greeted by pro¬ longed applause, the more so because it was a way for the spec¬ tators to warm themselves up. With a pitch more or leas dead al rhe ltith. Weiskupf joined Oosterhuis. Ballesteros and Kite in the lead. At the short 11th hu lost it again, missing from five feet for his three. It bad taken him 78 minutes ro play the five loop boles. Of the leading 16 players yester¬ day—the first 16, that is. when the day began—Thomson, ulth the two strokes that he picked up. bad the best figures round the loop. At 3.JU be was nlthin a stroke of the lead. By 4.15 his name was gone from die leaders’ board. Leaving the loop behind him. he found the going tougher. Mure inconspicuous than most, lint as steady as any round these famous holes. :vas Kite. The birdies, however, eluded him. In a bunker off the tec at the seventh. Shearer dropped a stroke and had nor recovered it by the time he nude back for home, off the 12tli tec. Ballesteros left the loop as he entered 5i, fire under par. N'icldaus lost a stroke with three putts at the eighth, those horrible helicopters seeming to distract him. At the same bole. Watson put a stroke J.n the bag with a putt from 50 feet, without looking like a man poised to make a charge. While.the loop, situated at the far end of the course and a mile or more from the clubhouse, was full of the. leading players, there must have been 10,000 spectators surrounding them. By the time.- Grensham and Aoti- the last two out, reached the 11th, there were no more ebon 200 left to sec Aoki leave bis pun so close to the edge of the tide thar. with Crenshaw's encouragement, he waited for it to drop, until told somewhat sternly by the referee ro putr iL As he did so. from high overhead a curlew called, ready to reclaim their Jovelv country. Third round scores at St Andrews Qualifying- store for final round, 222.-“ r ■ 2ii k ■ oosrErrtn.ns.- 52 »ro. WATSON OJSl. 73, 68. 70;' -212•' v : “ NICKLAUS tUSi. 71. 7a. M. OU'LN iNjt i. 70. 75.-63L' CHENSHAW .'US1, tOTSO,. 75. AOKT I Japan i, 68. 71. 73. . ■ 213' " ' ‘ . . K.XLOO. .71. 73. 70. . &CII'tUED£n i L'S >. 74. »>«■. 70. WU3KOPI' i US i. 6^. 72. 72. . KITE i L'S>, 72. o«\ 72. "214 . . V. THOWsqN lAlutraJlD'i, 72. 70. 8HCARER fAuitraUai. 71. 6«>. 74. • HAVES fSAi. 74. 70; 71* . . f LOVU 1 US 1 , 69. 75. 71. . HUNT. 71. 73. 73. . nrnrtN »uei, vu. vo. 67 BVTJAN fU&i. 73. 69. 74. . UAUXS1ER0S i Spain j, 6S. 70, 76. . , 216 • • mason: 70. n.' 7 su.-: ' ’' • I. JOS, 73. 73. be' ■ *-• MOODY fUS». 73. fcp. 74. ■ BROUN, 771. 71* T1. . NCWTON 1 69. 76. 71. • OZAKl tJa^ani. 74. 67. .75u - • " -• . -217 N. COLES. 71. 73, 75. ■D GRAHAM* ■ Australia». 7S,.'7*. 70. а. PAL’.r&n <i:si. 71. 71, 7:-. T. NAKAJ1.4A • Japani, 7U. 71. .o. r 2is M. CAKILL (Australia i, 71. 72. 75. 1W. J. MfLLLN. 70. 74. 74. _ M. ^^PALLbSihflOS iSfiolm. to. "f 1. H. CLVKK. 70. 73. 73. G ^ WOLSTENHOLME iAu»ualw. 74. ,|1. R. DAVOS 'Australia 1 . 73. 70. 73. 219 B. GALLAGHER. 72. 71. 70. 7. .BRITZ iS3*. 73. 74. 7*4. UOKUAN. 74. «J. 77. „ , . G. NOR MAN ■ AUSlrallB i. 72. 73. 74. б. CULLEN. 73. SI. 79. 220 ' V. SOMERS- > A turrslU (. 72. 72. 76. •A, ERODE, 75. 72, 75. A. GARRIDO i Spain i . .75, 71. To. R. CHARLES fNZl, 72. 76, 72. L. TREVINO (USl. 73. 72. 73. •I. HAVES lUSi. 70. 73. 73. E. B.inX'ES. 71. 7«. 73. P. BUTLER. 71. 74.* 73. 221 S. -HOBDAY IRtiOdosU >. 73. 71. 77. ■P. McETOY, 71. 74. 76, N. '-PniCE «SAi. 7-4. T5. 74. R. LONG ML IR. 73. 71. 75. . C. PL AY UR ISM. 71. 31, 76. B«-\VYIfN. 75. 7-4, 76. 222 A. ELAN iLS<. 73. 70. 79. J G1_\ND iSA.. 72. 75. 77. J. PATE 'US*. 76, 72. 74. D GOOD lAuurahai. 75. 75. ?< >1. KRANIZ fl'Si. 7j. 72. 75. P, DAWSON. 7S. 72. 73. •U- GODWIN 7 1. J5. 73. 1. ABRfU iSpain i. 73. 75. 76. H. IRWIN' USi, 75. 71. 7e. E. MKHWAV. 7n. 7u. 76. _ R. THOMPSON iLS'. 73. TV 7"- 223 N _ ILMCLlFlt 'Australia-. 72. M ‘pi.VERO .SnfuiU. 7-4, 72. 7*-. r. MOLINA ■ Araontfco >. 76 72 F. . OASSL iliah •. 71. 77. 76. U HVUGCTT. 71, 77, 75. D D URN LAN. 73. 74. 76. N HUNT. 73, 74. 76. >1. PON ON- 73. 71. 77. 224 n RLRNS "USA. 75. 71. SO. "I .l.uics. 7«. 7 4. 70. D. '1CUl.LLL a .ND. 7o, 71. S. TOtlltANCE. 71. 75. 78 22S □ JONES iILinuort, 72. 72. c.1. V. BAKER 'BA., 75. 75. 77 H. BAIUU2K1 iSA'. 73. 7 a. 77. 226 D. DUNK. 71. 72. H'l ' .\m»K*ur 1 Leaders’ scores P. Oosterhuis : 4. 4. 4. 3, 4. 4, 4. J. 4.-34 ; 4, 2, 4, 4, 3, .4, 4. 4. 4.-35. Total 69. " T. Watson.: 4, 3, 4, 4. 4, 4, 4, 2, ■4—23 ; 4. 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4. 5, 4— 35. Total 70. B. Crenshaw-: 4, 4. 5, 5. 4, 4. 4. 3, 4—3/ : 4, 3. 4, 4, 5, 4, 4, 4, 4—36. Total 73 J. Nicklaus : 4. 3. 4, 3. S. 4. 4. 4, 3—34 ; 4. 3. 4. 4. 4. 3, 4, 3, 4— 35. Total 69. S. Owen : 4. 4. 4. 3. 4. 4. 3, 3, 3— } 34 : 3. J. 3,. 4.. 4, 4, 4, 4, 4—33- T.Yiul 67. i I. Aokl: 3. 4. 4, 5, 3. 4. 4, 3, 4— I 33- 5 r 3, 4, 4. 5, 4, 4. 5, 3—35- ! Total 73. j i Teeing off times I 12.25 ; Thomson and Shearer. 12.35 : Weiskopf and Kite. I 12.45: Faldo and Schroeder. | 13.00 ; Aaki and Crenshaw. , 13.13 ; Wuon and Nicklaus. 15 JO : Oosterhuis and Watson. Tennis Fortitude of Mottram Noah’s dashing spirit of youth From Rex Bellamy Tennis Correspondent Paris, July T4 This was Baselle Day in Paris, a public holiday bright with beat and rei-olutionary memories. Ticks rumbled through file siaisil suburb of AiKCuii this morcing. They wire just playing heavy¬ weight rides In tire festivities. Dowd the road, alt tire Roland Gvrros stadrum, tlie. mood w'as mure subdued. But seldom has the fighting spirit of the French been more evident. Britain gained a 2—0 lead In their Davis Cup tie with a me Jest French team. But it took Chriimpher Mottram three hours and 28 minutes to beat Yannick Noah 3—6, 6—3. 7—7. 6—3 and John Lloyd was on court fer two hours acd S3 minutes before bearing Eric Deblicker 6—2, 6—2. 4—6. 3—6. 6-3. Noah and Deblicker had never before played Davis Cup tennis. The French had decided tli3t Noah. only 18 hut richly talented, was a good investment fur the future. Tbe choice nf DebUcL-er was forced upon them today when Dominguez, who tends to play his finest tenths when representing his country, bad to drop our of the programme be¬ cause of muscular trouble in Us right leg. This left the French short of experience and rhere is no substitute for that when players are subjected to the ini¬ mitable emotional stress of Davis Cup competition. The first match, though, was tremulously exciting. Except fur losing CO Ora ores In Barcelona which is no disgrace to anyone, Mottram had not even conceded a set in his previous Davis Cup singles. Today be conceded one, almost two, to a lad who was plucked our of Africa by the French Federation six years ago on the advice of Arthur Ashe. True. Noah had nothing to lose. Bui what a mfgiuy effort he made and wbac thrilling tennis he plaved. Noah, is rail, loose-limbed, and beautifully built. His gome is fired by the adventurous spirit ot youth. He attacked from start iu finish. His forehand, often violent, was -hit with top spin. So, umi- aliv. was his backhand, though he could also chip it when intent on rushing to. the net. Noah's, confident couch was equally- evident in his backhand drops, which carried so much spin' that they gave Mottram a lot uf trouble until Mottram began to spot them in embryo. Noah served well, too. mostly swinging the ball" wide of Mot tram's forehand. He varied die pace sensibly, giving Mottram no set pattern to unravel. Noah’s whole game was bold and Intensely resolute. Noah's positive approach to" the match contrasted sharply with that of Mottram, a counter-puncher vvbu seldom punched his weight. It Deeded strong nerves to go Tor passing shots when Noah was com- . manding Cbe net—like Muhammad Ali when vexed. For a time. Mot- tram's ripostes were erratic. They were always "nhibiicc. Tliat. is his way. His tennis could reason¬ ably be described its diffidently pertinacious. For all his'sound and often shrewd rallying, he seldom displayed confidence of courage in challenging the incoming vol-' layer. However tic diu ion—and in Vie Davis Cup competition, that is w.'iat matters. Noah was always the front runner In the first set. but had to break service twice to win it. fn the second, he bad four break points before Mottram earned a decisive break to 5—3 wirh the help of two winners off the net cord. In the third set Mottram mostly looked tfic better player. They went off for a rest. Tn the fourth, set it soon became dear that Mottram now knew the answers to most of the questions Noah could ask him. " . Deblicker. who was born just outride Peris. i&- a -dark, besuec- • tacled chap vvit-'i an abantiancc of curly hair and a reputation for genial ecL'cntriciry. He looks like a trendy schoolmaster or Woody Allen wearing the kind, of wig Woody Alien would probably .select.- /Deblicker is all nervous energy. He Is restlessly fidgiiy ard moves awkwardlv. as if lie has 'ust learnt the knack, ot niobiiiw. He. make- tennis look a difficult game to pay but. even so' plays ir raiher well—in spite of falling about and repeatedly raising gusts of laughter without mean- inn io. Deblicker fought until he was fit to drop. Iu fact -he repeatedly did drop, usually because Ills will power exceeded, his powers of anticipation. Long before the end of the match bis clothes were spattered with jhalc In tbe seventh game on the tilth set -he was briefly afflicted by cramp which surprised no une; He could not have done more foe bis country. For- two sets Lloyd looked elegant and assured—and a class above Deblicker. Then' the Frenchman realized that staving on the baseline was a better idea than-, trying to attack a player who was adept at producing lobs and passing shuts. Lloyd also lost hi* conceit era Uon?whJcb must he easy. fer anyone to do when in Deblicker’* company. Once * plgeori fluttered down and perched on the net as if owning it, in tbe middle of a rally. Once ' Deblteker had to change his shorts because the grip of his racket had somehow become entangled with the zip and ruined it. It was tirar sort' of match— bizarre, but totally . in keeping with the traditions uf the Dan's Cup competition for red-blooded combat. Motor racing Peterson’s limit becomes Andretti’s target Sy John BJunsden With two of the three qualifica¬ tion periods for the 3lst RAC British Grand Prix, sponsored by John Player, completed, there is every prospect of another black and ?oti[ front row on the start¬ ing grv»> on Sunday This time, The pavt setting has been per¬ formed by Ronnie Peterson who. when h-_- climbed the victory rostrum to claim the traditional JOB bottles of champagne for setting the fastest time in the third practice period, said that In his view, his lap time of lmin I7.16$sc represented just about the limit for his Lotus-built John Player Special Mark IV. U thai is the case, then he has little cause to worry, for apart from his team colleague. Mono Andretti—fastest in the second period at lmin IT.Stsec—no. one else has been able to crack the lmin 18sec harrier despite almost Ideal track conditions. The closest challenge has come from Niki Lauda, tlic champion, who changed to bis spare Brab¬ ham-Alfa Romeo RT46 for the. final hour of practice, and went on to record lmin 18.03scc. to slide Jody Sclicckter and his Wolf- Ford to the outside of the second row. Scheckter's performance was, perhaps, one of the most impres¬ sive of the day insofar as he bad so many niggling problems that at the end of the day, his team manager. Peter Warr. claimed chat there had not been time to. carry out a single chassis adjustment. For This race. Scheckter's car has been converted to short- wheel' base form, a rebuild which was only completed Just befrre mid¬ night on Thursday. But Scheckter. - vvbo was third fastest in rhe third period, then second" quickest in the later period, savs that tbe car is much improved by its shortened wheelbase. . Another- team with a . revised car' in their pit is McLaren, but so Far . it has not beeo seen in action at Brands Hatch. It is the prototype M27. a car whjcli has bean constructed from the chassis which James Hunt was driving at the time of his accident in Spain last month. Although the original M26 cockpit section has been re¬ gained the ccr ha* sprouted side panniers incorporating housings for the radiators in the latest 'fashion, as well as a comntetely changed rear ssupenrion. layout. Patrick Tambav tested the car privately at Guodv.ood.on Thurs¬ day. and it is expected that either he. or Hunt will test the car further atUnrads Hatch this luoni- ing during .the untimed practice period. An oil leak in Jabouille’s turbo¬ charged Renault proved to be a blessing in disguise; he changed fo his spare car and protnorlv- lmproved his position from 16fh place cm rhe grid to sixth—an encouraging performance for a car which has still to reveal its full potential. Derek. Daly, anxious to qualify his works Ensign on a circuit . which is familiar to him. began promisingly by being one of only 14 drivers to break lmin 20sec in the first practice. He is one of several drivers who-have benefited frum the softer-compound tyres wbicli Goodyear have been able to release to all their customers nou that the threat to their domination uf the grand prix scene ba-s rr. ceded, at least for the time herng. Daly says that with ihc softer rubber bit car's handling lias been transformed, and today .be will be looking for some more aero¬ dynamic downforcc in order to improve his time in tbe remaining hour of timed practice. There are onlv 2b places an the grid for the 76-lap 198-mile race, and so-fur-the drivers why have failed to secure one of them arc Rupert Keegan t Surtees.), who blew an cngjuc in his regular car and had to change to rhe older TS19. Tony Trimmer i Me barren "Mill, Bret Lunger tMcLaren M2G) and Geoff Lees (Ensign).' LEADING TIMES: I. V. FV-t.-rvm ■ JHS Loiu»-loni». liu'n I7.l$s"t: u. M AndreiU vjPS Lotus-t or«1.. I :X7.J-J . Jw\ Lmila i n.-.ibiiani-.IHJ l.'en>t-o>. 1:ia.'L".: 4. J. SiL.rl.ier . V olf-Fard ■. I :18.U\*: j. J. luiMin . liraDl.am-Alt* Komeoi. l.lU.57:-o. I. JabouJii:- iHon- Mill. J lti.SB: 7. A. Jun>-i • Winiani j- Fordi, 1 :ia.l-S: H. G. Vlllcnou-.r . 1 c-r- rarn. lite..'- 11 : v. j. Huni 'McLaru»- ronl'.. 1.10.03: lu. C. nr niT.irtnn • rerm/tti. 1:1W.1H- il. P D.«r),illlrr iT itciH-L urU•. 1:10.21: I'J. J. Unite- i L'el#u--'Lrti»'. J :iy..v: l&. Il fva.-w i.Vnws-lDid>. 1:10.61: 14. C. Hvoo/- .-onl iShartyw-T'ordi. 1 15. n. DjTr iEnsign-rord.. le,. «. Snick /Shadov-Fcid.. l:i".8B- >7. it. Piiani «lyrrqll-Fordi. i«. m. laiubJi i MeLmim-Vorri-. I-iM'.l*: l.-. 1 . A. nrUnu- ILolu-j-FDriJ,. lrJO.i*:UO. T. FluAwldl <F1UI|i4]|}t-Fo[<li. I —U.o4: Ul. A. Mcruno « .|(t.’.Mln-i-DHli. 1 SZO.Z-i: 72. It. Itoybcra <A7S-ronf*. l^O.uC: L3, ' J. Ma** -AlP-Ford.. I :.iO.VI; 24. R. ^iDngn'Ion f/Vrrow»- Fortli. 1 . 20 .7--.: -'J-,. v. B, -nil’ll. , S'.t- ICCB-rordi. 1-J0 77- 2o. J. COacoiuoUl ■ McLa ion-Ford i, A HU VI. Athletics Ovett leaves BAAB Rowing Another chance to impress the selectors By Jim Railton The national rowing champion¬ ships of Great Britain take place this weekeud at Nottingham and conclude on Sunday with a non¬ stop programme . of finals to decide 36 titles. The national championships cootrmit to go from strength to strength with a record entry this year uf 42S crewl. ..There is an added spice to tbe programme, too, in that some hopefuls for the world championships in New Zealand in November will still be trying to impress the selectors at Notting¬ ham this weekend. The n^m fur New Zealand- has not been announced and clearly the Lucerne international last weekend gave the selection boards much food for thought. Hopefuls for New Zealand in action this weekend include the London Row¬ ing Club cotiess four, world silver medals winners In coxless pairs, Roberts and Clark, the British quadruple sculls, AyUng and Hart (Kingston) in the women’s double sculls and a new composite coxed four from City Orient. Tbe finals on Sunday commence at 10.40 and conclude just over six hours later. With a massive weekend programme of racing, the organizers will no doubt be on their knees praying that an ill wind does not blow Notting¬ ham's way. '' | Yachting Rifle shooting Canadians lose to British Army by a shot A. strong regular Army team, made up mainly of Royal Green Jackets and Gurkhas, won rhe main services rifle ream award, the Unired Services Challenge Cup,. at Bislev yesterday after a close tussle with the Canadian forces. In a lest of combat shooting, fire British Army total of 1,299 out Of a possible " 1,600 was just four points—the value of obc shot—in front of tbe Canadians., with the. rest of the forces trailing. The RAJ* scored 1,261; Royal Navy 2.256 ; Royal Marines 1,254 ; and Territorial Army 1-155. Surrey bad thcic fifth consecutive Min and 22nd in all in tbe King George V Trophy. RESULTS: Th» United Swvi«??:. 1. Regular Amy, 2, Canada RwYfts. 1.203: S. RAT. l,2ol. white- head < Pi Mol»: X. Royal Saw. 76'j: 2. Army. ?oi: il, HAT', 742. The SubmachiUBflun team: 1. X '2 Gre. 479: 2. Train ina Group. IIM. 47*. r. W. Jones; 1. Oxford University, all! 2, Old Evonj»ns. 505: S. . bteo Ludae. 431. The Any Rim?; i. O. j. Goodili. 93: 2, Malar R. A. Greenwood. ■Ci: a. B. Brown. 89. Publfc Schools Vi-luwe: I. Old JohnUiu. 241; 2. Old Glcnabaohd. 240. Public School v'et- eraiu ”AoDrcflain: l. Uppingham V*t- rnins. "Ob. King Gcnrgr V Tronhv: J. Surrey. 741: 2, Staffordshire, 728: 3. Dei on. 727. 5? . By Cliff Temple Athletics Corr?:pcndeiu Tbe enreruaiic Steven Overt was leaving officials of the British Amaterr Athletic Board gues-iog last ni g.’i£ about whether lie might have a last-minute cheuge nf heart and decide to run in today’s heats of the 1,300 metre* n; the United Ringo'&m closed championship at -Meadowbank Stadium. Edinburgh. Ovett, currently rhe wcric’s out- soatHoji I,5o0ni cocipaiftcr. is somewhat -unconventional in his approach to ccTTipctiiiDns sod. altoough he docs not wish to com¬ pere in the Commonwealth Games, it has long been his-firm intention ic> run in Prague at the European championships. Tlio Prague team is being selected tomorrow and, although ftome gup; arc likulv ia be left until after Edmonton, Ovett has not yet officially recorded the European championship qualifying time uf 3min 40.6se'\ His objection to running in Edin¬ burgh is the -'cog. tiring train journey from Bri^htim and the refusal of the board to pay air fares v.hich, from their point of view, would amount to a huge sum for this meeting, involving as it does -hundreds of athlcies. Last eight's hcati. .were ratiler, academic. Elizabeth Sutherland, taking every opportunity fur a hard run at 400m hurdles, won her han't _ comfortably in 5S.lIsec. despite a cold head-wind in ihe home ilraisht. and will surely be untroubled in today's final. She alsu plans to run the 200m flat Sebastian Coe almost glided round his ROOm heat to win in lmin 51.03sec and is fast re- cwcrlng from his recent ankle injury. “ My heart tells me it is OK, but there is just a little niggle uf doubt in my mind.” That should evtiporate in today’s final but he ufli have to beware of the fast-finishieg 'idinburgh runucr, Peter Hoffman Jane Colebrook was Ihc most impressive of the women's SOGm runners, tedding her heat through . a 59.8sec bcil. and holding to will, easing up, in 2min 5.4suc. Today aba will want to erase the memory of last year's Haul when she un¬ accountably dropped out at 600m, and among her main rivals will be Mary Stewart end the Kicrnan sisters from Hornchurch, Lcslev and Denise. Qualifiers for today □re : MEN: 4uOm hurdles: Mo-ko-.. 52.52 m. w.iitUnqhdhi. *:..07- D. wt*. 5-j.6o: H. D in\iilc. M.ti: |i. Haniev. -•1 HcilH.- r-.-V! s Jim-.-s. Sj. -.j. luriiUhil. v,-..x.. uuoni- S 'JV.X H I crocs. 1 J. lit-:-ir..c.-o. 15I.U,: k. V-' , , c '-! ly , ! HoMmann. i:oiJ.«U: L. Nlcuulsc,-,. i: u u.,J: U. Jljrri^n I :jo.78: P. btowm J:5U bO Enormous fleet drifts away in direction of St Malo By-John NiGbo^s The stun of 200 boats in the Royal Ocean Racing Club's race from Cowes to St Malo hardly set the pulses raring when it splut¬ tered into life at Cowes yesterday. There was only die faintest nt breezes to ruffle the water, and is a spectacle, the enormous fleet had about as much impact as a damp squib. Hiroughout the past week boats competing in the RORC’s Inshore races have searched In vain for wind, and it looks now as -if their series will ,eod as rarnely as it began. The forecast for -the weekend is for continuing light winds, so goodness knows when the fleet will berth at Dinard.. At tbe rate they were sailing yes¬ terday. the 184-mfic race cucdd take about a furtuigbl instead of the usual two davs. Before the start manv boais wrere anchored to avoid being car¬ ried over the starting line by the tide. When the first classes started they drifted slowly awav ■ to the eastwards, followed at 10-minute imervaJs by succeeding classes. At last, they were all away, with fiicir sails. banging limply in the warm air. Then, after about an hour, a zephyr spread across die water from the" mainland shore a ad boats on' that side began to ease away. It took abuni half an boar for the breeze to reach Cowes, by which time boats that had elected to scan loshure, like. Edward Heath's Morning Cloud, were lett far behind. 1 As soon as the offshore burns were clear of- Cowes, a class ot one design Sonatas set off from the Island Sailing Club ■ to com¬ pere in die first race of their national championship. Needless to say. as' soon as lliey reached the starting area, the . wind . dis¬ appeared. Two hours later it pul in another belated appearance, and a race was started In what . soon became a pleasant -sailing .breeze. David Thomas. The boat's designer, led for ihc first beat, but was one of several premature starters. . Most of rhe others responded ro a recall, but Thomas did not, and was disqualified. Peter White in Parody settled into second place behind Thomas, with Hugh Bourn's Samsong alsu in contention. White was obviously unaware that by finishing second he would win the race and put .the issue beyond any doubt by passing Thomas on the second and final windward leg. 1 RESULTS: SondLi: 1. Hdr.idy i P. Uftlfe'c 2 . Rampant Mobltf < K. Lontuu'i : 3. S^nsong <H Buiini,; -1. Evilii ■ it. rirnon-i: 5. McluiXv ij. Caaperseni. 6. Scherzo iC. PenloMi. MEDGMBLIK: World OK Dinqhy ch.sm- pionahins: Sixth race: I. ’I. Dodson iSiT; 2. H. Dotai-n iNZ'! ■>. S- Lin-ihansen ' Dunirvark i: 4. C. Bhodeii iUUi. Svvenih race- 1. L. Arm It ,MZl: 2, It. Hocil^iua 'NcUiorlandui ■ 4. M. Delfs I Sweden i BUUi-i J Lolcbrvo 1 . j-,i)n .1.1 y=... _ftiwi-n. JO.'KJ: D. Kiv»i»jn C. BoN^r. 2 7.J1: A Crtvn.cr 2-8.i.v- A, luion. 2:a.i-1: J. PrlciDe. 2:1.42 L. Kltrrjn. 2.V.02. Cycling Zoetemelk well placed for victory Puy-de-Dojnc, July 14.—Joop Zuetemcikr of the iVctherlands, v.on today's lourtt-enth stage of the Tour dc France cj'ric race but Joseph Bruyere, of Belgium, retained tbe overall race leader's yellow jersey. - Zoetcmidk moved up to second in tbe overall p/ac/ngs after his scintillating victory in Today's time trial, a gruelling 52.5km (32.G mile) ascent of the Puy-dc- Domc mountain in central France. Michel PellC 2 tier, of BCIgiuni. was second in looby's stage and Bruyere vras third. France’s Bernard Hinault, widely tipped by the French sporting press to win the tour this year, could only manage fourth' place and was overtaken by Zoetemelk in the overall plarings. Zoetemelk. 31 -year- old former Dutch' champion. has twice finished second in the Tour de France. An experienced all-round cyclist, he lias won many of Europe's cycling classics in an eight-year professional career. Today’s results mean that the tour leaders are even more tightly bunched than before, with just more than two minutes separating the first four riders. Any one of the four—Bruye’re. Zoetemelk, Hinault and PoJiontier —could snatch victory in the final days of the race, which ends in' Paris- on July 23. STAGE 14: 1. J. •'3rl.-ii.ptk i-Jcm-r- lanfi. Ihr ajmte 2. M. PCI- IcnUt-r • Brinium >. lati-lV- "5. .1. Uruj'-rp rupiphun., 12o:4o: 4. U. Htn.iaii 'FniiW'i. 12J7:«l. 3. J. Aoo- .clJnha iPonuqJ)'. I .-U7:53: l>. L. van Impe 'Ui-Iplum-. lii*-.4u- OVERALL: I. Brvnv, 66-3194: 2 , T’oeirmulk. tt6:r,U27: •>. Hliuiuii. 60-55:14: 4. Pollcnvlpr, 6n:j4Al2: Anoki'nha. 6u»<:4 4: t>. KulDPr. ■ - AYR: Scolllih Milk Ua:r: I'lrst >us« tfrcim p.ilAloy ■: T. S. Barra s. 4hr,. IVniins 44<pt: 2. G. Yrrllnrien ' Url- giumi. same llinr: -1, R. Pevcna'ip 'Cci- qluin-i. 4 CM.ZA : 4. K. HO'lf ■ Dpl- nlum i' 1. E. ran de Wlelr > Be'aium i: b. H. Lci.-ls. all .ajnt- lime,. Ci.orali: 1. r.. Vcrlindi-n. 4U«.lu:a S. Rarras. 4:2a.IL: 5. B. UDNlnrbObCh < Nplh'n--• Linr 1 ; isit.-JO" 4. J ,%an Houwolmo-n fNoIhPHflnd>i. 41*7.27; S. D Wacyen- berg iReiqiiiini. same time: 6. F. HDSle. 4 27.30. . Tenuis □AVlfi CUP: -BaaWd: Sweden l<*art Spain 1—0. Pragui-: C^PLhoMoi'aki.i read Romania l—0. Budapest: Hungary an.l Italy arc Ii-ecl. \ — 1 . FOREST HILLS: Qlwrler-liiUl TounH: 1- Wasuse deal R. Stockton 3—, 7—S. ti— 7 ,; V. Lacrulailis beat V Price 1 —6. 7—j. TV Highlights ; BBC 1 . Cricket: England v New Zealand .- (10.40, about 12.45, sbout- 2 J!, about 2.33, about 3.3) Golf: Open championship (about 12.43, about 2.5, about 2.35, about 3.5) ' • Racing ; Newbury races at. 2.0; 2.30, 3.0 Athletics: UK championships (about 3.5) BBC 2 Cricket: England v New Zealand (4.30, about 9.20) Golf: Open championship (about 9.20) BBC l—tomorrow Motor Racing : British Grand PrLx . (about 2.40) A ubieties: UK championships (about 2.40) - BBC 2—tomorrow Cricket: Nottingha m s h i r e ■ * Lancashire (L35) Motor Racing: British Grand Prix ( 10 . 20 ) • - - IBA Cycling: Tour de France (about 12.35) Athletics: US v USSR (about 12.35) Raring: Ayr races at 1.30, 2,0, 2.30. ; York races at ■ 1.45. 2.15, 2.45 ; Irish, Oaks at 3.45. -Speedway: White City meeting (2.55) The high performance golf ball from... i I ar i ih- u IT. ib* 22 THE TIMES' SATURDAY JULY IS 1978 ' SPORT. Cricket . Essex moye up at the cost of Somerset pride and ambition By Richard Stresipu COLCHESTER: Essex f19 pts) beat-Somerset (3) by -200 runs. Six economical wickets for Lever's left-erra fast-bowling made certain yesterday that Essex moved- into a clear-cut position second in the tabic. They retain a game in hand over their rivals above and below them after dent¬ ing both Somerset pride and am¬ bition. -Twice in this match Somerset have been dismissed in¬ side three hours. For all the indi¬ vidual ability of some of their players, their lack of ballast could yet mitigate against them In the three-day championship. Once again in cool overcast con¬ ch dons, batting at Castle Park tested toe nerve, confidence and numerous elements of chance as the ball moved unpredicrably off a greenish wicket. Even so, Somer¬ set made a serry fist cf things after they were left to mcfcc 329 to win. In his first 9.1 overs Lever took four fn.- 12 and Somerset’s hopes were past redeem)C 5 - ' Lever returned after lunch and finished with sis for 33, the second game in succession he -has taken eight wickets, anti bis tally for the -.ason has now reached 77 wickets. His cail-np by England, which came through as this game was ending, has been fully earned. Lever's awkward sl 3 trt away from the batsmen, regular changes of pace and unvarying hostility make him an awkwara customer at any time. Ho a g ain received good support from Phillip. Turner and East, and as can happen for a side when things are going well, jome good catches were not only taken but were made to look easy. Whether yesterday’s play would have been more of a contest if Richards had bson fullv fit has to remain academic. His temperature and throat infection had subsided enough for him to attend at the ground and finally change and come in at No S. Richards almost disdainfully began with four fours and a six ever the sigbtscreen in two overs against Turner. These toots and others were breath¬ taking iu their brilliance in ivbat was by then a hopeless cause before one more huge straight bit xieldzl a catch immediately after lunch. Genius has Its own rules, but from the way he performed I was not' alone In the circumstances in wishing that Richards bad felt able to bat higher in the order. Another, briefer evampic of un¬ inhibited West Indian approach had come earlier when Essex batted on for two overs, with Phillip hitting Botham for three fours in an over. The main reason for. Essex continuing, briefly, of course, was to have the heavy roller used in an euorr pv help their own attack later. It did. not seem to have a great deal of effect on the pitch, -but presumably sowed further seeds of* doubt about wfaat might "happen in Somerset minds. Somerset's appalling start began (D the- first over .when Denning drove -a simple catch to extra caver. Sic combe was caught be¬ hind playing defensively. Rose looked as assured as anyone before •-.urT-ecrnsss. Break ueH. too. con- Botham’s. aggressive remedial style for once did not work, an edged drive being well taken by Smith Stretching across first slip. For the second time in the game Roebuck batted witb impressive correctness: Breakwd, coo, con¬ tributed a measure of determina¬ tion before he was bowled pushing forward. Roebuck played an out- swinger to second slip which cleared the decks for Richards. Taylor did not score at the other end while the West Indian was rgtaiing his fireworks and bad been In 40 minutes when be was caught down the leg-side tiying to pull. Dredca was caught at -slip. Somerset's last wicket pair delayed things for half an hour, Moseley hitting East for one huge six. ESSEX: first IruiL-vn. 270 for 8 dec iM. H. Dmnnt 73. N. Phillis ***. B. Ft I (anile aui. Second inrun o’ M. H. Deques.,, c Tarlor. b Moseley . . .. ,. ., v G. A. Gooch, C Denning, b Bxvai- woU .. .43 K, S. Mccwan. c Denning, a Buraev> .. .. .. o •K. W.. 5|. Fletcher, c OeraUntr. b Moseley .. .13 E. n. FtarUW. b RoUom . - 40 K. It. Poni, b Moseley .. .. .55 N. Phillip, not util .. .- 53 S. Turner, c Burge.*, b Botham 5 IS. C. East, no! out .. . . ti ExLraa ib 10. 1-b ... By" Jerome Caminada THE OVAL: Yorkshire (17pis) beat Surrey (5J by five KicketS. Total >7- whin - licet- .-. Jiv ! N. SnilUt and J. K. Lever did not nal. FALL OF WICKETS: 1—a. 2—IB. S _« J. 4-38. C—147. 6—!•>>. 7— UOWXtNC: Botham. 15—1 17—a: Mwchi, iy—a—o4—o: Uurgubs. 'J— J—27—1: Dredge, 7—1—50—O; HrcalcwcU .1^—5 H—1. In a thumping finish. Yorkshire pulled this niatca cud victory out uf the doldrums. Set 155 tu wtu in Just over two boors plus thfe ubligatory last 20 overs, they won with five wickets and exactly one over to spare. ' : Until tea, Yorksltlrc seemed to have no interest in ;■ scalping Surrey. In 10U triinures off 27 overs, they scored only 45. But tea. or whatever It was that the?- consumed ra the interval, pat fire into them, and..in the next 40 minates they ran dp 60. It was Lumb. who had opened' with Boycott, and Hampshire, the only driving force in the first tunings, who laid'the foundation. Boycott contributed little, falling to his opposing captain, Knight, Id a temp n ’n 3 to drive him. Lumb and Hampshire, however, drove and pulled witb abandon untO Hampshire was caught for 39 by Knight, leaping into the air in the slips- . The total was then US- Lumb pressed on, but at 136 be tried to book Jackman and skied the ball to the wicketkeeper standing well back. His 71 was golden for bis ccuimy. Bairstow did not sfav long ; and at 136 for five, eJgnt overs to come, the pendulum was swinging again. Could the lower half of the term from the north get the 19 runs needed, or would they ail disappear, too? Johnson and Carrick framed the answer. Swinging, lunging, and showing a straight bat too new and then. they, forged ahead. They cocked a ball np now and then, but the Oval, spirit smiled down on them in the evening sunshine. The crowd smiled upon them tno, for they loved it ml- The win¬ ning run came with a brazen single, with the six balls of the last over to come. Old was again sparingly . used ag ains t the Surrey batsmen yesterday* this * tfme"bec:a'use "of 'a strained shoulder. Athty. the medium-paced discovery of the match, once more took his place handsomely, and is now a county bowler in his own right. " and In thd next over he celebrated by square-cutting Athey for four. Knight, after 48; overs, passed Ids 50—his second, of the match- bur then, having losr Jackman, himself fell.to a piece of Yorkshire guile. At the Pavilion end Boycott, the Yorkshire captain, brought on die'slow lefwrm Carrick for one over in place of Cope; then after the icttirvening six balls from the Vans bail end. he put Cope on again,. This was the last over before lunch, and immediately Knight was held low down in the slips by L&nib'. After lunch the Surrey tail- end era scarred Atliay's figures at the same time-adding sfetuficantlv to the home team's score, as their had done, on Wednesday. Tho ma s -and Pocnck helped tiieh}seS r es to four, three, six in one over from Athey before the innings closed Racina . j Chokwaro strong enough to lift Athey: medium paced dis¬ covery eE match. The Surrey batsmen in this Inn¬ ings- blew hot and cold. Knight and You ids 1 moved toe overnight total of 65 for three wickets into the nineties before Younis 'vies Atopy's .first victim of toe day. Smith r ame in nod clouted a boundary, but toon the thougnt oF passing the 100 seemed to para¬ lyze the Surrey men. For half an hour the. score rested on 99. While the score was thhs stationary, toe number of batsmen out was not. Smith snicked a good boll off Athey to Hampshire ar second slip; ami in the same over Intikhab lifted one politely into Boycott's 1 lands at square leg. This made it 99 for seven, because Old dropped another polite catch from Jack- man in the gufiy, again off Athey. Atbcy's figures hereabout were 9—7—9—3. He and Cope, a spin bowler v.-bo keeps bis bowl- nlg right hand well behind his back''until the last in 6 mentT"serif down eight successive maidens, each one ritualistically applauded round the ground. Finally, Knight Cut Cope into the long field for three, to pass toe 100 at last. SURREY: F!iM In-llnr*. 1- • a. O. V. Knight 60. S. o:6iui for 4i». - ' Second Innings A. 11. Dotch’er.. c b OTd A. Lynch.-c Adiey. b o.<J!uai *lt. D. V. Kn.-oliL C Lumb. b lvjoj ... . .. • ... .. : C. it. J. »oo;». 14-ul. b OM .. Y;-unls Aluned. c n Ainev .. .. : □ . >1. SmIUi, c -Ham-iTlr?. b ■vtn^y >. . ln^‘<AJb Alim. c BorcolL b xuuv .- n. n‘ c G.-in-:-!:. n C-j i O. l. It* Kurils, a i'll p. l. not ■•>!! .. .. D. 4. -Ih-jmji. c to.1 a. t> 0‘C*iii a Cnrji . b 1. l-b .5. w :. n-o a* By Michael Phillips Racing Corre^nnr.dent The Murland Brewery Trophy is the centrepiece cf toa programme at Newbury this inrerc.joa. A year ago, this * valuable handicap for stayers was won hy Roval Hive but. sadly, rb-erc is no horse of comparable class among .toe field of 11 runners today. Bill IVightman is malting a serious challenge -and saddle? Charlotte’s Choice in addition ro Gcblin. wla ran so wed! in tlie Derbv and anain at Salis&urc, where he finished foarrh iu the Bribury Cup- They should both sire their backers a good run for their money and I w-iuld love to s^e C?ftlin win for Iii-s entMi-sirrJc wror. VTllKaai D'uie'a^-Home. I sfi’l t^-lrk that \Gchael Ji—ris's cult. CbokwarO, ■ e?^!'- the better bet on fiiis • Toioi .i: ' .Tyumen- »npK'CrS < 7--2--.._2—2*. “T'^Lwr. ; l ^o'ri 0 r i— — Qluhjnr 25.3-10-— -~jt~ ‘ Cov CfTTldi, a -O ■ 2 —44.- Gs."?. Ill-3- cccasicn. - - Bv Han Grange, who' iron the Irish Si Lfi-sr eight years Chokwaro ic 5k« nu improving crrsKs cf lifting rhf* nrizc, even ih.'n-di his w'-leht inc'udes a . -rr?jTn- lciwsed f.-p v.innlcT his. I-s' Tprm pr Tt‘ v'uuld bo d sat ‘cvir t-> cvuiecr'tv the w-u i' ith v J '. : cii he —on rhjt d”^ v.-’-'-q 1*5 h»at Ka'lVj- Delaney's Criss cnJ Hlkarf. Hikarl mil be. meeting Chokwaro on 101b Better terms today but ■ . oiav not be sufficient to bridge a gap of sL\ lengths. ■Our Newmarket cMTesponoent is more-inclined to fatTHir Meistcr- siucer but I wjS bitterly dis¬ appointed-at the way that lie ran in the King Gtorge V Handicap at Rural Ascot itod I prefer Chokwaro, whose record tins kHsson speaks for it>df-- MeiSer- singcr finished behind Valour at Ascot and there is nu reason why he should do any better Ac Nev.imrv yesterday, Geoff Baxter stole the show by v.inniag first toe Ridgwoy Handicap on Parrot Fashion and then the St Catherine’s Stakes on Hughes Next, who has become, sneb a fine advertisement for her under¬ rated sire, Roy ben, in recent weeks. The feature of the after- noun was imdonbtediy Baxter’s handling of- Hughes Next, whose numerous supporters lad every reason to fed. uneasy when thev noticed that Baxter lad elected to move across the course =»mi •take her to rage alongride the rails furtlie't from toe stands. The tactics are virtirallv nu. heard of at Newbury. csrecfaBw when there is a field as amall as only five. However, aD is well that ends well and it trai that the filly’s Owner and | John HiiL had Instructed to do it because he reckoai toe ground was faster thet Hughes Next probably gay, aD she gained by the man and even toe astute'Mr h the first to admit It later, Hushes Next iron him a Urinal £ 1-200 on top of tiie first' prize because sh* eligible for a bonus in } with the Ally's premium 5 which was initially put f by the Breeders’ .Assodatli subsequently backed by tb, Board. She will run nest Princess Margaret Stat Ascot in a week. Hughes Next lias now vro* such breeders* premiums f owner and it must be ho& these premiums will enc investors to buv British sales later this autumn na the light is beginning' tp: Other racing, pi STATE OP GOING IttSdlA ungharii: Good in Thru. C*iK4pr NiiAuri-: Good lo film. Avr- I r-rtonoo. V40d: Remalnrar r lam. VoA: Good. .Monday; f ijr>od lo firm. Ldcwtor- . usdrav. Good; Round couma, < font. YORKSHIRE: Pr,: l.ialng*. ill. D. JorUu^n J* lor 4-5 ■. 160 Inn:n 9 > “G Boycott. b Kn.c»: U. O. Lumb. c lUcii.inls. b JickniOJi C. If. J. Litre, l-b-nr. b J.irKiran J. II. HunpvhJry-. c KilQh:, b JjcLman .. -D. l. rciirstow-. i- Penck C. Jolirunn, not nut P. »i»mc!s. not cn: tmr4» «I-b v. 2. n-b 3> 14 Total ‘ .5 wris ■ .. .. 1’ C M. (id. A. Co^-. IT. p. Cu-nr-r j_-k 1 S. C*l**Min, iLJ r->L tat. ruLL or yjCKirre^:— l-:. -j — IJOWUNG- Io:fm4->. l r - — j —'•!— . Tior.iaJ. lO—*- 5-—Kn'.'jftt. 3 2—5—2"*—l: nsitiab. ;— l —<- PutocL. lu—I—2r—1. L'mnlroir T. W. S??accr anl A. G. T. WblU-kwi Second Iniungs •B. C. Rditr. b Lover .. ..23 P. W. Drnnuiq. c Pont. b. Lotur u f . A. Slocombo. c Smtlb. b Lrvor 2 M. nOebuck. c Cieoch. b Phillip .. .. .. ..JO I. r. BuUuoi. c Snitih. b Lover D. Unul;w*u. b Turner .. .. 14 'D. J. Taylor, c Smith, b Lrvor 0 I. V. A. RithanH. c Turner, b Ea»t_.3.5 Gatting and Edmonds G. I. BUTQ(C.9. not out .. . . ft C. H. Dradce. c McEv.-nn. b Lever 1 H. H. vio&cli-y. c Turner, b fcibt ib ExLrae iu 4. n-b li .. .. 3 to rescue A neatly timed ending by a confident Lancashire gWisXlhlvi Parrot Fashion winning the Ridgeway Stakes at Newbury yesterday. By Alan Gibson Toiai .. .. 128< FALL OF WIGKET8: 1—1- 2 —6. S —34. 4-10. 5—37. 6—3v. 7—yS. HOWLING: U?vtt. 19- Piillllu. ;>—i—27—i: Turner, ■ -f: Ciat, B.Z - Umpires: R. Aaplrtail and R. union. T. Lever comes in for Old against New Zealand Christopher Old, the Yorkshire Tast bowler, aggravated an Injury to his right shoulder against Surrey at the Oval yesterday and is out of the Prudential Trophy matches with New Zealand at Scar¬ borough today and Old Trafford on Monday. Although toe loss of Old in the middle of a fine season is a Wow to England, the handicap Is not a severe one because In's replacement, John Lever of Essex, is toe country's leading wicket taker with 77 victims. He was unlucky not to plqy In the Test series against Pakistan in which Old took 13 wickets. The York- shircman has been troubled by the injury all season and will have intensive treatment in an effort to clear up the trouble. England monopolized toe £4,900 prize money in toe first two matches against Pakistan in May, but with Richard Hadlee in out¬ standing form. New Zealand could Interrupt their run of 'success. England beat Pakistan by 132 and 94 runs, but Pakistan had lost half their playing time to rain before the first match at Old Trafford. There is little doubt that the New Zealanders, in form and in prac¬ tice, will be an entirely different proposition. Hadlee earned his colleagues a longer rest than they had expected with a seven wicket second innings performance to trio toe match against Warwickshire. So while the touring side were relaxing in readiness for the two games, many of England’s 13 strong party were still journeying to Scarborough from various parts of the country. As well as Hadlee, Cairns, a seam bowler, has made a big impact, taking 27 wickets on the tour so far, while CoJIinge. no stranger to English conditions, will give added penetration. The vicc-captain, Parker, and Cougdao both scored centuries against Warwickshire and Cong don's nagging medium pace makes Him a particularly valuable player iu limited-over cricket. Edgar, a 2X-year-old left handed batsman,- h3S - obtained six- -half- centuries since his arrival and all the batsmen have nuts in toe bank, including the big hitters Anderson and Edwards. ENGLAND: J. M. Braarlcy - ' Mlddln- In an exciting finish on a bad pitch Middlesex boat Leicestershire by one wicket, after the spinners BatferatoiM (five for 33) and Steele (three for.23) had caused a batting breakdown. J - Middlesex, 28 for no wicket overnight, nwded another 91 to win and all seemed well as Brcarley (23) and Radley (34) took toam akmg to 48 for toe fh-st wicfceL But toe collapse started when Barlow was second out caught and bowlgd by Steele for tone at 63 and Middlesex' declined.rapidly to 73 for six. A seventh wicket stand of 30 In 30 of inures between Gatting (11) and Edmonds (23) put Middlesex back in tire rumrinp- But both were opt at 10S. Sclrgy ttrofc charge to bit Higgs For nine In an over before Daniel made toe winning bit to give Middlesex victory. BRISTOL: Lancashire <16 pts) beat Gloucestershire (5) bp seven wickets. Mx. capty. G. A. Cocxji CEssvx). q. T. Rad'or i Middlesexi. D. I. Gower (Uttcnn-aMret. G. U, J. Rowa ■ Surrey). D. W. Randall fNotttnphain- shlrri. G. Mlllor ■ Derbj-shlrv). I. T. Botham •'Somerset).' P. H. Kdmomts fMIddk-aexi. R.. lr. TTivTor ' Dertjjr- ahin>i. R. G. U. WllUs (Warwickshire«. M. J. Hi'ndrick ■ Derbyshire *. J. k." Love ■ I'Esiox'. NEW- ZEALAND I from* : NT. -G. Burvesj (cap»i. J. C. Wrldhl. R. \v. Anderson B. A. Edoar. G. P. Howarth. J. M. Parl.er. B. E Congdnn. G. N. Fdwards. R. J. Hadlee. B. L. Calms. R. O. Colli noo O. B. Thomson. Umpires: D. J. Constant and J. G. Langrldgo- Newark ■Worcestershire romped to then- first championship victory of the summer by 132 runs on a crum¬ bling Newark pitch • against Nottinghamshire. They declared overnight on 203 for seven leaving Nottingham-' shire toe virtually impossible tar¬ get of 282 . Nottinghamshire were soon in trouble and they lost ttfelr first three 'wickets for -just 35—runs. The Worcestershire captain. Nor¬ man Gifford, did most of the early damage. He finished with an impressive five for 42 as Noting- hamshirc were finally dismissed for 130. .> : The top scorer was She wicket keeper Bruce French who equalled his highest ip to( cham- pionshipi finishing 25 not bur. - Tavare anti Shepherd see Kent home MAIDSTOXE: Kent (ISpts) beat Glamorgan (7) by six toickets. Kent toe county championship leaders, raced to toair ninth win In 13 matches this season In con¬ vincing style against Glamorgan. Left 223 to win in 170 mhmtes plus the last 20 overs they reached 223 foe four in toe eighth of the last 20 overs to take 13 porats. Tbev bowled Glamorgan out for 1-10 with the spin bowlers Johnson (six for. 64) and Underwood (three for 31) doing the damage. Underwood had mat ch figures of eight for 95 and figures for toe week at Maidstcna of 19 for 174 . Tavare reached 30 iu 67 minutes with seren fours to put Kent -on the risht road arid he and Shep¬ herd (55 not out) hammered 96 1 la 70 minute? in an unbroken fifth wicked stand. Sltgphenl hit tbrsa sixes and nine fours and Tarare had 13 fours In bis unbeaten 89. Warwickshire crumble to Hadlee BIRMINGHAM: New Zealanders brat Warwickshire bp an innings and 52 -runs GLAMORGAN: Flrsi innings, for 0 1 J. A. HopUns ’■>7. R. Uniong 7o: D. L. L'luJcnvoud O bJ«. New Zealand’s touring side rolled over the last seven Warwick¬ shire batsman for 36 runs in just 41 ini nates at Edgbaston yesterday to gain their second successive innings victor)-. Richard Hadlee, with a spell of five for 22 , bowled, insplringly but the Warwickshire batting left much to be desired. Hadlees finished with figares of seven for 77 and a match return of 11 for 116. Warwickshire offered litde resistance once they had lost a couple of early wickets. It took New Zealand only 23 minutes to clinch victory. First to go was Humpage. who holed oat to square leg off Coi¬ nage with 12 added to the over¬ night score.. - ■ KaUicharran survived one edge which lobbed over slips for Four and was yorked next-ball -by. Hadlee. In the same over Abberley unluckily played on. Derby Derbyshire scorned an attempt to make 240 for victory after Northamptonshire’s captain, Cook, had set them to score 96 runs an hour. Derbyshire supporters jeered- and slow bandcJapped l when it became obvious there was no Interest in going for the runs and toe game mercifully expired at 61 for three without toe extra half hour being claimed. Only 20 runs came Jo the first 23 overs before tea with HID making only tone runs In 31 overs and earning a cry of “ come on Boycott ” from one disgruntled spectator. Derbyshire’s captain, Barlow, said his side’s poor start had spoiled any chance of going for the runs and added : “ Nobodv had done better than, three runs an over but we were asked to make six an over to win.” Earlier Northamptonshire had scored 277 for two declared with a century opening stand between Cook and Larkins and another century stand for the third wicket between Steele and Lamb. When - you remember that In their first innings Lancashire bad lost five, wickets for nine runs, this was.a notable win. But we did not have much excitement yes¬ terday because when play started Lancashire, needing 171 In the last innings, were already 105 for nu wicket. They scored the rest, without much difficnltv, in about an hour and a half. It was Sim¬ mon's first innings which kept Lancashire in competition during their first innings, and it was Rar- cliffc’s bowling, more than that of anyone else, which kept Glou¬ cestershire down to two low scores. It was said that, on a beautiful July day—the first one I hare encountered In the month —we should have bad so little cricket. FortunatcJy. other major sport¬ ing events were taking place in the neighbourhood. I tried to per¬ suade toe Harlech Teletision team to come down to High Littleton for toe school sports, but appar¬ ently there were technical diffi¬ culties. I can report, however, some modest successes for the Gib¬ son family- Mv sob- Adam, came second in the 70-yard (beg pardon, metre) sprint, and second in the sack race: he maintains that the chap-who. beat him had a hole in his sack, and slipped a crafty foot out from time to time. I am afraid Adam has learnt to think the worst of everybody, after a heaw diet of the World Cup. My • daughter, Felicity, came third in the under seven sprint, bpt failed to live up to. training form in the Blue'Sean race.’ My ■wife. Rosemary, came “ about third ” in a .mothers race. They were too young for her, she said afterwards. 1 have noticed before that mothers races are about the only time when women, assuming thev have lost,, always add years to their ape rather than subtract them. Still, that was two sflrere and a bronze and a bit for tbe family, a respectable result. Gloucestershire also pljvcd respectably, not throwing toe match away as suiue sides mi£:it have done, making Lancashire work for their runs. Kennedy and David Lloyd carried on peace fully to US. when Lloyd was leg before to Procter. It was this stand wtikh had finally turned toe-match towards Lancashire. The pitch, which bad had its oddities n~v and then earlier in the match now played placably. After his first, fairly tost spell. • Procter changed ends and bowled off- spinners, and looked as likely as any. bowler to take a wicket Abrahams did not stay very long He was caught at toe wicket, another very- good one by Brass iagtoa- Kennedy was ecu tot a slip, with only a few needed, and Lancashire timed toe ending >0 neatly, with a six, that v.-e were left with 15 seconds of piay and half art hour’s c«nraismary to do it is 13 years since Gloucester shire Eiare beaten Lancashire in a championship match. The two counties have had some famous, and often dose struggles in the Gillette. Cup and other one day competitions. They meet again in the Gillette nest- Wednesday. These 3 re, of course, two different contests, and it is rash to draw- conclusions frem one to toe other. But Lancashire, ar too momenr do look toe more cheer¬ ful and confident side. Newburv results - iu -a.a.I. AL330UHNE STAKES i.-.-v-'i- inn Snvickoicr. c'.i c. U- — tun.-a ■ C. KoUcwj.v 1 . v-m P. Ld-i-j-. • 1-1 lav 1 Smartsc:. --- O. liUor 16-11 2 Be II*-A Ilia nee .. J. Mercer rj’O-li 3 ALSO RAN : o-e Avun Salmon. 7-1 ChuW*. X-j-J Daring Lisi. -i-l C.ilHao Low. ‘-'-1 f..--?rcu>-lon. Ja-l N.iU*--.- sr.rna -410-. lo-l Lu.- Uaiv- -"»-X iiul'un. Ponarjn. To- L ,'lwm*. I *'.| UaLiC-.-i. 1^-aniar. •-l.’.rcA K r ic. M,r.ti U*ile. Prln V'.* ran TOTH- Wm. am; iiLicn. -ags. tfn: Juai lorr-:. »l. «xJr. I. Wailii-r.- oi Nmraiait:rt. • ,1. 31. lir.la i7.34*<i:. Newbury programme a.J-> -a.5u. ecchihswell stakes • Div l. u-.v-o maiUeiu: Ll.l-?: / Television (BDC1) : 2.0,230 and 3.0 races J 2.0 OVERTON MAIDEN STAKES (3-y-o £1,214: lm if) a 040-330 Belt and Braces. J. Hindli-y. v-O . A. Ubnlii & OOO- Charlie John, Mrs N. Birch. <j -0 . / Crvbvn, <-. Ueiutt.'id. !>-0 ....." . J, SUK H 3CO-OQO Doww-, J. .Trof. 0-1} . . B. t3- a- East Coast. W. Hern. 0-0 ...E. E XO 00000-4 Croat Mona, Hid*. O-U . G. Be IX 00-00 Herb Hawked, G. Pcler-Hoblyn. .y-0 ... 3 :• " O- Major Swallow. P. cole. 0-0 ..:.. S. DC 1 i 03 Morse Code, Dunlop. V-O .’ G. UcJBS 3 > 0-02343 Rtbolane, ||. H-unnon. M-O ... B. Ui 17 003-23 Rover's Day. P. Cuadoll. f'-O.G. Hj o-o Shaab. J. our lop. -.'-O .R. MOiia- 03-4 ToduiCi u. C^tmly. >I->J .. R. Ctt -- - - «. W\ W-l! " j-. 03-4 ... .. .. 31 0-000 Ardluily La«>, \W W'lgliunan. ts-ll . M. -TU J1 a-oo Bvrlai. Mrs S. Birch. 8-11 .. OO SouUiorn Ss-as. P. u .liwyn. 8-11 ..B. King ot Spain, hr r. tv Philip "l 8: m—Bo-.v re lo ft Sam. •}. Ilob- Imu'-i. .. P.-CiPU. • .-I ■ i IJ-I To Hi sac. 7-3 Rover** Di}'. H-O Morse Cod*. 9-1 Belt so® Soul him Seas. 13-1 East coast. 14-1 Rlholance, lo-l Dowser. 30-1 -a Cjvony '..'.! li" l,vu*e is*-l- 2 Press the Button F. El.ii.-i • :-t f.»v • 3 ' \LSO RW; .j.L laiTih-itlrp Urll; 15-a .\nti:?:iri- P-v. 7-1 rons.-v l\- ••■ui.. .“.-I J-ie iho Jnlcr. l*:-l i:o<r->ii*io. S-.'lm '>,-r-in. uo-t iwit .v:.;a. —-J .‘.t-VLihun-. ■ Arm^-J Mnu.il Abort. Tliv Mo. Lune De MK-!. 13 Ui- 2 JO DOiMNTNGTON CASTLE STAKES (2-y-o : £3,04S: Jim Jill 27321 Sir Chris. -.1, Jarvis, '.i-J .. S. Tap -1C 111311, Tap on Waatfl Ft. V~2 3U..I ■ Lohengrin. J. DunJop. 8-7 . li. 5=ir rrhrb. 3-1 rap on Wood. 7-1 Lohengrin. TOIL: Win. •-•p; nL'Cv-j. Up. »ip- Clp -In:I ■:.j..5l. P. lairn-.:. at common. 21. II. lniln 1^.«-1> c. 3.0 MORLAND BRE1VERY TROPHY 13-y-o handicap; H lm 5f 60yds) •*'?• 501 21-0304 CoMln, W. Wlghlraan. 9-0 .:.G. B* 5.15 i.5.1-;. RIDGEWAY HANDICAP fC-!-o L 2 . 11 U: l'.m • Parrot Fashion, th 1. bv PK-CCi pj High I—.41 vs la iC. CBIWWli. 7-13 _ C-. naslt-r >35-1 • i Lady Aberrant .. R. Slreel «14-1' 2 Swiss Maid .... 6. Starvey iA-l* 3 ALSO RAN: E'.C-IA fjv Wi- * r mile -Wh-. Martn-ulr. \±-a Si rile on, ilie Du:.. 7-1 .Uiij, "_-5-l Ka-b.il. :< ra.1. -\<0 Lwefc <C). v.\ Here, e-x . B, ft« ^•11 3014 Cataciilsm^ J. lYr-e. 7-12 . S. Itaymon ■T.J 3 0-02144 Hlkari, B. IIUls. 7-7 .. . IL SU 7,-2 Valour. J-l Swagger Stick, d-l Latin Lack, 7-1 Goblin. 7-l' I'J-i Hlkari. 13-1 MeU^rslnger. I-!-l Charlotte s Cbolca, Fool's Pi Ou Prayet GLOUCESTERSHIRE: IM . C. M. nalcmre 5 for .51) and 135 -IJ. ;i. RatvlUfe 4 tor Jl.. TO IV: Win. p’ares Son. 27;-. -n: i-.rpt ei.j.8". ft. Al. Tiui-t. M La-.nbCiurn. 1M. sn had. 3 .ti th C7.4.:,«c. LAN CASH ;RE: First Innlnps 137 "J. SLumons 31. M. J. Prucivr 7 far Jn. Second rnnirgs • D. Llovit. 1-0-w. b Protu-r . . n A. Kennedy, c zahecr. b ShJcUelon .. .. .. 7- J. nijr.iiiams. c Brasslngion.' b Oavey .. .. .. r -r c. Have*. n«n out .. l ■ ,C. H. Uov.l. net ont .. 1 Extras -b 1. I-L 1. n-b 3i .. ; touj i o wtu. 5.4 5 • 5.4rj. HACKWOOO STAKES ivTa. Middleton Sam. r b. h l5on.«4y St ir—Batjnux-a Star <J. Norm.in■ .5-1:-" .K. Rolls., i H-T ■ 1 La Kosec .. I». Cdtlen' < 5-*i Ian 2 Ida . W. iTars.in ..5-11 3 ALSO HAN: 8-1 King Alfred »4t'n. 11-J tijgji-ti. 2»*-l Brt.iearner, b tan. lOTL’r v.-in. M--p: Maci-s. 2->o. lip. dual lircc.isf. Ajp. t(. Haino.t. Marl¬ borough. 61. 1,1. lniln 1.3.07aec. 171 : E. wood. J Shunions. ' J Lyon. R. M. Ratclirfe. R ArrowsmOh and P. J. It. Allot! did nw bal, _r.4ii or wtckets: i— ua. 2- 133. 5—108. ■ BOWLIN 1 ': Procter. 1-1—5—7-.0- Djvev. 12—U-IJ—1: Sha-'tlvlon. 11—5—21—1: ChJrtS. H —1—35—ti; C.nvenrv. 11—-o—50—0: Sadiq. 0..>— L’rnplros: K, E. Palmer and It. Jolhnii •1.1.5 i 4.1 ft ■ ST CATHERINES STAKES i-J-y-o miles - 22 481: fif > Hughes Next, ril t- bv Rnvbon— Meadow Lily iC. HiU>. *>-li U. BoiLer i 10-11 fjVI 1 Tudor Mail .. B. T.n-lor fil l) 2 Pro Patrla .... P. Edderj- 115-21 3 ALSO RAN 2-1 Songorella i4lhi. 14-1 .Moon Mirth. 5 ran. TOTE: Win. lop; clual rorecasi. ‘On. C. .1. Hill, at Harasiaplc. 2l. sh ltd: lniln li.StOscr. Middlesex v Leicester Hampshire y Sussex AT LORD'S Middlesex iibpiM beat Lelcvstcr- shirr iol by 1 wicket. LEICESTERSHIRE: 16*3 • S. C. Bal- dwsione 53.not. out: M. W. Gntilny s for r, n and N8 i P. H. Edmonds 7 for 5-1 •. MIDDLESEX: Firs) UuKnqS. 148 fK. Higgs T for da,. Second InrCnys •J. M. Brcirtuy. c Higgs- . b _ Raldorstone ... -■ 3A C. T. Hartley. l-U-w. b Sleole .. ■ -i 15^ n. Uxrlow. c and b Stecte .. "• M. J. Smith b Ba Idem tone . . O M. W.. nailing. «,t Totchard. b ., •Baldenuone ..: .. -- 1» «f. J. Gould, b EaiUaretone .. 3 AT PORTSMOI TH ^Hampshire ,5 put draw with Sussex _ SUSSEX: First Imungs. ino'..l. W. southern -j for .531. Second inning* 4.4- 14,4ft» WHITE HORSE HANDI¬ CAP tll.710: -Jill • Ladbrokes Leisure, ch p. by St Ciia-J—Lav. ly ..Sovereign . Sloati-.- K. C. W’ejiela. c Rice, h SlevctlSOn Ji G. I». MenrtLi. c Slvr»heiwon. b Sicvcibon .. .. ... P. W. G. Parker, c Gllliai. b Southern . . ., . i,o c. P. -7'hllllpson. t nreenidge. !• raw .. .. .. ..re Iniritn f.*b.)n. not out .. .. ,,j J. It. T. U.irclay. re| hurt .. -jj S. J. siori/A-. not out. .. ... 5 Ertnis ib 4. i-i» r t , w i n-b 5t i,i DioocLiocLi. 5-ft-.- It. Muddle >0-4 favi 1 World Crisis .. H. Slri-ri i 14-1 ■ 2 Crand Blanc . ...' O. B.r.lcr i J. I • 5 1LS0 RAN: n-d lllll Slal.un .4:1,'.. I Black S-ihljjifi. 20-1 Rough Itlvvr i pul. A ran. TOTE: Win. 2Ip: pRices. h.5n. "n; tlu.il rorecail.. 22.81 n. K.-ni. at I •2ilc hosier. i>|. 5m In .51.AI sec. ! 3.30 CHATTJS HILL STAKES ('2-y-o fillies : £1,808: 5f) •I'll 0 ellIchbourne. J. Dnrilon. S-ll .. -'3 Black Realm, P. Culc. 8-11 .... -!!••> • Blue Promise, J. Winter, s-l'l ■" 1 f -Camellia Walk. M. Clin.lv. 8-11 4**t DO Furore. H. Candy, ts-n ■lu'* OO Lady Equus, D. Utiug, H-li ... ily 0 v:. WTuhimsu. 3-1!. .. 41 f 02 Shoe, K. ’ HoughIpn. a-li .G. flpmsb .. (j. £>a . B: Roi . r. Cur E. El. P. D'arcy M. Then J. S K. uouumpn. «-u ...-.. J. Ji Hroiii’ii.-. 9 r'Stro 3 ' 1 i4°i U ^ l j 1 !^ ,rn - ' i ' , ‘ ****»"•• ^ *** 4.0 BRIGHTWALTON HANDICAP (£2,106: 7f) oiil o'."3 '•lit 3 rii?r^S 5 or t? to L <e.Dl. G.: Harwood. 6-10-0 ■,®nSn28 Nearly Mew (DJ, H. bwtfl. 7 " ~*J i 3T:B •.io 012 V. 10-1 1-00002 0100-00 031202 10-1000 2-3QG30 C«rriSgr'“wayH. ‘price'’4-S-id’ lo •'■■■teiv as■*| ii. rr.LP. 4 -o-i j . j. aiimP) jenny Splendid fDJ. J. Hainc.4-8-9 . P. Win ?i ,r .7 a 5 nl « fD ' 8 > Haneuod. 0-8-10 . B. Hop Master Craftsman |B). It. HcubIiIou. 3-8-1 __ J. Ri Showpiece, D. Kcdlh. 4-7-11 . E. Eli M, Thatr .VL ■M. Klnofihatt ^ -- 'vjihi. 4-rn .. lungwuu rj^HX^ i2Hi l o» w " k - NMrty Now * 7 - 1 s 420 STEVENTON HANDICAP (£1,499:15m) " ■ <?:•' Tr'* 1 '* son (DI,*. M. r.*:e. Or 10-0 .. J. Rt V9= A”™ Um.no CB>. C. Hativnod. A-0-9 -•.:, Z. Eld J2J4- 30-3000 -JJre. CCrO-J. H. Bingrave. 10-7-11 .. S. Hajiuoiu 6Uo 100-100 . Mount PcJlc, P. Artlmr. 4-7-3 . R. Cuts 11-10 Ltmiine, -5-1 Bright ITru. 4-1 Mount PrUc. 7-1 TTusl's Soli. Newbury, selections ' By Our Racing Correspondent ' 2.0 Rover’s Day. 2.30 Sir CJiris. 3.0 CHOKWARO is specially iO mended. 3.30 Shoe. 4.0 Carriage Way. 4.30 Limune. By Our Neivmarkcr Cun-eypondeni 2.0 Belt and Brace». 3.0 Meislenrioger, 3.30 Blue 1 Promise. Chester programme Jr ny 5.1.5 »r. 20. ECCH1NSWELL STAKES i Dir II: 2-y-o iii.urtea-.: VI.I.1H; nl.. Super Jack, uper Jack, b r. by m.iLinov— Dcrd • W.- GntuuyT., ->.ti K. P. Tomlin-,. !-Vw. b Sierte .. I P. H. F.ilmonrls. l-lvw. b Balder&ione T.»Li| ' 4 «Us drci .. -314 . 51. a. iiiisa, * . a. 1-one. G. u. Arnold and L. K. W'atk-r >11.1 not bai. J. E, Lmburer. l-b-w. b Higgs . . • 0 11 . W. W. S’-lvcv.' qoi out . . 12 . f all, or ^wicK-CTa: 1—7. 2—50 W. \V. Daniel, not oul £vnas *B ?i Soiond Inning* ■A. Jones, b L'ndonrood J. A. Hoptlns. e and b Johnson ». J. LL>i-d. l-b-w. b Lndrrwuod R. C. Onipng. l-b-w. b Rnwo .. G. Richards, c Tavani. b Lirulirf wood P. D- Swan, c AsU. b. Johnson M. J. ucwdiyn. c Woolincr. b JotUtTOI 'l. A. Noah, b Johnson .. 8. W. Jones, not out . . A. E.ConDo. c Tuvalu, h .lohnion A. H. Wilkins, c Wool bi or. b Johnson , . , , Extra* ib 3. l-b -I, -w 1, n-b j WARWICKSHIRE-. First Innings. ITT. 1G. w. Hutnpaga do, R. J. UiiUon •t for 3'. 1. Second Innings □ . L. Amiss, c HaiQec. b CoIUrgo 25 V. D. Smith, l-b-w. b Hadlea IT R. N. Abberley, b Hadlee . . So *J. wtiUchouse. c Edgar, b turtle.. .. _.. ... 28 . G- W . . Humpage. c Thomson, b Colli noo .. ., .. 2S A. I. KaUicharran. b Hadlee .. 5 P. R. Oliver, l-b-w. b Hadlee . . a □. J. Brawn, not out . . . . 2 S. P. Perryman, ran oat .. .5 n. n. D Uim*. b lladleo ... 3 C, Clifford, b if.)dice . . .. O Esins t l-b 9. n-b . .I t Portsmouth Sussex are still without a cham¬ pionship win after Hampshire abandoned the task of chasing 241 ia 195 minutes. Imran Khan was top scorer id Sussex’s 214 for four with an unbearen 62 and Parker hit six boundaries in scoring 60. Hampshire’s opener, Gordon Greenidge, led the Hampshire . reply.with 3 brisk . 28 . including.aj six off Arnold and fire fonrs. But ohee he was out ■ the Hampshire challenge subsided .' despite a season's best 63 from Rice, which included 10 boundaries. When' . play ended with seven of the remaining 20 overs Hampshire had reached 125 for foor. Total IV wl;B> ., ..120 TALL OT WTCKEIS: J->8. 2-So. i A il. 4 W*. 5 ■ 6H. t>—IO. T—IQ.-,. -lL-J. -.1-IOU. flow LING: SIcv-pD^on. l*.— q-j r:. “—■’—1 ~—o: Soml/vm. -jj — J 1 *—•> rl “Is Rlc-i. IO— I i■ rou. —0. TrvmleH. ii fi lft—o. ■BOWLING: _Hlng*. 7—2—-Cl—l: B&nrh. 1 . 0 7—li : HJbtgworth. M—0 —51—0: Slnilc, IH7—? i US 5 ; B.il- dori[nni>. 1 J—T, 5! i — 5. • Flrsr . Innings. ■ Imran i.inn ■» for 41 1»*> iliipire*" r^ R 1 . c-ood-iu and P. U. Wlohl. Derbyshire v"Nortfiarifs Second Inning* j' S' c •> Imran n iV r n5™- w ’IS’ 1 *- »> Phlllinv>n n. 11. ruracr. r Vi-jcb, b inir.in N - r f-*2K' e f'jniPNOB, b Waller - t * l| hp». no I out Lstras -hi. |.|, n .|, y ( 1 1 : M. L. Thom.i«; 1 -Jlj. | Young Go n era 11 on fi. Starkey i”.* Tj-. > 2 RfJJt Jim .... 15. IViMjT 1 • -.j • 3 ALSO P.VN- .5.-J II,.. i-Jui.-.in. 4-1 , Cirr-rl Patch. 1'41 In. CO-i I...II | I L--.1 ArhunJ. B.illy rji-t. Huunv bun. | day. Glitter Star. Grid. Liril p:r-ir-. I Natlenllb*. nie- SUrt-r. R.icl. Sru'ndU'c-:i. ! ' 1 run. | TOTE.' Win. £2 l--; nl.ic«. “Cn. Jin. 1 Wg: dual forcuiaM. —5.7n n. SwV.l. al Fmoih. JI. '..I. lniln 1 1. 10TL DOITRI.E: P.irr.il |- as lib n. flugliia N«kl. 744.10. 1TJEIILI ; King of Sii.iln. .'Ildrti-.-lon S.1111. Luiibrtd - 4 fjL-l'iire. IW'.R'i. nOI.TILi: nr.iL rOKEi.-.tST. C3.SO. PLAftl.-pn I, hicknnt not won. pool r.inteu lurw.irrt. 04..V1. 13 PtILFORD STAKES (2-y-o : £1,096 : 7f) O Avanll Carlo. N. i^JlIaghan, t'-U . 0 Coys Division, "P. Iloughlon. ,1 -U. __Capital Caines, fl. Murphy, '-u .. 0030 Dlbbinsdalo. Lad (B), I:. . Cr&sSJc-y. .. 00040 Park Joi, r. RjrraR. li'.j.... O Pr>mside <B). v !ta.dlng a -Uisi. M-u ... 03 Tclsmou. I>. MIK-hell. 0-u ... -225 T °p or .»*« Charts (Bl. B. H1»li; *.-0 _ „, ' Du osier's Cream (Bl. r. r-.iurhurjl. E-Jl .. 044 °40 Lady Chr> Pal. B. Hu'llnshr.id. G-IX _ 00 My Carl ad. M. Sal.unan. ■ 8-X1 . _9 Oytton Beany, J. Hrm: B-ll . . 2034 PBdZOia. M. W*.. Guli-nt). B-ll .. . P. Young . . p. walmv ... J. UTO-. - K. Dalles-J- ’.'.Y.Y ti: 'oantcl Hamilton Park at Derry Tbl.il 1 4 Wfcl, Dcrtatoirc ■ 7pu»i draw wllh NorUi- araatoi-hlre- < 1j. : j; 1 ' H N St ?^,SS2 r - L -'- M- Triinlofi. -J. W. W S, S fc7(' no. 3o VVn ~ ,n Todav‘s cricket 3 IM 43.. ■ Si-ra-ul idnlrtga ' •C. Cooh. b Klntm' • 69 W". Larl.lns. -c H.imy-Walkcr. b ;.v>c trfin* j . . - - . ». 011 D. S- Stt-yc. ncu out ■ ..i i>. ifS A. J. Lath b. not oat .... .. Xu». -b 1 . l-*i 3. n-b 11 . , - r -^ j4. Ql'iBTCICT-. I- „ I'm ran. 1.5—1—u_j. V™*; —o: hum. *— e.4o: 1 . Sir Mlchnel I---3■. _-. n>-gal Rail 1 ri-1 ■ : i. Ils-ii - M.i'o.ii- ,7-1 1. Double niiwm. u -( |4\. Iu ran. 7J.0: 1. Workshop «-I-1T • j, llij--- fngt 1.55-1 ■: 5. Go-C.-llir ill-|,. ran. -■I Ton Ilf Ih- Chan:. 7-2 PodJola'. -i-2 Tolsuiuss. 7.1 i. Diil^ion. 12-1 Dun,ii.T-s Crem, ,n-x Dlbblusdale ■Hi .-ry E. JoMWS C. fiedesj® .T. m - A. coorig . r. ifortR - ....... C. -Mosj. 1 Lutr Cbrwffll* Lad. Part; 2.45 ECCLESTON STAKES 12-y-o : £1,431 : 6f) « 1 Pearlrscent, p. .WjlVi\n. ->-l> .. -t 01 Laldheer (BJ. R .Vnn: irtinn. 8-11 ■ 3012 Mitsnki.- K. llniiln: head. i,-H .. I'.i i: -.. T.' '!«• ^03 Oysion Ejiales. J. Merry. '8-6 . . ..P. K-aWMJ 11 040 Una Yoona. ,J. lictrivll. 8-6 .. K. DarfeT-fl 1‘iui 1 Vapoi' 11 J1 ' 1 L * ,l, « ,t "T. 4-1 mILhuKI. 13*3 Oysion ■ EsUrcs,. - F. A J 3.IS CIIESTER IIA\’DiC;VP \ £3.596 : 2im 97yd) J ! 111-121 Assured (Cj. 11. candy. G-o-7 ... p.- Waldron Aropahos. H. I|«|t-.. 3-8-2 .. 1' Joliniun Snow-Star, J. f>-!hr-!l. .5-7-7 ...‘..If. H. SwUHnlril - 7—25^'; PhiiUp. 7 5«5. I. PrlDUcra/l Bov "i-nfii [i-.-i- 2. IMlK/.riin M l-l.: .1. M,js i:i:.-j : 7-4i. 4 ran. [)(i|Li| rt;d nuL inn. Phriniimn? A L ' ° tUu ^ <?1 " ■ H.5- 1. Thora.inby > 5-1 ■ ; 2, i5ol-»- hlB-. Priile -4-11: n.mI,] 1- Bixiif '100-30'. KiilmUw, Tt-2 uv. ii r.m. . Touj .. .. .. ijq 1-ILL OF WICKITTS; T—21. 2—52. 5—33. 4—52. •> —-j2. 7—>41,. 8—11*. O —100: 10—140. Total . . , , . . 183 FALL Or WTCKETS: 1—2d. 2—69. 5—136. J—161. 5—160. 6—175. 7—178, J—XR1. /_*—H«. 10—1«0. UOlfUNG: Jarils. 2.—u—1—0: W»sl*rr-t. J—1—15—ti; L’ n JP"wn-*d. 2 0 — 8—S i—5: • Jnhnsun. 21.2—5— t»4—o: Rowe. £>—2—21—1. BOWLING: Hadlpo. 34—1—-77—7: Colllngp. 14—2—46—2: Thomson. 8—2—21—0: Congdon. y —1—27—U. KENT; Him Innings .'21 tt for « line -Aslf Ir.bai 51; A. B. Ullklns 4 for 61. Second Innings J R A. Wonlmar. c Hoptlnt. b Lloyd -TT < c.. J. c. Rowe, l-b-w. b unaans .. in C. J. T-ivarO. net out ... .. QO •Aslf inbai c and b Swart .. 6- -A. L- • K. L'aiham, -c fi. Jones, b 5>v«J. -- - * - .. 2 I. N. Sheobrnl. no: oni .. .. fi.i « E?.ir>s 'l-b f>. n-b 5i ... .. TI >11 IK Total' < 4 -rltls 1 . . 226 G. V. Johnson- B. VT. mils. P. It. Gownion. 3- L. I'nrt.-nvood and K. B. S. Jarvis did not bal. M-, I FILL-OF WTCKETS: 5-rO. . 5—101. -- Nash. COV.T.ING: Cbnllc. n—D—CP—o: BTilins. S—1 —. j'l-i: Lloyd. 14-— X —o£—1. Swart. 1 2 —'2 t; Richard!.. 5.4—1—17 J. Unip'njs: W. L. ' Budd and C. Cook. NEW ZEALANDERS! FliV.1 Innlnqs: 41-1 for 1 ilr-: in. C. Congdon 1JU uni mil- J- M. PJrfcrr. 100 not nut. ti. P. HnWurth 1i5. J. O. Wrlohl 61 1 . Lfmpbvs: H. D. Bird and R. J. Meyer. PRUDENTIAL TROPHY 1 10.45 |n 7 15| SCJI^RROROL'G H: Engtand v M«-w COUNTY CHA M PIONSHIP COinil.RSTT.li; Essex V WjrwIefcshiiT j ii.o 1.1 6 %n» SM'A Y^-V f GWiTnornan v Mldrflesr^ BaiSTOL- r-loun.-6tcrshlrr v Sussex 10 7 n> >ORTi:a%;pto\: Northmpionshire v , Tori fMr" 111.0 |o 6.3(li NO 11 i.NGHiMr Xottimhamafim • v l.-utrj.lilnj /Jt.O in 6..>0' T.M-^TVtM. somsrsin v Leicestershire 11. <1 to T.O: Torai i2 wets deci•• P. irHWv. t. J. Yard ley. n. r., hiu:amy. surfru Njwa.-. 'li. Snarji. T. m. LamD and B. I. Grlfilltrs dirt Trgl bal, FALL OF WICKCTS: 1—105. .2— ,’Ul COWLING, rimdrid-. 1.5—«—— Ci; wsnepr. 1 i—o—6I —'>■ nartni*- a—2—2—0: seller. o—lu—0; AmV-raon. 14 — 3 —do—1: Kitmi-tj. 25—5—Til—1: Harvey, loiter. R—.5— — Notts v Worcestershire , . AT XEHARK. »i^’ lurct, ) ,wsWp 'f i'10pl*r seat' Not- Utinnanivl.lr* 15, i.y / .c- rS.‘. • . D j\ V ? H CE r ST T. R ^" , . e: J-KM , Innings. r,j* u „ U i? 75- J’. A- Noil rar K f** 1 : *-' T » 411.1 2»T. Coorirr j i . ■ i . Tunnkliire. 2—is—11-1-0. While. 50— SftfeW 2 i in;^“— Cjf - Chester 6.50- *. Trrci Belle -li.-l. 2 (Janyim-n- ■ h ■«-!». .5. 1 ■.. ■ T-l V ililenrild A-J. ln. 7-2 W- . I I r.m. i...5j: 1. Bing Lady ' 5-1 ■. s.iffiy Cun.iin ■ 4-di: 5. JUvnr- .an-l., : rail. 7.20. 1. Prince of Pleasure 1 7-2 >: ( SwanMnlur .j.t f.ivi: i. MorLir 1 7-1 .. il rail. ! ID 0-11123 32-1104 20141 002240 2334-03 40-1211 -:i A Hi vo. H. Mllriif.1l. y-T-.T MlgehUo. M. Nj-sglilnn. 6-7-7 Hoperul Bloom. W F.lscy "i-7-7 •I. iViiriaclio, 4-7-7 PitMirtne. l-ain'd -5-1 Ar.*- I'U-,. -.i-u Passerine, t>-i Auira. 12-1 Mlijelcl’o. -1.1-1 Ho;iplul rilo’om. Podr/giloa 5 JC. ' C. • KCCtOSlOP K. Darted- 6 10-1 Snow* 3.4-5 CITY WALL H.\NDTCAP <£1,SL6 : 60 Pay Roll IO.B). I. LThertnqton, 5-9-7.. T. !*•* I Don’t Kind IQ). J. B-.-rr:-. d-'ijj ... P. \VjUM Lucky Lark iCD.Bt. M. W. turfbr ... . C. MOW Burglarv Boy. L Uarralt. 4-8-1 . E JohnsOi Ratamalae. D -.l.Tt,. 1-7-13 .... — . DlnLum Chirr (D». II. M.-.»u. ’-7-12 . . TT 1 Moon's Lali. 1?. HoI’lruJir.1,1. .K. l>R(i' , V J Government Band- M. ' MU^ino. 5-7-7 .. Roschclia, D. i»!ani. 1-7-7 .. ““ \l!n>l 5-1 P.i 1- rfnll. Dlnt.MTTl (3ifi-r. 13-2 Kalsmaar. 1' 1 1-1 m-.i.ii'.. La-.,. CriimiinBl Uonfl. l«i-l ollicrs. 000201 J3244S OOOOOr. oaiopn 432423 OO-nnai 0-40100 OC-3302 000-000 ■- : I n,.n‘ RllMljl « l’..,'-. 1 i THE gv\|.: Surrey v llauunlilcc -'11.0 to (J.TOi DERBYSHIRE- TlrW Inninss. 27" fiu- f>-d--c r t> Miller "1. P. ti. KItm-b KT. H. Cjnv.YlglH 1.61. ,-.S°ni ,N< *HAMSH|RE: Flrsi Jnnhif n. PaTrl 1 ror J -- D N. County championship - P tt I. D DIO Rill PM Kent 111 1.5 *■» .5 l 2" 4ij lfi-5 ■E.WX lij i 15 7 4 1 M -40 157 vsrhi i I2i 15 «* r. *J 57 3« l-ir Someni.-L I4i 15 " 5 a 27 43 14 1 Midrfr III 1- A 4 36 44 1IH Noils (17i- 12 -5 R 5 57 41 IIS Leics (3* 13 5 7 2 55 57 lOu Lines i lo ■ 12 4 .*» 15 IU Glaues (51 12 .j 4 -4 50 5J i lOl 13 Ij .5 |u -J8 BA Slwr..-y lI4i:12 2 5 5 21 57 82 Hants 111 1 12 2 4 -*i 25 .55 HO Derby i7> 1.5 2 5 6 17 An a») Derby -U’orCJ 11 ■>» 12. 1 ■ H 50 . 1 Li NUiana ,1«I r, 1 H .5 27.51 7.5 r.Lixn 1 141 12 I* S -5 24 52 riH Simses 181 12 n 7 .5 23 54 37 1M77 poslUor L s in brafleL: WXntCFSnnai: U'orreetoraMrg v Derby shire * 11.0 to -:..30i MINOR COUNTIES | HEVLOW: Bnlfcrdshlr* v Cambridge- ■■hire RFIDING: Berkshire v Bucklnnham- sldrc Tomorrow JOHN PLAYER LEAGUE '2 fl IO -j 401 COLCHESTER: Essex v \\',-ir.ri'kshlre SWANSFA: Clam organ v MlEllms RR IST OI.: Glouccslerihlrp v Sh->slx NOT nNGHVU: . No Uing bams hire v LancasVrr GLASro?.i:L-RY: Soni«n«i v Lelcestcr- -*un> THE OVAL: Surrey r RamoOUr? WORCESTER: WorccsJmblni V Derby- ’.lire MINOR COUNTIES !lE\U)tt: Dedfordshlre v Cambridge- •HUT » Bl TS.shlnr v Buckln-ilwm^lilrr PEN HIT}|; Cuiuberbmd v rjuriijm HELSTON": Pprnw.ill v Ormli Second innings HUI. r Cook, b stnoia .. . n I.. S. Anderson, c and ti 5jcrle 7 F. S Kirsten, e Yarffley, R A. uiTnb .. .. 22 •■j:. 0. liariOW. no! nui .. .. lu G. Miller, no! oul.. E-ora. ib 5. u-li 1 Tafal Wkb'i . . . . nl • A. J. iJdj-vi-r-taalLer. It. Cnrt- VT!.,ht. .D. U. I -dw. A. Met lor, M. Htndntk and R. C. wbircr did not bK. .‘I'ALt OF WTCKETS 1—15. 2—GH. 5—uO. . non-LDfC: Sartre j. I—5—2—n ; CrllUhs. J—a—1—O: WllhO'. 7—5— ^—5: a«k!. 1J—8 — GO—C: WUKam.1. i—j—IO—u: T. M Lamb. J—1—Ji .—P: Lirtuns. 5 - i --j- o: A. j. Lamb. 1—0—1—1. t'p t T rtre s: J. 1. Griipp and J. vnn Paid d far' in,, r li—«-. S rce ^' 1 ‘nPinqi o ■ a vununid. b WjUar n ti- r.' U .-|.S. 0, ?’' rml - h I'rtibteuii F H-lLl-llMn. l> i:iiford r '.V. HJ'-’N l W-il.-un. b P3I.-I ■i- ti Uircrh u dfrord .. ■I. .1. biiiAdlry. l-U-w b CHCord 7, 'D-orve|).'; i,,P - e OVUM b H 'ctf'rnr. l | ""■f IUTP- f Hw'.phrics.'b *D- N. rrt-nch. not am ” .'-I K. CoLjwsr. t. D’bUvcln.! b Ouiord D. R. no^ivt, c Ornirod. b D'Oilvhira . Fjtira.-- < b 3. t-B i. w 1. n-b 3 > 7 . vi I. ei feci ni.n r.n ■. 2 . ! 4.15 CASTLE HANDICAP f3-y-o : £1.883 : 7f 122yd) ir»-L'i: 1. Salurui it -2 • n r.m. I 2 3ti-202o Swing Bridge (B), Tbnnuoti Jot.cj. I)- 1 ) .... - U*usc Guard IB). R. .Ir'.ii-.rnr.g. 3-7 . ■J 2^sSi2 2inn7. I!. ll.i||ln,be.irt. i:-2 .. - --- . ■ C'rn- Play Wllh Me. V. C-illaghan. 7-2.. - L- Je, }' n £5 • o-ooooo Pafcpao (c.&), t. i.iirliurt. 7 -u . c KwWtw 1 I,,?f*.J‘•'“r.l. "- J dirt'iv. 100-5*1 Swing flrldye. j 1-2 Como -Miy \!tSA > K. Darler -S -- T. ITvs 17 27 20 J I G-l T Fifth win expected Atlantic Venture seeks u fiftii win in 33 djy> in toe Turnherr> HamliCdf. at Ayr «n Monday. Edtvnrd Hide ha% too mount. On (he Siime c.*rd. Bri-EJeii .irrrmp>« iourto vkiury in too Rnjelie Handicap, .mil (lie Royal A'crr yin Her. Lu Alns-s. gen;s fur a third win in the Tcnncnr Tropliv. I". ALOI-OKD STAKES l£1.067 : lm 3f 8Syd) 0-34300 ’ • 00-03 C33 23-023.3 OOUOO -J S I’lill'ln . .. IU-1 I11.:-Kp>ss. I I-1 The Ceirlog. p'"lfn|iaii. '5"-a-ri’ V.’.’.’.’.’.’.’.’.’.’.V. c .. ntrtff Will Cunnecird (EJ. I:. --lunihi-. 3-K-5 J- I'5fi-5u .Mb nl. ‘-2 Ihf Co'ring. 11-2 Veniurus S-l min.'.- Roll. J*»-l Well Cormccit'd. Tolal. FAIJ. or liTCKKTS: l— u. a n—' Vi. .1—0*1. •>—7h 6—tiS. 7- H—115. r <—1G'-. IrWIAO. Piggott rides at Ayr Loicr Piggoit HIl-s up in Ayr nn Monday to ride the Vortouni- D. J. Hdl(Yard and D. O. 1 Chester selections , . J 1 5*.’ Our Racing Sraff ' bcrbnd Plate runner-up Hnllodn ! 2.13 Buys Dni-jon. 2.4S Pcarlcscent far Fred Rim ell iu the L12.m j 4.15 Stnn 3 Bridge. 4.4S cSrlo- Ten mint W.imficap Tmphy. M«cn(t Llitid^. ' By Our Newmarket Curro>ipondcni , --IS At.ir.ii Carlo. 2.4a LaliirHifir. 4.13 Swing Bridge. .15 Assuredi 3.4a Piiy BoD nrJe lUllostri tn victory at Snn- tluwTi Park last October. I THE TIMES SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 23 \it \ improved Fair Top is the most in Magnet Cup , M ichael Seelv • \ J'v centre of tie racing stage yr.AVr- oorta tills if rtm nnn- A -a W^acent 'afternoon's -snort is ;i f. : at York, where the V. v.;' c ":ii;i races carry, a.total of. -i.jiv', :! in"* added money.. The v : . . ‘-i fi* v*fit is tiie £12,300 John Magnet Cup. Peleid, Take :.;v lt V r and JoHy were chai- ' - .. 5 Pr- 1 '^ chree-vear-olds who won '-ihe and quarter handicap in \y.y i'.V. V^ve seasons. Today Peieid;s BHl Elsey. can capture \:i ". Hi' oveied trophy with another j *i same afic*group. ‘Fair Top. •• %-;!'■ one-mile - Cedi - Frail '^’i^cap at Haydrck Park in ‘ nj - 7 ^ pair Top was purpaced in ’ 1 3, i £ -ariy stages.- • Bowever, his •" :-L-~ v -3« told io the final wo fur - a ,A and -the. grey colt - beat .. ^Ana by-a. comfortable two Prevented by a mipor_set-- from tackling Homing- ,ia - .J^Vass .Clubmen's Handicap on. .or r . ''"'■Nine course, the High'Top - °' N . C ... was' tfc'en withdrawn from ■. because cf the firm ground. ~ ‘ '.'... . l; , 7 oould not he troubled by 'to- " A going, which an'the jockeys ■'»j yesterday reported "as - .per-- usual- this U o~ wide open William Hills make Fair Fluelleo "and "Fool’s Mate favourites ar 4 to l. Floenen d a short-priced favourite I iis race" last year, but never j much emhisiasm and was unplaced 'behind Air Trouper. A talented individual at - bis best, Harry Wragg’s five-year-old showed his latent ability when chasing borne Gunner B in the . Prince of Woles Stakes at the royal meeting.. Henry Cecil’s Fool's Mare is a Honhcartcd ■character who has won several good. handicaps under big weights In the past three seasons. But the seven-year-old ran sluggishly be¬ hind Billion in the Bcssbarough Stakes at. Ascot. Town and Country and n Padrone'must also be considered. Town and Country carried a Sib penalty for his galiar.r defeat of Le Soleli in the Newbury Sum¬ mer Cud. The four-yeir old repre¬ sents Dick Hern, who woo this race -two years ago with Bold Pirate. D Padrone captured the Estel Handicap at Goodwood in 1976 Tor John Sutcliffe and, judged by the style in which the fivc-year-old finished wJicn third to Lucenr at Sundown Park last week, he could be the pick or the week. However, 1 shall still stand by the improving Fair Top. With Sutcliffe’s stable running Into form, Silver Stee 1 could also .be well treated in tbc supporting £4.500 Harp Lager Handicap (2.15). A course specialist, Silver Steel will be better sotted by this afternoon’s easier surface than by the firm grnund on which -he ran at Ascot- Hero’s Homing carries the enormous weight fui a three- year-old of 951 121 b. Hf has been ;o convincing in bis two victories at Haydock Park that 1 take Hom¬ ing to continue bis trainer’s run of success by beating Silver Steel and the Hunt Cup winner. Fear Naught. In the John Courage Stakes f 1.43> the West Ilslcy trainer runs Tom Egurton’j newcomer. Head Huntress. But 1 am going for another unraced filly. Robert Sangster’s Yes Please, who U a half-sister to several useful win¬ ners. At Ayr. James Bethel! can land a doubir with Abercata, who can repeat last season’s vicrorv in the £5.00G .lue Coral Handicap (2.301 and with Musical Prince In tbc Clyde Coast Handicap (2.0). Twice a winner on the track, Abercata will have a.job to beat such as Charta Pearl, Referendum and Steel City, but may be equal to tbc task. Ernie Johnson had an unfor¬ tunate afternoon at York yester¬ day. First of all the lightweight jockey could finiii) only fourth to the 16 to 1 winner, KJngshcrc, on the 4 to 9 favourite. Kobloys, In the Black Duck Stakes. Barry Hill’s highlv thought of rwo-year- old was struggling to go the early pace, and when be started to find his stride Nobloys’s path was barred by a wall of horses. The cwo-ycar-otd's owner, Daony Schwarz, must to a tough charac¬ ter. jama Hunt will gain most from weights u Desmond Stonehain- ch RadnST-eorrespondent ' July 14 •„••• •. ly_ : •Hina Hunt; who faded to &tay i flnJshinff fourth w-Sbiriev its. in the. ‘Epsom Derby, hi election to -win Sunday's 10 ng Prix - Eugene' Adam"* at -Cloud-'.' Pyjama Hunt, who not won / this.. season,.. is favonrtd by the" weights. „je same applies to Pevero. ;c Head Is confident that Gay de wHT do -.well." and - Rnsti- is an ether with a serious ce. Tbe : : English visitor, id Gardens, must'give weight to-all his opponents and will do well to be. placed. Previous to running in Eng¬ land. Pyjama Hunt was beaten a length by A cam as in the Prix Lupin, and that liue of form is tbe best in-France. The colt also finished third to Nishaponr and ftusticafo in tbe Poule d’Essai des Poulains (French 2.000 Guineas). Pcvero. .after being thought a likely classic prospect, has had a most disappointing season, bur I think it noteworthy that his owner, Gerald Oldham, preferred Sunday's race to the Irish Sweeps Derby. Last season, Pevcro fin¬ ished fifth to Acamas in the Prix du Jockey Club, and earlier this reason was bogged down in the mud in the Prix Hocquart.' Gay Mccenc is a lightly raced son of Vaguely Noble. He began the year by taking the Prix dc Guichc and then ran fourth in the Prix Lupin. There is a lot of con¬ fidence behind Gay Meccne, who has been tenderly handled by his trainer. As Alec Head promised. Mid¬ shipman galloped . his opponents into the ground, and won today's Prix Maurice de Nieuil at Saint- Cloud at tiie generous odds of nearly 8-1. ■na-eequarters of a lengdi away second came Turvillc. Fair Salinia should act even better at Curragh From an Irish Racing Correspondent Dublin. July 14 Only two fillies, Altesse Royajc and Juliette BJarocy. have succeeded in completing lhe English Oaks and Irish Guinness Oaks double although upwards of half a dozen have made »'»* attempt. This underlines the formidable task facing Fair Salima in tomorrew eftemtun's renewal of the prL-mi'-e lrisj filly classic at the Curragh. One factor in favour of Fair Saliniu Is that she trill find this fair galloping track a much more suitable spot on which to display her talents than the ups and downs nf Epsom which got her. so unbalanced. in rhe final furlong though when Fair Salinia met the rising ground she turned on tbc brilliant speed previously shown over shorter distances and swooping down overhauled the Freoch- rrained favourite, Dancing Maid, by a short head. Dancing Maid has declined the opportunity of a rematch but the Peter Walwyn trained Stmi, who had been a length and a half in arrears in third place, is having another go. Suni was the stable neglected at Epsom and. like the winner she, too, was doing her best work at the finish. Tbc home contingent is headed by Keito in the colours of the Earl of Granard, who successfully plundered the Ribblesdale Stakes with RelXo at Royal Ascot when defeating Be Sweet by two and a half lengths. Rclfo stays really well and there- ia an question about her ability to act on fast ground. IRISH CLUINNESS OAKS >i-Va.7gS. I ' : m ■ 1U Bold Carr-ss. >i-0 .J. I ton 2 ', - . Cherry Hinton -- 0-0 I.. JM.juou aot lafr&lillria >.>-0 .... t!. aui.'.vy Oou l_dv Pdviova. v-0. — <il l l«>l;a. 0-0 .......... Ll. l:oct.» ,wl Whmljnlc. 0-0 . — 222 Ittmc Abotp. y-Ci .... r. Murphy (121 Rnycan. 0-0 . — 23.7 s.vncu Rojo, s -0 . — C 20 SorhUj. 0-0 . R. Carrult A 21 Stwru Krgij-iz '-0 W. &winl»ui-n 217 Sunl. o-o . r». LddL-py UOI Twlllqhl Ilnur. >'-tJ M. Phiili'p.y'iln 210 il’KVtft Love. V-0 .. G. M;GiMlh .irk programme evision (/BA) : 1.45 f 2.15 and 2.45 races] JOHN COURAGE STAKES (2-y-o filiies j £3,054 : Sf) M TO Qultabtin'i Streak (C). M. H. Easiwby. B-lo .... M. Birch 7. Kantado. P. hohin. 8-8 . C. Dwyvr 2 Head Huntreca.-W. Hern. 7-12 . Xf. Carton Vos Pease. □. Hills. 7-lv . J. t os Pease, □. Hills. 7-lv . J. BliMSdale 1 > Kanudo. -5-1 Head Huntress. 4-1 Ves Please. 8-1 Quibbling streak. HARP LAGER HANDICAP (£3,429 : lmi D0412T Homing (E.C>. W. Hern. 3-->-12. . _ _ 342111 .Poor Naught (D), J. tthrainoLon. 4-M-3.M. Wiphbm 3 _ 3044-00 Siwer Steol rB.cO). J. SulclUic. 6-8-9 . K- Fu\- 4 302300 KHtMiron (C.D1. J. W. Walls. 7-H-v. I. LtTWe 5 4-3043? Youaa Bob (O'. J. -tuuui. .J. nisa*>.lalc 2 t Fear Naught. 0-4- Homing. 9-2 Young Boh. h-l Klihairon. io-i silver IV. Corson 1 JOHN SMITH’S Im 2lfl" 021420 Pool’s Halo, ' H. C«rll. 7-9- Kusiun. ii. Wrang. 3-M-7 .. Town and Country (3J. W. nson. 5-H-9 V kli MAGNET CUP (Handicap : £9,968: Fra nil*. J: . Pine. Blue (CD). V. \ 42-OOL2. 34-2031- 000412 114100 40-0310 011-00 3701 __ . _ r . .. ... 000003 II PBdrona. J. SmcUir-i. 6-7-T I Flueltoa. -1-1 ralr Top. 5-1 Fool’s Mote iin. iw-j Franlde. lu-i Tine Blue. Errols Hern. 4-8-jr, kih. 5-a-a. Hew Lane. M. H. Easier by. t-B-j . M. Bird Effulgence, )[. "Pnca.- -k-"-! . S. Salmoi Fair Top, IV E’sro. .7-7-1 1 ... J. tovi .. . E Hide .. G. Lc>. It h. Cir'on 4 nioaottolc P. Cock r.irdi nwB Top. 5-1 Fool’s Mote. 11-2 fl Podrone. 2-i Tine Blue, Effulgence. 14-1 Ni-u- Lone. ft. To* .~. *3-1 Town and JERVAULX STAKES (3-y-o : £2,498 : ljm) Cau-We-Tetl. M. Comaclio. .. J.- Hlcasdoie 3 Kir. D. Jl ax bury. ’>-n .... P. Cook fSSr'Fraa W (B;' 9-U_.— r. .. G. LcnW 00-0 00030 10000-0 2000-03 000-99" 0-0 002004 0014-00 00-00 1UW. 0-0 'III,. 9-0 . _ w. Carson .. _. _ _ _ ._ ., k. Lusui Jay Wood. D. Ancfl. a -11 .. V Wharton 5 Lobcla. C. Brt’HUn. K-ll . L-. fUtle Nlfly (BJ, S. Norton. 8-11 .■ M. Rood 7 Duo-Demsr,_J TluGerald. B-ll - ncll. l Sugar free. -Scotsman. Ice. 4-1 Kl>. o-i Jav Wood. 10-1 Lobola, 12 - 1 - i FRiARGATE STAKES l2-y-o r £2,347 : 5f) 10120 Prorer Madam (B.CD). P. Asqulih. 8-1" 1 Mlsi Zadlg (DJ. B Hills. Coast - To Coast, "Drays I O . Rlodoro, C. Brittain, P. Asquith. 8-B . Smith" 8*4 8-4 . S Porks J. .Blea- uio w. Cw*nn E. Hide i-E Miss Zauig. 2-1 Proper Madam, 7-2 Rlvooro. 4-1 Uoasi u> Ccnu>i. .; FOUNTADNS STAKES (3-v-o maidens : £2,511: lim) 00-03 Bravo, H. Wragp. 9-U . IV. Carson 1 q-M3.-Chacao. B.’ Ranhiiry.- 9-0^--..' P. Co.jI. 3 304-2 Muir Sheik. J. H-9son.-9-0 . J. Biga,iL’e 6 „ !tS£. OlrroiHos. B. Hobbs. 9-6 .G. Lewis 2 0 - 2 J 2 O cair cf Man. b. HlUa. 8 -u . E. Hide 7 OO- Snow Path, P. .Wlgham. 8 - 11 .. M. Wlghtm .7 4 002 . Trawlanda, VV. Elsey. a-ii .. -MT Birch b 4 C"1f or-Man. 100-30 Bravo. 4-t Trapalunda. 1-7-2 Olvmpioa, g.j Gulf s, 12-1 oihers- 3 FISHERGATE HANDICAP (3-y-o : £3,054 : $f) .110012 Manor F jib Boy (D 1 , V. O'Gorman. 9-7 .... IV. fi'Uorm.in .7 101-001 Cold Song I CD). IV. Gddj], 8 -U . D. V,,’^ ri 031121 Enipsror s Shadow (CD), R. Hi.Ulmshood. 8-3 \V. Wlqham o 1 — Vboeer-. M- H- Eairtcrljy. 7-4 .K.. Hudamn 7 J 01-0004 Magqyddniur (Dt, M. W. basteroy. 7-1 .... L. C. Paries 3 010434. Jawhara fBJ. W IVhJtton .7-0 . H. Fox 2 •i wiDcror's Shadow, o-1 Manor Firm Bo-. 7--_ Oo.d Song. 6-1 Maggydnmua. outers. irk sdectipas pnr Racing Staff ■ Yes Please. ■ 2;15 Homing. 2.45 FAIR TOP is specially recom- ided. 3.1S Scotsman Ice. 3.45 Proper Madam. 4.15 Calf of Man. * Maggydamas. Our Newnurket Correspondent » Fluellen.’ 3.15 Stotsmim Ice. 3.45 Riodoro. 4.15 Olympics. 4.45 nor Farm Roy. g. nui-n-ji.1 ... p. run. G. Gain*!- 5 Ayr programme 1 Television (IBA i: J.30. 2.0 and 2.30 races] 130 GOAT FELL STAKES (3-y-o : £1,052 : lm 5f) 2 0 Californian. C- Thornton. °-0 . P- ‘KoUohcr .7 ■3 4300-00 Merchantman, S. IVjInvnoh:. £'-0 . — 1 6 ooaobo Neronlan. U. M.mhair. 9-Ci . P. Pcfk.ns 7 ■r OOO-CHID Christmas Girl. If. Marshall. 5-11 . — S If I 0-022 Henrietta Sallr (B), J Hlndiuv. 3-11 ... 11 Monlaz, DcHJ-> Smllh. B-lj . 12 00-002 More nr Les*. M. C-imwcho. E-ll . C-4 llenrinna Roll?, fi-4 More ur Leis. 4-1 .Mcrthanuruiii. 1«J-1 Calsiorman MwiiO'. 1*'«-1 others. 2.0 CLYDE COAST HANDICAP (£1.942 : ljm) ■-. OC-O0O3 Co ill la. W. C-ra-. j . E. A-U.'r 2 ! ft 102-233 Musical Prince |DJ. J. Hu-h-a. o .-.-l . . O Oilllli W S ! 7 132103 Wlcbvfell (C-DI. .7. V. lanes 7-S-12.S. «'V 1 cr 1 i 8 O-'V'"' 1 " Cam lea House (D). IJraji Strain. -j-E-J .A. M<r::r 7 4 u 004030 Hard Held. J. Barelay. 6-T-7 . 'I. MuiUi 7 1 I.7-H Miwual Prino-. --4 Uicl.ivr' 1 . ll-l GodiM. 3-1 Canitra Houa?. 14-1 Hard Held 2.30 JOE CORAL HANDICAP i £4.635 : lm i 2 030002 Charta Peart f B.D). J. Elhcrinoton. o-’-T .... S. \»-b»|,-4 .7 j " R4--.1I11 Ahercara fC-O). .1 KMh:li. i—-7 . G, Dilfi.-.M - 0-44004 Doogail (Cl. 11. Wiilvnix. 4-8-'2. Rtcnard Hu:rhlP#Dn > 14-2031 Referendum (D). «.. Tlr-rntri. ... Kdinner ri PCOJ 22 Sierl Cily fC-D). 'I. ilniiih’.liO. 4-3-T .G '■ 2 n 03-0334 SmuVey Bear. J Hin-^n. T - v - f i .T. AMor J .7-1 Smoftcj' Bes*r. 7-2 Ahcrv.-.-!.,. 4 .1 Ghana P-arl. ■:-2 R«ierranuiM. 1J-2 Steel CMj . 8-1 bbugf.!;. 3.0 CAMPDELT01VN HANDICAP f£917 : lm) 2 0-0(1113 Dusky Warrior (B). B HvlunoM. 4- -3. — 1 | r> 0300 Rarely Equalled. P. (.Me. . M l!ob*ri* 2 i K 0-04320 Sold a Million (B). P G-B-3 . B. Jiun n ; 9 34-0000 SsvIDIa. IV. E.sov, ,Vy-o . G DUIIUdd fi 1 to OOO-aprj Ships Locker. Pcnv, Smi»h. 7-':-2 . A. Mercer 7 R , Jl Gym Slip. A..JV. .S Web-ter .7 . 11 ooooon- Coed Form. M. H. rj.'-rrh-. 7-7-17 . — T 1 .'. 000142 Llndum Parwa (D). 1 . Sllil’lno. s-7-lfl . R. SUll 4 | 5-2 Du^ki Warrior, ii-: Lmtium far-.u. l*jy-7 - 1 Sold a Million. f ‘-i: llaren Egualled. 6-1 Sevilla. 13-1 other*. 3.30 GLEN SANNOX STAKES (2-v-o : £1.216 : 7f> A Bardhcaleiaurepark (81. R. S:uaor. ’>-0 ...... Cairnle (B 1 . M W. Enst-.rby. ’.'-O . Mund of God (B), J Lthcrinrton. --U ... Just Gayle. E Weynie*. -r-u . Mr Rafferty. Donrj Smith, v-O . Rlrian Flight. IV. Mirfhalt. V-0 . Scholar’s Ring. P. Iljs7n!. l-ii . The Clansman. W. Williams. v-U . Timonel. G. tiunier. 'r -0 . Border Squaw. IV. Clay. H-ll . First In May. 5. Vainv.-rigM. 3-1 i . 11 -8 TlJnoTirl. Z-l Jatl I'jyle. t -2 llordor Squatt, £-( Cidzn flight. The Cbmnun. 16-1 eiheri. „Oo 000(1 OOO 03 000002 0002D 03 OOO .ii. f.rn 7 . . H. Outi'.Cd -. .. P. Kclle.l.-r 2 ... S. W>b-ier ■ . A. Mercrr 7 7 .. P. PerLLii U? . 3 . Jago a .. . P. MjfrtJen 11 .. M. Ilohiru b .... C. Apter .1 Mr kfUierty. l-l-l 4.0 AILS A CR.VTG HANDIC.AP (3-y-o : £2.473 : 6f) A ^JlrSS 3 Bleoame fD). G.P.-Gfraon 7-'— 2 . CJ. Uu!fi?ld 7 7 Artis I ■ Management fB). J. Ethcrtng'b.-i. T-f -6 .... O. Grai- 4 A Daulic Affair (Ol. G. Huplrr. 3-P-v ........ :.l. hohen", 7 1 Finefe Gal IC-n.R>, j. iv. wan*. 5 -k-o .A. Mercer 7 2 ^°22JU PnGv C.o«d fD). A. IV, Jon;*. . S. V.'ebater a 11 2-02142 Lunar Wind ID). W. Williams. S-7-1 . A. Nusbilt 7 7 C Affair. 7-2 Pretiy Good 4-1 Elesa'n’-o. 7-1 Linar tt'lnl. 6-1 Smg.t iifli. Aru^le Managumcnl. 430 KYLES OF BUTE STAKES (2-y-o filliesCS9S : Sf) AIriBht-V. f lih-Me. W\ W'llllims, E-ll .... Rjutiard Hulchmsc:i 1 7 °S32 Oraqonara Lady, IV. £-11 . P. Perli.nj A 4 _,?22 Flltterdale. M. W. F.astrrb:'. 2-11.M. Hoberis .» a 34 Noble Mtsiress (B1. w. WlCtan^. E-ll .E. .Voter 4 2 nn2S 5" 0W CMe l’ ;• hl 3 ” . G. Duff I Did 6 w 00400 Viponon, S. Wmr-.ngM. «;.ii . . 2 i 2-1 Snuw Ghicf a -1 Noble -jisirc-s. 7-2 Flincrflalu. 9-1- Dra^oziara Ladi-7 10-1 AH1ght-Wim-M(*. iie-i \ lpcnr.p * Ajt selections By Our Racing Sraff 1.30 Henricrm BeJlc. 2.0 Musical Princr. 2.30 Abercata. 3.0 L indum Parva. 3.30 Timonel. 4.0 Prertt- Good. 4.30 Snow Chief. E.v Our Newmarket Correspondent 1.30 Henrietta Belle. 3.30 Ridan Fligiii. 4.0 Elcgame. 4.30 Dragonara Ladv. ottingham programme j BREDGFORD STAKES (3-y-o : £1^10 : 6f) - Amodoo, H. Price. y-U .. .,., MBB. 403002 Prmca or Spain. P. Taylor, h-o . OO Shaamusogue. H. PtICi-. x-0. M Zaurtuky. L. Ciunnn 1 . M-|| . 420304 Burglar mil, d. Marks, e-u . Comsdy BTUoi H. Flcmlnp. 8-11 . „ ^* 1 ° FUratown, p. C ulc. B-ll .. £1225? .lumqMiow. J. mm kip. 8-lt . P»rri Strand (B), P. cole. 8-11 . OOOfN -. Raguta, D, -Uioni. fl -11 . 0 «oaey Mirage. B. -ur>Hi.i». B-ll . on-noT £S. w nJ2? # 5* CB|. P. McMahon. 8-11 asjss? B JL l s,’ss: s B -,v 0 Wild C^rd, t,. P.-Gordcn. 8-11 . ., B. Taylor 1 ■» -. D. BurrVi m .. A. Cousins lr> il. Bantu-c? 7 -I . - 5. Salmon 7 ... p. Cook 18 .. F. M or by 12 . — Vi . W. Cardan 6 . . G. Baxter 10 P. Young 2 12 .. R. Dlckln 1*< M. lilghain 3 , J. . RlWJdalir 17 I>. Tyrrell 7 M - . 1 . r-.n.l 1-1 C. Williams I M. RUnnicr 7 8 2-1 Mnieh. Regal. Loyal and Regal. >i. W har::>n 3-11 .D. V.Trell 7 u O Mirysma, F5. ILmj. I . L. Jnhnion 13 OO Ml*a Belgravia. Dnur smlL’i. s-IJ . J. Blea-Hale - 03 Morse Princess. J. H’.rr. . E-ll . S. Saimun lu 40 Mozart Sonata. . 1 . Johnston. 3-11 . T. Rogers J OOO Orchom. R. Want f -11 |(. L(r-J3 IS _ O Plfacombe. C. CrISiain. B-ll . IT. Hide «i ooa Plum Run. r. nald'nr 8-11 . J. Malitilos ?■ QO Shandora, «l. H’ ,n. S-ll . A. Dond 1 Shy Grove, Ur.lir:n. P-11 . P. Bra dwell 7 IP *-iuin Run. a -1 Bosquet. 11 -."* Lad- Gt-rarJiua. 8-1 Pllocmibe. Another lu-i Mar.-o.-na. 12-1 >IIm B.'-igra-.'U. Morsa Prin:ess. 14-1 Loyal and 20-1 ethiri. -- “ -■ r.-uorom, 0-11 . ai. nuwaitr • o 7-L lh in?s Ch iiSU^7"2# Amedeo. 7-i Burglar Bill. 8-1 Song ii'smna* J5^l“thm.^ J? .' I l "‘ hme4 ‘ F,ww - li "' 1 K,w Cjrd ' No,,IJ - 3 TRENT END SELLING HANDICAP STiVKES (£568 ; 2im) TP”* P- Feloaie.. 5-u-l . B. Hedloy 11 o- m- 4_-a- .. - ... c williams f? 8.15 LEAGUE AND LEAGUE CUP WINNERS HANDICAP STAKES l £1.373 : Jinn 1 100-002 False Witness, B. Hobb.«. 3—7 . G. Lewis ». OQO Simon Slingsby 1 C), II. (icm.ny. . — 7 02-3031 Bullfighter. H. Co.II. ~- 8 -ll . M L. Thomas 11 H 030-002 Portal Prince (O). j. I'.ingham. 2 . 3.11 .... j. Mctougaflr 7 JO O 00-3141 Sunlight Wonder 1 C). C: P.-Uoidsn. 3-d-ll .E. Eldln 7 It. 0000-00 Mercy's Scion. H. L.'oD ngrldge. 4-3-J . < 1 . Cariam 1 17 -10-1030- Gartrso Hill (BJ. P. .Winur. 3-3-U . I!. Curunt .*> 22 -403-033 Juan Jnhns Choice. N Adarn. 7-7-iO .... M. Wlnham ”■ J J4 ___«>• Boy Marvel. J. Ulnuhsm. 5-7-7 .. C rodriguvs j r 2 o 00000 - ScagH. W. fVhart.-.n, —7-*.- . K. Oarlpy a y 27 00 Privy Court, K. 3:id'j«atLi. a-7-/ . — 9 7-4 tulffinhlcr. 3-1 t izlie li’imtu. ■*•.' S> 1 IIIlight W'ond-*r. 17-2 Portal Prince. 8-1 Ganree Hill. 10-1 Jason .toting otc-iCe. 20-1 others 0-00000 OW-rni- 03220. -"Wunncir 1 DJ. U Golding. 4-8- 3C2-030 Candymur (B>. H Rohan. i-S-r, Mtivj 1 . JsJale r. Hi nm.-u " ' ’RJ710 1 .‘oaver 1*1 C. Oldroyd 7 . E. Hide 12 8.45 CITY GROUND MAIDEN STAKES lid, II. altcJlh-.-r. .5 FOREST HANDICAP STAKES (3-y-o: £2,763 : 6f) Sf-Bai ISJ. i. Kaiifuig. va-IJ.J Matihiis 2 Sandjoro (D.B) , L. BfUtaln. 5-B-3 .C. HhI; ”■ Pfltey Green (O). J Dunioo, 5-T-io. U. Carwin « 010t t?R ■ Mrtocli .{»)-, \1 Masson. 5 . 7-13 . A. 8o.i*f •> n.,nJlrS -P arl "5 *™.JD). P. Can doll, j-t-n . K. Darloy 1 ’■ LuhCMlalh.lD^J. \ 1 . H Easicrta-. 3.7-3 M. Wighnm ' W 0-300 Muter B Ufa on (D). H. Rohan, j-7-1 ..X_ C. Porto* i i 4 nT55-^r2? Ji f?S 7 2H. ^ Bm - 4 * 1 Plu °v drecn. 11-2 Lunesdrile. B-l Rica- 1 Dar.ng Era. lo«l Others. 5 RED AND WHITE MAIDEN FILLIES STAKES (2-v-o: £1.332: 6f) W«»efa, B. Jarvb. 8-U .M. L. rhomas 0 KtrHjuet. B-. Habln. a-Ji . G. L«wtg Hi .-i, ■Carifarfce, S. Lomw*«. 8 - 1 : . C. inffiatm. r. 00 TTent Ftn, w. WTiarton. 8-U . W. Wharinn S 1> Jenny* Rnckcl, N. Adma. 8-11.P. Madden 17 nnrJf Pf^-_2SP*C l,l W i * ,* •, Jar ^'- B-l 1 . S. Jarvis 3 S OO00. La. Picephpa, p. 1v*/lW. 8-11 .. . — 8 8.45 CITY i O^JO ]* 22022 1 00-230 a 00-0044. 00-0000 X 3 ■j 02-0002 14 00-2002 17 OOO ’H 0 ;: T » oooon-o 0334 Til oo-onn 7, *, 0-02 Z’l 02-0 Leganes. N. •<j . Bcldin:i. v-u Vlqvf>. . Hr:c-. —0 BrlHinn. M\ dm. 3-11 . Brindisi. J. nunlon. C-li . Cllei, lv Sienh'.-n'on 3-11 Lei Us Luv> (B). L. Cu.-nam. 3-11 Miss Crispin. Mr* P.ur./u h-ll - 1 3-y-o : £1.194: lm 5f) . F.. Eld.n b . n. Rouse «i . W. f.var»on 7 .> 1 . L. Thomas 2 . A. Bond *• . P. Cool U .. M ra.rlnr 10 . E. HJda 8 .. — 13 . r Morbj 11 . J. Bloasdale 11 . G. Bjxltr 1 . R. Weaver % . B. Rjy.T.or.1 17 . S. Ecclca 3 12 .B. Hedley itj -2 Coin-, l-'et. H-- !J>1 Us bnnflli!. 20-1 others Sacred Rites, b. Drrer. 8 -U .. 11 --t Pnncclr Tool. 7-2 »ldn. 4-’. Por Ci Pit L>. • Loir. 7-1 Mccatillo. 3-1 Duka. 10-1 Lega.iei. i2-I Nottingham selections By Our Racing Staff . ... . _ „ 6.15 Prince of Spain. 6.45 Candymay. «.la LunesdalC- j. 4» BosquCL 8.15 Bullfighter. 8.45 MecarUIo. By Our Newmarket Correspondent 6.15 ZawiasKy. 7.15 Ibe Sandford. 7-45 Pilacombe. S-la Bullfighter. S.45 Le: Us Love. ork results > '2,1' MOHKGaTC stakes >. r .2rS»; lm i . . Uo Mqrintr, h c. by BUKtncy- 9C1-. Fr*« (Capi M Laniorn -S-ll .Hide f4*71 1 ■rarallnn . . M. .RolieriL ilQ-li 3 'fwrra PDini. J. Maiihina ii3-2i 3 ALSO HAN: 11-2 Hover. 13-1 h«d i4Jh.. 25-1 J»i»tu to rjuiifc. •}.. Nannhu, 00*1 Ttiffan. 100-1 n.ir Ljdv. w ran. TOTT: Win. 13p: jHjcos. lia. 33p. at’dual torccan, 35p. - G. Briithln. Ncwmairc.. ai. 2’J. lrcir. 33.46aoc. Atm., did. not ran.— 'M >2.31i "BLACK DUCK STAKES **->'-0t Iri.CSo; wfi • - nariwPB, hr c. by DrugonarS PUacri—Valtlnp rt. Marsh * • W Ii. Raymond C16-I i 1 -- fe. Hld« aT-lj 2 “Sen Lelctmor • • V. WlBhaia ruo-H 3 _ ALSO RAN: a.«» Ntmojs <4ih*. S-i Touch Doy. 14-1 Plntcnons Man. t# ran. TOTE: Win. C1.8P: place*. J4 p. 36n: dual foranM. ET.85. I. WalLcr. at NawmartcT. n, si. 1mm IS 83scc 3.0 13.1 i PHILIP CORHES STAKES iS-l’-b: £j.01U:_bF i Bold From, b c. by Daring Dlapl.iy —CoroUvia if. Walker* v-u t J. Lowr *14-1* i • - J. BIMWUIO ‘3-r* 2 Hi!lability .-E. Hide >11-1) 3 ALSO KAN: 2-1 Tender H-nrt. S-2 Hard Froai. 11-1 North Pane <4:h'. 23-1 Quick Train. 33-1 Hlckorj- Island. AihMtl Suite. • 50-1 Azrow. Gibbon 11 ran. TOTE: Win. *33.111: places 60n. HP, 14p; dual forocMi. £10 .>3 i.. W. Watu. Richmonil. i'=l. iii im. imin lo.yOsec. Arms King was with¬ drawn. Tsnder Heart c.-mr* In lirut bu: after an oblocUon by lltc second and a Stewards' Imulrj render He-irt wai disnuallficd. li ji' TILCON TROPHY i Handicap - £4.467: wf- Beethoven, b r. far —DciOP Nigh I ■ \v. Greenwood • 4-jt-s r. lie* ■io-: i Epsom into .... P. Waldron • Jm ~ 2 Dffia Mead . R. los • 12-1 . 3 UkU PIN: 7-4 lav W’V'nny • l-.h■. o-l Hying Tyke. V-l Janu.»aP. l'.-I Prin.ula Eoy. 1_"-1 Petard. 3 rfn. tote Win. Tip: alocr*. Kni. l-f. U3p. dual forecast. £l.oo o. NOsbitt. hi Rlpon II. Ii. Imtn ul.»3scc j.U *4.1 • UfALMGATE HANDICAP >»-o: Sd!.443: 1‘«■*> ■ Sir Gregor, b g. fa Sir. l-.icr-— SumnStr Sorrtrv 'R- G:i»?:l-. 7.7.M. lilnhum >3--v 1 Man Of Franco •• It- V, nir ;l-'- 2 Nyota.. E. Hide i4>l< 3 1LS0 R.1N 11-2 potshot 1 4-Lh •. 4 r.ia- rcn-C: Wm. 22p: dual forocasl. 27c. R. Hanbur . ei Newnurkcl. 41. 121. £min i'i 73»ic. 4.*>I - l.lo- MADYGATE HANDICAP i£_’.243: im l.-i Parent, er g *jj Gre.it Net.hev —Piragua .Mil M. W'-.ifll. -A.E. Hide '7-i fav 1 Ssnnlor Sam .... A. More or ■ 3-1 > . 2 pas de Deua .. J. Matlhlu 3 ALSO R’.N: ia-4 Semper Nova • 4m .. 4 r:n TOTC: 7V. n. 2l5; dunl lore fast e,Qr.. r._ ot Lej-faum. Nk. 31. lmm TOTE OOL RLE- Bald 1 n>«. Str vircjjr. 12>4.l2. TT1G5L6: Klnp^facre. r-.cRilij vcn. Tv ran:. L210.S1. Double Du 3 i i qku>;: L5.“j. Jackpot: not wan. Piattrpo:: £73 45- SECRETARIAL WNNHMNMMtM S BI-LING 3 • SEC/SH/TYPIST * • FRENCH/ENGLISH • ? Preferably nlth some Grr- • X mPn. required lu a^ainl Z • tunaglng Dlrecior of London 7 • office ol American commcr- V • clal bank. Quiet City office. • ^ £5.70u t LVs. gg 9 -Tei: oaa 737G. • —tf —HKHW f TOO BUSY TO LOOK FOR A NEW JOB . DURING THE DAY ? U »o read our adc In mis rsuer today, then ring and arrange to come and see us' after 3 OU nm. Oli.XKL ruiiSOSNKL CONSULTAMl S ' COLLEGE LEAVERS' TOP CAREERS Solrnlld o pern no 9 lor well ' r.iucrtten S.-cTtLifiea in Hublian- tng. II.l Arls, ChuntiU. Uusi- nrm. World and Gurrcnt wts.rs. etc. Let u* open Uic dour io a successful luiurv COVENT GARDEN BUREAU 55 Hern si,. L.G.4. AAS 7UUO INTERESTED IN PERSONNEL/ADMIN ? Manantno Director of We.j Eml CO. o\r-o>ilng textiles e-id f.Lj-iion I.ibj-ILI wltevi-ri. slutULii Rt 'suv. -Vent'd iot» mwKri io:> ultnienl'eJinln . etc Discounts plus 24.UUU plus. JAVGJ1R r. A PEERS . .-4J ol46 Recruitmoot LonMiiiants ADVERTISING AGENCY: See Re- cepl ‘teleph.. 2>".. W.l. £7i.b50 p.a.—Stplta H-her Bureau • Apr.. 110 Str.in'l. W.C.2. 83ft 4- 'Alro open Sals IO OO M.m.-lC.vO ji.m. .. TOP Setxcuilji AsslonmenU. ai re.-iily ticei). n: ia:cs wJlh the create of London menu,, r.h. ■- I liners, lie? Wm i.iu no«t St.. I..C.J -.„H r.OAti. n>;i.niliment Consul- lunts. HARLEY STREET SURGEON tiiijenuy requires experienced UOifelary oniic:r-.il1v raarof of a largo medico Icqaf nracUco. tviiarj- cuordlnq to ana ■ nd c-iTicricneo.—V3JJ {(<£]. SENIOR SECRETARIAL A Pmonari THi'IUoni In bank, oifirlng high jCtlurlo* and eL-celleni fringe bene- IHs. Jonathan Wren. Personnel ponsulUrcy. 17& Blshopagaie. MORGAN FLJRXE ft CO. Ltd.. West Lnd whol-n't vine ni'txh^nli. have 2 ncutlrt ior in adj'.i-tb’o audio aecrr'.arj- ana an efr.etenl copv lyrld. Interesting and caritrl vorit. Salary a.a.e. pieaw rng ^it'-'.' W M-'no on f> 1 -- 1 Vj ujijl. INTERNATIONAL publUhlng com- nanv require two «honlnnil sots . mid 20 i to m on: In their ad- • terllrlng and aale« ileihirtmteit. n.ust have noon ahnrth.ind. accu¬ rate typing ,-.n,l uililnqnoa to help In general running or dr- n;nmenw: r^’srlej nraoii.ible 73p cw WK k luncheon vnndiru. a wcck« hrlTd-y.—Rlnq Mr. Godden. tjj tsTZl. TEMPTING. TIMES ARTS. ANTIQUES AND PUBLISHING JOBS are our npedallty foi leiriporary S-jcr^larii*!. Audi.- 1 ypUt>. >-opy lypL-ts anj Ti.-iopnimlaU. lor Buud xkllls wt pay toil riuei. Night wort G also avall- .nWv Tur gaud Cony Tj plsts. l’le.-«c rant.ici LL: Rhode,, litKN\Dbfl IL ul LUNU ST It ■’ ml.T..wnt Kon- iii’^n'i No. .»3. ne::l door 1, T;nincl: i • (n-ft’J 1 ' iu»»4 1.1-A2" 7'.,-. 3 IT’S ALL HAPPENING ! Mere. tn;t p\ 5-.-cxetar,tss ri"- iicd on ‘Hrtu:,’- T-,u r.n«a. ■tTpiul.itmg .iMinimirais and a (lieque In the nirr-.-nl week — Welcome. JOYCE GUIKTESS BUREAU 21 BRMflPluN 4l(i;7DL HNOMPrUN RUAD KNIGH ISBfilDGIi. SU ■ !lro.iip::>n ,\i. tie lew sKiie imru L'n:>; itaftridgo Tune Slatlon. Sis?-’.- Si. smii s:-" 3i,-7 JV10 1 he RecrtiiDueni Consultants £2.80 P.H.—Discover lor yourself tnc. lov-> of wftriflng with me b-.-l Temoijrara' Secr*-rotial Irani In Li.n-tun. Spnrd.s ruuulrrd arc 100- nO a”J lhe Hei.'.blin-, (u wcTk in ihe West End or Cihr. Wc need von all :—Rinn JTT 11 2d or ri 23 doT.j Crone Corkili Conjotunn. SUIT Vutiraelf : Wr have a variety of wcll-ivatd tnmporarj o« 1 nn- menls for B*_re;arl.’a. Tml-.ta ■nd Audlnr-rull details Ceom- ewi snrf. Konslnuim. '-77 K52.1: Strand. 3875: Regent Street. 430 7SiT2. E2.G3 P.H. W; hdc J ivriNj or rop lobs. li«l Lnd Cl'l Ihr imrennm. v J |h sp r-eds ol Jfrf) ' «,o Career Plui Consultants. 7.74 42S4. _-__ U CREME DE LA CREME SECRETARY/PA To Managing Dir?clor. ohatma- seutlcpl Company. Earls Court Preleiahlv taiifa markclinq back- jrounJ. Salary around £4.003 neg. pai annum - L.V s. Rhone Linda Bright 01-373 6607/8 NEGOTIATOR If vou Know H^mpsirad ^nd N.li. London lire Wo bud or j-our hand, h.ive bound- leiu enihusldMTi tor selling and are mobile but nrri necessarily Minor! raced. Drome Knight and Partners v.-ou'rt like to near irom you on 435 3208. 5 PUBLIC S £ RELATIONS * 1 CHELSEA m ■ ScrreCirj- "P.A. for ibis small ■ 'm ronsuliancy. Minimum age H _ 2a. Abie lo cope do own. h H Absolute rt-iia'alLtv cssenlial. E ■ Sense of hirnour helps. « ■ Chance la loam business. ■ ■ Own office. H ^ Telephone 253 6311 | HUlIRCIRIRIIHim PART-TIME VACANCIES University of London PART-TIME Sharthand/audiO typist rsfluttv 14 hours woakly (or UnJversily Hcallh Sen vice. Responsible, mature person preleired. ' Pleaao eomaei Admin iciraior. ZQ Goaer SINmL W.C.1. Tol.: B36 763B CHELSEA R8STAURANT requires Sd.rnlar* ■ BuoliLnepor far >ionorsl iluiiaa. bio aiicwthsixid bul mini br cmitam and willing. Mondiy to rriituy. 14 n.m.-.'i p.m. Goud wil- ari negoLiable.—Ring .732 STEPPING STOKES -THEATRICAL ' PRODUCTION CO, W.l. requires Junior Serratarv. Good » h up. Including reception¬ ist iKiiles. Salary nogotLiMc. Ttileplione M Tiij n on &W 4831. GENERAL VACANCIES American Ambassador to' Norway requires :. STEWARD I'n.i.-r Gii - Kunrrvl-.>on of Itod.e Manager Chef. -Hid. Stuwurd will uvslsl in tlie lir.->iralten ut ninoln, serve a; Mbfc and rt parilts ,nnd do some housework. Cooking ability dusirabiu. . HOUSEMAID Duties Include house cleaning, selling tables, serving at tables Hnd si receptions, for turtner tntorauilon on cither vacancy. please send rurnculum Wtae. irlcfihone no., references and one ;.hoic- qnnh In lhe AilminfStratleu nific-r. American irr.ibassy. nraniiiiensvelen IB. CK’o. Nor- wjy. ir.xuti and board pro - .Idcil. Interviews will be held in Lundun. SOUTH LINCOLNSHIRE. Arcnaen- logicai unit requires unemployed .irrli j'-s.iuyisl lor l year id supervise Small Towns Survey MrtJ (i.w. Ring Stamiord • ■ 117301 2.-/JU. DRIVER GUIDES. tun owners. Telephone David, ill-727. 22U0. LEGAL APPOINTMENTS A LAN CATE Lng.ll Stall, the tst coiumlianLi lo the protesslun. oiler a vonfldorlial service- lu cnip’nyers and si.iir ,it all le-.ola. I L'lcidionc lor dp(.oLntn.cni ur write lu Mrs. ItolincK. Mrs. flarl;ncj. or Mr. G'ales. Ui-4Uo 7201. at b Ciroat UUCen Street. London. W.C.2 toft Ktngsv.ny >- EDUCATIONAL ALL G-C.E. -O' and *- .1 " Inel courses -init. sciences, husmess studies bv ■■.’.ncri luLors at Hol- born Tutorial College. 47 Hed Lion Si • Halburn. U'.iM. Ai>dv (or pruspocius ■ lei. JOG Bd-W C.C.E. DECREE and prcfusslnnal er.aAM. TultJon br posi. Free K osperlu!.—W Milligan. M.A.. ml. AJ4. Uolsey H ill. OMerd 0X2 6PR. Tel. : OBftO 54231 : 2 -t huur,. _ MRS. THOMSETT’S IN OXFORD. —Intensive 2-lenu secrataral eoitrsp. Brochure: miord 721670 A TRAINING GROUP m self-under-. si.utillnu. Frlilav. 2114 July, and luesday. 15th .'.upusl. from 7-10 O.III, In London. Throne!) Ihe hurt and M rain of facing iw rain. I much my dem-osi self, lhe ju>lf I dr. tiAl J-noW. nnd Ihrnuah ih.n touch I nrov..’’ From a iraem by Dermot H' no who will lr.nl the group, riei.illj ur lon.i -r enur-rs. mill Hous" U ■ V. h'l- rr.i.-h SL..London W.'.'J, Tel. OXFORD 1 *. J *"cOUNTY Mwrel.ir.al iOolIrne Tlirre-temi vncrrinrlal cnnra.'. Umauaok'3. r.oKogq ho>l.'l a.iti I'*:i. 74 St die*; Ovlnrd. Tel. fT. JAMES’S SorrrmriAl * ’’I'rgr. Pro*uv* ’ll' rW’in ,, iv < ar_ r _-J Uelliclbi ijdn* . SW3 773 ."ri -J DOMESTIC AND CATCHING SITUATIONS RIBRNIBIIIlHinBIP 5 HOUSEKEEPER/COOK I a b ■ Vounflisn couple who ora m ■ obliged io travel gnienri jely H JJ and who Jiw in Loudon S gj during ihe week are looking g ■ for someone lo look alier ■ ■ mem end their ^oeciaculerly ■ 5 boautlfut house m Glouces- ^ gg icrshiro. Sell contained <lai n ■ 3nd car provided. Excellent ■ ■ salary Only those with ■ ® impeccable leierences neeo ® 5 Jpply ' 3 ■ Pleaee Wf. BI23S 0196. Of ® 2 write Box 1834 K. The rimes, g UlUMUmiBBUBlia SUPERLATIVE COUPLE REQUIRED Iv hause In Mayimr. (o lire in an Euilsr/Valsl and Cook/ Housekeeper. Weekend fiee and lop sa/sry. Impr•-.cable relui antes required. Please conracl Mrs Redhead on 353 2030 Re“«i3e charge. DIPLOMATIC FAMILY with 3 <tiuoo children In Boon, needs mother's TivId. Irom Soni. fnr vear nr more. Apnllunis should really lUc children, be flrjdbK .ihir lo drive and have some knowledge of Cr-m-in. Tol. Bonn ^117)0 nr wrlie c o Palcc. BFPO IP. British Lmbauy. Bunn. LADV CLEANER required. 5 days a wool,. Comaci Mr*. Oa/i. Tel. 4M 1 &23B from J p.ni.-n p.m. MAYFAIR HOUSEKEEPER, for widow or. Msituru, rt-Hable woman. Own room + bath. Tel: ■Ip*' 21'48- SMALL NORTH DEVON HOTEL ururally needs enihustoiiic young Conk ibrcakfosl and dinneri. Live In. imi> p.w.-—Phone Mrs. Brand. Bldcford > 02372-1 77203. REQUIRED RELIABLE STUDENT, capable cook. Seeks Nanny type am ploy m on 1 lor summer lacnllra. Eager to iravM.—Horns Cros- 412. 7HET/M €S ) \ . \. I-/Sr=.r ! 7 JL \ \ When you want to gei useTheTimes. Lost louch uiih an old Iriend ’-Wani io send birthday or annivirsa^ srceiings?Muicii|>a row? Place a in Ihe renowned Times; Personal Columns whey appear daily.and you'd be surprised hoii many people read (hem. . For further informiilicin.ring II 1-837.33IK . Manchester Oo 1-8341334 MOTOR CARS ■ v,y,j; DATSUK i Y 260Z*76 ?• Silver coy. Radio cawette." y one lad/ owner. 17.000 ,J.- X miios. EssbHbm eononioi). X X s-i.aio. . Tel- 435 7203 I ■ " I X Evti and weokenda v :t . i ■Vxwx-wvxvx-;-:-:-:-:^ BMW 1602Z (975 metallic grey wilh tawny interior. Imma¬ culate condition, one owner, 25,000 mis, all standard extras: Only'£3,250 Phone 589 4357 1977 RANGE ROVER In Sahara duct wffh P.A S. and option pack, radio and 8- irack. 8 months ' Supercaver. Immaculate condition. £8,500 Ring office hours: Wellingborough 650744 luinuuiniuin 5 LINCOLN S CONTINENTAL « MK IV COUPE S ) u 7 4. Superb 17 wiiiic. wiiii E buiguaiH Inlrrlor. Cmv D conceivable exir.i., atuclutclv II beautiful car. tow mileage. g £4,750 1 Tel : Bristol 6S6504 Jaguar 3.8 litre E-type Coupe Original iinvaio ovii.cr ici'ti of i nil araui'd '..'iwj lor r^i>.'i>Uon.vl bpecimen in ildrt. giL'on, 1e>s Ilian 70.000 (o:3l n>uc. since new In lvdC atul very ■ well loosed • an nr. Test Lertinute valid lo June IPiO. Phone Dorking 730919 any lime an'- leave your nemo, addrese end telephone number for appolnuneni Lo view. CORTINA. GH1A 2.*j. Silver, bl.ivk interior nllh burglar alarm and lamlnaicd windscreen. lo months old. lJ.Ckju miles only. Excellent condition. Privnlc owner. • C3.49S o.n.o. Tel.: 01-030 8073 day Guildford 70156 eves. QUEEN OF THE ROAD ' 9,000 MILES ONLY! Princvsa 2CC0 HLS ttuio P A.& 1977 metallic ccpper brown, pold coloured intenor, -myl rod. Carpeted throughout, in mint condition Fully 's*ed with only one D'-vncr C3 35f> one Phone OT-SOE 0485 NOW1 RTH ions on MG MIDGET Tahiti Blue. Immaculate. 11.U00 miJcs. Radio. Offers over £2.U0U. Tet. Swansea (0792) 792234 BMW 320 In ’While. 19/7: S roflislration 4.200 miles. Timed glatis. lie- ban. sieioo radio cassette. £4,900 Tel: 724 0692 weakenda and overlings RARE 1935 TRIUMPH GLORIA 10 ft. 2 -»eaier sports, oners! 041-942 6036 BMW 2002 Til M ri^. -72 model, Riviera blue. 116.000 miles, regularly serviced, usual t-drji. escellenl condllian. LI.>>75 a.n.u'. Tel: 0256 850584 VW SCIROCCO GLS NOVEMBER 77. S REU- n..jbU miles. Sill] under guarantee. Blaupunu sierra caseellB radio. Immacula IO. B3.7.V* nave neatly £l.UO0 on neH i Tel.’ t»492 J1&757 or 0-io 0B2 4011 BARGAIN t“7*i D.ifmlcr Sovereign 4.3. While with red leather interior. Stereo radio 'c. Electric wm- dews + aerial, eic. 30.000 mllos . J.C.Sio for quick sale TEL. U1-4B6 0765 MGB GT 1'475 bln bumper model. Wife's car. only 18.600 miles. Damask- red exterior. Radio, overdrive, taxed, etc. Garaged, regularly serviced, ere. Immaculate. £2,500 o.n.o. 01-549 6023 • anytime i AVENGER ESTATE, de lilac. One owner Excellent value. Family vehicle. Dealer serviced. Conner beech metallic. R ” rrulsln- tlon. Radio. ■£ 1 .o8i.i.—01-55-1 5734. ■ Cycles, t ur prices or l quotes, ring 01-560' 0683. NEW' FIATS. Special Ofler on alf models. Immediate delivers.— Ripne Normans. IH- I 5U4 o441 or 01-633 0042. PORSCHE. Hoauy super prices orfered for all Si- models far Ihe really super - Hughes ifoior Com- pam’. Tel.: u°aa4 sen. SCIMITAR GTE. September .fi. overdrive,- eleetrlc windows, alloy wheels. itntei! ihn. radio' n-truck. electric penal. lE.'JOO miles onlv. EJ.SuO o.n.o. iKl- 2oo 3511 otflcc. Stud icy U515 home. BMW 2500 1975.—PAS “6.000 mis. Metallic qrej' anthracite. Manual, stereo radio casseue. Alpine wheels, clec. ncrldl. Otic owtigr—immaculate condition. £4.01)0.—01-723 4733. ROLLS-ROYCE & BENTLEY 1968 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow Blue, Ottwhitc ifim, new tyres fined, recent overhaul 'by Roils agent, la/aa until 31- 12-78. Usod daily by com¬ pany difoclor. E8.7S0 Meadow field 78G195 BENTLEY MPW, 2-dour. I l (i7 Site . 1 1 yrn i.ifti. b.,telf i.-i} i rout, n.r candibanon. „7-i.0liu mite* ‘HO.yjU.—-To! ■ H ii hni and . ■ N - Yorka- UT-43 oSX7 day or C-20L- tvm tines. MOTOR CARS OUTSTANDING ■ •ALFA SUD (S) 13 Ti Malw efren, Ziaban. Meres. ii.iXto .niirs. viarraniw. ONLY L'J.Sia: Nn otfen. R:nq 01-87$ 6122 _ lovenlnqs otib’i _ SITUATIONS WANTED .MANAGEMENT ENGINEER. Pb O. ii.a.o, Anglo-American.. relurns U.K.. desires any appl. tracli p.-juarch. cuelefa.—Bov 2uui K, Hie nines. YOUNG, unaglnailve. married clier ieefes employment in private iiaiue anywhere. Heply S. Mctvor. La Sablonnerie. Sarv. uiumri islands: INTELLIGENT VOUBfl man. ea-H.M. i'(.rcu QualUlod conimrrUsi dlvvr. seeks lucrative position U K. or orRrzea». Anvthtna cun- slilcrad.—Hamendon 62912. ARABIC SPEAK INC lady ivitn UOOd cummand of Enoltsii seeks trm lan^c or iiarl-llnie work, location nrcfcrahly outside Loridcm. IVrti- tno. unnsiduon. inKrnrctuig or einnlir work.—Uoi 2i2l K. Hie I imes FLAT SHARING LUXURY FLAT IN-FULHAM MjIutb Professional person, lo shara luxury f'al. own faedrAnn, & bathioom. Unmun vine Dr th» rlvur. verandah leading dawn to river Diroagn garden. Use of aorage. 2 in Ins Irani under¬ ground. El jo p.c.ni. Ttl: 736 0955 5.W.l. Nr, LkUTOds: lurnlsned room modern block. Jddy. - fffv p.w. 88y 5M7. MALE/FEMALE Share flat. . rnrr. room, reasonable rent. I el. 62a 3H63 after 6.30 p.m. W. l.—2nd person for small house. Own room, colour TV. c.h., rie. 1123 p.W,—89-300B3 office. 01- **‘►3 oVTo borne. . N.W.3.—Line room ■ Tn 1 specious Flat. 1 2.—794 r058. hotting hill.—-R oom offend to quiet qiri In comfortable rial. El7 weekly.—03-229 2293. EALING.—Couple lo shorn I usury n.-i, -".i inri_onfl flat. ra<.) incl.—on A (>330. HAMPSTEAD COTTAGE seeks 2nd person lo share peaceful aunos- nhrrn. everv luxury mcladlnp massive garden. Close to woods and tennis cnuris. good partlna. easy reach of public iranspurl. Clot) per mooch Inclusive —48T ^7>>7 or 4S8 B093. Cun pham COMMON.—Prof rational parson, mid T 20 "s. to share bouse With two olhers. Own room. £l-> n. w exclusive.—Phone 01-223 aerm. RICHMOND HILL. .Avail. .Imnied. 2 mths.. own mom, luxury c h. •>turuii(-oi. suit sludeni. visitor. ■ SBO n-tn.—Tel. 94 O 165-t. PROFESSIONAL PERSON, over 217. Marble Arch. Luxury (tat one large room. £20 p.W. 262 3RP3 alter b p.m. _ • RENTALS AVAILABLE NOW ! Superior fur¬ bished flats- and houses holiday and long lei*. ElOO-EoOO 0 w — Call Constant Properly Manage¬ ment. 5B‘> 281 H. short LET. Kensington.—New icjcIdus luxury flat overlookinp gardens. 2 double beds., eu. Available now. £125 p.W. 727 m:-Uo. SHORT LET T Centrally located iir.urv flats In the best areas E4U-240U' p.w.—flatland. Bocfcingham Palace Rd.. London J.Vl iel.i 01-823 82 jl. W.ii. Ecdsit. share kitchen and Ijainroom. nr Tube. E2u p.w. inc. Kill. Available now.—Phone 727 8427. HEYCOCK & CO.. 40 Beauchamp Thaw. S.Vr'.S. is UI Help you tint) ur Ibt jour flal ur house. Please emu : ul4 BEAUCHAMP ESTATES. I or lli- hc.%t in furnisi-ed flats houses m I on don Short-lono Ids. Ljo- 24 jij -I Vi —.jM-t »0BI. LITTLE VENICE.—Lu-iu:> lurni-hrd lii-.n Hnuxc -piraje. . bed . ■> Iv-iVIII . 2 baili. L23U. D.V. — Tvl. UI-2.46 ‘■3S’ 1 . HOUSEPROUD LANDLORDS • • ■ Yv» l-4ic the hoim .—ii e have the l-J.-.il len.inl cphune fun a. t.dnlix,. Ul-...,'-' j4r. I . A MONTH ot iu -I a wed .’ *( Slifirl L. Is un li«»- h.-> I. i.ag*-. KNICHTSER1DGE APARTMEI ITS LTD. nave a l.irne si-k-cilon ul lurn.xhi.il nuusus and ii.,:* i.i •-enir.il Lnndun for sjiur: lui.i li-u irurn 2 ov».—oi-uai 2:37. LANULURUS.—MU Urtp n[|V IlUUiM- UciuiiiPiotlallori short Iona term. maim. company leis.—Kw Accommuiiaiiun. Oi-£iHl i-t4J. AT HOME in Loncion uo. mr taindon'x lines! lurr.ishca ir.ns and houxL-s. I el : on Mondaa. Ul-Val 221 o. LANDLORDS. Speclalisn, in Lmoasxt and Inicrnatlunal I..U loll Inn* require L-enlrai Mala' liuuaos. Plaua Esi. 4372. LANDLORDS ONLY.—Con K.A.L. S-liDiojn ivly in lulling your prop¬ erly 7 Our areas ore l-ulham, Pui- t»-j. Dalti.-raua. Clapham. lianas- i.urUi.—3jl 3331. WHY LEAVE YOUR PROPERTY EMPTY 7 We hale many waiting -jpjilluiiis to-jfcing lo £|iL-nd 2]0(i- •;3oO p.w. In ccniral areas ter lung short tell.—Landwjy 5cr- nces. 255 tx) 2 >». K.A.L. i Knightsbrlriqe Apartments ■. Ilegrai'-S Hark Oillcc. olTer ih«f best srlL-ctlon ol lldLs & houses in li.l & N.W areas. iJoiirleuus and M Helen! seri-li.i-.—Ring U1-7-J3 •snlb. CROUCH ■ LEES ofler a seleflion ij( lunushed and unturmsr.ed h.im anil houses. Central areas. £7 -j lo £■” jO p.w.-lol. 4V3 V1'4I . KENSINGTON. 3 mins. Iron'. Hide Pair. 2 bedrooms, colour TV. hv-aunful and modornlv furnished, o-o oionUis mlu.muni. £2CX> p-w. 5:11 (J3M4. eves, or Call .vlr Sld- dlqt. 73U l lCib. WRITER AND FAMILY ralurpud Irom ohruad. a:as unable lo reoc- iupv own home unlll July. >V. Will lahe loving- core or your tin me. Reasonable roni irom Sept Ocl. Highqate Camden area, txc. KelS. TH.: 837 1 71s. S-W.4.—Off Gralion Square, qofel street: smart, furnished, nround floor, s.c. flat: double bedroom; L45 p.w.—1YI. O74o2 Cldo. AMERICAN Lvecuuve nevus nisorv furnished Hal or house, up. io L20U p.w. Usual Tees required-— Phillips Kay * Lewis. ol"> Still. E.5.—Tlireo-bed house. Aug. lei. igyo u.tv.—ui-bun oai7. KNIGHTSBRIDGE. Urauiliul fla'. lully serviced, colour T.V.. I1M. Barter. 2 b-.-ds. recpl. ).. * b &jju p.w. Shori lei. Ayiesfard & C Zb. 01—301 23A3- HOUSE IN HENDON. 5 bedrooms. 2 ree-'pl.- 2 ha tits.. Sira ge and large garden. To le: for 1 year or more. s7i> p.w. No agents. Bos. SUM K The rimes. LUXURY _HOUSE H.W.11-Five bed«.. 3 recepis-. 3.baths., c.h Barden. r .<_monlh&“ — l year. £lbO diplomat' RE oil I RES .House, flat ceniral London. HamDsiead. 2 roconls. Long lei. tiart Aug./ Sen! Tel.: 725 4143. MAYFAIR.-Lui-IHI’ '“W.,- „,’?25 rd - room Hal. ElftJ p.w. 4U2 PU77 BELGRAVIA. Lhester Si., mfllso- neite. 4 recepl.. S bed*., avail, lsi August. 8-10 wks. L7DO p.w. king 253 8577. KNIGHTSBRIDGE. Luxuriously tur- rnshcii flal. double bedroom, bathroom en suite, silling room. Lllrhen. hall. -c.h.. c.h.w. Min. H mlhs. 2300 p vv. 589 4’>48.- 584 3136. 3. KEN. GARDEN SQUARE.— Super siudlo flat for one ivio. Bri'hii. modern: £60 pw—3io OWNERS OWN Belgravia small wcH furn.ihrd mews canape. 2 double bedrooms. Price nep. Available lor Up lo 6 moniti*. Tel. 233 BS52. . EATON SO. BeaotHuI large drawing • room. ’J bedrooms. 2 baths., small dining room. mod am 1 .Hchcn. overlooking gardens. July 2~>ih-August 301h. £250 p w. 25"i 7n22. BLOOMSBURY. Spacious ninlso- neilr. 2 hedromns. American Ulchcn. maid. JllfJO p.w. 405 odiham HANTS.—2 w, bed. un¬ furnished flal in period nouie l.iarnge snac" possibio. iw of •Jtiiaan r» io a year lease. L« * h.v.m. 6'J3 5 ,: *37 mvo. nr Sal. Via-..- Sun. or br arnarigrnn-ni ■. N.W.n. Liround floor hi?lira lu**. 1 dudblc berroom. filled ur rolw^. vluifa'. recopUun room. Wiitir-i' dinlny room, dishwasher, wash¬ ing ’marhlri".- iorra?e gartlon. L'Ml p.w. Inc. f.h, Mfn. lei ft monilri. Ti-I 722 S'-'ab (dal >. CROUCH A LEES after a ?eli*cnun uf furnished nnd unlumiahed llais unit houses- femral arras. K1 > to 2 ri w.—Tol. J’i? 9041 YOUNG Profi->dunji man - urgently *.r-I j aV.-.«imm>idalion. Clraird Lo-xioo. 15-23 pounds n*T wecl.. —ijl-Jl'i 75in qlirr 7 p.iu. SLOANS SQUARE. Hohd.n* fl_.il. 2 roniiii. I. ft l».“Oi' (.i3'>7. LARGE (.tec-rgian i.imllv huuac. hew Green, 2« July :n 2nd Sent., i n.v. IU 6362 WANTED URGENTLY. Central ‘tiih. Ulhaii InlllMK ll**te lor OVfrica 1 : lirniv. '..“fi i* £303 p.’.*. Bnh 3, Co.. ui-'C^ ni 17. am- linn- ISLINGTON 3 bed roomed period family hO’isc. ’;<U p.w. harly lueii^l for 12 HICK. IK-ftor SV.'o HAMPTON & SONS offer «* Vii-ia.l itlfcilor of qua'ily turn Mini in .ii.?, on • aijarimf nii in -.nr Ut-n:n>l London areas special! .nq ttar:»cu’arl- in Mayfair_ »ln>i UI-4- 7 f .222. ' ro i.c7. a w» “—"Hih. i.i,ni'ii!i. WJi. Ilau-r. I.irc> ca-.itn.un.il . fi>!rd'ift. I rent tor careMklny. _ 'il-727 v-i*''. FULHAM. B.-nall aiiracihc turn. l'!n*l .imilem ct' , ‘ , nji*. -j Lr**- ruoii’-. " Til' n. "• ii Id i io-ih- cuTicin) jr n , i”!i'- .*.w.. ret • I.I..1.T. .*:-,3 i M. 212 -ihi* • 7.76 lt)7f. -r-. •■*... (couUnucd un page 24) i f H M fi. at th P-' m ul ui th M bi 35 ai III sr th th ca sr m in al iu Si rc st V ol ai ar R w 9C ta to Ui St to G a! pc Fc be hi in Pi' sr Ul ' ai ta dt UT sii U m in, ca pl ar' te . gr: nc. H- pr tii St- ca pa wl. tu oe ’ M Ti it so ra St ba wi, lo ri. in su sh ur se tii ac nf in di Bi th >« re m F Di St re •ir Er th m ca th T1 M. IJ. im Hr VI 1C l-.’ M- T> M. LI- pn nt ii#. 1C Ui- l.|. Cfi Ml IK ■U S' SATURDAY JULY 15 1978 **** First Published 1795 BIRTHS 20. ift Wes- y.rt'jh i nee ?—a daughter . a. iKj#r for To place an advertisement in any of these categories, tel PRIVATE ADVERTISERS ONLY 01-837 3311 APPOINTMENTS 01-278 9161 PROPERTY ESTATE AGENTS 01-278 9231 PERSONAL TRADE. - - 03-278-9351 iMANCBESTEta OFFICE 061-834 1234 Queries in connexion with advertisements that have appeared, other than cancellations or alterations, tel : Classified Queries Dept - 01-837 1234, extn 71S0 Ail advertisements are subject to the conditions of acceptance of Times • Newspapers Ltd. copies of which are available on request.- HNATHIX-—On July lorn Aiutralla. in rrurt6i>> and lia-fi- • ijjn.tn koii-uuij i Nicolai. HYAKS.—On July 2nd. ta Elaitw anil i’sul IZ.vain.-i. ci Oxford—a dauahitr • Du bora h i. Lfiws-LLOVD.—n.1 July .um. al Il.H.C. M.ilentlly Hoipted. W#n- ih rater. io Ann moo Tooid- Jonvsi and Jonii—n inn iTcamt. troJier for Di-iyih and Gjh*I!i LOCK.—O n IDSh July. Io LASlcgr <noo McOorfuni and ilichaei. ol Lantaura —3 son I'fltmMhy 'IlCtUCli. ORAM.—On July *Uli. al ‘ Ourra (-"hallolie's Ho>nllnl. la Jine 1 nee Haworth 1 and .VUchai-I—a dauali- irv. . PLATT.—On fb» lUUt June. In OiiCioa. 10 Georgette* (hoc tvnn- tfiTi#' ami HapY PfciLt—a jo:i 1 Amirov/ Rj^hnnll. RICNS1U350N.—On July Ijill. ID Susan fm» Falrtazn; 1 and John —a son. ROSS.—On July >14th. 10 Diana < n :c MUlbonrn< and Sandy Hass —a riJU-jhLL-r 1 jjia Vanoasai, a slater for Emma Louisa. STOKES.—On I 0 J 1 Julj. Lo Var- garni anil Hoyi.-r. of WaKJi Abbi-y —a son < iSqneilia frtdiwd- JjmrSi. • - . I TAVLER.—On 13Lh July. In Pi-ti and Alun 11 Cui-kHt-fd Haipltel— a son ■ Lute 1 . WlifCKLER-—To Mario fnc* Sjp- warti and Andrew, an July l.*Ji al Queen Myy'i. Ho-.oltal. N-ui- baointon—a son ■ import An- IhonjT. broLiter (tar BamjUr- DEATHS MOHTRESOR.—On July lSth. Madge Dorothy, wtfa at Uie hn Rf.tudlcr !■". M. MonmssOr. M.G., and dearly ls-vud mothi-T, ERtedtr.oQior and gr&al aranc- m other. Late' wi Alvcreteke and ra it bury - House. Slier tame. Funeral service at YuovU Gra- iiiaiortuA al ^ p.m. on 2uJi ROWLAND 0 CLAfliL^-On July 12tb. 1 i :7R. KUtfdmlr as W« home. OrosAwnya Col tag a, ICHttburj. Newbury. Berta., wab i<cwL.nd Clark. Cremation private. No flowiNrt. please. Memorial Sar- fim 10 be h»M lai‘r. SAINT.—On JuK 13iii. l-mob. husband of .Pauline, father Of Nick, of Fork Corutte, Pw.ton Mewscy. near Andover. Senve 31 Ko’ir Trinity. Penicn Mewttj. an Tuf.-day, Juir IHUi. at - S-J p.m.. .foliowod by ortraie tre- r.iatlon'. Family nowcK only. Donjiinas. 1/ dosbod. lo the 1 U.N.L.T.. «: ’o John Sleel and San Lhnlied. ChfetU house, IVlmites- ter Ji.siG. Ull GO ED-THOMAS.—On 13*h Jnir. Uomtiiy Ttavers <widar/ of Sir Lvnni. Peacefully in a nurelnn home at Oxford. Fun««l rjrtsite todayi .Menrartal ynrrtcu planned laicr. PERSONAL COLUMNS ALSO ON PAGE 23 HOLIDAYS AND VILLAS FOR SALS MARRIAGES S3 Animals and Birds Appolntmen.* Vacant Bminesi lo Biunon OomcsUc and Catering Sianlloni - • Educational Enlorlaiatncnls .. 6. 7 and 8 Flat Sharing ... S3 Home and Gordon .. 11 Legal Naliens . . . . 11 Motor Cars ... . - 33 Postal Shoppers . . .. 11 Property .. ... -.11 Remote.23 Secretarial and tlon- . S;c.~erarial Appointments 33 Services . . .. . . 33 Simmons Wanted ..* 33 Travel . . . . A HITCHCOCK APPLBHV-On Julv bin, at St. Jolut'ff Church. Ura.-nsgr\#vc. Ji-reniy. elder :-On of Mr and Mrs C.u><ffrw Hll'.h- coclt. of 1 SUPUf's ll' J v. f^imurids# 1 . to CirmFn. dauuhier of Mr and Mrs J. £. U. Amloby nf ul Alfrvion Close, Brandon, . Dumoiri. MELCHER : POTTER.—The mar- ilaaa. look place In London nn IQtit Jt0l*. lt'78*. hclwcot. T ..rreniy- Paul Mclctiw*. son of □oris DU', of Los Antjc'es. tlL'l- fumia. and 1'loni Mary- Fotli-r. - daugnier of .Mr. and Mra. U'UJiatn Po.K-r. of Jeracy. Channel hbiib. POPHAM : DAWE.—On July lL'h. al St. Mary's Chuicii. Hay ling Inland- Mr. s'uan Por.ham to Dr Carolyn Da we. WAS : BHATT.—On July I3Ut. at NorUiwIcl. Pari: Pu •.litem, tt'eni- bivy. 1J.IV Vyjk lu Ua HiiaU. MEMORIAL SERVICE JEPHCOT7.—A Service of Thanfcy- ttlvlng for Uio life and v.-ark of Sr Harry .l.-pl.aoit. Ur._. will b»- hold at Si. Martrantt'e. ti'eslmliL-tcr. at 14 noon on Friday. Ulst JiH**. l'JTH. 10 be corducicd by Ute □.-an of U'ouUnlnsIer. No tickets are required. IN MEMORIAM BTNC.—In proud, and lolln ANNOUNCE & IGNIS UK HOLIDAYS SHORT LETS C.ANCER RESEARCH Jn our lonq rirugalo w und-i^ Utc cjisn of cane r. '«! any* hiiilnn lo J-»k df-erer am* tfeeata’ Inio Uu# U. Inn ceil, lnlo the lncm>D5l ae-tens «. hi,, sirpif. piease hi it our work lu? vending a dcgelioit of “In M:n»orteni *■ #sift IC#— ltlHHJil 5L CANCER nDS^CH ri-so ... noon lh.i h. P.O, Brx 1— Lincoln :. Inn Field*. London. *Ul SPX THE EARLY CHRISTMAS BIRD GETS THE EARLY CHRISTMAS DISCOUNTS I Buslr.etsmen want to taka lit* a Una out at Curie Lmas advert 4- Inp 7 Hlnq 01-273 U351 ItOW and find out about IhC necoivos early buoklno dlscounis for The Tlraoe Cliri,Una« C1D Hulde ?. n e the Chrts:m.:s •Tnunidawn—hill bunv bet ore the after ends i VILLAS IN FRANCE 30'.. REDUCTIONS On part-paid cancellations WAP PING WINE NEWS LE TERRAL ROUGE tlaUtetl if Fmnco by cnantorerLl LATE BOOKERS - • RELAX i If sou lucen’l yn; Lngl.ed yuur npilObi’ or iv.iiu iu Lhiiov, 2 WEEKS OR LONGER ? jjjgyy wo. can irroiuthl- ill you .n. ol rtruu'jur are tujsy people, un- Du^r.v Esute 'AseaiA Uhl ill _ p&tc to arrange their sum:t:-r liollaar In Decr.ttibar . or ■i^nudO'. Gredin Hate : ^-siar ho.el , A.1 WAG.. .Vahirv 2>0riney rfCChtmtndJd ..II rooms v.-HU oniote baili- r n 2 tn:.i. Slogan : comfort and vmice o*f th: baa^sn Uach. u.3,ior : pimc'Iui coonij StSHS®- 4 villus from Hie .lOrth. DeilW CMJ.I. P.:ar t-lOiMly. Kmei au'fbnr HP*L- Eandy be:cit.-i pv.irbv. ““ft tbli vlna now b” crlLnq Cloieliy nil;-.?;. 4*il. a «ir ''rrtre (o r .jur broehup- io Mao-head Hotel, \vooliordi°- •vorihv. Ride lord. Ditun. ".lake *• •=* ai you can. plnatc. have Ccnsr-1 Lonaou Late a'.oL'cbla Irons L7J p.w. 01-53- , . , tls4 Ring THE ADAM BUREAU Offers. Loc- du.Va i.-idw: range m ib-.u.-.' ! shert lot sw.leu t'aki aj-J huui-s ii 1 all i ft nira. areas. Lome ana i 4 U5 lod* - . - ct < r~ R"'ea:_S!.. W.I. or ;'...??;ian< 01-JC7 o,l:.. FAMILY HOUSE LARGE FLAT. CENTRAL.—Private y?.‘r»a«. ZiWi'.i bvjfowt. t\. ■.t.e'.j.: r.ias.vn: : J-j Wi. 7 V p. w. —jj 1.- f * 5oCl • jJ- 335»J. Taka fcdvanlifjo c>f Lhe lisi of tii-.-io vUVJl noliaay borgatru. u> esm offer ut> io oO ovr c?iu off on Wrt-p.iid can?-i- hwlon, ,(.r l!ta tnonLn of scu- tertibcr only. AttricIS’.e ylllii and ojari- msiii in a hun.b*T of Francli rororls. Hclo loo. wllft all your ltavlI ctrangcmemi. no:,* - .We aUo h.,vc n few vaisinrie; far August at nur- sual ral'i,. Write or nhone for dotoJls and booMinqs today w: ! Now that h- a t-ty warthwltl'e nieejy ^VTrstiy rites a lot nf' bvCnn. eJiW o.ntr cnaapo r*o* 4.| r . , ll S'“ wine wiiit fklroviv m unliv and hiau power. Th), aValraWe future in wtPrft to. .iitprove. ,V»v UOi.must be /i, [»r 12 twit, case mc. Vd.. ^___ BLANCY BLANC Estate toltled by Ptotrd Pare of (J^ugny JJQLCM_\R H OLID A VS LTD., Dfjt. n2 Shirley Road. Cro'.-dnn. CRu 7 ep Telephone: Ol-bSb yvjb 124 hr. answcrlnfl service! PARIS £23 _ . . nng ary or'Paymaster Lleui. the Han. Ct'-org.. livno ZlN. who died at 13. 1&44. ASHTON. OEOJICE F. R.—On lfitlt , ut; n^-rJr- loved anil July. 14' consuauy fagjtl, remwitSSed bj - hlfc ELDRnfcE. EBNEST EDWARD ROOTH.—Hem'.-oilXJ-ine wtm obtdlnn and dcvuicd love.—- aWdinn II.M.E. STAMHOPE-PALMER. ROEFRT.—■ In. blessed ciemory of my be¬ loved hui-tund- an his b'rtfida:'. July Idlli. I mlvs ync more than wards cun s.',y. Mud biuaf you. all r.iv lure. /.err.. TEMPLB, CYRIL II.—In prau-l iitil lend, rest memory of ray durlv B ivd husband. July 13. lt‘43.— jisy. WATTS.—^In loving memory of Panel vu I M. Watts. July 10. 1133. - ■* In M.inuu TuaS Dominie.". LOOKING FOR A HOME ? THINK CLAIRE MARIE VVHEN THINKING OF AC COAIMODATION BROSDESBL*KY. N V 5 b»drooms. sle.'p.9. lu'lv i-guip^ed. Large garden. To let all .lugtut LlOO p.w. . O LEAVE YOUft HOTEL er„I r.••’*.■.■ i.f.o or: cf our susw aiur.ilr.c..- of holiday teflngi.— i err.-T u Dav.es. ol-ji-l 5l7J. See Rentals Column EDUCATED MATURE Working widow oners .Ttuncljl ijiir....ncp to Mmila perron 'aeg ran prcviilo a canpanlai Lome 10 share. Lon¬ don ir?a. (l:ah.-si refe.-v-nc rAs K. required. Bos The tunej. DEATHS Bov Ho replies mould tm addressed la: The Timor PO Bos 7 Now Printing House Square Cray's tnn Road London WC1X SEZ Deadlines lor cancellations ana s Herat ions to COM fexceol for Or oorrd advArtlsemegtsl Is 13.00 hrs prior 10 the day of publication- For HOtidr'l Issue the deadline u 12 neon Saturday. On all cancellations a Stop Number will be iuund to ute advorUser. On any sub- seauent queries regarding the eantv] nllon. 'Ills Hon Number must bo onotao. PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD. We make every effort to avoid errors in advertisements. Each one Is carefully checked and proof read. When thousands of advertise¬ ments are handled each day mistakes do occur and we ask therefore that you check your ad and. if you spot an error, report It to The Classified Queries Department immediately bv telephoning 01-837 1234 (Est 7180). We regret that we cannot be responsible for more than one day*s incorrect insertion if vou do not. 1 . . . Ksbi *a<il ... If Ihnu can:-! biilv'.i-. n.l tlilnnii ?»»•’ ua#- -'bia w h^i ihai bpimvi-Ui."— Si. Mark V. 2-'.. BIRTHS Jutv IJUi. Uuccn ALCOCK—aJn i ‘.'i.trlort's HriMtllJl. to K'.u and Tlmaihy Alcod:. oZ 1 .MoniiKbcr How. Twlclh nii.jni*—a sen. a hr.ithor lor AU undri-. BALLAHTIME.—On July 1*. al Prmbut'.'. nr n.irbir.’ imn Nvi- snni ami Rrur,.—a tlaugliivr i .IlnvuHfra Barh.ire ■. a (nslur for Mar.. BRiriD.—On July 14. at Ournsn Charlotte'* Ho-Snia'. lo Chartalty •nou Liiardi and Julian—a son. BULLARD.—cm July i4Ji. in Takro. to Carolyn me* wium and ArUiur—a daunhicr. . CAV/THORN.—On iltl, J U |v. rn Slept, and Simon—a duuchim • FmHVi. COCKCROFT.—To Rb-Wn mcfr .'lacLInlodii and , :ic!>*i’l. on July 3Ui at Ihv Hoy.ii Susst-; , Cou-uy Hospl.a'. Brlghtun —a son , BOWEN. MAnC.YllET lAETETLX. p<:au.1Ully in New Zt^tanU on July IJUi. Cpiovort au.il. grral aunt and gr-al-great aunt, for yuan licadmlaima th Dun- emty ;-Mr». COWAND.-Cm July bib. 197S. IKMCirfully at I ho Ri-.,0.iv« Nurs¬ ing Home. SlUmoutb, □■■von. K.'lb'srinu Hope Coward. D ev. London, and honorarv D St. Ma nchrtlrr. aged IG your*. Cremation look place al Excier bU Thursday. DUCAT. JOAN.—in hur 5N5iit year late of Shrrpmvaiur. Ztep.-. Hiut*.- lolly In a nursing hoaic al Salte- bury. Calpin.—O n July G'.h. John Car; Trascr. Ui ilm train insctl] a: Taup.on. ag «1 lj, y:ari tSun- snim' Cn.lKii, husband of MomiU. Dad of liiTTllfCi. J:ri-i.y. Jolly and Janv. luwrnll TUvjd.iy. lK:h July. S.-rvIca at, rnimanuel Churvn. PlvrriouUi. at 11 a.m. All tvelconiir ai lh>.‘ church. Cm I lowers ard imuuirtes. nlujie. la Waller G. Fairon. Soih-bury Hou^e. Teihlil .1 venue. TW.: Hllnou.;i 63J3U. CIBBON.—pnjcelnUy at St. CollUn- M's Hofifj.ee. Ldlnburgii, on iJtn July. l*'Tb. al'.cr d long ulnir&s couragioujli’ bam,'. U. Col. Anwar Wvntor Mtebon. O.h.i.. ■ Uie A. and S.H.i. of Wuat Ujiravtiltln. Artl(,>ni. Arqvle. Dcirlv loveil hu.,te.nd or Sheila, and ulhrr of Ojv iI and Loolsi.*. and n,u;h loved gramltjlher and :.iep fa lour. Funeral sen icy ,i! St. Poler‘*. Lution Place. Ldin- burgh. on fU’?day. lUlh July, al 2 u.ni.. to wldch all [ncnd-V ax* L-u-atd- Cr<.n.l.ion ihfreil.er pri- l-die. Mr monal vrrelce at Ari/um al ,i Liter daw. rpinllv Ihawi-rv only. Donations If desired lo SL Coiiimtn'i H 'sake. JACKSON.—On Monday. July liMi. i«7H. suddenly and peace. Hilly at her heme. La Orange Cottage. ItouLc drt Landss. SI. Oiten, Jer-i-y. Nora, aged T2 voant. diot-ly loved moihi-r of Anthony and Mrahair.n. Will te' sad!/ mlii>d by her lami'y. four srjndchHdran uvl fr'rndi. The litTural sfTvLa will be huld at mu Jcracy i;n*in.K.irjioi. ru;i- djy Re'll. July 181lt. al 2.30 P.m. Flower* ntav te- seoi m H-iciier ami Le Qu.-inu. Tuirral Dtreciarc. 3C> Koniingtan Place. Jntvi JOHNSTON-On T.-Ill Julv. D. acn- fuliy at home in ntr sr-ih y.-ar. Itlarnircl Honrltiu. 2nd daughirr nr the 7th Harug V. at-ln-ili.nii. ■ nd vMuw of n-:hrJ iJuJuituv Bnuwr m> ■ Ul,-d 1 * '2 >. and' CvnI Fabian Rjiclhr Juln.lun idled FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS J. H. KENYON. Ltd. FltNERAL DIRECTORS Dav and Night Service Private Chaptns 4 f Edgwarc Rdad. vv.a Ul-72.-, 3277 44 Mortons Road. W.d Ul -037 0737 ANNOUNCEMENTS CANCER RESEARCH CAMPAIGN vi the largess single cu&ironer in Ute U.h. of r«rtud' lnlo all forma of cancer. Hulb us to nimuci cancer Willi a legacy dunauon or " in muiiiuiuni danauon to ARCHAEOLOGIST req. by S. Lines AKli,ieoi<n;tu.l L'r. 11 .—oec Ucn. Vacfc. PHONE : 452 9276 FAMILIE5 WANTED. In H.'OipStMd. iind 'joMcPs iircoL ii> * *-:k- our E.E.C. sviiihr.is ttuii- Xil- A5 EDINBURGH FLATS doganv cenu-al Edinburgh riaL uy.-n aullooti to .VrJiur'a wjl. S double, i single badruoczi. Vacant oUth July to end Edin¬ burgh FtttUval. VIA ScDferaber. for b-d fc breahia*. lib, Steiner c.f Language S-.uJIe* of U1-4-J2 1731. HOLIDAY FLATS from E.33 p.W. ut'varii.—Helen Watson & Co.. ‘-i 1 ---■•> ...orf. WErrr __.“-Viiroomrt F*s. lit Aueu-l. 5 •.••C-.-lo-. LT-U J |.7 - > i is - ., ..)n J im;.. ISLINGTON FAMILY HOUSE, vle^.rl • r ..-.nr T.\. Avail. Aug. £du r> v.—.,!!> cO-n MANAGING DIRECTOR. S-TOL re- nulres London cied a terr'. Short i 't:. P'.iu.-.r-• 51 ii-i. j—. [TO LET. ISLINGTON.—Buaulllul. ■-, ssirtcu. ldtii I'l-ntury heuv:. _ . | c-.cr.oorInc Lllg.-burv Field#. MODERN COTTAGE; BertalUre. SO ! in :i 3. 2 recor#!.. 2 hath ;ulns. London. ■" Ivt. 2 v. t-Fls» ] . Tel: 031 229 652S July. Aug.. Sv-.J.. ~~ j p.w. Sls.’iis a o Fu:l] iurii:fchi d. <ju 1 ol. tennl*. court,. Rets, tii^-ntuu. i J c.caL-.. 1 lanndtT. \vailab:<r no to live w. f—-r.i 23 July. !P7»j vR,/fcrone-.s. Plume ul-2L’« icl.: iUi04, m j Uif. BOOKS WANTED. Sr^pndhund, Anu- ■ c, ~ ncunu c ._„ - , ... q oar Ian. -Sea Wotiud. i ^jV-la w® N.*"”’d^o”i : ed - c fLll. Sleeps 4--S B.W. . F-'cqrel CHEZ-NOUS ACCOMMODATION. W.. XV. S \f. London, ill".' hoiLift,. •».> E-ICO n.v.-. V.-7 24da. LINCOLH CONTINENTAI_Superb I Sc-e Motur Cara. BMW 10025: Unmagmlats. See Molar Cars. ihlmplo COL Frorh tTJ i . daq»._—Tel. 1 DJU-S, £22215. ANIMALS AND BIRDS raattccry 7 m vs l Parte oni¬ on., dues Qp-ral'.- over]- Frftiar and EuniMV throughout the y«er. Pomne-v.cr amuiflcjnrnts include ri-cnra Jot illnhl dlmd frum C-V-Wirl: to Urhr for an t|t7P?»IH)le *--3K return I Cliy li-ttrs Inc'iUd-ng Jel flight and rrvtih transfer-. 2 nights b and b tn eeftiraU.v nliualcd hotel —unbrautcle value from £35. CiiANCC.IY TRAVEL 140 r i Cimndcn Hill Road. Lutid-m. V.9. Tel: OS-ufl-a P4S* ADTA AT'JL u.vit. J-hr. answering service. vv^ha-',”Viimlrcds more astenJhinn Vine Jwrgaov-—d n v.t*j„ for full Line 1*4. Rorm-ml-er you aro wcicotno .o call In tn m jou titty Parting te no problem. ctUioc. GREAT WAPPINC V. .NP^W.. ^10 ^V.VPpLNG HIGH STRE Tei- oi-iia' . T .va7-9 G oods offered subject rtutatnuig unsoid. HOLIDAYS AND \TLLAS SPECIALISTS IN ECONOMY FLIGHTS ro NAIROBI. UAR. .lOEI.'RU. JJmI AhPiUA.' INDIA. PAK. Sc.1- CHELLES. MIDDLE E.IST. FAR EAST DLRAI. TOKYti. AUSTRALIA. LUKOPE. CAIRO. LA.T. LIU. 3 Pant Mansions Arcade GRAND PRBi COMES CLOSE Wilt zoom binocular j DUOili. 64 \GW HotyJ Si? ihg aZumphant flj cio^c-up when .van tug Main fever. ECONAIR; NEVER KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD Visit Friends and Relatives In KENYA. S/W/CENTRAL AFRICA. trmiOPlA. SEYCHELLES. AUSTRALL4 kCONIIR INTERNATIONAL 2-15 Albion R'dgfc.. Ahterngaw SL. LondUD ECT 7BT" TeL : C1-4U5 7tejS/{i207 ■ Tls. ; OT4C77 1 f Airline Agent*i UP, UP AND AWAY TO NAIROBI BULLDOC rumples fer fale. Dop< i «>::*coo C lei. ■ ' - »4ii i *-■ SU3BIER SALES REG AML'S Our sale itaris toiiay w«b O'-nuin-.- rndueilons on all our beautiful clothes 17 Beauchamp Place, SW3 5S4 7293 CANCER RESEARCH _ li.1MP.UUV Dept. TXE. 2 urliuD House terrace. London UW1Y 3Alt. GLYNOEBOURNE WatUixJ. EVfTA—Wanted to TICKETS. bee __ -.change, no tu J4 3U1U, 27Hi July-, lor any l-t-21 July.— tel. OMord ;d3iia. KNICHTSBRIDGS Hat E-U.fKKj _tipicJ;.sale.—Sec London Hal*. 19-YEAR-OLD STUDENT cooki fcceLS ran illy ta nhure holiday in return for cooTJng--shopping, etc.: pro- f-irably a broo d.—Jt 1-4 5G 7877. IRISH POETS home to ItL—iScii J. p. SARTRiS Ploys.—See ivanlc-d. CANON CAMERAS Horn ihc World's latest spec lolls i—aop For VIVrTAR LENSES. Camera*. Flash Hurt. etc. • pic.. From Euro FoJo.—See Far Sale. MY DEAR GILBERT, are you at tlf Old Vic on Sunday ai 7.5U n.ro.—PlnriTnlr. A. Sullivan. CONSULTANT prx:llco requires oitlce space. West End. See IK ntol. HOUSE Swop, 6 bed. houcu. sn mile*, south MutuvJi. afylne foul- hllti. rjorage and large garden. - Offered Aug.-Sent. 13 in rv- clianqe mr similar seajl iwall. Stud!Ik. Biol Par^ t: unoting. CHELSEA- Inmia-uLilc tivg-ncy house.—See Lund & Sun. Cul. 1”>|^ hurled III 11.3..I a.hi., J"CHARMING ieai.lt hutLSc. Tunbridge 1711, julv. at Thra::hTi Oiurth, 1_It oIJs. iSee vuuntrt pro|>erty.» LIU) KI J11U1IIUUII.T. THOMAS MICHAEL,— i private followed by nice al Si. Man-a ■ Simon Jamr DATNOW.—On Ulh July, el S'. SI. Mary’s. M.2. lu Ll-n atirt David—a daughter lYtumln looih •. GOODCHILO.—On July IJUi. ai Klno*'.en Hospiu.1. lo Pei.r ai^ Pli—a djuoiuer i (Caroline P.ini- J ai. a el,ter ror> N'lcho as. CRINKE.—On July XyUt. at Nor- v.'lrh, to Iteiamu-i I inrc I'jintyn, aid Pan 1 —a -nn • E-hasl-an An¬ dreas Sheldon i. ■ brother for .\lc.\andtr. Norfnl... LANGTON-1 illv Wh. l"7Jt. g. J .e- fuHy in hifc *[i , vu. dt hU liORte In .Malurca. Tltoma* F.ilwin. iiukF. luvwl husband of Donrihv and beloved lith-r ai Jum- and Norma. Funoial fiervkr was held .n ■ ijliIt an Hih JnLv. LEYBOURNE. CT1ICL MARY, nn Julr t'Hh. nitacefaliy .it home. 1R Latin Street. Dcv!«.-fc. wile or thj Ute PercUnl John Ltv- boum. » belovhl malhcr. qrand- ntoUi-r and qtcai grandmoLher. LONGMAN Cremation onen sen— ... , - Church. Bourne Street, behind Slunne Sriunru. S.W. I. on Wed¬ nesday. l'Hh Joir. at 12 noon. No llower*, nluor.e. LUCAROTTI.—'VirtueRym« Soil. L.lr. < ft Id. > on loin July ;ud- dente at his home 50 Hnundwai Pnrfc. Revive.. ReqaU.-n mass 11.ou a.m. luetdar. i.Mh July at the Church of tint Immaculate Cnn.-<prion. Devi uj. Howers lu iij,rt>. t‘. Ilatldon. Funero! Dircc- Itir. 27 Slrtmouih itr.rl. D-.vL-cs MPFSEL. FHlvrr. C.1J.E.—On JnJv 15th. at hi* home. Maritia*.. Rori'iiios. dearly Invod broiher of v.ic Conniei* or now, MILLER JONES. KEITH.—Peace. , fn‘1" at hts home on July 11. ! Huzband of Deity Ellon nee I Ajf-i.-tth. brolhrr ol Monica nartenbUrt" and Katharine Bi-nUer iKiun.-n. lumfdi «,;rv1ce at Si Saviour’s. Wallon S‘.. S.W.5. r,q 1 huridlV- Julv 20lh .M H.50 a.M. hV.liulv flower* onlv. Dam- funs if rir<ir<d to Famirit-n Tund. National Hospital. Qu?*n Suuar.:. ti.C.l. The Times Crossword Puzzle No 14,952 ACROSS 1 Hoiv one achieves a decree u( unimpeded driving ? (6).- 4 Scion out of form for Bisley (S). 10 Abraham's city {7). 11 Amuses a townee who is bcilcsed by expenses (7). J2 Their lease was up by the fall (4, 3, 3). 13 A gentile turns to Hindu philosophy 14). 15 Bluff kingdom I enter bv oath (7). 17 Land-agent’s veritable high spot 17). 3 Part of United Kingdom lose; ODIHAM. H^nts, Uniurn.iiicu flat In pi-rlud hou-.c. See Kcnuil*. SECRETARY, s.w.l required. Sea hacn-larlai «acancti*. CAN VOU SPARE iu*t one Sunday u Tier norm i... haw a Conlaa f rwup of lonely, oid poor.lo io in.Phone notiLKi. ui-240 ttryjli. ASHSROOKE — PEMBLETON — rirmclis. Whirc ara you 7 Ynltr fcile-nev L man ominous with no news since- your momentous announcement a . whole w«?t ago. Sorely ronrg peuiile have wiuiea to you ask¬ ing you to continue Ui.in io sioo I’.iur great massages. Aou’vo had my leuer and Uie six other signatures on the letter arc oU bona Dde. in fact, from other members or my houso lioro at school. We also rfubbed Pj- I getiler lo pay fur Lhls annaimci.- meal To unyono else ruading ihli you must write immediately tn Ito’. 1991 K. The Times and say save the A-P-F's now ”. ur some tiling apnrunrlate. Please tielD. Jorcmv Packenham. DO YOU have drive 7—See Domes¬ tic * Causing. K AHO -M. No news, bill phone CaoLiln Qllgh. LADY of indoncndeni means, carig Foj«. healthy and pleasant, would like to meet another Ip- similar ail nation, willt Ihv Idea of sliartng oiirtngs. suc'ai ovencs. hitcilee- iu.it co*>venaUon. wc. imnec- Oh> * r?feri:nr-’i exchanged. Bo.i i'*n v . Th.- Tlmi-S. □ID VOU MISS JOHN PPOFUMO'S '• rennte> from Heav.-n ’ radio anpo.il lor Tomhee HaJI? If so do nol mis* ’h"' opinrlunilic to contribute. Donations to John Prolumo. • Tovnbcc Hall. Com- inerclal W.. E.l. zoo.ooo piece* reject chma—Sec For Sales. A COURSE In letr-andomanding. —S» EdnuUonal column. THE COUNTESS OF DURHAM much reflrrl* liiat she wa* nimble lo attend Uio service of ihonlcs- givlng for the tile of the Duchess or Sutherland, owing to absence Ebreai. TRISTAN DA CUNHA, Pllralm Island: Historian working on lopte ■ ■r rnwh •••'nd. Kl. KHda. popu- ladons would appreciate oppor¬ tunity to acaulre books on Uicie ciaccs. Dr. S. Marray-Smlth. 53 I Ercmntori Square. London. S.W. 5. •CHARTERHOUSE SCHOOL Hcgtsler I , tvoO-25 is now available from j tiie Ldliar. Chorterhousa Register. ! CHartertiniise. Godalmlnn. Surrey. • OLD CARTHUSIAN DAY SalUXda>' j July loth. Annual General ' 'liTttng in hail at 3.50. THE COST OF INDEPENDENCE. To the blind. Independcnco I* ar-taiY precious. The Jewish Blind Soclete help* them achieve It lurouoh day centres, n-ald' n- tiai and hoi [day homes and oilier soetai scrvlcra. But cot is are nionnJrg. Help Is urgent. Dona¬ tions plea si to: Hon. Treas. JBS. Rn 1. X Craven Hill, London, v.'.a. DEAR MRS. ASHBROOKE-Pomble- sen-Firrn-li—iqnnre p.-rci’ Shud- worth. we who have La work tar a living enloy the sort ol lire J-OUT arnottneiuaents portray. — -I. u. oxiev. 1 FRED SILVER.—llibpy 24 wlgnle* - guinievofnilat pg ldleglum—(amu ■ love ll.-arj.—r.S. ■ PERCY SHUDWORTH—van un- i i-ueitablc cad. ul:e back alt you . raid about A. p. Fr. or it's | plsinli at down on Richmond Part. Signed, the League or Ash- brncilce La mi Us h. i MAKE YOUR WILL THE EASY WAY—at hamc. See Servtcv*. MARY FARRIN. L.,u-|u.t-.e buuinii-r Knltwe.sr. I7hlaslIc reduction*, v SIh. Maul Ion at.. w.L, 01-4 h, 2 iHf. PIANOS.—July sale. FIoc>t selec¬ tion. Now Ccchitelo. VjRiana. Knight. Ker.ibi?. clc.—J. k(|U.si S amuel p l.-i nos. 142 L’li'iW-r- Road. Marble .ireh. U. 2 . 01-72-3 HB13. BALLOON. tile latest malcrniry fashions from Parts. 77 Walton St.. S W.o. ul-S;t-.> 5121. PIERO DE MONZI.'CERRUTI. Said now on nt 22 Beauchamp PLce onU 68-72 ruthain Road. S.W.-3. ToF. 58" n7-:o and Owl 2UU'J. 200.000 PIECES REJECT ami lx.et WEST SUSSEX.—Se.-lsldd holla J- ls.lt. Cl9. ,OS ii. IIOI.I 274-ilOJ j-.W. HOLIDAYS AND VILLAS The Wnrran. Lisi WUterl.-ij. Chichester i U24.T, 870 0^2 WANTED I. 1 r-73. or tin oil Ini atva.—Ashtefid '73685. n-n: until Seylcmt.ir. 1 ould iOiulir .1 buyir.’j [ ling r. ill.ice. tjussti. \VE LEAD OTHERS FOLLOW ai.uuu rifcvfia reject arm IK*! china. Masons. Spade. A<il«Ic< . Hiy.vl Worccsk-r. Enocli ti'eitp- waod. Adams, eic. Porcelain H'arehouie, Curtow Stn.-.l. Bv Ttrvrer Bridge. S.E.l. 407 vS33. Open 7 days. ADVENTURE HOLIDAYS.— 1 (..liUdren and adults. m'ln n ■ LOiioeirnj, u-alersth.ig. po-ij-ir.-L, and man.” other &ror:s. Aciomcie- ; I'.iUon in Lonis -i-j manor farm. I Lou/iianu* C.nu-c .Dept. T*. I King-bridge, a Deign. Tc.e- J Phone: UTJ R5-3 227. [ LIME_ TREE HOTEL. bbiUT Steee:. Celgravia. S.W.I. near Air lor- ; roinal*. \ icton.i leaCh statiui. lit r .ah.s \o <7.:i5.ta^ I SA.. S. A.ii.ir.:i. Viia. - E>»l. Inula. P .is:.!-.. Far K-.n. Xnrlli ifeji. Ciji Ainra. AUSLH.!3. .lo'biirg - ma.iv cCier world wide di-s- tlni:’ frl: 4;i* .W4 734 234.3/ 4.“', 2.-,2u L"*:rrru air tra'.xl » Cover.o- S:.. La.idrm. W.I Air AgenZl Other World Wide destinations •ncl. D-VR. SEYCHELLES. {■LAL’niTILS. JO'BURC. BANG¬ KOK. TOKYO. SINGAPORE. BOMBAY, CAIRO. TEHERAN. ROME. AUSTRALIA. W. AFTtiCA and all Earupoan Capitals. Fly FLAMLVUO TRAVEL. 76 Shaftesbury Avo.. W.-L. Tel. 01-130 7731.-. Open Satur¬ day. Airline Agents. ITS THE EESTWAY TO TRAVEL Economy v.Tlh reUafaUlly. Sai- Iriys an tin.- following dcsUna- tl- as. Nairobi. Mombasa. t1\s: F.S SALAAM. SEY- CHt LLES. MALZRJ1ILS. JO’CLU'3. INDIA. PAJCISTAN. if- A'TtlCA. S. AMERICA. Tel. yi-*’ io y?ar, ’6 7 u best- W.lVi TRAVEL LTD.. 56 .7® V.Tnh:omb si.. I»:iJun W«?2H. Sp.icJa lists In economy travel for over 6 tear*. Telex: Bcstra SVatv.'J. Air Ante. IScuten Rouse i. Knlghlsbridoe. London. S.W.i. 01-581 2121/2/: ATOL 487D. Airline npoita. Established Since FOR S.VLL, BOB DiXAM by DAVID OXTOBY A unique opportunity wiUi tn- v.'srau-a: ror>.ntla] u acqutec a rar‘ pj-JorLil chronicle of the life end music cf Bob Dylan by a highly respected artist. .A complete set ol twelve original etchings, and etchings and a equal in t available .irc-m an edlUou Untiled lo only ten artist’s prools. pulled In 1977. Please ring 01-876 1342 for derails r-stl In today ac<1 | rar.Ov;. or phono Mr. tva, 01-629 1711- WANTED BOOKS WANTED. iiiq Amlquartun boob dr L ibrarti.-* or sroau , It -it prices paid h. .. collect anywbero. Pica*a write H.-.y AxsoTi S-.'ilcrr. D L -Bt. .3. u ffl Haj -on-Avye. ij i Rwi phone 04V72 875. WANTED URGENTLY, c Concert Harpsichord-—l baird Agency. Oxford TURN YOUR HOUSOtS into xnciwy. Ring fiat t J.-P. SARTRE. AO EJV- or' 2 riav»: Whore. >21 The Unbn RESISTA CARPETS Mirauon Biondloom. 12 ft. wide, slain re'Usunt and herd wearing. L 4o.-U> Sq yd. Cords, Wiltons trom £1.60 yd. 255 New Kings RtL. S.W.6 01-731 35ua .0 To borrow dt bqr '“B o7!*5 evening*.. STEINWAY AND m olnrtos ourthhitd. . g» Jirendi, 01 any ago 'S hi mediate di-rt*loa art* Hunts Pi an m LU. jjij f ur F reefone »ir.ig . wanted: ■ TICKETS 1 ru bournr. on Momf.ii' 4, Hinq 247 T«rb ofirice hr" KhightebrUae. S.w.l 01-539 3233/9 A. hi.' BALDWIN’AND 4 rvjh:nh~d cn ns and madals. i'.-.ij fhig/o 'btciiuen.* bonqfri TL Ad-tehl TmiiJsV! U C2N nRL. 01-1*50 bb‘ SERVICES breakfast 6.13. ui-73n 8191. i FLY + Fr V FF V Fr V CHILDREN'S ADVENTURb II..];. , U 1 « rJ - 1 « “ L ‘ I: « fL * ! L. pert ,u;,Tr.-:clon. fr>nai\ j flRFFrF epirV ITAI V lt«j.ntcia->. o-ln-l nrograntin'.' In- VJlAk.n.LC.. 51 Alii, llALl cludos Mdiing. . candulng. nor.*. :r>.-lJcing. taring, archi-rr. jirr.- GREECE CLUB ANNOUNCEMENTS THE GASLIGHT CLUB . 1 J,d 'l&'dWV' ,n “ and It proved lo be a great succe^» a* mnvt pn>l#->-ional •ntomlnoTfc find out. „ _ It offer* Super ne,.-aiir.-m lacimie*. Labarvi. frlrnilly. courtr-ous. •il'pntlve *a>rvl:». _ Bara Irani n.m. Rastiiiirani from «, .»ft n.m, until the carle hour* Monday to I ndsv. . Saturday from v i ni. Na Mi rube,shir rsqii-rcd for Out of Town nr Ov-Ti-a* \!*<1orv Unique rtenilepien \\ Ine Bar '•nep Monday-H>i!.iy . }2. aD u.m.-j p.m. Sur. rn bufri-t and hot and role illshes. 4 Duke of York Street. St. jaa»«‘*. I ..IP ri r*l. S.iV.l. river lor .. .ud Iror.tar lor bro- Summer COtswoldS and Heart of England, i S. c cotLgrs ,nd country hot^e apis. Ojl:j suil.a-.a 2 . Brochure wan : LoLsw-jiil <te>uniry Cat- ugei. Buckland. Crrudu-ay. Wor.-.j lel.; Dread way UJ53 rt-il - Z3'~.. FIFE.—HcUdaiv rial, sloe -pi ft. 1140 n.w.—Tcieohonc Taiur i DERWEKJWATER HOTEL, Porllns- 1 .^f-nwick. Lf'ilrtlv silu-.iK i^llh lake and i - Phone i.Xwii! 7 chnre and lartffi J oil day*. SNOWDONIA Shrr-r:h:re collages. Ml dates. Dirriregion 334. INSTANT FLATS. Lsrnog. Ltiyur WK"f. Mr. Page. 57~ .»45 - .. CAMBRIDGE.—Ch.T-..-:.-n-:i: 17 c. 1 cotxvortcd mu>.. small vluagc. 4 r , 1 b?d. o r;c't».. -lining reooi. ; acre, veg gard.n. Avail. "’Ji Aug.-2nd Stpl. ■SKU p.»-. Tel.: '.-rt-'il Cnrvter; jri *-•■> r.-..t\ ! • WELSH FARMHOUSE. '-i->. 6 . ireui sire.im u-.vi c-». July 15 g- U".l • 2 • • ill-- PEACEFUL FARMHOUSE. «ond h re. lance diriarcs " f-ir P-l-Y Hats: PLi.'S u.ibcai.ibie -.a.uc la;.’.-ra £ Betel Holi- u.”» !g Tol.m ■ Polonar.n-rii', u. slTDi J: Serlio. - f-rctwdr* ■ ; PLLb *r;rij| -J fir 1 oiler. Detail* ;rom: h RE7DlV I HOUDAVS JKT Carl* fit. Kd.. tl.5 -4i-_J Dl-137 *TCiy 1 ATOL 4-"2B- 24-hr. brocnurcpltono **"jt1ci A score or more holldais on elgm very different Uroelc bLn-'<. 2 wee' nnc-5 from esy te L2L4 Colt-Jr brochure I ram any good ulvnhonc. SL-NMCD HOUDAVS . 4 ".5 rultuni Rond London. S.W. 1 1 * Tel.: 01—Wl r.16" ■24-hour brochure piiunei A3TA m-’mber ATOL 5iP2B ALGARVE HOLIDAYS Sr^cLil for late buoKer- — hi-.L-r j. nr.q irm.i L’i.i V_r 2 -..-s-k5. avaihibTe 1 «» and 2 a l-liy. Oalu-icr, lugu^l bep- ti.mber ateo aiaiianle. JOHN HILL 1II.iV FI. 1.1 D. ■s. K-w Id.. I'Khinond. surrey 01-V4B 414 m A2T4. LVT.t. AIOLHCC-Ii i SUNDANCE—MOROCCO. Anile 5 1 help.re irant lo Inform all our friend* that vre’v* raotnl to W-icnme VTtnge. Tancle-r, De¬ lightful chalets With balh. Olym- |*.c pool, riding, ter.nr*. Uite- sl.'i* .-.gn foMi'nre a l In it* own 2 il acr-'n ot peaceful nr.ollc gar¬ den.. Gnod mod anil MitMUtn- nvr.:. Tr.urs of Morocco avnll- ab - -. Hire .Margaret el PMja- v.ijr! 1. ul-530 'JO 00 t ABTA. ATOL 117D 1 4T HOUR FTTTLVG SERVICE Lon leg's largest Independent bUoL tiers of plain carncting. KEEr IN THE PICTURE l Sc-s the very j.iiesi marie is of 55mm SLR camera* at Divans. (4 Sew Bond Sircot. Also a ran issue slock -af c.tt- k-ULatars, lerue*. hl-il uni. much more : Give Mr. Magnur a call today on -FULLY - CQMPREHENST READY’ MADj WILLS for oarents who v 1 th 01-629 1711 10 dtecuse your requtretnenu. ROSES by Post. First cla.*» a.r mall ri ali- Special sur.tbiLr crice. L5 fer iO freshly cut Bloomi. ii',.7., fnr 15. me. p. 4 r. Cheque-' P.O. io Hosts hy Pent. P.o. Bov 1'nJ iTi._Huc de* Marerua. . Tel. ~ CumtscY. C. u4Si 5aCb2. CRETE. 'iu:ite V our Late F-r VIII. logit. i'-_-fiti u an 12 n.l. 'p. * K. - -.OU - I. ' I. u-.: Ju!- tU'1. VAO H.fbmn 2 7.5 Tel.: 01-'CO Ifirtt Nlqhl or 4 j*> 7242 Day. SPORT AND RECREATION COWES.—Young meg offer f-i-i* v.r- vices as cret'.—01-736 ." Jb, YACHTS AND BOATS FAMILY YACHT G.R.P, Seam after Sailer 2.1 feel. Drop keel. Similar to Weslrrly Pageant. De>ign-'d hy Mima ueODle. Sleep* 5. run head roam. Separate enclosed w.c. Sis «alta. in-board Sioar* Turner 20 h.D. £500 lust spent on yacht maldng It Immacuiaie’ through¬ out. 1 owners OWN Hi-'-irtna. furnlsheri _Itenu'n COTTAGE HOLIDAYS. l.ir. aU i.-ontn .. T^.t-uh.in- w r bro¬ chure. vnt, •02421 %v,l3 IDYLLIC LAKE DISTRICT sefltne. rinrnimg ..ertu-led T’rih -_ - f.irnhuusi’. Mig.nfir.-m v-:.-v.s in- rlurie Skldri„iv nml Lite RarTCU:!- «;-Mie. Lr.c-Hon! du.iK-st'f fjcill- MeS. nurden. qnni-. * and inat- rxm. Pan- 'renanp nshmg .nail¬ able iu-a'ly. Steeps dp Su I ram oth Aug.—Te’. airnard 1 AMle 2714. CORFU 4 •V :‘S . _ f ji-j.o.-. i- aite. an3 Sm-,te». Nirg now. ,.,>-.07 .•"72. y ihr— or , :a : i*i 10 •Ziio.Eicpou.in IIOI.-.IV*. J" » Rra.-ni Street. Loi-ai-ii. v-..;. EUR05AVE CHARTER FLIGHTS: Athens Irani ite-v. ite^fu from £6--.. Malaga from £57.—Euro- *a.'* n-aie'. 717 fi n l.jhishr.du..-. L • Jnn 4 Vi 75 r t>bVB. S.W.I Tel.; 01-5*4 _“I r ' UI-5GI 525R. ATOL FAMILY Holiday AccorninoJaUon. 2 yichcns. 2 SaLhJ. oil-fir .’ri C . 11 . B’auiLful 1.ai|> c-.g.lun wall. C<-.- FLV WINGSPAN .• tenuity irs". s : fc .CCa.ij,--, hi IUj-H • ' lid'll* Aim. a. A'livricu nay F.uro.*«.—U n- F.uru.*e .—\\ - 417 *; jo r, ui. ijueer. hi... L'jaaon. \» .C 2 . Ul-242 3ei-2 <A.r..tie 4»i. n: •. ■, GENEVA.—Daily lUglit* Lhrnugh-iut tho year Ir.m 24V return. Fnr lull rti-Uuls: OPT. 'J'lria. I ulhani Ro. Bwxo vll. 01 -nsi 2 : 21 . 5€'.0. ABT II iiw * * ATOL CURTAINS A LOOSE COVERS.— 1m.. Sanderson and Setters. Ail Pn items brought lo your home style* lurpJriiy mane ana lined. London districts atltl surrounds. 01-504 03'Jb and Runup 76331. OBTAIMABLES-Me obtain iho un- obulddble: ihJiots tar sparling evoflte. Uioj-jv. incl Frarrt Slna- Ira, Evila.—Tel: 01-839 5363. ereryiMng to each no meg '.■> Li.’lr chn«g imca-cd Li The 5io.t& Busuioss. i2i.57 i on the BBC \|ta, program Send £5 Lin comp'rlc set. fb hu'bkind and wile CMJl«ta:ot 1 ’ booklet, n for Itu-iher daiote lo: r AMTLYVtil L8 3u Baker Sireot, HIM ARTICLE OR ST WRITING! Carre apon donee coach) - the W-lha'l quality. Py from the London Stji Juiir-’tllfiiii iTi. Id $ Sin-rl. Irmdc-n. vir, - ' i^A%c. Acme ‘ ,rd iS MOVING from large touniry houie. n-nrei mini now sell contents. i Herts, i GCE. DEGREE, and e-3 un*. Tuition orofpoents.—v. M: n.'ol. AJ4. Waite: OV2 6PR. Tel. hours. r&. : :. antiques, cn:. Dane trd •SoV. NIKON FM CAMERA 111 guid finish V.-WT, SOmti. Ft.a ichs. Scvhr ujed. Aii7 olTere.. OublUt 526b-l2. ATHENS. ROME. ITAUAN VILLA Uolhlag* on the. Tuscan r.sasl. Rruc.iure: Bcl’J-ih.-n CAIRO £6'J. ! JVlurn tKc.12.. From £fi'j. Lanrlcum. j7 Ehurj HriJge Hd.. S-.s.l. .at' oIa2 i Air Agis. •. Lid.. 864 C.r-t-n Lanes. London, xai. Ul-560 7234 . ATOL 8M5Bi. tral - vll one r’.v.-.—rtinn NORTH DEVON bedroom hohrLy wlnns ni manor avai te hte Taslefu nardrn. licensed _ refiianrant AIRUNK TRAVEL, opp. Victoria St. Ecppotiiy fUqhLfc and coaches.— _ ‘ ' Agent*-. • "/wtf- rJ2 'v2l' a, ‘ J ' AT rt EM 1 S -. c °0PU- GERMANY. Gl| 82B 1887. Air 3N. E- aUtl'lul l" ar 2- Alp rilJ ; _ ihrtjy n.ite in Sir-arai- —-- . manor ho'IS-l. 1 ATHENS OR EUROPE? Fly Eum- teble from 3- Ui Auguit. , EUROPE EUROPE EUROPE. OT Air 1 dt«.li—542 *615 4. Air Agones. e-u’Lv redc-curaicii. Acres c?i Aste. \.,l ",-ilv i5r>i. rn. Osvn riding snble* arri I_ nn-vl‘.nr.inT rn rmhnr 1 ... .L. ...- ■ - — ■ — HOLIDAY COUNTDOWN.—A few puce* siiii available lo T«*i Aviv and dcsUnauon? In Europe. Nairobi. Uar ts baiJ.'JU. Jd'trurq. tvea Altlcn. India. M.'Far East, Jjun, and Au.traho, Travel Centre. Y19 Oateid St.. W.V 01-137 20-.V 91 St. ATOL 113B. Tj-tng Hambie. Mooring pos¬ sible. 15,750 o.n.o. Telephone 450 7008 anytime ur- wiunr, 5 , 1 . i.ji.vr:r? 1 'ft Lid ”1 V 57 - ar *&?■ z“'i;.vi'' sn Artuiw nn'v EJS» p.i.. TL-lephor.e j OVERLAND 10 ind.a plus Stopover . i_. I ST..'>«■•••: “D -faii-i -min J 1 ^■ l, 6 irom Trail/inritr?. -k> L>irl3 • . ycun t;u<Aii ioniiiin \ u 6J. y^7 UK HOLIDAYS CHUG through ihe ChLucnu on > vpna' narrow twai. Bridgewate: Boats. B’haiusiad >044 27 1 56i5. FIRST CL ASS HOLIDAYOFFER OtraeusaTKi ota uu^Summl Cccdt>j Comfortable mem w0fi H&C3.Tdtefcdl0rw 7daysfromE65 l? JC. 'i. l tl/-JcurgC«r.) f'rvLvcrinild. Crana 3 ".JI HcfndckPARis t.r .5C.V-lo.l- 1 NORTH NORFOLK. p.tv. Ti-lephs V'bT, TSr; 3o 3 . RIVERSIDE FAMILY HOUSE to 4 hi-rhn.'.r.fuHv egutpnt-d mile* Lohriin. 7 r.itu-s M4. 2 luxury cruiaar Included. Anaux I'-S'ri 5t>l. 21.VJ r> ‘.»- Murtaw 1 Bucks 1 .i80?. ATTRACTIVE COUNTRY HOME. sleeps 7. (n Monh Cinib. Tree Julv SI-4 to Aunu.’, 26111. Ideally suit t.ixnilr: £U15 for ruH let. W73S OXEGA. EXETER. rThon-ilrq lhateherf rtri- age. sips. 4 . • Av-iUabiL- Angus - . 121 h, l'.*lh. , l 750. Fv-'ler 74617. REMOTE. SEMt-OEREUCT W<rK Highland mair-Jun. N-i mod. cons., sirens 8. A-.nintrie Aug 1‘Jth-Scpl 2nd. 85B G7HO. FULHAM. Small .ilirnrlive' fur- nlihoil modern ct>l:.igc. 2 br-l- rooms. garri?r>. gr 12 months camp,in<- or hvliiLiv let. JZ''j p.W. Tel. ■ U1-4»5 *43.7 rM. _ . TTi^i I 1 IT 6 Irvc*. 1 . COTSWOLD COTTAGE. xh.-CPS 6. Privnle retlriric. ._ "ilh-'2oUi Aug. Tel. > 04.3431 > 45.1 SHORT LETS ' - a u-::-ip Ag»ms . ten 1 bek.— mo rrei name tn :d- i?, n L , I re <nu:i. mi- Li with o:h-=r ■i--*' ‘ear oius wild are fun l iv-.ng and live. Blignins ror late ff? ofc r r r , cl ' these prices, -ii Jusv. 2 wL». Crence. £iru- 17':*. '.ordcao £125: 31 July. •• ■-fi-'lij. It in,an*;. LBrochure, legii-.ri:. st-m-i. Kent. U1-3U2 2 1 nour«. E*CEL HOLIDAYS—rdllT Ia9t cramp fi.r iJyiiu. Crete, flhodc.-*. AtlietH l f.Mit u? in Julv & Aunu-'. To.. f>:->.24 9101 'ATOL ltn, bd Leisure Communlca- Umij.. OVERLAND TREKS. 1 . 11 b b-JOklnd r. -lucU-in.. iJumi.v-M i-rocco. 2 5 wi--. irc-m 2oj. S’.udmt dis- euums. lirnciiiire: li-.-ntaur Tra- ■;'l. J Hallway St.. Sid- run. U'til. ■U-.Vjc* .-/j LOWEST PRICES irom—AmilfFdam -.14: fiar-.-iunj * Madrid 2.52: ' ■■ rmab 1 't it-: G-ncvh * Zuricti SHORT LET, t>-10 wlu.. Lovely I r-i-nir.ii London house. Mill t faiiillv. all cumrnrts. garden. ' Ol fur.I 7 024 44111. | C. LONDON, s.c. flat, siren* 4 «i— 1 - , .._P t r . "lav ca-li. .\i*g l.imo Eiiunu-y Unite. - . So n.m. London. 1 Vi ' 1 01-41G 947.51 -R-'aritng 4.7272°. 1 FAMILY u ould rent hc.iulllul 17III i So 11 !- tentihnnse. ltal to , Aug. . 1 ta»« r-ncli ht'i* : -nil sc.i. £Xlo p.w. 0745 7023-3. f J-'-D: } Immli ."Jr*' - : Copenlianen _r.n : Mi- -:7l: Home £Ta: and J»!5--r l.ureiMMn drsilnallons. Sl4rie. % 01-202 Ulll 1 ATOL 448 KATHMANDU im* jiimnrr 7 Places •trail, on l |-u - k. oeer'and ettpedl- Hell IO lirii.i ni.it Noi.it m AUqg -T. aim di-rur.or.-i sepl. and Del.. Full detail'-, rnremm- r Ovnrianri. | WANTED.—TravelKxu to . explore fir-.-ek isbmis on IS a day: lu- page guide tree .-—Loliure Com- l.tunlCJ.lunrt. > ATOL lOOTBDi. 01-tVl 4680. PARIS—2 ntehts or more from £4,5. Includes flight, b. and b.. rea* s*-rvict-*. welcome ww. •-W Hosts. 01-637 0956 1 ATOL 0!JoB ATHENS from £49. 'Hor.'o from £55. F-i4la-> from J55', J . Alicante Vrwn E-tL. plus camiiing. villa <c hotel h'-ITiliv! by coach or Jet. 2 wet-?:* from W. Vontura Holidays. J79 South Rd.. Sheffield S6 CTT.L. Tel.: tU7J2> 355352/^42391 or 125 Aldrrsgah? SI.. London. C.G.l. Tel. 01-255 2640 01-2al 3715.-In assoc, tilth ATOL holder K-HiB. NAIROBI OVERLAND via Sahara. Cor tral African _lutigtes. genre pirb. Ccr. 7 £5 j 3.. Aardtark F.xpedltloru. JJ. Golnrldag Rd.. - —— a-- Kf a rtf .’.fn •? VjvI OLD MALTING5 FLOOR TILES. Hanu roil. 12ln by I2ln. H.5U each, lulephone 01-267 2708. FRANK SINATRA tlcttQIA for -vale. Tel.: OMaijMblc*. ui-EO'J 4«K. OLD YORK FLAGSTONES, eg obi c «. afa-fiff 1 ®- H - ‘ u - vs? SALVER, 2--07. SILV LVBR SALVER, -2VOT. Dublin .9 754 ' 76*350 T A PIANO. HuTD^cllOrtl. Cla- .Vchord. Harp. The Unique, y“4 lily Home-rent Scn«ne ■wTildi ailowK ihe widest piusmic choice erf teylrumeJU plus the most ver¬ satile uur-Jiaae aaion tn one- yiar. Infarmalrf^i irom 01-H92 btoj. .Mortoy ijaueHre.4 Uelmonl HIU. _ Law-.iliam. S.E.Jo. fully stranded mink coats rro.m E'.’SO. Hcma Fur#. IE Hann- yer_st.. London. W.I. 01-629 money, a great deal, in local : g—— MHt MHM—— las burden (4, 3. 3). 5 Gift of poetry ? 14, 5). 6 Drink of redundancy (4). 7 Farthest pillar-box ? 17). S Opera's new overture to 3 la) 9 Shu could be getting fed up 14). 14 A Mrs Mopp wlio was less resigned than Canale ilO). 16 Fellow on rearing horse— sec change of element 19). 15 17’s ■*' desirable ” tvare ? (9). 20 Cleanest thing, we hear, about IooUmII {“). DERBY 200 DERBYSHIRE PEAKS Surv-fb Cou.nlrr *T?Uaq>i siccus 0 In Sny village nrjr Meriio.1:. 3nm>u-uldd hv b-.auUlu! ctmntrv. S.lde thn cattmc is tully fur- nrt.hnd n-ltfi nt-i(Krri fc'JLhin ^nri bithraoni *nd Is •ms'Iv acco^- SIMi-. AcJIhV- August 26TU ■onward.*. HURRY : Phone Matlock 2073~^'OW I —JO Old Uroniiii.r/i Rd.. London « w i. <n-.'.7n »,n i GREEK I5LANOS. 1 anlasttc lug* t-.ingt- or h,-i|i.l.'.k s. Definite avali¬ ability. iM'iiiv Cuminunlcjth.ns. Ic. rn-4-l 4680. I ATOL. IbOTIlU AUi.Xl. AIR TRAVEL WORLD-V/IDE. Tri ihe -rcciatiiii lur the cheap and cneeriul. ('. 11111111 -rcl. 1 t Air. 1 »« X-w huM bl, London. Wl. 1*' London. N. 8 . 01-540 75 ,J 5. BIG SAVE WITH SAM. Australia. N-Z.- India. Middle East. Tokvo. Bangkok. Jo'burg. Teheran. Manila. Ram's Travel. Ul-t>36 2o-i 2 Air agents- AUSTRALIA, & M.Z.-EcoPdnilcnl r.iroa with expert personal adclcv. tll-r*5H <1411. coluntbus Travel. HS London Wall. E.C.3. A.H.T.A. and ATOL V3Xb Bonded AlrUno e.gent. CRETE. 31 JULY. Few i,ionrle» In studicn dose to sandy beach and lavi-rna, I week ctOjiip. 2 W( -li. 2140. JUat rM". tilnrisar 5"515. i.IBTA. ATOL TIVB.i PARIS, studio to l-;5 Auq. .; SeW. Latin giurfer. L.-i> p.w. _'ncj. nlcctrlciif. rrl: Si-venoaai to6i.. CANNES. SiUrilo aw.. .-.Ivcu 2-a. avail, from 26 August. 01-204 ‘ wv •»*. VI VITA R LENSES cameras, flash flona. erJarger* and photo acces¬ sories. unnvailed sioctts. the he-i ptiem at Ihe _ world's laroesl speiiailsi. Eure Fota Centre. Him Road. Cowley. Uxbrldqe. Middx. Watr Drayicn 48224. THE PIANO PEOPLE.—Ocfatt Cadde Plano* Lid.. Interest Tree loons la buy your plane now. -Tele- phono Orpine ten 21724 Tor de¬ tails and a comcrt.-hensive plana . foid..r. I-B-M.: GolfbalL £250. Exec. D. £2-'»0. bid. D. £ 200 . Fairway. 2'n 3072. ADLER 21 □. Superb. £250. Falr- FIND FRIENDSHIP. , Z'on.—Oaiellne Comjrtt ner.t. T.i, aa Ablmwt-— l.on-ten. ri.a. IH-M7-* TICKETS for all iheatw ■* all sparitea ; occasion octasldn Ticker*. 600 spo«j. SECRETARIAL COURSE" step. Mrs. Thom setts 72tb?n. - - OXBRIDGE. ABO Tutors. nu MUSIC STUDIOS urith-Tnn a valid 6 I<’ for prac^co oi Irom y.30 a.m.- 8 JM p. dams unili 5 n.m. Wla Sm-r-t _226*. London. t#i.'~ — FRENCH & SPANISH 01 cuslfitod native leactim MI541 RENTALS If you ore thinking of lhat spare roam or other .icconunodatli selected prospect !'-0 te Consult Claire M Associates 01-404 8582 01-404 5737 tl> sprcialteo In aJJ cv; unfurnished and mini - apartments, eic. EPSOM RACECOltRSE is imcresteil to learn the location of unusual and/ or unpublished pictures associated with the Derby : the 20Utb run¬ ning of which will take place in June 1979. Please reply to Tim Meligan RACECOURSE PADDOCK EPSOSZ. SURREY SWUIER SALES EASY, EASY! ... M-4.^% GO51 . 1.1 rOL ItMbEU KIBBUTZ. rills Sun-mer—pla-'J avail 2 Julv. SO Auo- 5 SpsL S.a.n.. Proivvl *»7. 21 Utile R'J*- -.ill *4 t.. W.i: i. i,i.-jS3 4021. MADRID. BARCELONA. ATHENS. Aniitentaiu. Paris. Munich. Corfu. C.-neva Zurlrh. Lisbon.. Nlr». nt-.-ne. Milan. Malaga. Malta ana most Curouenn cities. Dallv rioha.—-4-rendnm Holidays. «H- 5W l»fAS i ATOL 4.3201. I U-S-A, coast to co.ifct campmq. " *■ fnnt C 1 -* ' *”•" EUROPE. — Most Places. Chc-a-i. Very. rtrienTic*-. IVho clae 7 Ol- 4.*ui 7501 NOW ■ Air .131*. <rf covr***. BEAUTIFUL Colourful. Ponuga! of fi;o L'ncriiu J'.-d flv.^cn br aches from Uie Narui ta thn Alyarvv. Ilo'lda-, fr-ng LtOo. Tlic |r;s: Siitifanr* af WUnay Lrrt.. Care Srreei. WUney. O-.on. T.-i.: Wiinriv - H' •■■51 2 J<>4 G5aa 4-511/ 1-i ■ 4BTA'.. IRELAND.—Car hniMay-s In rajilra ■inil rountry noa'-efc. • .anile I’.nio. httlV. 4'Jl ol>72. H. LANE & SON PIANOS. New and i recondlUonod, 326 Brighton Rd.. 1 S:h Crordod. 01-638 5513. pianos pianos.—I rtvos; and buy S now. Com prehensile range al nnw and reeondlilaned Beauleln. :- BluUmer and Swlnway. After srr- 1 vie:, all guarantees. Continent I M«dty. FKhcri; of Sircatham.i Pfano Snetlillst*. 01-571 3402. i SPECIALIST lytwwriiar/dictailan equipment. Maintenance or sales. Contract or call service. Chesham Olflco Equipment, 01-701 8401. CANON CAMERAS & accessaries. L'nrlvalleiJ stnck-i. the best prices at Uio World's largest specialist. Euro i-olo Ccintrc. High Hd.. Do nor hesitate > get in touch and get advice- . <Jo\vle-. Uxbridge, Middx.. Wou _ Drayton 4-3224. EASTERN RUGS. Over 400 to d'oose from. Open Sals, nfl 12.30.—Hralt'T & Siono. J Snow Hill. E.U.l. 01-236 4433. JUST CARPETS. Any carpels m.vlp in G.D. available: ' c nrlco tilling -- free underlay far A:.-mlnsrcrs « Wiltons. Fn-o cstlmaics.—01-38 j 2 ■!/. 2u 22 Van •tan Place. S.W.4. ICO* e Acrylic at £4.95 with free undcrinv. CORK FLOOR TILES Cl.95 SU. , ■ Yil. Waved. 357 B066. De Curry* : S«rHcos .54 Penlon St.. NWi. } ARDQZONE'S plana sala: Utiriqhl* ; a in Otf*r*trunim from 1:150. I nKondlllonud Baby Grands, 0 -icli- LONG LET F0I n COMPANIES • Magnificent Reaeni's 4m Door 2 -bedroom. 2 room, 2 -reception nsr. 1 furnlihifd. Minimum Ji. year with parking I Write id: I'.' Larne caurt 51 Putney HIU 5.1142 BLACKHEATH-: MIHDBEIBof RUGS' 1 andBEPCOVHtSat HAUP PRICE sn.rMY.sn.cjnw ■niBHfefcm |i£SKH6BltLnn-I7SeMiStSSn|V I BpVm RnSHglnM. 19 No women disturbed by Brut 22 Perhaps Pm gaver in castles appearance of Endymioo's in the air (7). " paramour i3, 4). 23 Chesi enclosed in father's i 21 in sum the diaiy of Steiner __ ^eket f5|. i perhaps (7). -a Touchy flsh (4). j UK HOLIDAYS 22 Ache far a suod Ions )oar ? 16 Au^oress ?<»s most or the _ _ { <). ' * way by road (4). ••MMMHMHUHMIMUMeMMHMaHM Nr. HI6HGATE TILLAGE Spacious Flat in Modern Purposo-bcili block; 2 bedfsomfc. largo sDaclous toimou, _ kitchen, b.nh- toeni. cnin.-phons. C140 iwviii ch.iiqe. oaraqc. M : v*iar Iwae. Prico C25.5C0. inc. nawly fill-id carpois and euriams. 24 Su touching. Ow] pod Pussy- Cat dancmg by moonJight (4. 2, 4). 27 Aslan waggoner has to go back (7). 28 Bird calls to announce the economic upturn ? I"). 25 Cause of radio black-out? Good point (1* 4, 3). 30 Organic agent of my Zen conversion, note (6). Solution of Puzzle No 14,931 DOWN 1 Canopy for beardless one ( 2 ). 2 What’s the grouse ? Mea¬ sure trouble in the bar ? C7). CLOVELLY COURT DEVON To let July 22 io August 19, medieval manor, sleeps 10; magnificent views over park to sea. Tennis court iu prolific garden; golf course 12 miles and riding close at band. £270 pw RING NOW 02373-215 (Clovelly) This ocliqhitd cd.-prtiscr was able to cjncol Ik; ah aildr it had appeared only once in the suceessiui " PropcMi-s under tSS.iMO " column. Gne had boo hod on our succesc- tel serijs plan (4 day; -t- i day hey) bu£ only needed ono ir.^erlion * Sho sugqj'is ■'hat anyone alter a Quick l*,?. ' ol " rn '> Times fivip inem Imd a buyer ! wk .. fr-un Cl 73 + ABl tilnhl*. Irelraniprir:,. <!12 Kenway Road. S.W n ni.lvo 4013. maibella. *-,:.-r howl ar villa* in'.luJ.ng llli.lii .mil fn-.- car with L-nll.mlli-d inllcjg-. Derfiirl urc* Iran nratlirnw. Luton. Goiwlrt nn.| M.in.-'i..-!.— fa- lulr. Auan-.l. fept. frnni C12.» Uoir VlUa Hali¬ da V>. J|. Nrtrili Em 1 Kd.. Gald-T» Hrg.-n loRdon. N.V.'.It- T«*l.-0l- li'xiL"'-'-’ -' l ” llno '" “* hr*., U.B.A. - : ~ I " '■SiA,—ifcon c.ro.Mj Sl'-li-ni. irnm £22.75 maty..—itii-is sis., cji-.'-ao SOUTH AMERICA.—TV*b—*l«1 Ltd.. OOH r LA* LA f* r-.irfi' ”57. 1 NW CUB vrturn sihr»iiiit,|i nis'iL*. HeaUi* rvw. M.ig-.-lir-vii-r il.-urlurefc. and •u.f 30 p-.tM-r faroocan desi!- iii-j..-li.— urewncr.i Tixjra_Ji>A i.-luiicwir-r itaad, S.W.7. 01-034 7J2V .Ui rA. LE TOUOUET, DIEPPE. BOULOGNE itiritvlriual Inelutlve holiday*. T1 iii« iIff. 2.1 Cl|..>tcr Clo-'-. Lonilon SWIX 7BU. 01-255 aoro. AUT-l. 2.i Chrrfrr Cio-.c. Lor^an. SWIX TMf. .,l-JV. ij'ill.. ATHENS ri'.-p. 1" JuK’. 2XJ. for 2 aifi .1 ii-t ii-e it.-:;i« 'fhJAt j]”. iinn atol. ii-in.._ NEW YORK BY HELICOPTER.— fr. r 1 Lrii!>i* \l.inh.iti.m. DroartVAV Si mu- T»acK.ifl^. Rara- nor 'iniVL-l. oi-SOJi lnlr». iAUi'4 I.IT\ i _ _ w TUSCAN ART TOWN. Nt.tTbv coiutorl.ible f.irni hau*n in 17 .irres. :tvnli.ihli- for Jane cheap tet. SItpim Ring -li-i Uj<i 1„ WEEKENDS ABROAD. 1**0 Euro- ni-jn dostmatlotifc. MIgnl. nqf«t. b-b from SSio tnci. S-j 4|r» rr-.i-.--i -1 »l-:ui fti«a i4BT4< HARBELLA TOPGOLF HOLIDAYS | n. l. flight?. hotel* .WJ'iMl*.. | »4’if-dri-.L* car. Edwards. TOocuif ■V-'.|M 2202. .AJ1TA. AIOL B7»iB i. BLEEP . . . BLEEP . . ,> Sprly h-'ZiiLiya hero. My aiPr«; I* Llu-v.-d lariat ,*m tf vou to.I it.- jnur turn.- .mil --dtir-'i'- l'U s*“* .vnu a hrocliure full of giji>i*''s ■lhpui Ull* nrevl: island. Ho r ng 01-F.T: 24 LA i' 2 J hrs. i P-H won't even diuwcr back : ATOL 7f.u D. EUROPE . . . Mast Places Chrer . . . V.-rv TIIt-Mirlcw . . ... Who Lire ? ui-4£<i 73ui . - , Now i Air .Mi* ... or Course. U.S.A. COAST la e«.v-l catBrittT o wjj. [mm LIT”. +■ AltC ninlits, Trakamrilcg. 5*2 K<-nwar RoirtJ. S.W.-T.. 01-370 JOZ - .. fil>-lns. ric. 01-25-6 7003. GIGLJ RECORDS. H.M.V. Otter: 1 and dPLalln to 23 Solsdon Road. Londan. S.F.l-v. BOSS, uvrr and undnr. nreferehre single- mnacr. for on-rsi-js buyer. «.>4.S-8K0351,_ PERSIAN CARPET for Kile. £1.000. Christa, 4-u 82 m“. am-lo pm. GREY FLANNEL. Mreuwenr >i:e start* Friday. T ClUlIrrn Slr-i-i, W.i. CONTINENTAL TRAILER 1 V A. CanciHInl order. Tej. Lee- side a:-2 7007. TWO CHARLES EAMES Ch^rg ullh oaonwas—ii:cttieni L-nniUt-an.— L'recru sale. L4CO cccn. ul-44* 7510. ROYAL WORCESTER Arundel • blu.-». bl-plcc-s, £320-01-3-16 SeLl. MRS. GORDON'S BlUIhnvr ivbuiK !.r nJ eUru. rusowrtOff. r,!t. lUin. r.--Ji.ci-ii from '23.S73 to £.3.4L5 on lrt-.72t: . 1000 . MRS. GORDON'S Ibnch rebuilt up¬ right piaro. ro£--ivuaiL rcriw-ri ippi. 1 £.2.140 te 2P‘-S an OI-12B J. MRS. CORDON'S Cluthncr rebuilt prj ” J ui.igg. ri'-ew-Tfid. 611 . 3in.. reriu,.-. I 'run G T ..6<<5 Jo £3.270 •m ul-'.Jrt 40011. MRS, CORDON'S Unatui-Sir-invim r-nu,i» grand Rinna. ra.*ei.-an4. Ml. 1'iin . ri'iucr*i irom : 13.473 C‘: '-TO an Ol-T-J1 4f1iM.i MRS. CORDON'S SVInunav ri-bulK M'ul'ri "O'* qrand pt.ino. reie- In. join.. re.it:;vjl Iran -4 ''JI | M r^gUp on Ol-'CH ■Mjiju. Foor-tiedroaraed hou»«.'. nidrriirEith Part; : 2 bJthn'- • 5 reropBotw. modern ' Lichen, oawfen and not •ivn'.ablo om year front, _ Aunust. . . £350 p.c.m. rtteB 01-518 2809 any 4 COUNTRY. HOUSE. 26 BlHj^ of Landau i40 nuns. 4 '5 beds. 3 recj-pl*. on clatliei wash nr'dryer. . washer, rtc. ' F-isliy _rnn ■ with tenoi* cnorl. Exert fLie propertr. Phone 01-45 ■ nr write a Uddit WUnpd, London. W1M 7TD. ARE YOU A HUNTER 7 FB Uail-3. one of London ■ uomiaua uqmts will pet - -, formslied flat or house liours—-LRnofil. II you so* *. A iperfect! tenant—of» WE DO NOT CLAIM to he . clans, m do ur harder I . good proeeruea for. good m-, . Piej*C ti-h.-P.-one us. lo c ■ v-iur jtMuircntenU. i^ttuass sag 5247- SUPERIOR FLATS AND H* available end also hflUUJ dlDlomals and- ex ecu lives, or short .laW. ln j*! 1 VI. LloTirud & CO.. l.St. Sueel tt',1. 01-43? i^*, EXCLUSIVE! 55 DAY CRUISE AROUND SOUTH AMERICA MEMORY TYPEWRITES ? SUmUHRJCHBHlBBBB S THINK CLAIRE MARK i.; 1 S WHEN THINKING V - l ; S OF ACCOMMODATION Bing 01-8373311 Now! Tills leisurely •tuI*'* &4 1 '-* from Ornos January 4tli, '73 murnina Ornn t on I rttreniy ~'«li. *7 n . K."|ilVP- Snnnni-r Hits _WInter., 1 ollaw lha route Ihe, grr .i n.ivliwuars look around Bninh Arm-nr.i. On the luhniou* ;iuhiTlji-iI. lully air-condiUonvd Achtile Lauto. ilaoHiip of u.q Visit Hrasll In I!» cnlonrfttl .Carnival atmDsph-ire—Ruenq* Alp-s tin* Marts of suulh Alll-.rlc.i—Pnm—Vi-ne/neLi fur l|n- million.]I p fc' lo - .' - ” ar Carons. N.ivtpaie lh- historic Maxell in -Sirjli ugit tire pan.i-n -7 <tin.il. l:'« Un- l‘*7'» way to explore Knuili Ain rtv-.i—.in s luvuiy unknown In llm 9 n-. 1 t . vptefr-s. i.in-- zrn.il ai.7 to ,ine. .\U bv scliediilroi service ni 1 tri 11.11 C.ile-'oiii.ia. I.• -. 1 *: mtH' ter tlr.- .icconi. of ' - nur cliol.-e. S«« yatir travel agent ar call Alan Taylor now on 01-83? 2157. '-'-Old Pfoios-iing. Kate oul- pui—Less r/Iors—For ir.lw- ni3L ; an. or domonitrstlon, telephone 220 2S26. ot turtle C.A.S.T. Office Equipment 49 Queen Victoria SL E.C.4. .’ 5 bedji!—flat— nuuw or'iusi MS ,oom - '* ]|<j* CLAIRE MARIE ASSOCIATE.. - | 5 Call In personally 10 Uw » : •' " ,H floor. 60 Chanwr T rA lJ !l ■ Monday to Friday 8J.50. s phono for appolnitncnL 484 5738/* RoMbto and htlpM (COQ till tied on p^ge 23) HIMMIHltMMMUMHMIMMHMMHM! Laura Lines Ltd., 99 Rosebery Avc., E.C.I. LAURO CRUISES TTIIES NEV.'SPARCRS LIMITED. JVTa Primed and Pubnsbed by Tlmro |>rji1 u-i: Which of the following rights in the US Bill of Rights comes from a provision of the Magna Carta?The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution ("no person shall...be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.") is a direct descendent of Magna Carta's guarantee of proceedings according to the "law of the land."
What was the basic reason for the Cold War quizlet?The Soviets believed the west was out to destroy communism. The West believed Soviets wanted to spread communism around the globe. - The USSR had been attacked previously, Germany had invaded Russia in WW1 and Hitler had invaded in 1941.
What government gets its power from the people?It is a democracy because people govern themselves. It is representative because people choose elected officials by free and secret ballot. It is a republic because the Government derives its power from the people.
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