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Daily Express<br />

TUESDAY APRIL 18 1989 WEATHER: SUNNY INTERVALS * 2 2 p<br />

THE HORROR OF<br />

HILLSBOROUGH "<br />

WE EXPOSE<br />

THE FATAL<br />

BLUNDERS<br />

By HARRY COOKE and MARK YOULE<br />

HEARTBROKEN policem en<br />

who watched helplessly as fans<br />

were crushed to death in <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>Hillsborough</strong> disaster rounded<br />

on senior officers last night,<br />

accusing <strong>the</strong>m of causing <strong>the</strong><br />

tragedy.<br />

. One experienced PC broke down<br />

in tears as he described a series of<br />

fatal errors.<br />

It was revealed that, amazingly, one<br />

superior ordered officers to take a lunch<br />

break after <strong>the</strong> chaos began and- as <strong>the</strong><br />

first victims were being crushed.<br />

T he full sto ry of b lu n d e rs unfolded as it<br />

w as disclosed th a t th e F ootball A ssociation<br />

H IL L S B O R O U G H H O R R O R :<br />

P a g e s 2 , 4 , 5 , 7 , a rid 4 0<br />

p lan s to c a rjy on w ith th e FA C up to u rn am ent.<br />

The. sem i-final betw een L iverpool and N ottin<br />

g h am F o rest w ill go ahead a t O ld T rafford,<br />

M anchester, o n S unday, M ay 7.<br />

S enior officers from th e S o u th Y orkshire<br />

police force w ere accused of:<br />

A TOTAL lack of com m u n icatio n w ith<br />

'ju n io r officers w ho w ere try in g in vain to cope<br />

w ith th e grow ing chaoS.<br />

NOT controlling th e low er ra n k s once th e<br />

full extent of th e tragedy becam e apparent.<br />

O ne PG said: “W e w ere leaderless.”<br />

FAILING to sp o t th e huge build-up of Liverpool<br />

fens 40 m in u tes before kick-off as su p ­<br />

p o rters cheerfully m ade th e ir w ay tow ards th e<br />

d eath tra p at L eppings Lane.<br />

IGNORING fran tic requ ests by ju n io r officers<br />

to p ostpone th e gam e fo r a t least h alf an<br />

h o u r to ease th e p ressu re,<br />

DRIVING aro u n d in cars on “intelligence<br />

ga<strong>the</strong>ring” m issions in stead of takin g p ro p er<br />

Charge.<br />

DRAFTING in too m any ju n io r officers and<br />

p ro b atio n ers w ho h ad no experience of polic-<br />

MAN LEFT ‘BROKEN’<br />

Supt Roger Marshall cannot<br />

fac e talking of <strong>the</strong> disaster<br />

ing big soccer m atches o r know ledge of th e<br />

H illsborough ground.<br />

IGNORING a w arning fro m M erseyside<br />

police abo u t th e p o ten tial d anger fro m th e<br />

invasion of L iverpool fans.<br />

ALLOWING th e low er ran k s to ta k e th e<br />

blam e fo r th e ir ow n blunders.<br />

L ast night angry M Ps dem anded action<br />

against th e m en responsible fo r <strong>the</strong>, m istakes<br />

th a t led to catastro p h e a t S atu rd ay’s FA Cup<br />

sem i-final in Sheffield..<br />

As th e public in q u iry and a separate police<br />

investigation got u n d er way, S u p erin ten d ent<br />

R oger M arshall w as nam ed as th e officer who<br />

o rdered th e opening of th e m etal gate a t th e<br />

MAN PUT IN CHARGE<br />

C hief Supt David Duckenfield<br />

had been in job th ree w eeks<br />

Leppirigs L ane end w hich led to th e cru sh . A<br />

to tal of 94 m en, w om en and boys w ere killed<br />

and 170 w ere injured, som e of th em critically.<br />

Mr. M arshall w as resp o n sib le to Chief<br />

S u p erin ten d ent D avid D uckenfield, w ho only a<br />

m o n th before h ad been a detective w ith th e<br />

regional crim e squad.<br />

Liverpool M P D avid A lton said last night: “I<br />

a m to tally d issatisfied w ith police h andling of<br />

;<strong>the</strong> crow d at th e game.<br />

“M any im p o rtan t q u estio n s are going to ,<br />

have to be answ ered. L iverpool is a city lodked<br />

Page 4 Column 3<br />

Anne: Controversy<br />

Princess<br />

and I<br />

are fine<br />

smiles<br />

Mark<br />

By ASHLEY WALTON<br />

P R IN C E S S A N N E’S h u s ­<br />

b and, C aptain M ark P h illips,<br />

denied yesterday th a t<br />

th e ir m arriage w as on th e<br />

ro ck s after 15 years.<br />

As he relaxed on a luxury<br />

yacht in M onte Carlo, he said:<br />

“E v ery th in g w ith m e and<br />

Anne is fine and happy.<br />

“We are m eeting in London<br />

tom orrow w hen I get back.”<br />

And of Anne’s friendship<br />

w ith th e Q ueen’s equerry,<br />

Com m ander Tim othy Laurence,<br />

Captain Phillips said:<br />

“W h at scand al? T here is<br />

none.”<br />

I t was <strong>the</strong> first tim e Captain<br />

P h illip s h ad sp o k en so<br />

frankly about his m arriage to<br />

th e Princess Royal.<br />

F or two weeks, he had been<br />

avoiding <strong>the</strong> Press.<br />

Firstly, because his nam e<br />

was linked w ith alleged Comm<br />

o n s c a ll g irl P a m e lla .<br />

Bordes. Then because of <strong>the</strong><br />

controversy over <strong>the</strong> four intim<br />

ate letters w ritten to Anne<br />

by Com m ander Laurence.<br />

H e said: “As fo r M iss<br />

Bordes, th at is a com plete<br />

joke to us, everyone around<br />

m e knew that.”<br />

Popping<br />

Captain Phillips said th at<br />

Pam ella Visited his Scottish<br />

equestrian centre w ith 40 people<br />

and cam e to his Gloucestershire<br />

hom e later as a guest<br />

of one of his friends.<br />

H e said: “I never actually<br />

m et her. She is popping up<br />

and down like a jack in <strong>the</strong><br />

box, and I am sure she is<br />

doing very nicely out of it."<br />

Captain Phillips, who has<br />

been in Monaco on business,<br />

revealed <strong>the</strong> biggest problem<br />

in h is -and A nne’s h o u seh<br />

o ld — getting <strong>the</strong>ir 11-year-<br />

old son Peter back to school<br />

after th e E aster holidays.<br />

“He’s <strong>the</strong> only one w ith any<br />

problem in our family, like all<br />

children h e doesn’t like <strong>the</strong><br />

th o u g h t of going b ack to<br />

school after it’s over."<br />

^Captain Phillips returns to<br />

. B ritain today and is expected<br />

to travel straight to Gatcombe<br />

Park, <strong>the</strong>ir hom e in Glouces- '<br />

tershire, to be reunited w ith<br />

Princess Anne.<br />

The Princess arrived hom e<br />

from America yesterday.


2 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 ★ *<br />

% By DAVID BENSON Motoring Editor Bonjour Bluebird, says France<br />

NISSAN Bluebird cars built at<br />

Sunderland are to be allowed<br />

into France as British products<br />

and will not be restricted<br />

by French quotas on Japanese<br />

goods.<br />

This decision, announced last<br />

night, is a considerable victory for<br />

Industry Secretary Lord Young,<br />

who has been determ ined to get<br />

<strong>the</strong> Bluebird accepted as a British<br />

product throughout <strong>the</strong> EEC.<br />

It was vital to secure EEC<br />

acceptance to ensure <strong>the</strong> future of<br />

Doctors’<br />

warning<br />

on health<br />

changes<br />

By CLARE DOVER<br />

MedicalReporter<br />

PLANS to refo rm th e<br />

h e a lth se rv ic e h av e<br />

been rejected by th e<br />

p restigious Royal College<br />

of G eneral P ractitio<br />

n ers.<br />

Fam ily doctors said <strong>the</strong><br />

reform s would seriously<br />

damage patient care and<br />

doctor-patient relatio n ­<br />

ships.<br />

The move followed similar<br />

rejections of <strong>the</strong> Governm<br />

ent’s W hite Paper<br />

proposals by o<strong>the</strong>r medical<br />

colleges and th e<br />

health service unions.<br />

A spokesm an said <strong>the</strong><br />

college deplored <strong>the</strong> fact<br />

th at <strong>the</strong> W hite Paper and<br />

th e proposed new contract<br />

for GPs were produced<br />

w ithout consultation.<br />

He said <strong>the</strong> idea of letting<br />

GPs manage <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

own budgets should be<br />

properly researched.<br />

The college was particularly<br />

unhappy about <strong>the</strong><br />

am ount of tim e available<br />

for th e medical profession<br />

to discuss <strong>the</strong> proposed<br />

reform s.<br />

Legion disease<br />

kills two more<br />

TWO m ore people have<br />

died in an outbreak of<br />

legionnaires’ disease at a<br />

m ajor hospital.<br />

The victim s, who have<br />

not been nam ed, died at<br />

Queen’s Medical Centre,<br />

N ottingham . O ver th e<br />

past seven m onths, seven<br />

people in all have caught<br />

<strong>the</strong> disease while a t <strong>the</strong><br />

centre.<br />

A spokeswom an for <strong>the</strong><br />

h e a lth a u th o rity said<br />

<strong>the</strong>re was no evidence to<br />

suggest <strong>the</strong> hospital was<br />

a source of <strong>the</strong> infection.<br />

“Someone's written to<br />

c ritic ise m y le tte r<br />

about th e R ig h t to<br />

Reply B ill ”<br />

N issan’s factory in North East<br />

England, which w ill be turning'<br />

out 200,000 cars a year by 1991, and<br />

to w in <strong>the</strong> £650 m illion investm<br />

ent in a new factory for Toyota<br />

in Britain.<br />

Toyota, which w ill also eventually<br />

turn out 200,000 cars a year,<br />

needed to be assured that <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

B ritish -b u ilt cars w ould be<br />

accepted in <strong>the</strong> EEC without tariff,<br />

after 1992.<br />

Now that Lord Young has had<br />

<strong>the</strong> French assurance on Nissan,<br />

an announcem ent on <strong>the</strong> Toyota<br />

factory is expected in <strong>the</strong> next few<br />

days.<br />

B u t for eigh t m on th s, th e<br />

French have been stalling on <strong>the</strong><br />

B lu ebirds, w hich Sun derland<br />

started to export last September.<br />

The French were demanding 80<br />

per cent British and EEC content<br />

for <strong>the</strong> cars.<br />

At <strong>the</strong> m om ent, N issan have<br />

achieved 70 per cent local content'<br />

— 10 per cent m ore than <strong>the</strong><br />

accepted EEC guideline requiring<br />

a 60 per cent Euro content.<br />

Lord Young had threatened to<br />

take France to <strong>the</strong> European<br />

Court to get <strong>the</strong> French to accept<br />

<strong>the</strong> 60 per cent figure.<br />

M e a n w h ile , N issa n h a s<br />

exported m ore than 15,000 Blue-:<br />

birds to France despite <strong>the</strong> threat<br />

to deduct <strong>the</strong>se cars from <strong>the</strong> Japanese<br />

quota in France.<br />

Now France has backed down<br />

and sent an assurance to <strong>the</strong> European<br />

Com m ission that <strong>the</strong> Sunderland<br />

Bluebirds w ill not be<br />

counted against <strong>the</strong> quota.<br />

End of Kop as Hurd<br />

demands all-seater<br />

grounds at top clubs<br />

THE END of popular<br />

standing areas like The<br />

Kop, The Shed and <strong>the</strong><br />

Stretford End at big football<br />

grounds was signalled<br />

by <strong>the</strong> Home Secretary<br />

yesterday.<br />

D ouglas H u rd o rd ered th e<br />

judge heading th e H illsb o rough<br />

d isaster inquiry to recom<br />

m end outlaw ing standing<br />

terraces a t clubs w hich stage<br />

crow d-pulling m atches.<br />

Horror on <strong>the</strong> terraces 1946-89<br />

Bradford City: stand<br />

catches fire, 53 die<br />

Liverpool: 200 hurt<br />

when section of<br />

crowd panicked<br />

Injured wnen barrier<br />

JANUARY 1971<br />

Glasgow, Ibroc<br />

66 killed, 170 injured<br />

when crush barriers<br />

WAY 1985<br />

H * ptfS fedtam :39<br />

HOed in rioting<br />

involving Liverpool<br />

and Juventiis fans<br />

(m e a t 30 people nun<br />

when barrier collapsed<br />

Sunny intervals, light winds<br />

Outlook: Changeable<br />

M M dtebrw gk:<br />

couple die when pillar<br />

Boitoa: 33 die, 500<br />

Injured after barrier<br />

collapse<br />

BtrahvkMCHrun)<br />

collapses, 20 hurt<br />

• 1,2,3,5,6,15,16,17,18,19,22: Sunny intervals<br />

and showers. Wind light north to<br />

north west. Max 11C (52P).<br />

• 4,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,20,21,25,26,29: Dry.<br />

Sunny periods. Wind light, north to<br />

north west. Max 12C (54P).<br />

• 23,24,27,28: Sunny intervals and showers.<br />

Wind light to moderate, nor<strong>the</strong>rly.<br />

Max 9C (48P).<br />

Sun sets (London): 8.01 p.m., rises 5.57<br />

a.m. tomorrow. Moon rises: 5.32 p.m.,<br />

sets 5.05 a.m. tomorrow. High water at<br />

London Bridge: 1.35 p.m. and 1.49 am .<br />

tomorrow. Liverpool: 10.43 p.m. and<br />

11.04 p.m.<br />

HOTTEST AND COLDEST<br />

W arm est p lace In B ritain yesterday: M ore-<br />

cam be,L ancs, 14C (57F). CoIdesfcBenbecula,<br />

O u te r H e b rid e s. 1C (34F ). S u n n ie st:<br />

T iree ,In n e r H e b rid e s 10.8hrs. W ettest:<br />

W yton,C am bs, 0.4ins.<br />

By ROBERT GIBSON<br />

.Political Editor______<br />

T he m ove cam e as th e FA<br />

condem ned th e U EFA p resid<br />

ent fo r b rand in g th e Liverpool<br />

fans as “b e a sts”.<br />

T h e FA s a id J a c q u e s 1<br />

G eorges w as “u tterly insensitiv<br />

e’’ to suggest th a t crow d<br />

violence caused th e disaster.<br />

The Government’s Bill requiring<br />

soccer fans to carry identity •<br />

cards, w hich was due to<br />

receive its th ird reading<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Lords next Monday,<br />

will be postponed<br />

as a m ark of respect to<br />

Saturday’s victims.<br />

B ut M r H urd made it<br />

clear th a t <strong>the</strong> Governm<br />

ent still intends to<br />

press on w ith its plan to<br />

com bat hooliganism.<br />

T he d ec isio n w as<br />

greeted w ith open hostility<br />

by Labour MPs<br />

a n d M rs T h a tc h e r<br />

seemed surprised at <strong>the</strong><br />

lack of support from<br />

<strong>the</strong> Tory backbenchers.<br />

Violence<br />

M r H u rd to ld th e f<br />

C om m ons: “V iolence<br />

has been <strong>the</strong> curse of<br />

<strong>the</strong> gam e before and<br />

m ight be again unless<br />

we find <strong>the</strong> remedy. It<br />

would be foolish to for-,<br />

get <strong>the</strong> lessons of earlier<br />

disasters.”<br />

“T he G o v ern m e n t<br />

believes <strong>the</strong> future of<br />

football in this country<br />

lies in a national m em ­<br />

bership schem e in desig<br />

n ated gro u n d s and<br />

now it seem s also in_<br />

Ortun. 27<br />

Caram<br />

Channel b.<br />

a<br />

Shetland<br />

■Lighting-up times: London 8.32 p.m. to 5.27 a.m<br />

THE HORROR OF<br />

HILLSBOROUGH<br />

M r Hurd: Remedy;<br />

p ro v id in g all-seated<br />

a c c o m m o d a tio n a t<br />

m ajor football clubs.”<br />

He said <strong>the</strong> proposed<br />

m easures would mean,<br />

<strong>the</strong> end of terraces at<br />

th e biggest grounds and<br />

m ig h t also involve<br />

a m e n d m e n ts to<br />

streng<strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> Football<br />

Spectators Bill.<br />

Form er sports m iniste<br />

r Neil M acfarlane led<br />

Tory opposition to <strong>the</strong><br />

scheme, saying it would<br />

be “prem ature and foolhardy”<br />

to press ahead.<br />

John Carlisle, chairm<br />

an of <strong>the</strong> Conservative<br />

MPs’ sports comm<br />

ittee, added it would<br />

be wise to postpone furth<br />

er discussion.<br />

Shadow Hom e Secre­<br />

AMSTERDAM_____ — dad 8 46<br />

Aims____ __ __dear 22 72<br />

AUCKLAND............. dad 22 72<br />

Mmw __dear 36 97<br />

RAMUS. __dear 29 84<br />

BBHI ............. __dear 22 72<br />

■BUI.------- ------ dad 10 50<br />

Missas_______.— .raii 12 54<br />

MWEST dad 19 66<br />

cum......... .... dear 30 (6<br />

CVBMH_____ __ dear 9 48<br />

m ui______ — dear 17 54<br />

HAVANA___ __dad 30 87<br />

nSKI___ ....... __ nk 5 41<br />

HOW me............ —ok 21 70<br />

moflu_______...dad 26 79<br />

JAKARTA.__ _____ __dad 33 91<br />

IMA.____ ___ .... dear 24 75<br />

USMN..........__ ..... dear 16 61<br />

WORLD TEMPERATURES<br />

LOSANGBB___<br />

ta ry Roy H a tte rsle y<br />

said. “The decision to<br />

push th at Bill through<br />

Parliam ent, even while<br />

th e inquiry is sitting, is<br />

n e ith e r ratio n a l n o r<br />

sensitive to th e moOd of<br />

<strong>the</strong> country.”<br />

H e added th a t th e<br />

inquiry m ust consider<br />

crowd control outside<br />

<strong>the</strong> turnstiles and not<br />

ju st in grounds.<br />

Lord Justice Taylor,<br />

58, who will head <strong>the</strong><br />

inquiry, is expected to<br />

p ro d u ce an in te rim<br />

re p o rt in ab o u t two<br />

m onths.<br />

Its findings can be<br />

published im mediately<br />

and th e recom m endations<br />

put into effect.<br />

A full report should be<br />

com pleted by <strong>the</strong> beginning<br />

of next season.<br />

A team of 150 police<br />

officers headed by West<br />

M idlands Chief Constable<br />

Geoffrey Dear will<br />

h e a r evidence from<br />

police, emergency and<br />

hospital workers, fans<br />

who survived <strong>the</strong> crush<br />

and people concerned<br />

w ith fo o tb all ground<br />

safety.<br />

M r Dear and th e judge<br />

are to visit Sheffield<br />

today to see site of <strong>the</strong><br />

disaster.<br />

IMMJL<br />

IBCCA...__<br />

MEnCOQTY—<br />

Kwynu.<br />

OSjO „<br />

MRS.-<br />

SMFMWSCO.<br />

VAttOOYH-<br />

20 68<br />

..dear 14 57<br />

..dear 34 93<br />

40104<br />

25 77<br />

28 82<br />

8 46<br />

.dear 12 54<br />

dear 28 82<br />

12 54<br />

14 57<br />

20 68<br />

19 66<br />

6 43<br />

..dear 14 57<br />

12 54<br />

18 64<br />

16 61<br />

TEMPERATURES AROUND BRITAIN<br />

Belfast.............. rain 10 50 Glasgow............rain 10 50<br />

Birmingham.....'rain 9 48 London........ drizzle 9 48<br />

,Bristol...............duil 10 50 Manchester rain 10 50<br />

Cardiff:.......... cloud 11 52 Newcastle bright 10 50<br />

Manchester 8,44 p.m. to 5.31 a.m .— — - —<br />

Prices at pumps<br />

jump up again<br />

TWO petrol giants increased prices again<br />

last night, with BP adding 7.7p to <strong>the</strong> cost<br />

of a gallon, and Esso adding 8.2p.<br />

Esso are now charging 196p for a gallon<br />

of four-star and 186.4p for a gallon of<br />

unleaded. If BP’s wholesale price is<br />

reflected at <strong>the</strong> pumps, motorists will be<br />

paying similar prices.<br />

It now seems likely that petrol will break<br />

through <strong>the</strong> £2 a gallon barrier this year.<br />

Spokesmen for <strong>the</strong> two companies blamed<br />

<strong>the</strong> international cost of petrol and crude<br />

oil.<br />

News of <strong>the</strong> increase led to anger at<br />

Westminster, with calls for Mrs Thatcher to<br />

limit <strong>the</strong> number of petrol outlets oil companies<br />

were allowed to own.<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r petrol companies haven’t yet<br />

announced an increase.<br />

EEC sinks Ridley<br />

THE Government may<br />

have to postpone water<br />

privatisation after <strong>the</strong> :<br />

EEC yesterday threatened<br />

court action .<br />

unless strict drinking<br />

water standards are<br />

applied. Environment<br />

Secretary Nicholas Ridley<br />

had tried to win<br />

exemption from <strong>the</strong> ;<br />

rules, which could put ___<br />

off potential investors. Nicholas Ridley<br />

W alk-out threat<br />

to leading store<br />

STAFF at a top store are to strike over a<br />

wage rise — even though <strong>the</strong>ir union<br />

admits <strong>the</strong>y are already well paid.<br />

A thousand workers at Selfridges in<br />

London are furious ,at an imposed settlement<br />

of 6.25 per cent. Their union,<br />

USDAW, says <strong>the</strong> increase is inadequate, •<br />

and should at least match inflation, which<br />

is now above 7.5 per cent.<br />

Bosses at <strong>the</strong> Oxford Street store insist<br />

it will be business as usual despite <strong>the</strong>.<br />

one-day walk-out on April 27. They are,<br />

refusing to discuss <strong>the</strong> imposed rise with<br />

staff any fur<strong>the</strong>r. i<br />

But a union spokesman, who agreed<br />

Selfridges staff were on good money for<br />

<strong>the</strong> retail industry, said <strong>the</strong> strike would hit<br />

<strong>the</strong> store hard.<br />

Last month, USDAW held two one-day<br />

stoppages at <strong>the</strong> store and had pickets on<br />

all 14 entrances.<br />

Party girl Sam<br />

FORMER page three<br />

girl Samantha Fox has'<br />

celebrated her twenty-i<br />

third birthday at a New)<br />

York nightclub. Sam,<br />

who has had three Top<br />

Ten singles and two<br />

million-selling LPs,<br />

spent most of <strong>the</strong> evening<br />

with Paul Stanley, a<br />

former member of <strong>the</strong><br />

rock group Kiss.<br />

Family safe as<br />

fighter crashes<br />

A FAMILY escaped death by 100 yards<br />

yesterday when a jet fighter plunged on to<br />

farmland outside <strong>the</strong>ir home yesterday.<br />

The American Air Force plane scattered<br />

high explosive shells after exploding in a<br />

fireball, killing <strong>the</strong> pilot.<br />

The Nicholas family — including two-<br />

day-old baby Stephanie and 17-month,<br />

Natalie — were all unhurt. The A-10 Tank-<br />

buster was flying with ano<strong>the</strong>r plane when<br />

it failed to pull out of a dive, clipping <strong>the</strong><br />

ground, near Chatteris, Cambridgeshire.<br />

Farmworker Dennis Clarke said: “I hate<br />

to think what would’ve happened if <strong>the</strong><br />

pilot hadn’t steered <strong>the</strong> plane away from<br />

<strong>the</strong> town.” Police sealed off <strong>the</strong> area while<br />

<strong>the</strong> shells were ga<strong>the</strong>red. It is <strong>the</strong> second<br />

Tankbuster to crash in <strong>the</strong> county in a<br />

fortnight.<br />

FT-SE 100 index 2054.7, up 1.1<br />

Dow Jones (early) 2338.57, up 1.51<br />

Business starts on Page 31


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week with a sensational<br />

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come.' p — — — —<br />

Every day is a<br />

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ute (25p off-peak). Sorry, ■ ADDRESS................................................ .<br />

<strong>the</strong> contests do not<br />

apply in <strong>the</strong> Channel ■ ■<br />

Isles or Eire. Normal<br />

competition rules apply. j<br />

ASPECTS OF A TWEE SHOW WHICH IS SECOND-RATE LLOYD WEBBER-<br />

Strong scenes: Michael Ball and his leading lady Ann Crumb<br />

£4m sales are just <strong>the</strong> ticket<br />

THE LONG-AWAITED new<br />

m usical by Andrew Lloyd Webber<br />

opened last night in London’s<br />

W est End with advance<br />

ticket sales of £4 m illion and<br />

touts set for <strong>the</strong>ir greatest killing.<br />

But <strong>the</strong> £2.5 m illion Aspects Of<br />

Love has had its share of <strong>the</strong><br />

problem s th at beset every m ajor<br />

musical.<br />

The official first night was<br />

delayed for five days because of<br />

technical com plications w ith <strong>the</strong><br />

40 scene changes, and its star<br />

Roger Moore pulled out five<br />

weeks ago, pleading th at his voice<br />

was not strong enough for an all-<br />

singing role. Run-throughs had to<br />

be cancelled because of an electricity<br />

black-out.<br />

Losing Moore was probably <strong>the</strong><br />

w orst blow for Lloyd Webber, but<br />

his shows do not really need help<br />

from celebrity actors. People will<br />

pay to see an Andrew Lloyd Webb<br />

er spectacular, no m atter who is<br />

appearing in it.<br />

Unknown<br />

Aspects has already made a<br />

s ta r of young leading m an<br />

Michael Ball. His rendition of <strong>the</strong><br />

key song, LOve Changes Everything,<br />

shot to num ber two in <strong>the</strong><br />

record charts.<br />

Leading lady Ann Crum b is virtually<br />

unknown in B ritain but<br />

toured America as Eva Peron in<br />

Lloyd W ebber’s Evita. She and<br />

fellow American K athleen Rowe<br />

McAllen are both appearing in<br />

A spects u n d e r th e E q u ity<br />

exchange deal w hich allow ed<br />

Lloyd W ebber’s w ife S arah<br />

Brightm an to star in The Phantom<br />

Of The Opera on Broadway.<br />

Theatreiand is now anticipate<br />

ing w orld-w ide in te re s t in<br />

Aspects Of Love, which could<br />

.also be filmed.<br />

But' p art of <strong>the</strong> £4 million<br />

take-up at <strong>the</strong> box office is by<br />

ticket agencies in <strong>the</strong> hope th at<br />

Aspects is a hit. It’s <strong>the</strong> biggest<br />

gamble of <strong>the</strong> year in <strong>the</strong> West<br />

End.<br />

The musical<br />

haunted by<br />

<strong>the</strong> ghost<br />

of Phantom<br />

MAUREEN<br />

PATON<br />

at <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>atre<br />

VER since<br />

c o m p o s in g<br />

r ■ Jesus Christ<br />

M ^ S u p e r s t a r ,<br />

A ndrew L loyd<br />

Webber has been<br />

trying to walk on<br />

water.<br />

H is latest musical<br />

ambitiously aims for<br />

intim acy and subtlety,<br />

qualities not<br />

usually associated<br />

with a crowd-pleaser<br />

like Lloyd Webber.<br />

A spects Of Love, a t<br />

th e P rin c e o f W ales<br />

T heatre, is w ell acted,<br />

w ell su n g a n d w ell<br />

staged in a slightly twee<br />

p ic tu re -p o s tc a rd way.<br />

B u t it’s really nothing<br />

special and frank ly not<br />

a p a tc h on T he P h anto<br />

m O f T h e O p era,<br />

Lloyd W ebber’s greatest<br />

success to date.<br />

T h ere are so m any<br />

scene changes in this coy<br />

s to r y ' of* a sexu a l<br />

m erry-go-round th a t it<br />

sh o u ld have b een a<br />

movie instead.<br />

The m achinery grinds<br />

so loudly th at <strong>the</strong>re are<br />

som etim es m ore noises<br />

off than on stage. This<br />

wouldn’t m atter if <strong>the</strong><br />

orchestra could deliver a<br />

few b e lte rs, b u t th e<br />

Kevin Colson: Wig<br />

m usic is predom inantly<br />

wistful.<br />

Roger Moore can congratulate<br />

him self on his<br />

lucky escape from wearing<br />

a hideous grey wig<br />

which m akes his replacem<br />

ent Kevin Colson look<br />

like Miss Marple.<br />

Passionate<br />

By Lloyd W ebber’s own<br />

standards, th is is a sec-<br />

ond-rate musical, based<br />

on a third-rate novel by<br />

David Garnett. Michael<br />

B all is n e v e rth e le ss<br />

excellent as <strong>the</strong> idealistic<br />

17-year old hero Alex who<br />

falls for Rose, an older<br />

woman, two years after<br />

<strong>the</strong> war.<br />

His scenes with her, <strong>the</strong><br />

astrin g en tly sexy Ann<br />

Crum b are <strong>the</strong> strongest<br />

in <strong>the</strong> show.<br />

Alas, Alex loses her to<br />

h is m an -o f-th e-w o rld<br />

u n cle S ir G eorge D illingham<br />

who also has an<br />

Ita lia n m istress called<br />

G iu lie tta . R ose a n d<br />

George m arry and Alex<br />

e v e n tu a lly b e c o m e s<br />

attracted to <strong>the</strong>ir 14-year-<br />

old daughter Jenny. Also<br />

hanging around <strong>the</strong> place<br />

is a chap called Hugo.<br />

And <strong>the</strong>re is a faint hint<br />

of lesbianism betw een<br />

Rose and Giulietta.<br />

N othing th a t w ould<br />

frig h ten th e h o rses is<br />

shown on stage, unless<br />

you count <strong>the</strong> sight of <strong>the</strong><br />

passionate Mr Ball in his<br />

boxer shorts which are so<br />

long <strong>the</strong>y look like Boy<br />

Scout trousers.<br />

H e sings gloriously,<br />

particularly <strong>the</strong> hit Love<br />

Changes Everything in<br />

his rich, highly-charged<br />

H arry Secombe voice.<br />

Ms Crumb has a beautiful<br />

pearly warble th at<br />

blends well w ith his, but<br />

<strong>the</strong> only o<strong>the</strong>r m em orable<br />

song is The Very<br />

First, sung by George to<br />

his daughter. One fiery<br />

num ber attem pts to tu rn<br />

George’s funeral into a<br />

B acchanalian rite th a t<br />

suggests choreographer<br />

Gillian Lynne has seen<br />

too m any Carmens.<br />

L loyd W ebber h a s<br />

described Aspects as his<br />

m ost operatic work to<br />

date and talked coyly of it<br />

being “not unM ozartian”.<br />

Surely he jests.<br />

T he ly ric s by Don<br />

Black and Charles H art<br />

are witty and precise. B ut<br />

this is no m ore than m ild<br />

entertainm ent and certa<br />

in ly n o t a m ust-see<br />

show.<br />

Director Trevor Nurin<br />

has given us an efficient,<br />

b u t u n in s p ir e d a n d<br />

o ld -fash io n ed p ro d u c ­<br />

tion. -


DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

THE HORROR OF<br />

HILLSBOROUGH<br />

YOUNG <strong>Hillsborough</strong><br />

victim<br />

— deeply uncon-<br />

s c io u s a fte r<br />

^ a lm o s t b ein g<br />

cru sh ed to death —<br />

opened his eyes and<br />

spoke yesterday in an<br />

astonishing meeting with<br />

Kenny Dalglish.<br />

Luckett,20, was on a<br />

v?1i-, or *n intensive care<br />

at Sheffield’s Royal Hallam-<br />

shire Hospital as Liverpool<br />

manager Dalglish and members<br />

of his team visited <strong>the</strong><br />

disaster victims.<br />

T he young fan’s anxious par-<br />

5 ? i b y h is bedside praying<br />

th a t th e ir critically-ill son w ould<br />

by som e m iracle p u ll through.<br />

And a m iracle w as ju s t how<br />

am azed doctors described what<br />

happened <strong>the</strong> next m om ent as Dalglish<br />

stood over Sean’s bed.<br />

A doctor, never expecting to get<br />

a response, said: “H ere’s Kenny to<br />

see you.<br />

®“ dd®,nly Sean’s eyes flickered<br />

open and in <strong>the</strong> first words he had<br />

spoken since Saturday’s tragedv<br />

said: Kenny Dalglish.”<br />

C o n sultan t a n a e s th e tist Dr.<br />

David Edbrook, who witnessed<br />

bean s astonishing recovery, said-<br />

It was ju st amazing. Sean iust<br />

woke up instantly. I have nJver<br />

known anything like it before.”<br />

Grateful<br />

!?lish and his team m ates<br />

were overcome w ith emotion.<br />

Or. E d b ro o k ad m itted : “I t<br />

brought tears to my eyes. Ail <strong>the</strong><br />

° f <strong>the</strong> Patlents were <strong>the</strong>re<br />

and <strong>the</strong>y were all very grateful ”<br />

His colieagu^ Dr. Paul Garfish,<br />

aia Tr. wqc . *<br />

tion recover conscious'ness^'onlv<br />

Si° Wly ~ normally it can take<br />

S r « s e& , s “ - But “ *<br />

tney C3fG, •<br />

Seari' of ciaverden, War-<br />

w ckshire, was well enough to talk<br />

n v ,= ^ nci ss £ iana and Prince<br />

pital n y visited <strong>the</strong> hos-<br />

He told <strong>the</strong>m of <strong>the</strong> horrific<br />

nw m ents when he thought he was<br />

going to die in <strong>the</strong> terrible crush of<br />

Leppmg Lane.<br />

P.rinc? and Princess overshot<br />

<strong>the</strong>n- schedule by m ore than<br />

hoV‘r 3S <strong>the</strong>y visited <strong>the</strong><br />

victim s who poured out <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

hearts to <strong>the</strong>m.<br />

Ian McDermott, 22, a m anager<br />

of a stationery company, told<br />

Diana how he thought he was haith-e<br />

“ i- was squeezed<br />

from his body m <strong>the</strong> crush. ‘<br />

was interested to know<br />

whe<strong>the</strong>r Ian, from Anfield, Liver-<br />

Victim wakes from a coma during visit from Dalglis<br />

Magic words<br />

lliilil<br />

r J<br />

¥ g<br />

imms&<br />

•^ T p — meets <strong>Hillsborough</strong> victim Jam e , ,amny ho~ ^ =<br />

~ f f r r pain,ed ^ 9ro J 'ss> 3 S z £ .<br />

W J * " " lta n couldn't im agine<br />

have been like.”<br />

A _ w m.<br />

y*S-.1S 1L3 f it . ? ” '* lmow ri7^ arles„ J ;old Patie n t Jam es<br />

as <strong>the</strong><br />

ested^new Prince Charles h«^les was also inter- inter- Windrow: “Football Football matches seem<br />

t O H P H o n /< p A « iA 4 i M T _____ f i ‘<br />

stadSim s^hould d a y s * ^ dangerOUS places<br />

p r e s s e d th e rreservation e s e c tio n _ H e and Diana saw „n -l HARRY COOKS. -IK E ATCHIHSON, IAN McKERRON, JAM ES COLL.NS, Q M H A M rDUDMAH,i,M,CHA1EL1I0 'FLAHEftXYr<br />

SS&SftS<br />

mfflm<br />

sj, :<br />

ftiSKW.-.<br />

tSm


as Charles and Diana com fort survivors in hospital<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 5<br />

THE HORROR OFi<br />

HILLSBOROUGH i<br />

that spark life<br />

Marshall: ‘Broken’<br />

Named:<br />

Officer<br />

at gate<br />

of tears<br />

T H E P O L IC E c h ie f<br />

w ho o rd ered th e opening<br />

of th e floodgates of<br />

d eath w as n am ed last<br />

■mm&m<br />

n ig h t a s S u p e rin te n ­<br />

d en t R oger M arshall.<br />

“There isn’t a policem<br />

an in B rita in who<br />

w ould w ant to sw ap<br />

places w ith him ,” a colleague<br />

said.<br />

It was Mr M arshall who<br />

. decided to open <strong>the</strong> 16 ft<br />

w ide co n c ertin a steel<br />

g ates a t th e L eppings<br />

Lane stand where 94 Liverpool<br />

fans died.<br />

The 46-year-old fa<strong>the</strong>rof-two<br />

who has years of<br />

exp erience in so ccer<br />

crowd control, was at <strong>the</strong><br />

edge of a seething 3,000strong<br />

throng outside <strong>the</strong><br />

ground.<br />

H is loud-hailer appeals<br />

for calm were ignored.<br />

Rapidly<br />

The situation rapidly<br />

grew w orse, and th e<br />

police chief feared th at a<br />

wall was seconds away<br />

from collapsing on hundreds<br />

of terrified people.<br />

It was <strong>the</strong>n th at he<br />

m ade <strong>the</strong> life or death<br />

decision.<br />

mmm<br />

And it is understood he<br />

had no tim e to consult by<br />

ra d io h is im m ed iate<br />

superior, Chief Superintendent<br />

David Duckenfield,<br />

44.<br />

M r D uckenfield who<br />

h ad only ta k e n over<br />

responsibility for crowd<br />

flUaittilwiiiHiu aisbuiai tfiti'iWimA<br />

a rra n g e m e n ts th r e e<br />

Heart to heart: Princess Diana sits on <strong>the</strong> bed of patient Ian Clarke as she talks earnestly to him and his mo<strong>the</strong>r about Saturday’s disaster ! , weeks before, was in a<br />

co n tro l room only 50<br />

yards away.<br />

One officer at <strong>the</strong> scene<br />

fatal blunders are exposed<br />

CITY’S SHRINE<br />

said: “It was a nightm are<br />

situation for anyone to be<br />

OF FLOWERS<br />

in.<br />

“We could hear m es­<br />

A MASSIVE shrine of flowers to <strong>the</strong> sages over th e radio ‘The<br />

<strong>the</strong>y w anted th e w hole less than 10 m inutes to charge of th e en tran ce<br />

victim s of <strong>Hillsborough</strong> was yester­<br />

issue brought out into <strong>the</strong> explaining <strong>the</strong>ir actions.<br />

South Y orkshire federa- _<br />

wall is going, <strong>the</strong> wall is<br />

defied th e ban. Part-tim e tion secretary Paul M id-'<br />

day growing steadily in Liverpool’s -going.’<br />

open. One officer w ith 25 Twice, Press conferences employee Jack Stone said _ dup: “I am proud of <strong>the</strong> job<br />

Roman Catholic Ca<strong>the</strong>dral as<br />

“W hat else could Roger<br />

years’ service said: “It has— broke up in disorder. On a p olice in sp ecto r h ad <strong>the</strong>y did. Yet all my people m ourners continued to show <strong>the</strong>ir M arshall do? He had 15<br />

tarnished <strong>the</strong> police force— S u n d ay n ig h t S tu a rts forced him to hand over can see from newspapers grief.<br />

police riders and 40 o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

in this area.<br />

Anderson, Assistant Chief his keys.<br />

and on television is th at it The ca<strong>the</strong>dral becam e <strong>the</strong> centre of officers at his disposal.<br />

“Unless explanations are C onstable (M anagem ent Mr Stone said: “I gave was <strong>the</strong>ir fault.<br />

<strong>the</strong> city’s sadness after a vast and They had no hope of con­<br />

given and <strong>the</strong> blam e put Services) storm ed out of a <strong>the</strong> keys to him and told<br />

squarely where it should packed room after reading him it was his responsibil­ “T hat is ju st not so and it m oving requiem m ass on Sunday. It taining <strong>the</strong> situation.<br />

lie, it will bring adverse a nine-line statem ent. ity, not mine.<br />

is grossly u n fair. T hey was <strong>the</strong> biggest congregation <strong>the</strong>re “The gates had to be<br />

public reaction, ham pering<br />

day to day police work Rules<br />

“I refused to open <strong>the</strong><br />

were faced w ith a situation since <strong>the</strong> Pope’s visit In 1982.<br />

opened — it seemed <strong>the</strong><br />

for years to come.”<br />

And th at was only to say '<br />

gates. I did not open th at<br />

for which no am ount of Though <strong>the</strong> m odern building can only place for people to<br />

But a t police headquar­ th at <strong>the</strong> W est M idlands<br />

gate. You know as well as<br />

tra in in g could p repa re hold 4,000 worshippers, an esti­<br />

go.”<br />

ters at Snigg Hill in Shef­ force was being called in to<br />

anyone whose fault it was.”<br />

<strong>the</strong>m.<br />

m ated 10,000 arrived. The m ain<br />

A no<strong>the</strong>r officer said:<br />

field city centre, Press cal­ investigate th e crowd con­ Under club rules, he said, “Policemen went in <strong>the</strong>re<br />

doors were left open so that those<br />

“P ro b ab ly th ey w ould<br />

have been forced down<br />

le rs were abruptly turned trol operation.<br />

p o lice w ould n o rm ally and did a very professional crowded outside could listen, and a flat by th e sheer weight<br />

away.<br />

Repeatedly, senior police only open th e gates to job.”<br />

second m ass was held on <strong>the</strong> piazza of th e crowd. We will<br />

S outh Y ork sh ire chief officers, including C hief e s c o rt fan s fro m <strong>the</strong>.<br />

next door.<br />

M r. M iddup revealed<br />

never know.<br />

Press spokesm an, Super­ C onstable P eter W right, ground, or in <strong>the</strong> event of th at m any of <strong>the</strong> 200 offi- A church spokesm an said: “They lis-, “Roger M arshall m ust<br />

in te n d e n t T ony P ra tt, have refused to discuss <strong>the</strong> an emergency inside. ~ cers involved in th e diaster tened In prayerful silence to <strong>the</strong> Sal­ be <strong>the</strong> loneliest m an in<br />

appeared harassed when decision to open <strong>the</strong> Lep-<br />

Police refused to com­ were now off duty suffervation Army band that played for Britain. He knows <strong>the</strong><br />

he declared: “I have noth­ pings Lane gate.<br />

m en t on M r S to n e ’s ing from shock and stress. <strong>the</strong>m <strong>the</strong>re, before joining In <strong>the</strong> enorm ity of his decision.<br />

claims.<br />

outdoor m ass offered for <strong>the</strong>ir bene­ “There will be many<br />

ing to say. No one has any­ S h effield W ednesday<br />

He said: “Many of those fit at <strong>the</strong> sam e tim e as <strong>the</strong> service thousands of policem en<br />

thing to say. And th at’s officials, it was revealed M ounting criticism of involved will need profes­<br />

that.”<br />

yesterday, have ordered police actions a t H illsborsional counselling. I have<br />

inside <strong>the</strong> ca<strong>the</strong>dral.”<br />

in <strong>the</strong> land who feel sym ­<br />

In th e two days since Bri­ employees on duty at <strong>the</strong> ough w as d escrib ed as to persuade <strong>the</strong>m to forget<br />

He stressed that nobody had been pathy for him .”<br />

tain’s w orst soccer disas­ game to keep silent. “grossly u n fair” by th e <strong>the</strong>ir m acho image and locked out and all had been able to A senior colleague said:<br />

ter, police chiefs devoted B u t th e g atem an in Police Federation.<br />

come forw ard for help.” ' take part In prayer.<br />

“Roger is still on duty but<br />

he is a broken m an.”<br />

JOHN TWOM EY, P H IL IP DERBYSHIRE, MARTIN CHARLESWORTH, MARK YOULE, ANNIE LEASIC. LOUISE ROBINSON-


6 DAILY EXPRESS' Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

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THE HORROR OF<br />

HILLSBOROUGH !<br />

--------- — — 7-<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 7<br />

MOTHER’S ANGUISH OVER THE DEATHS OF HER HUSBAND AND SON<br />

<strong>the</strong> two men in my world<br />

A TRAGIC mo<strong>the</strong>r spoke<br />

yesterday of a chilling<br />

premonition she had in a<br />

cinema at about <strong>the</strong> time<br />

her husband and son were<br />

being crushed to death at <strong>Hillsborough</strong>.<br />

“I felt <strong>the</strong> breath go<br />

out of <strong>the</strong>m,” said 35-year-old<br />

Linda Howard.<br />

She lost Tommy, 14, and her<br />

husband Tom, 39, in <strong>the</strong> disaster.<br />

At h e r hom e in M asseyfield Road,<br />

R uncorn, sh e revealed how sh e felt<br />

p ain s and struggled for<br />

a ir as sh e sat in 'th e -<br />

O deon a t W arrington<br />

o n S atu rd ay afternoon.<br />

She said: “As I was<br />

watching th e film I suddenly<br />

had this terrible<br />

prem onition.<br />

“I could feel one of <strong>the</strong><br />

c h ild re n g aspin g fo r<br />

breath and I had this<br />

panic.<br />

“Then suddenly everyth<br />

in g sw itched off as<br />

th o u g h life h ad ju s t<br />

drifted away from som eone.<br />

I knew som ething<br />

u n sp eak ab le .h ad h ap ­<br />

pened.<br />

“W hen I got hom e I<br />

heard about <strong>the</strong> tragedy<br />

and rem em bered th e way<br />

I fe lt a t th e p ic tu re<br />

house.<br />

“I knew it was young<br />

Tom m y’s b reath going<br />

out of him but I didn’t<br />

w ant to believe it.”<br />

Bruised<br />

Linda had gone to <strong>the</strong><br />

cinem a w ith her o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

children Gale, eight, and<br />

11-year-old Alan.<br />

She spent <strong>the</strong> night try ­<br />

ing to ring <strong>the</strong> emergency<br />

num bers and eventually<br />

got through at 3 a.m. on<br />

Sunday.<br />

Later she travelled to<br />

Sheffield to identify <strong>the</strong><br />

bodies.<br />

“W hen I saw my husband<br />

his face was all<br />

bruised and swollen,” she<br />

said.<br />

“H is hands were sticking<br />

upw ards as though he<br />

had been trying to shield<br />

and protect our son.<br />

“T h en th ey b ro u g h t<br />

Tommy in and at first I<br />

thought I saw him move.<br />

I th o u g h t to m yself<br />

‘Thank God, he’s only<br />

asleep. H e’s going to<br />

wake up.’”<br />

T he H ow ards’ young<br />

neighbour Kevin Tyrrell,<br />

15, also died.<br />

H e was having trials<br />

w ith T ran m ere R overs<br />

and hoped.to be taken on<br />

by th e club as an apprentice<br />

after leaving school.<br />

G e n tle g ia n t P a t<br />

Thom pson, 35, lost his<br />

life saving o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

The 6ft 3ins, 13-stone<br />

B ritish Rail guard travelled<br />

to Sheffield w ith his<br />

bro<strong>the</strong>rs Kevin and Joe.<br />

T hey su rv iv ed afte r<br />

being helped by fa<strong>the</strong>r-of<br />

five P at who was lost in<br />

<strong>the</strong> crush.<br />

Steven Fox, 21, was<br />

overjoyed when he won a<br />

free ticket to <strong>the</strong> match.<br />

B ut th e lucky draw cost<br />

him his life.<br />

H is fa<strong>the</strong>r Des, 45, .said<br />

at <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong> family hom e in<br />

C arlton Road, B irk en ­<br />

head: “Steven w as so<br />

excited about <strong>the</strong> game<br />

a n d w ent w ith fo u r<br />

friends.”<br />

One of <strong>the</strong>m Ray Chapm<br />

an,45, also died.<br />

A m o th er sp e n t h er<br />

54th birthday 'yesterday<br />

travelling from 'Liverpool<br />

to Sheffield to identify<br />

her son’s body.<br />

Bessie H orn was taken<br />

to <strong>Hillsborough</strong> by m em ­<br />

bers of 20-year-old Gordon’s<br />

flute band.<br />

M rs H o rn ’s h u sb an d<br />

Stephen said at hom e in<br />

St Jam es Drive, Bootle:<br />

“Gordon was <strong>the</strong> apple of<br />

her eye.<br />

“She was so proud of<br />

Victim:Carl Victim:Nicholas<br />

Dead: Tommy Dead: Mr Howard<br />

him. Now <strong>the</strong> bottom has<br />

fallen out of her world.”<br />

Pour years ago Richard<br />

Thom pson, of Formby,<br />

w itnessed th e horror of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Heysel stadium tragedy<br />

and has been to only<br />

two m atches since.<br />

B ut his bro<strong>the</strong>rs M artin<br />

, 20, and 17-year-old<br />

S tuart never m issed a<br />

game and on Saturday<br />

Richard watched TV pictures<br />

of <strong>the</strong> disaster not<br />

know ing w h eth er <strong>the</strong>y<br />

survived.<br />

After an agonising wait<br />

he learned th at Stuart<br />

had been killed.<br />

Band<br />

H e said : “M a rtin<br />

phoned to say he was<br />

O.K. b u t couldn’t find<br />

Stuart. He went round all<br />

<strong>the</strong> hospitals and eventually<br />

to <strong>the</strong> morgue. T hat’s<br />

where <strong>the</strong>y found him .”<br />

One of S tuart’s friends<br />

Kevin Williams, 16, who<br />

lived a few doors away<br />

d ied try in g to save<br />

ano<strong>the</strong>r pal’s life.<br />

Gary Collins, 22, from<br />

B o o tle, lo s t h is life<br />

b ecau se of h is k in d ­<br />

n ess.H e sw apped h is<br />

sta n d tic k e t w ith a<br />

friend’s uncle w ith a leg<br />

com plaint who needed a<br />

seat. .<br />

In ste a d of sittin g in<br />

safety Gary chose to go<br />

into <strong>the</strong> doomed enclosure.<br />

TWO soccer mad boys escaped<br />

th e horror o f H illsb orough<br />

b ecause th e ir old er friend s<br />

refused to take <strong>the</strong>m to <strong>the</strong><br />

m atch.<br />

Teenagers Carl and Nicholas<br />

H ewitt feared <strong>the</strong> boys could be<br />

hurt if <strong>the</strong>re was a crush. Tragically<br />

both bro<strong>the</strong>rs died in <strong>the</strong><br />

disaster.<br />

Carpenter Carl, 17, and schoolboy<br />

N icholas, 16, from Severn<br />

Road, Oadby, Leicester, were<br />

obsessed with Liverpool Football<br />

Club.<br />

Yesterday fam ily friend Dennis<br />

Noon, 38, from N ene Court,<br />

Leicester, said: “Their obsession<br />

rubbed off on my own two boys,<br />

Daniel, eight and Siinon, 11.<br />

mm<br />

Alone with her memories: Linda in Tommy’s room yesterday<br />

By DECLAN CUNNINGHAM<br />

“They were always round here<br />

playing soccer with <strong>the</strong>m and<br />

often took m y two to away<br />

games.<br />

“But <strong>the</strong>y wouldn’t take <strong>the</strong>m<br />

when <strong>the</strong>re was only standing<br />

room because <strong>the</strong>y knew <strong>the</strong><br />

d an gers to c h ild r en w h en<br />

crowds surged.<br />

Loved<br />

“My boys would have loved to<br />

have gone to <strong>the</strong> Forest-Liver-<br />

pool gam e — I’m so glad <strong>the</strong>y<br />

didn’t now.”<br />

T he teenagers’ hearbroken<br />

parents Mick and Brenda, left<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir hom e in Leicester yesterday<br />

to stay with M ends. Carl and<br />

Nicholas were <strong>the</strong>ir only children.<br />

Mr Noon said: “I heard about<br />

<strong>the</strong> disaster on <strong>the</strong> television and<br />

prayed <strong>the</strong> lads would be all<br />

right.<br />

“On Sunday m orning I saw<br />

Mick walking up <strong>the</strong> drive. I<br />

could tell by his face <strong>the</strong> worst<br />

had happened.”<br />

Mr. Noon added: “Everyone<br />

round here knew and loved <strong>the</strong><br />

lads w ho w ill b e so dearly<br />

m issed.”<br />

Yesterday students at <strong>the</strong> Beaucham<br />

p Comm unity C ollege in<br />

Oadby where both boys had been<br />

taught held a minutes silence.<br />

Girl gave<br />

up Oxford<br />

place to<br />

be near<br />

Kop idols<br />

O N E of th e s is te r s<br />

k illed in th e H illsboro<br />

u g h d is a s te r h a d<br />

tu rn e d dow n th e chance<br />

to go to O xford so she<br />

could b e n ea r h e r socc<br />

e r id o ls , i t w as<br />

revealed yesterday.<br />

Sarah Hicks, 19, left<br />

school last year to read<br />

chem istry — and chose<br />

Liverpool University.<br />

She and sister Victoria,<br />

15, who also died in <strong>the</strong><br />

tragedy, were both pupils<br />

a t H aberd ash er A ske’s<br />

School in Elstree, H erts.<br />

And yesterday girls at<br />

th e school p rayed in<br />

m em ory of th e sisters.<br />

H e a d m is tre s s M rs<br />

S h eila W iltsh ire said:<br />

“T he w hole school is<br />

V ic tim : V ic to ria<br />

V ic tim : S a rah<br />

deeply sadd en ed and<br />

shocked. We are all very<br />

subdued.<br />

“W e h eld a sp ecial<br />

assem bly this m orning<br />

where I broke <strong>the</strong> news<br />

to <strong>the</strong> whole school, and<br />

we said prayers for <strong>the</strong>m<br />

and th eir parents.<br />

“W e sh a ll b e doing<br />

som ething else in memory<br />

of <strong>the</strong>m after we have<br />

had close collaboration<br />

w ith <strong>the</strong>ir family.”<br />

The sisters were killed<br />

after going to <strong>the</strong> big Cup<br />

day w ith <strong>the</strong>ir fa<strong>the</strong>r Trevor,<br />

a 43-year-old managing<br />

director, and <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

m o<strong>the</strong>r Jenni, 42.<br />

Both girls had Kop season<br />

tickets and <strong>the</strong>y idolised<br />

England midfielder<br />

Steve McMahon.<br />

M rs W iltshire added:<br />

“T hey w ere gentle,<br />

quiet and sensitive girls<br />

who were very well liked.<br />

I t is such a waste.”<br />

M r H icks is now threatening<br />

to sue <strong>the</strong> police<br />

and <strong>the</strong> football authorities<br />

over <strong>the</strong> disaster.<br />

A n o th er v ictim w as<br />

nam ed yesterday as 16-<br />

year-old K ester Ball, who<br />

had gone to <strong>the</strong> m atch<br />

w ith his fa<strong>the</strong>r Roger, a<br />

City banker.


8 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

D aily Express<br />

The crucial<br />

lessons of<br />

<strong>Hillsborough</strong><br />

A S THE shock and numbness<br />

of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Hillsborough</strong> tragedy<br />

has given way to anger, <strong>the</strong><br />

tempo of recrimination has<br />

quickened. And South Y orkshire<br />

Police have become <strong>the</strong> main target.<br />

This is not surprising. Nor, despite<br />

<strong>the</strong> understandable protests of <strong>the</strong><br />

local Police Federation, is it unfair.<br />

Policemen present at <strong>the</strong> disaster<br />

have told <strong>the</strong> Daily Express of m isjudgements<br />

in both planning and execution<br />

of <strong>the</strong> crowd control at <strong>Hillsborough</strong>.<br />

They have told, too, of inept leadership—or<br />

no leadership at all—during<br />

<strong>the</strong> unfolding nightmare.<br />

Their stories and opinions merely<br />

corroborate those coming from dozens<br />

of spectators, experienced reporters<br />

and ground staff.<br />

To suggest that fatal mistakes<br />

were made is not, <strong>the</strong>refore, to rush<br />

to judgment but merely to state <strong>the</strong><br />

obvious.<br />

Of course, fateful decisions were<br />

taken with <strong>the</strong> best of intentions, by<br />

men under pressure. But <strong>the</strong> best of<br />

intentions led to <strong>the</strong> worst of outcomes.<br />

This is why it is now vital to examine<br />

ruthlessly <strong>the</strong> way <strong>the</strong> police<br />

planned for Saturday’s match and<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir actions at <strong>the</strong> time.<br />

Home Secretary Douglas Hurd<br />

emphasised in <strong>the</strong> Commons yesterday<br />

that <strong>the</strong> police operation would<br />

be a central issue in Lord Justice Taylor’s<br />

wide-ranging inquiry.<br />

H is investigation will focus on <strong>the</strong><br />

decision, taken in <strong>the</strong> teeth of ground<br />

staff objections, to admit more than<br />

3,000 late-arriving Liverpool fans on<br />

to <strong>the</strong> already packed terrace at <strong>the</strong><br />

Leppings Lane end of <strong>the</strong> ground.<br />

This is not a hunt for scapegoats.<br />

Only by pinpointing m istakes and<br />

those who made <strong>the</strong>m can <strong>the</strong> correct<br />

lessons for <strong>the</strong> future be drawn.<br />

Mr Hurd seem s to thave grasped<br />

one crucial lesson already. He indicated<br />

that legislation com pelling<br />

clubs to elim inate terraces, and<br />

replace <strong>the</strong>m with all-seating accommodation,<br />

could be on <strong>the</strong> way.<br />

There must be no doubt or hesitation.<br />

Had <strong>Hillsborough</strong> been an allseat<br />

stadium, misjudgments would<br />

not have led to such horrifying consequences.<br />

All-seated grounds are not a crowd<br />

control cure-all. But <strong>the</strong>y would certainly<br />

prevent a repetition of anything<br />

like Saturday’s carnage.<br />

Our duty to<br />

<strong>the</strong> public<br />

S<br />

OME readers were distressed<br />

by our front page picture yesterday<br />

which showed <strong>the</strong> agony<br />

of young fans being crushed<br />

against <strong>the</strong> perimeter fence.<br />

That picture—which was <strong>the</strong> same<br />

as, or similar to, pictures used by<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r newspapers—was distressing.<br />

Indeed it was horrifying.<br />

It encapsulated <strong>the</strong> nightmare of<br />

<strong>Hillsborough</strong>, in a way that words<br />

could not match. That is why <strong>the</strong><br />

Daily Express and o<strong>the</strong>r newspapers<br />

felt that using it was not a matter of<br />

choice but of duty.<br />

. -._i . . ... -V • '. ‘ /--<br />

SHAME OF THE CHEAP WAY SOCCER TREATS ITS SUPPORTERS<br />

T HE predictable<br />

demand for our football<br />

clubs to modernise<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir squalid<br />

grounds, is inevitable<br />

after <strong>Hillsborough</strong>, but you.<br />

can bet cigar-chomping<br />

chairmen will wring <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

hands and plead poverty.<br />

For decades <strong>the</strong>y have treated<br />

<strong>the</strong> fans who finance <strong>the</strong> game<br />

w ith scant disregard, certain<br />

th at however disgusting and<br />

dangerous <strong>the</strong>ir terraces, <strong>the</strong><br />

faithful will still be <strong>the</strong>re next<br />

Saturday. They will even alter<br />

<strong>Hillsborough</strong>.<br />

Perhaps supporters’ loyalty<br />

has been so sorely tested that our<br />

major clubs will be shamed into<br />

dragging <strong>the</strong>ir facilities into <strong>the</strong><br />

20th century, for a fraction of <strong>the</strong><br />

price <strong>the</strong>y will happily lash out<br />

on some striker.<br />

By th at <strong>the</strong> fans don’t m ean<br />

building a gaggle of smoked-<br />

glass executive boxes, b u t more<br />

m odest requests like <strong>the</strong> certainty<br />

you1 can visit <strong>the</strong> lavatory<br />

w ithout <strong>the</strong> risk of drowning.<br />

Boards of directors happily<br />

hide behind <strong>the</strong> nostalgic belief<br />

th at fans preier to sway in a<br />

sweat-stained mob behind <strong>the</strong><br />

goal.<br />

Prying into <strong>the</strong> finances of<br />

our 92 league clubs is a little like<br />

th e tax m an askin g to flick<br />

through <strong>the</strong> Mafia’s books but,<br />

on paper, 82 of <strong>the</strong>m trade in <strong>the</strong><br />

red, so w ithout outside- help,<br />

am bitious m odernisation plans<br />

are <strong>the</strong> stuff of dream s.<br />

Even so <strong>the</strong> game is awash<br />

with cash — from lotteries,<br />

pools, TV contracts and <strong>the</strong> like.<br />

Unfortunately, it’s not being<br />

spent on <strong>the</strong> people who pay out<br />

m ost of it — <strong>the</strong> poor bloody<br />

infantry who every Saturday are<br />

searched, segregated and frogm<br />

arched in police lines on to<br />

som e con crete w asteland to<br />

peer through steel mesh.<br />

Talents<br />

It would cost clubs about £35<br />

a head for a tip-up seat. Politicians<br />

will argue th at team s like<br />

Spurs got <strong>the</strong>ir priorities wrong<br />

when <strong>the</strong>y paid out a record £2.3<br />

million for <strong>the</strong> talents of Paul<br />

Gasgoine when <strong>the</strong>y could have<br />

bought over 60,000 seats.<br />

The experts insist <strong>the</strong> sum s<br />

aren’t th at sim ple. G rounds like<br />

Spurs’ W hite H art Lane are<br />

am ong <strong>the</strong> game’s showpieces.<br />

B ut author Simon Inglis —<br />

who has m ade an exhaustive<br />

study of B ritain’s stadium s —<br />

says: “They are technically hard<br />

to m odernise, hem m ed in by<br />

houses and roads.<br />

“You would have to tear <strong>the</strong>m<br />

down and start again some<br />

place else like, <strong>the</strong> W est Germ an<br />

clubs did, b u t fans hate it when<br />

<strong>the</strong>y move from <strong>the</strong>ir locality to<br />

som e green-field site m iles<br />

away.”<br />

Even if clubs had <strong>the</strong> wiU and<br />

<strong>the</strong> wherewitha.il to move, <strong>the</strong>y<br />

would find it near impossible to<br />

get planning permission.<br />

Everyone accepts <strong>the</strong> com m unity<br />

needs a football stadium as<br />

Squalid<br />

saga of<br />

<strong>the</strong> poor<br />

little rich<br />

clubs<br />

long as, like a prison, it’s not in<br />

. <strong>the</strong>ir backyard.<br />

Why spend £50 million on a<br />

new ground th at is used only 30<br />

tim es a year and, for <strong>the</strong> rest of<br />

<strong>the</strong> tim e, stands as an architectural<br />

eyesore like a mausoleum?<br />

Unless, like Preston North<br />

E nd, you lay down a plastic<br />

pitch and get <strong>the</strong> local authority<br />

to use it for 90 hours a week.<br />

Sim on Inglis says: “To help<br />

clu b s im prove facilities; th e<br />

Governm ent should change <strong>the</strong><br />

tax laws. There is m ore tax<br />

advantage for a team to buy a<br />

player than build a new stand.”<br />

Ploughed<br />

The taxm an takes over 40 per<br />

cent of <strong>the</strong> Pools money, but<br />

only a fraction is ploughed back<br />

into <strong>the</strong> game.<br />

A gencies like th e F ootball<br />

G rounds Im provem ent T ru st<br />

(FGIT), who get <strong>the</strong>ir money<br />

from S pot-<strong>the</strong>-B all com p etitions,<br />

have paid out over £40<br />

m illion over <strong>the</strong> past 10 years<br />

w ith safety as <strong>the</strong>ir priority, but<br />

clubs com plain <strong>the</strong>y need more.<br />

The problem is adm instrators<br />

keep sh iftin g th e goalposts.<br />

After <strong>the</strong> Ibrox disaster, it was<br />

exits th at needed renovation.<br />

H o o lig a n ism a n d H eysel<br />

brought a call for fencing, <strong>the</strong>n<br />

th e B radfo rd fire provoked<br />

m ore stringent safety regula­<br />

By DANIEL McGRORY<br />

mm<br />

tions, all of which forced clubs<br />

to leave terraces empty.<br />

G lynis F irth , se creta ry or<br />

FGIT, says: “Every tim e we had<br />

surplus funds and w anted to<br />

spend it on schem es like family<br />

enclosures and facilities for th£<br />

disabled, <strong>the</strong>re would be a new<br />

safety requirem ent and th at is<br />

where <strong>the</strong> money had to go.”<br />

Disabled<br />

They were set to embark on an<br />

unsung campaign to get lavatory<br />

facilities up to something like a<br />

civilised standard, but that will<br />

perish w ith whatever recommendations<br />

<strong>the</strong> <strong>Hillsborough</strong> enquiry<br />

comes up with.<br />

Their sister organisation, <strong>the</strong><br />

Football Trust, which helped<br />

clubs com bat th e hooligans,<br />

doles out around £7 million a<br />

year to pay for policing and <strong>the</strong><br />

fences th at are now being torn<br />

down.<br />

Last year Liverpool received<br />

£525,000, <strong>the</strong> sam e as M ancheste<br />

r City, w hile M anchester<br />

United got £292,695 for safety<br />

a n d a lm o st' as m u ch fo r<br />

im provements.<br />

T he u n fash io n a b le te am s<br />

didn’t m iss out. Grimsby had<br />

£436,515, Oxford United £469,990<br />

and Plym outh £286,068.<br />

The Football T rust also helps<br />

fund a special unit at Leicester<br />

University to investigate soccer’s<br />

problem s.<br />

Co-director Patrick M urphy<br />

says: “We have to get into per­<br />

Supporters are herded in like animals<br />

spective how few big occasions<br />

<strong>the</strong>re are every year. If <strong>the</strong>re<br />

were half a dozen decent-sized<br />

grounds w ith seats, th at would '<br />

be sufficent.”<br />

So far only a few clubs have<br />

risked <strong>the</strong> all-seater experiment.<br />

In Scotland, Aberdeen and Clydebank<br />

have m anaged it with<br />

fo rm id able su ccess, th o u g h<br />

th e ir attend an ces are p altry<br />

com pared to Arsenal and Liverpool.<br />

Clubs refuse to share a ground,<br />

preferring to run half-em pty<br />

wrecks a few hundred, yards<br />

apart and go deeper in debt.<br />

S u ch n arro w chau v in ism<br />

doesn’t blight Italian giants like<br />

Inter Milan and AC Milan who"<br />

share <strong>the</strong> magnificent San Sirb<br />

stadium which is owned by <strong>the</strong><br />

local m unicipality even though<br />

<strong>the</strong>y have m ore cash than <strong>the</strong><br />

four English divisions toge<strong>the</strong>r:<br />

Venues<br />

It helps that m ost of <strong>the</strong> Italian<br />

favourites are wholly owned"<br />

by industrial giants like Fiat<br />

who indulge <strong>the</strong>ir team, Juven-<br />

tus, like a delinquent child.<br />

It is doubtful, even now, that<br />

<strong>the</strong> top ten team s who need <strong>the</strong><br />

big venues will em bark on m assive<br />

building program m es.<br />

The suspicion rem ains that"<br />

w hen all th e en q u iries are<br />

exhausted and <strong>the</strong> tears have<br />

dried, little will have changed at<br />

our football grounds.<br />

It w on’t until <strong>the</strong> fans stop<br />

coming.<br />

Ann Parkinson’s toughest battle<br />

F<br />

r<br />

By CATHY GALVIN<br />

Mrs Parkinson: Tenacity<br />

a g i l e -<br />

LOO K IN G A nn<br />

Parkinson, wife of<br />

T ory p o litic ia n<br />

Cecil, Is a woman driven<br />

by a steely am bition — to<br />

stam p out <strong>the</strong> drug and<br />

alcohol addiction th at she<br />

h as w itn essed a t first<br />

hand.<br />

“Already 40 per cent of<br />

th e B ritish population<br />

are affected by some kind<br />

of addiction,’’ she says.<br />

“And th eir families and<br />

friends also have to deal<br />

with that.” Ann Parkinson<br />

knows th at from her<br />

own b itter experience ;—<br />

her own daughter Mary<br />

was addicted to drugs for<br />

te n y ears, even tu ally<br />

breaking <strong>the</strong> habit ju st<br />

over a year ago.<br />

For m ore than those ten<br />

years she has cham pioned<br />

<strong>the</strong> fight against<br />

c h e m ic al dependency<br />

w ith te n a c ity . S he<br />

believes — and statistics<br />

seem to back her up —<br />

th at addiction is perm eating<br />

every stratum of society,<br />

from <strong>the</strong> hardened<br />

drug addict to <strong>the</strong> businessm<br />

an who can’t resist<br />

th at th ird brandy after<br />

lunch.<br />

It’s a problem th at costs<br />

Industry £847 m illion a<br />

year In absenteeism —<br />

and costs families years<br />

of heartache.<br />

Launch<br />

Yesterday she took <strong>the</strong><br />

campaign one step furth<br />

er w ith <strong>the</strong> launch of<br />

Action on Addiction — a<br />

new charity whose first<br />

initiative is to provide a<br />

“ceiitre of excellence” for<br />

th e study and treatm ent<br />

of addiction. H er advantage<br />

as a front woman for'<br />

this prestigious new charity<br />

Is th at she Is a passionately<br />

Interested am ateur<br />

ra th e r th a n a pro fessional.<br />

People respond to her<br />

because she understands<br />

<strong>the</strong> struggles of family<br />

life and has not always<br />

lived a life of easy luxury<br />

as a top politician’s wife.<br />

In a crisis, her advice Is<br />

sim ple: “P a re n ts and<br />

teachers m ust m aintain a<br />

common approach. Don’t<br />

panic. Keep on talking.<br />

Try and keep It friendly<br />

and balanced^ and be prepared<br />

to share It with<br />

somebody else.<br />

“At some stage when<br />

you get into a serious situation,<br />

where th e addiction<br />

has become Intolerable<br />

for those around <strong>the</strong><br />

patient, you’ve got to say:<br />

‘You need help, <strong>the</strong>re Is<br />

help, take It or else.’ x<br />

“You have to be able to<br />

provide a cool p rofessional<br />

approach to <strong>the</strong><br />

subject. Ju st to hype It up<br />

w ould u n d erm in e Its<br />

medical and professional<br />

basis.”<br />

Aims<br />

In itially , th e charity,<br />

working with <strong>the</strong> public<br />

and private sectors and<br />

th e M edical R e se a rc h :<br />

Council, aim s to provide<br />

£6 million. It will h elp 5<br />

develop B ritlan’s Addictio<br />

n R esearch U nit In<br />

London, providing training<br />

for professionals and<br />

treatm ent for patients.<br />

Ann Parkinson has a<br />

vision of what Action on<br />

Addiction could achieve:<br />

“I would like to think<br />

th at 50 years hence addic-i<br />

tion will be seen as a<br />

m ajor Illness.”


DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 9<br />

THERE’LL BE NO MORE COMEBACKS BECAUSE I’M NOT RETIRING AGAIN, VOWS SINATRA-<br />

F r a n k s i n a t r a ’s<br />

Ol’ Blue Eyes twinkled<br />

last night as he<br />

vowed <strong>the</strong>re would<br />

be no more comebacks<br />

because he would never<br />

retire again.<br />

Sinatra said: “I never grow<br />

tired of <strong>the</strong> appreciation of<br />

<strong>the</strong> audiences every tim e I go<br />

on stage, I love it.<br />

“I t’s a love affair w ith th e audience,<br />

it’s som ething special th a t<br />

never grow s old.<br />

“There will be no m ore comeb<br />

acks because I ’m n o t retirin g<br />

again, I’m going to keep on perform ­<br />

ing.” "<br />

Sinatra, who starts <strong>the</strong> B ritish leg<br />

of his world torn- w ith Samm y Davis<br />

Junior and Liza M innelli tonight at<br />

<strong>the</strong> Royal Albert Hall, revealed he<br />

still got butterflies in his stom ach<br />

before going on stage despite his<br />

long experience.<br />

The m an who has played every<br />

m ajor concert hall in th e world over<br />

<strong>the</strong> past 50 years adm itted: “The<br />

first 40 seconds wherever<br />

I’m on stage I’m<br />

“After th at I could stay<br />

<strong>the</strong>re forever. I ju st get a<br />

little nervous and it goes<br />

away w hen I see <strong>the</strong><br />

audience because <strong>the</strong>n<br />

we becom e as one.”<br />

Sinatra told how <strong>the</strong><br />

idea for a world tour<br />

with <strong>the</strong> old Ratpack of<br />

Sam m y D avis Ju n io r<br />

and Dean M artin was<br />

first thought of several<br />

years ago at his hom e in<br />

Palm Springs.<br />

He said: “We ju st said<br />

‘let’s go back on <strong>the</strong><br />

road, wouldn’t th at be<br />

great?’ so we decided to<br />

do it.”<br />

B u t S in a tra d enied<br />

ru m o u rs su rro u n d in g<br />

M artin’s final decision<br />

not to tour. It was said<br />

th at M artin only wanted<br />

to p erfo rm n ea r h is<br />

home, playing dates in<br />

Las Vegas, Reno and<br />

Atlantic City.<br />

S in atra added: “We<br />

talk about him all <strong>the</strong><br />

tim e and call him on <strong>the</strong><br />

phone.”<br />

B ut <strong>the</strong> singing supers<br />

ta r to ld how h e ’d<br />

always hated <strong>the</strong> Ratpack<br />

term , which began<br />

with H um phrey Bogart.<br />

Hectic<br />

Now in th e middle of<br />

<strong>the</strong> gruelling tour, Sipa-<br />

tra says he has arrived<br />

in his second hom e of<br />

London and couldn’t be<br />

happier. He is staying at<br />

<strong>the</strong> Savoy hotel and <strong>the</strong><br />

m em ories are flooding<br />

back.<br />

He said: “I had a flat<br />

here in London many<br />

years ago and I adore<br />

this country.<br />

“I alw ays ta k e th e<br />

same suite at <strong>the</strong> hotel<br />

and over <strong>the</strong> years I’ve<br />

seen <strong>the</strong> skyline changing<br />

from my window as<br />

buildings come and go.<br />

B ut I still love <strong>the</strong> atm osphere<br />

here.”<br />

The hectic schedule so<br />

far has included dates in<br />

<strong>the</strong> States, Japan, Australia<br />

and Hawaii and<br />

now <strong>the</strong> trio will play 12<br />

SOS<br />

E u ro p e a n c o u n trie s<br />

before ending in Dublin<br />

in May.<br />

Sammy and Frank are<br />

travelling by private jet,<br />

while Liza has to take a<br />

b u s or fe rry to get<br />

around.<br />

Frank said <strong>the</strong> problem<br />

was she had developed<br />

a severe ear infection<br />

and saw a doctor in<br />

G o<strong>the</strong>nburg who to ld<br />

h er to fly could cause<br />

serious damage.<br />

B ut despite <strong>the</strong> problem<br />

s <strong>the</strong> stars are having<br />

a ball.<br />

Cabaret<br />

Frank said th eir ijnain<br />

relaxation was arriving<br />

in town and searching<br />

out <strong>the</strong> best Italian; restaurant<br />

available.<br />

One, in S to ckh o lm<br />

pleased <strong>the</strong>m so m uch<br />

th e y p u t o n an<br />

im prom ptu cabaret in<br />

front of astonished diners.<br />

They literally sang for<br />

th e ir sup p er. S in atra<br />

explained: “Sammy put<br />

salt down on <strong>the</strong> wooden<br />

flo o r and d id a ta p<br />

d ance. A re s ta u ra n t<br />

m usician was playing a<br />

m a n d o lin so I sang<br />

along. It was great fun. I<br />

think everybody enjoyed<br />

<strong>the</strong>m selves.”<br />

T he p erfo rm ers are<br />

staggered by <strong>the</strong> reception<br />

<strong>the</strong>y have received,<br />

and Sinatra puts it down<br />

to <strong>the</strong> fact th at <strong>the</strong>y all<br />

get on so well.<br />

He said he and Sammy<br />

had known Liza since<br />

she was bom while <strong>the</strong>y<br />

had known each o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

for 40 y ears.— “we go<br />

back a long way and we<br />

care about each o<strong>the</strong>r”.<br />

They w ere delighted<br />

yesterday to hear th at<br />

• 1 1 • i •<br />

Sinatra, Liza and Sammy Davis Junior<br />

By ROGER<br />

TAVENER<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir concerts in Rotterdam<br />

had broken all previous<br />

gross records with<br />

m ore than £1.5 million<br />

in ticket receipts.<br />

H e said th e y ’d also<br />

been thrilled to see peop<br />

le of all ages from<br />

bobby soxes to pensioners<br />

enjoying th eir concerts.<br />

B ut he said it was<br />

unlikely <strong>the</strong>y’d ever be<br />

able to to u r again as a<br />

trio because of th eir personal<br />

projects.<br />

Backstage at th eir concert<br />

looked like a florists’<br />

shop because so<br />

many well w ishers sent<br />

flow ers and greetings<br />

cards. The display grows<br />

w ith <strong>the</strong> awards, plaques<br />

and keys to <strong>the</strong> city <strong>the</strong>y<br />

also receive.<br />

S in a tra says th a t<br />

despite his long illustrious<br />

career he still has<br />

am bitions to fulfil.<br />

H is m ain hobby is<br />

painting and would one<br />

day love an exhibition of<br />

his work ju st as his old<br />

friend Tony B ennett had<br />

done.<br />

Success<br />

He said: “I’ve got a<br />

painting studio at my<br />

hom e in Palm Springs<br />

and I’d like to do more<br />

work like that. I find it<br />

really relaxing and I love<br />

to paint in oils. I do lots<br />

of desert colours and<br />

some things in a blaze of<br />

colour.”<br />

S in a tra s a id h e ’d<br />

d o n ated som e of h is<br />

paintings to charity and<br />

given o<strong>the</strong>rs to friends<br />

as presents, b u t never<br />

sold any.<br />

H is o<strong>the</strong>r m ain ambition<br />

is to continue his<br />

enorm ously successful<br />

movie career.<br />

61 never grow tired of <strong>the</strong><br />

audience’s appreciation 9<br />

j<br />

The way <strong>the</strong>y were: Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly and 01’ Blue Eyes himself<br />

ssssss<br />

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10 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

WORRY<br />

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Prices are exclusive of VAT.<br />

Speaker faces <strong>the</strong> axe<br />

over huge cash fiddle<br />

Wright: Accused of cheating<br />

ONE of America’s m ost<br />

powerful politicians was<br />

last night facing ruin after<br />

being branded a cheat.<br />

Jim W right, S p eaker of th e<br />

H o u se of R e p re s e n ta tiv e s<br />

an d second in line to th e p resid<br />

e n cy a fte r D an Q uayle,<br />

ta c e d p o s s ib le e x p u ls io n<br />

fro m Congress.<br />

An ethics com m ittee report<br />

accused him of receiving more<br />

than £140,000 from a wealthy<br />

friend.<br />

H is wife Betty is said to have<br />

been given a £40,000 share as<br />

salary for a sham job. On top of<br />

th a t financier George Mallick<br />

gave her a Cadillac car and a<br />

rent-free home.<br />

Wright, a 66-year-old Texan<br />

Democrat, vowed to fight <strong>the</strong><br />

charges. “I b ro k e no ru les<br />

knowingly and I shall fight this<br />

thing to tiie end,” he said.<br />

Wright, a m em ber of Congress<br />

for 34 years, has three<br />

From ROSS MARK<br />

in Washington<br />

weeks to respond to th e allegatio<br />

n s before th e com m ittee<br />

d ecid es w h at d iscip lin a ry<br />

action to take.<br />

He could escape w ith a sim ­<br />

ple rebuke or be expelled from<br />

Congress. Friends said even a<br />

reprim an d w ould p robably<br />

destroy him.<br />

Mood<br />

And th e Republicans are in<br />

no mood for forgiveness after<br />

<strong>the</strong> rough ride Democrats gave<br />

to President B ush’s nom inated<br />

D efence S e c re ta ry , Jo h n<br />

Tower.<br />

W right was cited by <strong>the</strong> ethics<br />

com m ittee on five counts<br />

inv o lv in g 69 tra n s a c tio n s<br />

which broke <strong>the</strong> rules.<br />

He said th at if he felt he no<br />

longer had th e confidence of<br />

his fellow Democrats he would<br />

step down as Speaker.<br />

Briton’s ordeal goes on<br />

as guns blaze in Beirut<br />

BRITISH hostage John McCarthy last<br />

night began his fourth year as a prisoner<br />

in a country where death comes<br />

cheap.<br />

TV jo u rn alist M cC arthy,32, w as kidn<br />

apped in A pril,1986, as he w as abou t to<br />

leave B eirut.<br />

N ot a w ord h as been heard fro m h im or<br />

h is capto rs since h e w as seized on h is way<br />

to th e airp o rt.<br />

A nd yesterday freedom w as as far away<br />

as ever for th e L ondoner — w ith B eiru t in McCarthy: Seized<br />

th e m id st of one of its w orst _ _ _ _<br />

s e c ta ria n b a ttle s s in c e th e By DAVID RICHARDSON<br />

fight for suprem acy began in<br />

th e L ebanon 14 years ago. once of th e w orst days I have<br />

ever lived through.<br />

M ore th a n 23 people, including<br />

th e S p anish am bassador,<br />

“I don’t know w h eth er we<br />

have died in th e latest re le n t­<br />

are going to survive th is.”<br />

less ro u n d of artillery clashes A C hristian, hiding in a cellar<br />

betw een M oslem s and C hris­ to e s c a p e a n o th e r M o slem<br />

tians.<br />

b om bardm ent, said: “W e are<br />

being slaug h tered like anim als<br />

A M oslem w om an w ho has an d no one lifts a finger to help<br />

sp en t th e long years of civil u s. D eath has becom e cheap.”<br />

w ar in B eirut, said: “I t w as M ean w h ile , M c C arth y is<br />

Soldiers shoot<br />

funeral girl, 13<br />

ISRAELI soldiers shot dead a 13-year-old<br />

Palestinian girl yesterday during a funeral<br />

for a teenager in <strong>the</strong> occupied West<br />

Bank.<br />

A 50-year-old man died after being<br />

beaten by soldiers on <strong>the</strong> occupied Gaza<br />

Strip. Arab sources said five o<strong>the</strong>r Palestinians<br />

were wounded, one seriously, in<br />

stone-throwing protests. The demonstrations<br />

followed an upsurge of violence in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Palestinian uprising.<br />

NEWSLINE<br />

Afghan rebels<br />

m ake new push<br />

MOSLEM rebels reported fierce fighting<br />

near Jalalabad yesterday and claimed to<br />

have captured seven government posts'<br />

guarding Afghanistan’s strategic eastern<br />

city.<br />

The guerrillas also reported heavy fighting<br />

near Khost, an eastern garrison town.<br />

But diplomats based in <strong>the</strong> Afghan capital<br />

said <strong>the</strong> government may have succeeded<br />

in opening <strong>the</strong> eastern supply<br />

route from Kabul to Jalalabad.<br />

Parrot smugglers before <strong>the</strong> beak<br />

POLICE at Melbourne airport said <strong>the</strong>y<br />

had cracked a major bird-smuggling<br />

ring yesterday when <strong>the</strong>y seized suitcases<br />

packed with parrots and arrested<br />

three West Germans and an Australian<br />

pet shop owner. The four, who were<br />

bound for Singapore, were remanded in<br />

custody by a magistrate. They were<br />

charged under a wildlife protection law,<br />

and could face 10 years’ jail. Their<br />

cases contained 32 drugged parrots.<br />

alm o st certainly being kept<br />

p riso n er in a cellar som ew here<br />

in W est B eiru t — w ith no<br />

access to new s from outside.<br />

It is unlikely h e w ould have<br />

seen th e m essages of sup p o rt<br />

a n d love h is fam ily and friends<br />

pu b lish ed in a B eiru t new spap<br />

er yesterday.<br />

H is fath e r w rote: “W e th in k<br />

abou t you every day. W e try to<br />

im a g in e how y o u a re a n d<br />

w here you are. I t’s te rrib le th a t<br />

you have been away from us<br />

for th re e long years. W hatever<br />

you do, old chap, keep your<br />

sp irits u p .”<br />

G irlfriend Jill M orrel w rote:<br />

“I ’m sending you m y special<br />

love.”<br />

M cC arth y , a r e p o r te r fo r<br />

W orldw ide Television News, is<br />

one of 17 W estern hostages<br />

held in B eirut, including th e<br />

A rc h b ish o p of C a n te rb u ry ’s<br />

envoy T erry W aite.<br />

Portland<br />

The ethics committee, which<br />

is m ade up of six Republicans<br />

and six Democrats, was unanim<br />

ous in its verdict, meaning<br />

m any D em ocrats feel th a t<br />

W right has done wrong, and at<br />

least has shown bad judgm ent.<br />

A no<strong>the</strong>r m ajor com p lain t<br />

against W right was th at he<br />

skirted H ouse rules by accepting<br />

£30,000 in royalties f.'om <strong>the</strong><br />

slim volum e of his recollec-i<br />

tions and old speeches called<br />

Reflections of a Public Man.<br />

The com m ittee found he had<br />

taken th e money from pressure<br />

groups w ith interests in legislation<br />

on which he was working;<br />

by having <strong>the</strong>m buy as m any as<br />

a thousand books at a time.<br />

In this way he circum vented<br />

lim itations on w hat Congressm<br />

en can receive from private<br />

and public groups.<br />

The com m ittee will report to<br />

<strong>the</strong> full House after hearing;<br />

W right’s response.<br />

A high noon<br />

deadline for<br />

runaway Ron<br />

From PAUL THOMPSON<br />

in Malaga _<br />

FUGITIVE R onnie K night<br />

w as yesterday given a “high<br />

noon” deadline to stay a tree<br />

m an.<br />

L aw yers fo r 54-year-old<br />

Knight, w anted for questioning<br />

in B ritain over a £7.3 m illion<br />

robbery, have been given<br />

48 hours to keep him out of a<br />

Spanish jail.<br />

They have to convince a<br />

Malaga judge at noon tom orrow<br />

th at Knight and his wife<br />

Sue, 39, should not be locked<br />

up while his lawyers appeal<br />

against an o rd er expelling<br />

him from Spain.<br />

M eanw hile arm ed police<br />

are keeping a round-<strong>the</strong>-clock<br />

watch bn his luxury villa<br />

and o<strong>the</strong>r homes on Spain’s<br />

so-called Costa del Crime.<br />

Knight, ex-husband of Carry<br />

On star Barbara Windsor, did<br />

not attend <strong>the</strong> brief court<br />

hearing. He and his wife have<br />

not been seen since his arrest<br />

last Friday.<br />

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DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18-1989<br />

name.<br />

S m allest price<br />

C a n o n , th e N o . 1 fa x s u p p lie r in E u r o p e<br />

n o w o ffer s th e N o . 1 fa x v a lu e in B r ita in .<br />

A t £ 7 2 0 (ex. V A T ), th e C a n o n 8 0 h a s a ll th e<br />

fe a tu r e s y o u w o u ld e x p e c t from a n o -fr ills fa x ,<br />

a n d a fe w y o u m ig h t n ot.<br />

A s w e ll as th e r e g u la r ‘lig h te r a n d d a r k e r ’<br />

r e p r o d u c tio n s e ttin g s , it h a s a ‘f in e ’ m o d e for<br />

g ra p h ic s an d s k e tc h e s.<br />

A p u sh b u tto n h a n d s e t a llo w s it to d o u b le<br />

as a ph o n e . W h il e a sim p le sw itc h a llo w s it to<br />

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r i o r m o r e d e ta i ls a b o u t C a n o n f a c s im ile m a c h i n e s , p o s t th is c o u p o n to R a c h a e l" |<br />

I S iz e la n d , C a n o n U K L t d ., C a n o n H o u s e , M a n o r R o a d , W a ll in g t o n , S u r r e y i<br />

I S M 6 O A J. O r , r i n g F r e e p h o n e 0 8 0 0 8 0 0 4 2 0 . F a x N o . 01 7 7 3 2 1 8 1 . |<br />

I N a m e P o s itio n ____________________ . I<br />

^ C o m p a n y T y p e o f B u s i n e s s j<br />

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1 2 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

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T<br />

If E R E w as a<br />

tim e w h e n<br />

C ath y M cG owan’s<br />

face was<br />

as fam ous as <strong>the</strong><br />

Beatles. She was Queen<br />

of th e Mods, television’s<br />

h ig h est-p aid p resenter<br />

and <strong>the</strong> fashion leader of<br />

j a generation of teenagers.<br />

C Then suddenly she quit<br />

her front-line job on <strong>the</strong><br />

’Sixties pop show Ready,<br />

Steady, Go, to becom e a<br />

full-tim e mo<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

T hat was 17 years ago.<br />

Now sh e ’s b ac k and<br />

looking like she’s never<br />

been away.<br />

T h e re a re s u b tle<br />

changes. I t’s top-to-toe<br />

Chanel now instead of<br />

Biba, which was to <strong>the</strong><br />

’Sixties w hat Next is to<br />

<strong>the</strong> ’Eighties, and <strong>the</strong>re’s<br />

new co o ln ess and<br />

so p h is tic a tio n w here<br />

breathy enthusiasm once<br />

got her by on <strong>the</strong> show<br />

w hich w as com pulsive<br />

viewing for us all.<br />

B u t b asically Cathy,<br />

now a presenter on London<br />

Plus, is still th e same;<br />

g irl-n e x t-d o o r w h o<br />

b ecam e a h o u seho ld<br />

nam e in th e ’Sixties.<br />

I t was like having a<br />

chat w ith an old friend<br />

in terv iew in g h e r th is<br />

week after Cliff Richard<br />

asked her to host his two<br />

sell-out sum m er concerts<br />

at Wembley.<br />

She spoke of her reasons<br />

for turning her back<br />

on fame and considerable<br />

fortune and why she<br />

is now back where she<br />

^belongs on telev isio n<br />

w ith offers com ing in by<br />

,<strong>the</strong> bagful.<br />

And for th e first time,<br />

she revealed th e reality of<br />

'her failed m arriage to<br />

actor Hywel Bennett, a<br />

m arriage which lasted 18<br />

. years on paper b u t in fact<br />

it was little m ore than<br />

two.<br />

D rifted<br />

apart<br />

“For years I kept readying<br />

about how we were<br />

istill living toge<strong>the</strong>r and'<br />

how I had given up television<br />

to be a wife and<br />

m o<strong>the</strong>r — a mo<strong>the</strong>r, yes,<br />

b u t a wife, no,” she said.<br />

■ “We were really only,<br />

toge<strong>the</strong>r for about two<br />

years. It’s so long ago<br />

■now I can hardly rem em ­<br />

ber why we split. There<br />

was no big scandal or<br />

anything. We ju st drifted<br />

apart.<br />

“W hen Hywel had his<br />

drink problem of course<br />

I did w hat I could to help.<br />

B ut it was nonsense to<br />

suggest th at <strong>the</strong> drinking<br />

wrecked our m arriage. It<br />

had ended years ago. In<br />

fact very few of my really<br />

close friends even know<br />

him.<br />

“I never bo<strong>the</strong>red to<br />

c o n tra d ic t th e sto rie s<br />

th a t we w ere s till<br />

toge<strong>the</strong>r because I really<br />

m eant it when I left television<br />

and said I wanted<br />

a private life.<br />

“I' don’t really know<br />

why Hywel wanted people<br />

to think we were still<br />

toge<strong>the</strong>r because we wer-<br />

c o m e<br />

The girl next door is<br />

back in <strong>the</strong> spotlight<br />

en’t. In fact when he had<br />

all those problem s it was<br />

‘m y sister, Frankie, who<br />

helped him as m uch as I<br />

did.<br />

“I never talked about it<br />

because if you start giv-;<br />

in g in te rv ie w s a n d<br />

talking about it you lose<br />

th at privacy.”<br />

A devout Rom an Catholic,<br />

Cathy did not consider<br />

divorce at first b u t .<br />

eventually, after lengthy^<br />

d iscussio n s w ith her,<br />

priest, she decided it was<br />

<strong>the</strong> right thing for her<br />

and <strong>the</strong> divorce was finalised<br />

last year.<br />

Cathy said she opted'<br />

o u t of th e lim elig h t<br />

because she wanted to be1<br />

w ith h e r d a u g h te r,<br />

Emma.<br />

Most<br />

im portant<br />

“I alw ays said th a t<br />

when she was in college I<br />

would go back to work: It<br />

never entered my head<br />

th at I couldn't pick up<br />

where I left off.” t<br />

O n th e day ^Em m a<br />

sta rte d college! C athy<br />

went back to work. And it<br />

happened in very m uch<br />

<strong>the</strong> sam e way as it did<br />

first tim e around.<br />

“I w ent to a party and<br />

m et a producer from <strong>the</strong><br />

BBC who asked w hat I<br />

was doing.<br />

“I said I was thinking of<br />

going back to work and<br />

he asked me what I was<br />

doing <strong>the</strong> following Fri-;<br />

day. On <strong>the</strong> Friday I was<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Daytime Live studio<br />

doing m y first pro-,<br />

gramme. It felt as if I had<br />

never been away.”<br />

To look at Cathy today<br />

To <strong>the</strong> left of Cliff Richard in religion<br />

By PHILIPPA<br />

KENNEDY<br />

<strong>the</strong> years ju st slip away.r<br />

She's cagey about her age;<br />

b u t she m ust be around!<br />

46. Yet her figure is still<br />

<strong>the</strong> trim size ten of alii<br />

those years ago and <strong>the</strong><br />

.hair is th e sam e straig h t<br />

shiny m ane w ith a fringe.<br />

Good ;<br />

She trim s <strong>the</strong> fringe<br />

herself. The glossy shine<br />

is all down to good living,<br />

she reckons.<br />

“I d o n ’t d rin k , or,<br />

smoke. I’m a real goody<br />

tw o shoes. A ctually 1<br />

can’t drink very m uch<br />

although I’ll have a wine<br />

and soda.<br />

“People always say I’m<br />

somewhere to <strong>the</strong> left of<br />

Cliff, Richard as far as<br />

religion is concerned. It’s<br />

m y I r i s h C a th o lic<br />

upbringing.”<br />

Cathy grew up in a big<br />

house in Streatham . The<br />

house was always full of<br />

friend s and th a t’s th e<br />

kind of hom e Cathy runs<br />

now in W est London.<br />

Cathy has found it easy<br />

to slip back into her<br />

career because she never<br />

went away as far as her<br />

friends were concerned.<br />

Famous<br />

nam es<br />

She started in television<br />

at <strong>the</strong> sam e tim e as a<br />

w hole g e n e ra tio n of<br />

fam o u s n am es, C ilia<br />

Black, Cliff Richard, <strong>the</strong><br />

S tones, and when she<br />

interviewed <strong>the</strong>m -it was<br />

ju st as if she was chatting<br />

to mates.<br />

H er two best friends<br />

are w riter Pat Booth and<br />

Gabrielle Crawford, ex-<br />

wife of a c to r M ichael<br />

C raw ford. “W e’ve seen<br />

each o<strong>the</strong>r through som e<br />

ups and downs and have<br />

always supported each<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r.”<br />

It was like th at with<br />

Cliff too. T here w ere<br />

hugs and kisses when<br />

<strong>the</strong>y m et this week to<br />

talk about The Event,<br />

Cliffs sum m er concerts.<br />

She is working on plans<br />

fo r a new telev isio n<br />

series which would take<br />

celebrities back to <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

roots.<br />

She said: "I know m ost<br />

of <strong>the</strong> people and <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

families so it will be like<br />

looking up old friends.” ■<br />

Cathy has finally come<br />

home.<br />

I felt I had never been away<br />

\ i -i * ' 1 > t » A v / x t<br />

A ■'i f * £ 'i. ■ t . .■? • f‘ « si '(> f jr »■« ; ss 't- f- iu »s ,


14 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

FLEXIBLE,<br />

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Between <strong>the</strong> day you use your Access card and <strong>the</strong> day you get your<br />

statement, nothing happens. For up to 31 days.<br />

All we do is tot up your bills.<br />

And, unless it's a cash withdrawal, we don't charge<br />

you a penny interest on w hat you've spent since your last statement.<br />

Then we give you ano<strong>the</strong>r 25 days to decide how much to pay us back.<br />

Ei<strong>the</strong>r pay <strong>the</strong> lot. a minimum amount, or anything in between.<br />

Now who said your flexible friend is boring?<br />

A c c e s s Is M o r e Flexible.<br />

THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS PUBLISHED BY THE JOINT CREDIT CARD COMPANY LIMITED, SOUTHEND-ON-SEA X, SS?? 088, W H O ACT AS CREDIT BROKERS FOR THE BANKS LISTED BELOW. IF THE ACCESS ACCOUNT IS SETTLED WITHIN 25 DAYS O F THE STATEMENT DATE N O INTEREST<br />

IS PAYABLE (N8. FOR CASH ADVANCES INTEREST IS CHARGED IMMEDIATELY FROM THE DAY O F WITHDRAWAL AT THE APR'S SET OUT BELOW). OTHERWISE INTEREST IS CHARGED AT A RAT£ EQUAL TO AN APR AS FOLLOWS; LLOYDS BANK (APR 26.8% ), MIDLAND BANK (APR 26.8%).<br />

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FREE AT ANY TIME TO VARY ANY OF THEIR TERMS, INCLUDING THE APR. FOR FULL DETAILS ABOUT EACH BANKS' ACCESS CREDIT CARD. PLEASE CALL INTO THE BRANCH OF THAT BANK.<br />

Q


i f DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 1 5<br />

Terror ride hooked to sub<br />

Three men in fishing<br />

boat dragged for mile<br />

SKIPPER Geoff Comber was taken for a ride<br />

he will never forget when he netted—a<br />

submarine.<br />

His 44-foot fishing vessel was dragged backards<br />

for more than a mile after he caught <strong>the</strong> sub. And,<br />

as <strong>the</strong> boat gained speed, <strong>the</strong> three men on board<br />

<strong>the</strong> MSV Laurel were terrified it would be dragged<br />

under if <strong>the</strong> submarine turned tail.<br />

Rapist gets six years<br />

A MAN of 27 who raped a woman after she called to<br />

look over a flat was jailed for six years yesterday.<br />

Stoke Crown Court heard that Sajid Miah, of<br />

Regent Road, Hanley, raped <strong>the</strong> 30-year-old woman<br />

a month before his wife flew into Britain from<br />

Bangladesh. Judge Kenneth Taylor said Miah used<br />

violence to overcome his victim in a three-hour<br />

ordeal which left her bruised and marked.<br />

^EDWARD SEES GOLD IfPALACES OF RUSSIA-<br />

Prince<br />

on <strong>the</strong><br />

Soviet<br />

stage<br />

Finally Geoff, 46,<br />

decided to cut his nets By TOBY MCDONALD<br />

ra<strong>the</strong>r than risk <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

•<br />

PRIN C E EDWARD<br />

lives and lost £4,000 Ministry of Defence said : w ent w alkabout in<br />

worth of trawling gear. “ It certainly was not one M oscow y esterday after<br />

Yesterday, safely back of our submarines, we to u rin g th e K rem lin<br />

on shore at Peel on <strong>the</strong> had none in <strong>the</strong> area.” palaces. I t w as th e end<br />

Isle of Man, Geoff said:<br />

“ My boat can two a An American Embassy of a three-day to u r seen<br />

two-ton loan, but what­ spokesman refused to as a d ress rehe arsal for<br />

ever was down <strong>the</strong>re comment.<br />

a v isit by th e Q ueen. '<br />

towed us about like a The channel north of<br />

•<br />

In cossack hat, th e<br />

cork.”<br />

<strong>the</strong> Isle of Man is P rin ce stro lled in<br />

normally used by sub-<br />

Denied<br />

R ed S q u are w ith a<br />

m a rin es from b o th<br />

He added: “ There’s no countries, based at Fasgroup<br />

of young acto rs<br />

doubt in my mind it was a lane or on <strong>the</strong> Clyde, on from B ritain ’s N ational<br />

submarine and I think it <strong>the</strong>ir homeward journey. T h eatre w ho travelled<br />

w ith h im to stage a play<br />

would probably be an The MOD have advised a t a M oscow th eatre.<br />

American one in that Mr. Comber to file a<br />

•<br />

area.”<br />

claim for compensation “I t ’s an experience<br />

Last night, nei<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> with <strong>the</strong>m.<br />

I w on’t forget for a<br />

British or <strong>the</strong> Americans Two years ago, <strong>the</strong> very long tim e,” th e<br />

would accept respon­ A m ericans a d m itted P rin ce said afte r visitsibility<br />

for <strong>the</strong> incident 12 d raggin g th e v e s se l ing th e m agnificent<br />

miles north-west of <strong>the</strong> Summer Morn for over golden K rem lin a p a rt­<br />

Isle of Man.<br />

four hours off <strong>the</strong> Isle of m en ts w here R u ssia’s<br />

A spokesman for <strong>the</strong> Man.<br />

T sars u sed to live.<br />

•<br />

H e declined to<br />

sp eculate w hat<br />

k in d of w elcom e w ould<br />

b e afforded th e Q ueen,<br />

w hose relatio n s w ith<br />

R u ssia have im proved<br />

d espite th e m u rd er o f a<br />

relation, T sar N icholas<br />

II, by th e B olsheviks in<br />

th e 1918 revolution. Prince lEdward and actress in Moscow yesterday Picture: STEVE WOOD<br />

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Star Jose<br />

back from<br />

fight with<br />

leukaemia<br />

By LOUISE ROBINSON<br />

OPERA singer Jose<br />

Carreras spoke yesterday<br />

of his joy at<br />

returning to <strong>the</strong> stage<br />

after a two-year battle<br />

against leukaemia.<br />

The tenor makes a<br />

triumphant comeback at<br />

London’s Royal opera<br />

House tonight.<br />

“I’m feeling great,” he<br />

said. “Nothing less than<br />

100 per cent.”<br />

For Carreras, 42, it is a<br />

remarkable victory over<br />

<strong>the</strong> cancer that nearly<br />

killed him.<br />

He became ill at <strong>the</strong><br />

height of his career while<br />

filming La Boheme in<br />

Paris. At one stage<br />

doctors gave him only a<br />

10 per cent chance of<br />

survival.<br />

Help<br />

But he pulled through<br />

after a bone marrow<br />

t r a n s p la n t and<br />

chemo<strong>the</strong>rapy.<br />

He marked his recovery<br />

with an emotional concert<br />

before 150,000 fans in<br />

his native Barcelona.<br />

N ow th e sta r has<br />

started an international<br />

fo u n d a tio n to h elp<br />

leukaemia victims. He<br />

has already raised £1<br />

million for <strong>the</strong> cause in a<br />

series of benefit concerts.<br />

And he is determined to<br />

use his experience to give<br />

hope to o<strong>the</strong>r sufferers.<br />

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1 6 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

RAC man<br />

in mercy<br />

dash is<br />

fined £30<br />

By TOBY McDOI^ALD***<br />

AN RAC patro lm an w ho<br />

dashed, to help a w om an<br />

m o to rist in d istre ss late<br />

at night h as been fined<br />

£30 for speeding.<br />

R o g er W ild w as<br />

stopped by police driving<br />

at 57mph in a 30mph<br />

lim it. He was prosecuted<br />

despite his pleas th at <strong>the</strong><br />

frightened w om an was<br />

stranded in a deserted<br />

unlit car park.<br />

W hen he eventually<br />

arrived nearly an hour<br />

late at <strong>the</strong> car park in<br />

Bury, Lancashire, Miss<br />

Leslie Chamberlain, 24,<br />

was alm ost in tears with<br />

worry.<br />

Miss Chamberlain said<br />

yesterday: ”1 think that<br />

to give someone a speeding<br />

fine when <strong>the</strong>y are<br />

doing nothing m ore than<br />

helping a frightened lady<br />

in trouble is terrible.”<br />

Mr W ild,' 26, of H udd<br />

e r s f i e l d R o a d ,<br />

Rochdale, was convicted<br />

at M iddleton and Hey-<br />

wood m agistrates’ court.<br />

He said th at since <strong>the</strong><br />

m urder of M arie W ilks as<br />

she waited for help on<br />

<strong>the</strong> M50 in Gloucestershire<br />

last year, all calls<br />

from w om en on th e ir<br />

ow n h ad been given<br />

urgent priority.<br />

Gunman surrenders<br />

A SNIPER who fired 15<br />

shots during an 18-hour<br />

siege a t R a tte n sh aw<br />

nursing home, Nayland,<br />

Suffolk, gave him self up<br />

yesterday.<br />

:fi£| 5<br />

SEX ATTACKER STABBED TIFFANY 94 TIMES AFTER LURING HER INTO WOODS-<br />

Life for <strong>the</strong> Devil who<br />

murdered a little<br />

By ALUN REES<br />

SEX killer Trevor Owen<br />

— branded a devil by<br />

detectives — was jailed<br />

for life yesterday for <strong>the</strong><br />

murder of angelic Tiffany<br />

Hoiles.<br />

Owen, 31, also dubbed<br />

Quasimodo because of his<br />

staring eyes and <strong>the</strong> way he<br />

limps, lured nine-year-old<br />

Tiffany from an adventure<br />

playground into woods.<br />

H e to rtu re d h e r and trie d to<br />

have sex w ith h e r before stab ­<br />

b ing h er 94 tim es w ith scissors<br />

in th e quiet m ark et tow n of<br />

B landford F orum , D orset.<br />

It was a repeat of a sex attack<br />

he com m itted 16 years ago in <strong>the</strong><br />

sam e place, a t <strong>the</strong> sam e tim e of<br />

day, with a girl of <strong>the</strong> sam e age.<br />

Trapped<br />

T hen he trapp e d a p re tty<br />

. youngster and threatened her<br />

before assaulting her: “If you<br />

scream I’ll kill you.” She su rvived.<br />

— but 16 years later, Tiffany<br />

died a brutal death.<br />

At Winchester Crown Court, Mr<br />

Justice MacPherson told Owen:<br />

“You have been convicted on <strong>the</strong><br />

clearest evidence of a brutal murder.<br />

You are a very dangerous<br />

man.”<br />

Owen was taken to <strong>the</strong> cells<br />

screaming at police: “In God’s<br />

Owen: ‘Dangerous rnan’<br />

name I’m innocent. You’ve pinned<br />

it on me.”<br />

Detectives were alerted that<br />

Owen had been hanging around<br />

children in <strong>the</strong> Milldown play area<br />

while <strong>the</strong>y were on holiday. Forensic<br />

experts matched up fibres from<br />

Tiffany’s clothing to his.<br />

They also proved that his clothing,<br />

like hers, was covered in ivy<br />

hair from plants at <strong>the</strong> scene of <strong>the</strong><br />

murder:<br />

After <strong>the</strong> case Detective Superintendent<br />

Roger Thompson said:<br />

“I’m satisfied and pleased that <strong>the</strong><br />

right man has been sentenced to<br />

life today.<br />

“He has shown no remorse for<br />

Tiffany’s fate and in court <strong>the</strong> only<br />

TIMES<br />

TABLE<br />

sorrow he has shown has been for<br />

himself.<br />

“At Tiffany’s funeral <strong>the</strong>y sang<br />

her favourite songs and one of<br />

those was Lord of <strong>the</strong> Dance.<br />

“There’s a line in that ‘I danced<br />

with <strong>the</strong> devil on my back’ — that<br />

sums it all up for me.”<br />

In 1986, Owen was again convicted<br />

of an assault on a girl, but<br />

<strong>the</strong> ruling was quashed on appeal<br />

because his victim was too upset to<br />

give evidence.<br />

Mr Thompson added: “I find it<br />

deeply disturbing that he has comm<br />

itted this m urder in circum ­<br />

stances so similar to his last conviction<br />

or attack on a girl in 1972 — <strong>the</strong><br />

same place, <strong>the</strong> same time of day<br />

and a girl of <strong>the</strong> same age.<br />

“It obviously poses <strong>the</strong> question<br />

about <strong>the</strong> safety of young girls if he<br />

were ever released.”<br />

Search<br />

Tiffany’s fa<strong>the</strong>r, Mike Hoile, said:<br />

“I’m relieved it’s all over and I’d<br />

like to thank <strong>the</strong> police, <strong>the</strong> public<br />

and <strong>the</strong> Army who helped in <strong>the</strong><br />

search at <strong>the</strong> time.”<br />

Tiffany’s natural mo<strong>the</strong>r, Yas-<br />

min, died in a car crash five years<br />

ago and her step-mo<strong>the</strong>r Michaela<br />

grew very close to <strong>the</strong> girl.<br />

Two days before <strong>the</strong> murder she<br />

was told she was pregnant, only to<br />

be shattered by Tiffany’s death.<br />

Now <strong>the</strong>y have a baby Luke who<br />

is nearly a month old.<br />

Family friends said: “The lad is a<br />

real corker."<br />

TYPICAL EXAMPLES<br />

Tiffany: Murdered near a playground<br />

12 34<br />

R enault 5TL<br />

3dr<br />

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3dr<br />

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Campus, 3dr<br />

R enault 5<br />

Campus, 3dr<br />

Retail price (inc.‘on<br />

<strong>the</strong> road’costs £300) £6,180.00 £6,180.00 £5,505.00 £5,505.00<br />

Minimum Deposit 60%/£3,708.00 40V£2,472.00 £99.00 £99.00<br />

To Be Financed £2,472.00 £3,708.00 £5,406.00 £5,406.00<br />

Flat Rate 0% . 0% 7.9% 6.9%<br />

APR 0% 0% 15.2% 13.5%<br />

Maximum Repayment Period 24 months 12 months 48 months 36 months<br />

Finance Charges Nil Nil £1,708.08 £1,119.00<br />

Monthly Payments(1) £103.00 £309.00 £148.21 £181.25<br />

Total Credit Price* £6,180.00 £6,180.00 £7,222.08 £6,633.00<br />

Customer saving at typical<br />

12% pa flat rate, 24.2% APR £ 6 0 2 .2 8 £ 4 5 3 .9 6 £ 8 8 7 .0 4 £ 8 2 7 .2 8<br />

Weekly E quivalent(1) £23.77 £71.30 £34.20 £41.82<br />

‘ Includes £9 option fee<br />

This offer is subject to credit status and applies to any new Renault 5 ordered and registered between 1st March and 30th April 1989 (offer does not include Channel Isles and Isle of Man). Written quotations available from any Renault dealer (see Yellow Pages). Credit facilities provided by Renault Financial


TEARS AS BEN’S FRIEND IS KICKED OUT<br />

■ S M M i K S l<br />

Homeward bound: Male au pair Hakan says goodbye to Ben<br />

Farewell, au pair pal!<br />

AU PAIR Hakan Larsson said a tearful<br />

farew ell yesterday to <strong>the</strong> little boy<br />

he had com e to Britain to look after,<br />

w hen im m igration o fficia ls threw<br />

him out of <strong>the</strong> country.<br />

Eight-year-old Ben Oberman burst<br />

into tears as his Swedish friend left<br />

from Heathrow Airport after Just a<br />

week here.<br />

O fficials had ordered Hakan, who<br />

comes from Go<strong>the</strong>nberg, to leave<br />

after insisting <strong>the</strong>re was no such thing<br />

as a male au pair.<br />

Ben’s mum , author Wendy Oberm<br />

an, 45, had invited Hakan to Britain<br />

to look after her son w hile she worked<br />

on her writing.<br />

Now she has w ritten to MPs Rosie<br />

Barnes and Sir Hugh Rossi to com ­<br />

plain about <strong>the</strong> im m igration ruling.<br />

I l i i S i P i<br />

lllllillllll<br />

iW HalM lllM i<br />

THE RENAULT 5 RANGE FROM £5,205‘<br />

tid, NWS House, City Road, Chester X, CH99 3AN. All prices correct at time of goingto press. 'Prices include VAT, Car Tax,<br />

★ DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 17<br />

Gloria: I’ll beat my bad break<br />

TV CHAT show sta r<br />

G lo r ia H u n n if o r d<br />

vow ed last n ig h t to be<br />

back a t w ork in th ree<br />

w eeks — despite b reakin<br />

g h e r a rm in six<br />

places.<br />

G loria, 52, w as h u rt<br />

p lay in g te n n is a t a<br />

friend’s party. B ut even<br />

though she fell heavily on<br />

th e h ard co u rt, brave<br />

Gloria returned <strong>the</strong> ball<br />

and scored <strong>the</strong> point.<br />

H er son, 18 year-old<br />

By BOB McGOWAN<br />

M ichael K eating, said<br />

G lo ria w as h ea v ily<br />

sedated at her home in<br />

Sevenoaks, K ent, after<br />

her right arm was re-set<br />

in hospital.<br />

He added: "She had<br />

stretched out to return a<br />

b all and sh e crash ed<br />

down on <strong>the</strong> hard court.<br />

"The arm broke in six<br />

places and th e hospital<br />

told her <strong>the</strong> ball joint in<br />

her shoulder had been<br />

com pletely smashed.<br />

"She has to go back for<br />

m o re tre a tm e n t th is<br />

week. She is in a lot of<br />

pain.<br />

"But my m o<strong>the</strong>r is a<br />

determ ined lady and she<br />

insists th at she will be<br />

back at work w ithin <strong>the</strong><br />

next three weeks - .even<br />

w ith her arm and shoulder<br />

in plaster." Gloria: Brave<br />

Lisa Loveless tells of<br />

EXPRESS REPORTER<br />

RANDY b u sin essm a n<br />

Michael Alway wanted to<br />

go all <strong>the</strong> way with sexy<br />

employee Lisa Loveless.<br />

When <strong>the</strong> haulage firm<br />

boss took blonde Lisa on a<br />

working trip to London he<br />

booked a double room and<br />

tried to seduce her, an industrial<br />

tribunal heard yesterday.<br />

M iss Loveless, 24, refused th e<br />

advances of h er 53-year-old boss<br />

b u t th e “sexual h ara ssm e n t”<br />

continued back in th e office, it<br />

w as claim ed.<br />

Alway bom barded th e £12,000-<br />

a-year executive w ith lewd suggestions<br />

over th e phone, it was<br />

alleged.<br />

3'<br />

m m W m m<br />

Alway Loveless<br />

Finally sh e refused to give<br />

Alway a lift to th e office and was<br />

s a c k e d fro m h e r jo b a s<br />

o p eratio n s m anager a t Plym ­<br />

outh-based chilled food d istrib u ­<br />

to rs Flow In tern atio n al.<br />

Y esterday M iss Loveless, of<br />

L aira Road, P lym outh, Devon,<br />

c la im e d d a m a g e s fro m M r<br />

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Then all you have to do is choose your new<br />

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from <strong>the</strong> Campus to <strong>the</strong> GT Turbo, and prices from £5,205<br />

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Alway a n d h is com pany u n d er<br />

th e Sex D iscrim ination Act.<br />

She to ld th e E x eter hearing<br />

th a t on th e ir drive to L ondon<br />

“th e w h o le c o n v e r s a tio n<br />

rev o lv e d a ro u n d h is sexu al<br />

activities.<br />

“H e th e n told m e he h ad<br />

booked a double room a t th e<br />

hotel. W hen w e w alked into th e<br />

h o tel I m ade a b it of a scene an d<br />

said M r Alway h ad been expecting<br />

h is w ife and could <strong>the</strong>y<br />

please find m e a single room .”<br />

L ater h e allegedly trie d to kiss<br />

h e r w h en th e y to o k a lift<br />

toge<strong>the</strong>r a t th e hotel.<br />

M r Jo h n C arter, for M r Alway,<br />

said innuendo by th e com pany<br />

d irecto r h ad “been ripened o u t<br />

of all p ro p o rtio n ” by M iss Loveless.<br />

A decision will be announced<br />

today.<br />

THERE'S MORE<br />

TO LIFE WITH<br />

RENAULT<br />

1


18 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

If you hold fixed-interest National<br />

Savings Certificates which are more<br />

than five years old, <strong>the</strong>y’re probably<br />

earning interest at <strong>the</strong> General<br />

Extension Rate, which is now 5.01% pa<br />

tax-free. But this isn’t a guaranteed rate<br />

- it can vary from time to time.<br />

The fact is, this money could be<br />

working much harder for you.<br />

By reinvesting your matured<br />

certificates in 34th Issue Certificates,<br />

you’ll get <strong>the</strong> much higher rate of 7.5%<br />

pa. And it is g u a ra n te e d if you hold<br />

<strong>the</strong>m for <strong>the</strong> full five years.<br />

It’s all tax-free.<br />

The reinvestment limit is £10,000,<br />

on top of <strong>the</strong> usual £1,000 which<br />

anyone can put into 34th Issue.<br />

This is obviously a very good<br />

opportunity to make <strong>the</strong> most of your<br />

matured certificates.<br />

But <strong>the</strong>re is an exciting new<br />

alternative which may suit you even<br />

better.<br />

So read <strong>the</strong> second column now to<br />

make sure you don’t miss out.<br />

SAVINGS CERTIFICATES<br />

Now <strong>the</strong>re are<br />

two ways to<br />

re-energise<br />

your old savings<br />

certificates.<br />

A second highly attractive way to<br />

earn more than <strong>the</strong> tax-free 5.01%<br />

General Extension Rate from your<br />

matured certificates is to invest in <strong>the</strong><br />

new National Savings Capital Bonds.<br />

There’s no limit to how much you<br />

can invest, and by holding Capital<br />

Bonds for <strong>the</strong> full five years, your<br />

return will average out at 12% pa gross.<br />

This return, too, is g u a ra n te e d ,<br />

whatever happens to o<strong>the</strong>r interest<br />

rates.<br />

The interest on Capital Bonds is<br />

taxable annually. A basic rate taxpayer<br />

would get an average return over five<br />

years of 9% pa after tax. If you are in<br />

paid employment you will probably be<br />

able to settle your liability to income tax<br />

from your monthly salary through<br />

PAYE.<br />

Non-taxpayers of course would<br />

keep <strong>the</strong> full 12%. (Remember, if you’re<br />

a non-taxpayer, that local banks and<br />

building societies h a v e to take tax off<br />

your interest, but National Savings<br />

takes nothing off.)<br />

If you want to reinvest in 34th<br />

Issue, ask for <strong>the</strong> Savings Certificate<br />

Repayment/Reinvestment form (DNS<br />

502MA) at your post office or bank. Fill<br />

in <strong>the</strong> form and apply for reinvestment.<br />

Then send it to <strong>the</strong> Savings Certificate<br />

Office, Durham, along with <strong>the</strong><br />

certificates you wish to reinvest.<br />

If you wish to buy Capital Bonds<br />

ask for <strong>the</strong> same form and apply<br />

for re p a y m e n t. When you get your<br />

repayment, go to your post office and<br />

ask <strong>the</strong>m for <strong>the</strong> prospectus and<br />

purchase form to buy your new Capital<br />

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SHOULD final and catagoric<br />

proof be required th at <strong>the</strong> skull<br />

found in a - swamp east of <strong>the</strong><br />

Urals really is th at of <strong>the</strong> last<br />

Czar of ali <strong>the</strong> Russias, <strong>the</strong>n I am i<br />

in a position to help provide it.<br />

The Soviet authorities, still<br />

sensitive about <strong>the</strong> m urder of<br />

Nicholas 11 and his family by <strong>the</strong><br />

Cheka secret police inJ918, are J<br />

refusing to confirm <strong>the</strong> findings<br />

of S oviet crim e w riter Geli<br />

R yabov, w ho la s t w eek i|<br />

announced th at he had discovered<br />

w hat he believes to be <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

egfthly remains.<br />

Shapes<br />

The definitive evidence, however,<br />

could be on a shelf in <strong>the</strong><br />

New Bond Street shop of royal<br />

h at m aker H erb ert Johnson.<br />

There, alongside models of <strong>the</strong><br />

headshapes of <strong>the</strong> Prince of<br />

W ales, P rin c e A ndrew and<br />

Prince Edward, <strong>the</strong>re is a<br />

m illim e tre - p re c is e ,<br />

wooden tem plate of <strong>the</strong><br />

Czar’s head.<br />

I t w as in 1901 th a t<br />

Nicholas, whose wife was<br />

Queen Victoria’s grand--<br />

d au g h ter, v isited th e<br />

shop. He ordered four<br />

hats; a deerstalker, a fur-<br />

hat, a m otoring cap and a<br />

silken topper.<br />

After th e Czar’s m easu<br />

rem en ts w ere ta k e n :<br />

<strong>the</strong> m ould was made.<br />

The block was made. It<br />

is still in perfect condition.<br />

Says Jo h n so n ’s chief<br />

executive David Brad-<br />

bum : “Skulls are like fingerprints.<br />

T he shape of a<br />

s k u ll h a rd ly e v e r<br />

changes, and although<br />

<strong>the</strong> size may be <strong>the</strong> same<br />

HOW I KEEP<br />

AHEAD OF<br />

THE NEWS<br />

T H E DIARY<br />

which can’t<br />

under <strong>the</strong> hat<br />

The skull, and <strong>the</strong> hatter’s template<br />

th e shapes are very different.<br />

If I got hold of <strong>the</strong><br />

skull I could tell you<br />

straight away w he<strong>the</strong>r it<br />

is genuine or not.”<br />

I t is now for <strong>the</strong> Soviet<br />

authorities to decide if<br />

<strong>the</strong>y w ant to avail <strong>the</strong>m ­<br />

selves of this irrefutable<br />

proof.<br />

I will be happy to make<br />

th e necessary arran g em<br />

ents. I await a response<br />

from <strong>the</strong> Soviet embassy.<br />

BOX OF GOODWILL FOR HILLSBOROUGH<br />

WE are all shocked and<br />

num bed by <strong>the</strong> tragedy<br />

at <strong>Hillsborough</strong>. We can<br />

never do too m uch for<br />

<strong>the</strong> victim s and <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

bereaved fam ilies and<br />

anything we do Is too little.<br />

But w e m ust do what'<br />

w e can and to that end I<br />

am ^ offering a box for<br />

Saturday night’s perform<br />

ance of th e fully sold<br />

out triple b ill a^t <strong>the</strong><br />

A lb ert H a ll sta rrin g<br />

F rank S in a tra, f L iza<br />

M in elli and Sam m y<br />

D avis Jnr.<br />

The private box for six<br />

is b ein g donated by<br />

Who cares<br />

what happens after<br />

Remembrance<br />

Sunday?<br />

The Royal British Legion does.<br />

Everyone gives money on Poppy Day. Hut not everyone<br />

knows where <strong>the</strong> money goes.<br />

For <strong>the</strong> 364 days of <strong>the</strong> year after Remembrance<br />

Sunday, The Royal British Legion is busy putting <strong>the</strong><br />

money to work, helping and caring for ex-Service<br />

men and women and <strong>the</strong>ir dependants with advice,<br />

training, sheltered employment and homes.<br />

To find out more, telephone 01-930 8131 or complete^<br />

<strong>the</strong> coupon for a brochure.<br />

H<br />

L<br />

PLEASE TELL ME MORE ABOUT<br />

THE ROYAL BRITISH LEGION.<br />

Address-<br />

-Postcode-<br />

Telephone-<br />

T H E R O Y A L B R IT IS H L E G IO N I<br />

Send to: D ep a rtm en t X)Xl . T h e Royal British Legion. 48 I’all<br />

Mall, L ondon SW 17 5JY. • I<br />

Emperor Events. Champagne<br />

w ill be provided.<br />

The show was sold out<br />

last October. The best<br />

seats have a face value<br />

of £100 and are changing<br />

hands for m any tim es<br />

that- am ount. A box is<br />

obviously worth m ore<br />

— much m ore given this<br />

tragic circum stance.<br />

If you want to buy <strong>the</strong><br />

whole box — and I am<br />

starting <strong>the</strong> bidding at<br />

£2,000 — please telep<br />

h o n e m y s e lf o r<br />

Jeanette on <strong>the</strong> num ber<br />

below.<br />

The box w ill go to <strong>the</strong><br />

jhighest bidder and all<br />

'th e m on ey 'w ill be<br />

donated to <strong>the</strong> Hillsbor-<br />

iough disaster fund.<br />

The telephone num ­<br />

ber is:<br />

01-922-7144.<br />

THE<br />

FATED<br />

FAMILY<br />

Czar<br />

Nicholas<br />

ivith his<br />

family,<br />

assassinated<br />

in<br />

1918.<br />

Anastasia<br />

is on right,<br />

sisters<br />

Marie,<br />

Olga,<br />

Tatiana at<br />

back, w ith<br />

Czarevitch<br />

at<br />

m o<strong>the</strong>r’s<br />

feet.<br />

A sign of<br />

one’s station<br />

in this life?<br />

THE Queen has washed<br />

her hands of <strong>the</strong> row over<br />

signposts on th e Sandringham<br />

estate.<br />

As I recorded last month<br />

<strong>the</strong> old Sandringham station<br />

has been converted<br />

into a railway museum and<br />

ow ner Roger Hedley-<br />

Walker insists that for <strong>the</strong><br />

museum (18,000 visitors a<br />

year) to survive he needs<br />

six roadside direction<br />

signs. B u t th e S andringham<br />

estate (200,000<br />

visitors annually) have<br />

objected.<br />

The matter has now gone<br />

before Norfolk County<br />

Council.<br />

But not before Hedley-<br />

Walker received a letter<br />

through <strong>the</strong> Queen’s aide,<br />

Robert Fellowes, bro<strong>the</strong>r in<br />

law of <strong>the</strong> Princess ol<br />

Wales, stating that Her<br />

Majesty has no wish to<br />

intervene in <strong>the</strong> matter.<br />

Relic<br />

The royal missive states:<br />

“The county council’s decision<br />

on <strong>the</strong> matter and <strong>the</strong><br />

speed at which <strong>the</strong>y reach<br />

it must be entirely a matter<br />

for <strong>the</strong> council and not one<br />

in which H er Majesty<br />

would wish to be personally<br />

involved.”<br />

At stake in this David and<br />

Goliath battle is <strong>the</strong> future'<br />

of <strong>the</strong> station, a perfectly<br />

preserved architectural<br />

relic of <strong>the</strong> by-gone age of<br />

steam. As Hedley-Walker<br />

says: “People ju st don’t<br />

know we’re here.”<br />

The same cannot be said<br />

of Sandringham. Including<br />

those for <strong>the</strong> sale oi last<br />

year’s Christmas trees, Lavatories<br />

Open and Please Do<br />

No Park on <strong>the</strong> Verge, <strong>the</strong>re<br />

are 62 signs — compared to<br />

one for th e railw ay<br />

museum.<br />

And Ano<strong>the</strong>r Thing<br />

9 HAVING Jailed as a. national newspaper proprietor,<br />

Gordonstoun-educated Eddie Shah seems to be doing<br />

ra<strong>the</strong>r better as a property speculator. Last year Eddie,<br />

who lost his shirt on a ‘here today, gone tom orrow’ rag<br />

and <strong>the</strong>n tried and failed again w ith <strong>the</strong> Post, paid<br />

£250,000 for Russell H arty’s old home. Rose Cottage, in<br />

Giggleswick, North Yorkshire. He has now re-sold it for,<br />

som e say, £2 million. The feeling in <strong>the</strong> village is that he<br />

would have been lucky to get £450,000 for <strong>the</strong> cottage.<br />

B ut even that lowly figure would give him a profit of<br />

£200,000 — not a bad return given <strong>the</strong> strangehold of<br />

depression that has seized <strong>the</strong> property market.<br />

WITH THE WILLIAM HICKEY TEAM ' ~ ~ -----<br />

Picture: RICHARD YOUNG<br />

THE Argentines have yet to declare <strong>the</strong> end of hostilities<br />

over <strong>the</strong> Falklands, but peace has broken out in <strong>the</strong><br />

competitive world of polo.<br />

Argentine players, as I exclusively revealed, are<br />

now allowed back into this country, and ten-goal Gon-<br />

zalo Pieres, one of <strong>the</strong> finest exponents of <strong>the</strong> sport, Is<br />

using <strong>the</strong> good offices of very English Edwina Fyson to<br />

promote his brand of polo equipment.<br />

In <strong>the</strong> summer she is to be found in <strong>the</strong> apporo-<br />

priately named Polo Lounge in Chelsea. In <strong>the</strong> winter<br />

she flies out to <strong>the</strong> Pampas where she sells Pieres’s<br />

wares from <strong>the</strong> back of a Range Rover.<br />

“There’s no doubt that being a woman helps my<br />

business, though <strong>the</strong> Argentine men are very surpised<br />

that I want to do something like this — well-bred girls<br />

don’t work very much in Argentina, if at all,”<strong>the</strong> 25<br />

year old St.Mary’s Caine-educated solicitor’s daughter<br />

tells me.<br />

And what, I enquired, is her opinion of Johnny<br />

Gaucho? ^<br />

“I love Argentina and <strong>the</strong> Argentines — I can’t fault<br />

<strong>the</strong>m,” she says.<br />

I can only hope that this happy state of affairs<br />

survives <strong>the</strong> predicted election of <strong>the</strong> rabidly anti-British<br />

Peronist party in Argentina’s forthcoming elections.<br />

DISPLAY WITH PRIDE<br />

I IN YOUR HOME OR OFFICE<br />

ur historical research Scroll explains <strong>the</strong><br />

OOrigins of <strong>the</strong> Name to be researched and<br />

provides <strong>the</strong> following information -<br />

he original nationality i.e. Was it Viking,<br />

TNorman, Anglo-Saxon etc ?<br />

he original meaning-Was it Geographical, or<br />

Tperhaps a job Description, or even a<br />

nickname?<br />

he first recorded date and place, in History i.e.<br />

T<strong>the</strong> Domesday Book?<br />

he earliest recorded spelling, usually quite<br />

Tdifferent from todays spelling.<br />

he Monarch on <strong>the</strong> throne at <strong>the</strong> time and<br />

T<strong>the</strong> date of <strong>the</strong> reign<br />

his scroll is a true record of <strong>the</strong> origin of <strong>the</strong><br />

Tsurname. It is superbly printed on parchment<br />

style paper with a traditional heraldic border<br />

decorated in Purple, Red/ Gold and Green filigree.<br />

Unframed size 10" x 8".<br />

An original gift for Birthday or Anniversary.<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 19<br />

Wild tales<br />

of JFK by<br />

Sammy<br />

Davis Jnr<br />

AS if we didn't know<br />

enough already abou t<br />

President • John Kennedy’s<br />

in satia b le sexual<br />

appetite and his shadowy<br />

co n n e ctio n s w ith th e<br />

Mafia, Samm y Davis Jnr.<br />

has how weighed in with<br />

his own dam ning collection<br />

of recollections.<br />

There was, for instance,<br />

<strong>the</strong> tim e when <strong>the</strong> one-<br />

eyed song and dance man<br />

was invited to view <strong>the</strong><br />

million dollars collected<br />

by Las Vegas hotel owners<br />

(in cash, of course)<br />

for Kennedy’s presidential<br />

campaign. “I never<br />

went near it,” he says.<br />

Pour wild women had<br />

also been laid on for JFK.<br />

Sammy didn’t go near<br />

<strong>the</strong>m ei<strong>the</strong>r, he insists.<br />

“Some things you don’t<br />

w ant to know,” he writes<br />

in his autobiography.<br />

'Chicks'<br />

There were o<strong>the</strong>r occasions<br />

when a collection<br />

of what Davis sweetly1'<br />

calls “chicks” were to be<br />

seen b o u n cin g th e ir<br />

w ares around in front of<br />

<strong>the</strong> man who introduced<br />

o rg ies to th e W hite<br />

House.<br />

“Did I see <strong>the</strong>m hum ping?”<br />

he asks. “No, I did<br />

not. Did I see <strong>the</strong>m kissing<br />

on th e lips? No, I did<br />

not. But I also know <strong>the</strong>y<br />

ain’t <strong>the</strong>re to play shuffle-<br />

board.”<br />

Clearly it was a heavy<br />

b u rd en of h u m iliatio n<br />

J a c k ie h a d to b ea r,<br />

though one for which she<br />

received am ple financial<br />

com pensation.<br />

Plf f.m ,I, ,<br />

.<br />

Ufa icmafim. Sn»


T<br />

20 • DAILY EXPRESS. Tuesday April. 18 1989' ■ i u f ' ' ' j! :i ;<br />

These changing Times: Pamella with Andrew N e il.<br />

W O w e e k s a g o<br />

P a m e lla B o rd e s w as<br />

c o n s u m e d w ith o n e<br />

th in g : W o u ld h e r<br />

face, b a d ly g raz ed<br />

a fte r a m o to rb ik e c ra sh , b e<br />

s c a rre d fo re v er? ,.<br />

. S he w ould have been, b e tte r<br />

w orrying abo u t th e perm anent!'<br />

a n d deep disfigurem ent of h e r ■<br />

p erso n ality th a t seven years of<br />

alm o st crazed am bition have<br />

left h e r w ith.<br />

B eautiful she m a y be, though<br />

she has been fa r too available to<br />

be exoticatty m ysterious in that<br />

classic Indian way. B u t her<br />

. overw helm ing characteristic is<br />

her dangerous penchant fo r fantasy,<br />

now so pronounced th a t it<br />

is clear she can n o longer draw<br />

■<strong>the</strong> line betw een fact and fiction.<br />

I t is a .fa c e t th a t w ill have<br />

served h e r w ell w hile try in g to<br />

p u sh u p th e b id d in g . fc»r h e r<br />

ow n tack y story. T he bigger<br />

th e n a m e s, th e b ig g e r th e<br />

m oney. .<br />

. B u t b attlin g w ith th e 'd e m o n<br />

of fantasy is h e r new -found<br />

n eed to b e loved. P o o r P am ella<br />

is d esperate to b e allow ed b ack<br />

in to th e veneered cafe society<br />

th a t once sh e u sed so skilfully<br />

o n h e r clim b to fam e an d n o to ­<br />

riety.<br />

H er victim s — she h a s few<br />

f r ie n d s n o w e x c e p t h e r<br />

r e m a rk a b ly p a tie n t th o u g h<br />

cru elly ’h u rt fiance N ick A dam<br />

— w ill know th a t h e r p ro te sta ­<br />

tio n s of innocence and libel are<br />

in th e m ain th e w aitings of one<br />

cau g h t in a tra p of h e r own<br />

m aking.<br />

I n In d ia, o n e of th e cou n try ’s<br />

leading psy ch o th erapists, D r<br />

D a y a l M irc h a n d a n u , sa y s<br />

B ordes is suffering, fro m n a rcissistic<br />

d isorder, a syndrom e<br />

p ecu liar to w ould-be film sta rs<br />

arid m odels, v<br />

“I t is ha rd to rely on all she<br />

says. I n th is d is o rd e r th e<br />

p a tie n t s u ffe rs fro m d a y ­<br />

dream ing w hich replaces rea lity<br />

fo r a sh o rt w h ile .. M iss<br />

B o rd e s n e e d s a s e rie s o f<br />

self-analysis an d th e ra p y for<br />

guidance.” '<br />

P am ella believes life com es<br />

o u t of a m ake-up case. As a 14-<br />

year-old sh e daubed h er.round, ■<br />

schoolgirl face w ith m ascara<br />

a n d lip stic k to look, som ething<br />

she w asn’t an d h as hidden<br />

b eh in d exotic cam ouflage ever<br />

/ I By DANIEL<br />

t jfo fn 1 McGRORY<br />

and SUE<br />

JOHNSON<br />

S THE REAL<br />

l l i l l l i i<br />

m m m m<br />

No Stone unturned: Rolling along with Bill Wyman . Always on hand: Pamella Observed with Donald Trelford<br />

innocence are<br />

someone in own<br />

since. S he p a in ts h erself , to be<br />

anything you w ant h e r to be.<br />

T h a t is.h er job; an d sh e is good<br />

a t it.:. 1 : .<br />

S he is so p ractised at: glossing<br />

over th e obvious lies in h e r<br />

life, like • changing h e r nam e,<br />

h iding h e r s tric t m iddle-class<br />

upbringing an d h e r sh a m m a rriage<br />

th a t P am ella an d th e<br />

tru th have becom e only pass-<br />

. ing acquaintances. .<br />

T h e c o n tra d ic tio n s - w ere<br />

painfully obvious as she haggled<br />

over th e p rice of b reak in g<br />

h e r c o n triv e d sile n c e . O ne<br />

m in u te she w as th e in ju re d little<br />

g irl lost, th en , w hen th a t got<br />

boring, she w ould p arad e h e r<br />

list of lovers, delighting in th e<br />

d isc o m fo rt h e r c o n fe ssio n s<br />

w ill cause.<br />

Sordid<br />

reality<br />

And despite, o r m aybe because<br />

of, h e r freq u en t close proxim ­<br />

ity to m en, sh e is cold an d d ism<br />

issive of m o st of <strong>the</strong>m . B u t<br />

she does give th e m som e cred it<br />

in. today’s A ID S-ridden w orld:<br />

"O ften guys w ould pay m e for<br />

m y com pany an d n o t fo r full<br />

sex. T hey ju s t w anted to b e<br />

se e n o u t . w ith a b e a u tifu l<br />

w om an. O ften w e w ould go to<br />

b ed arid <strong>the</strong>. m an w ould have<br />

relief in stead of having in te rcourse.”<br />

T h is is th e so rd id reality of<br />

th e girl w ho a fo rtn ig h t ago<br />

to ld th e D aily E xpress: “I ju s t<br />

w ant to clear m y nam e. So<br />

m any lies have b een w ritten<br />

abo u t m e."<br />

.P a m e lla co m e s fro m an<br />

' A rm y fam ily. H er fath er, M ajor<br />

M ahendra S ingh C harudhury,<br />

w as. a- w ar h ero k illed in', th e<br />

. Indo-C hiria w ar of 1962 w hen<br />

P arnella w as tw o m o n th s old. \<br />

As a stu d e n t sh e sm oked,<br />

she w ore tig h t sh o rts an d she.<br />

loved to b e w ith boys. S he a ls o .<br />

enjoyed shocking people for<br />

effect, an d once sho u te d o u t at<br />

college: “D am n, I forgot m y<br />

pill. Now w hat’s going to hap-<br />

pen?”<br />

O ne ex -b o y frien d re m e m ­<br />

b e rs a group of th e m playing<br />

card s to g eth er in th e h ea t of<br />

th e sum m er w hen th e pow er<br />

w ent off. P am ella p ro m p tly<br />

p eeled off h e r je an s and con tin ­<br />

u ed playing.<br />

T he Sidney S heldon sto ry<br />

T he O th er Side of M idnight<br />

abo u t a b eautiful, successful<br />

an d am b itio u s w om an trig ­<br />

gered off P am ella’s p la n for<br />

life. "I’m going to b e like th a t,”<br />

she announced to friends.<br />

. P a m e lla ’s n e x t s to p w as<br />

Lim a, P eru, fo r th e M iss U niv<br />

erse contest. P ro m th e re she<br />

w ent to New Y ork, determ in ed<br />

to m ake it big.<br />

W ithin w eeks of arriving she<br />

w as in vited on to p riv ate je ts of<br />

oil m illionaires; S he w orked in<br />

an ad v ertising agency fo r a<br />

, w hile and lived w ith an In d ian<br />

sto ck b ro k er b efore she jo in ed<br />

th e b illio n a ire s c lu b w h ich<br />

inclu d ed th e S u lta n of B runei,<br />

<strong>the</strong>. E m ir of Q atar, and arm s<br />

m e rc h an t A dnan K hashoggi.<br />

; F ro m N ew. Y ork, P am ella<br />

w ent to Japan arid th e n to<br />

P a ris w here she m et reco rd<br />

p r o d u c e r D o m in ic B o rd e s,<br />

w hom she m a rrie d in Ju n e<br />

1984. “S he w as definitely n ot<br />

th e h o u se w ife typei," s a id<br />

B ordes, som ew hat wryly.<br />

Pam ella left h er husband after<br />

three m onths, arid telephoned<br />

•him: from London to say she<br />

would not be returning.<br />

It- was while she was in Paris '<br />

th at P am ella m et Ahmed G adda-1<br />

fadairi.<br />

• After a w eekend toge<strong>the</strong>r in<br />

Paris, she. couldn’t w ait to boast<br />

' to her. girlfriends about'<strong>the</strong> hand-<br />

soine Libyan who had w asted no<br />

tim e in trying to im press h er by<br />

flaunting photographs, of him<br />

w ith his cousin, Colonel Gadhafi.<br />

Over a candlelit dinner, he<br />

bragged about- his diplom atic,<br />

forays to m eet kings and princes,<br />

though <strong>the</strong> copious files kept by.<br />

-every w e ste rn in te llig e n c e<br />

agency knew him as <strong>the</strong> air force<br />

m ajor handpicked by <strong>the</strong> Libyan<br />

dictator to m asterm ind his terror<br />

operations in Europe.<br />

Dealing in<br />

death<br />

She was never a stupid girl, and<br />

however scant h er knowledge<br />

about <strong>the</strong> m en who shared her<br />

bed, she m ust have . realised<br />

Ahmed dealt in death. W ith<br />

Pam ella he was suitably vague at<br />

first about how he seived his<br />

deranged m aster, though she<br />

was intelligent enough to realise<br />

from his conversations th a t his<br />

idea of a shopping expedition<br />

was to buy shipm ents of guns.<br />

No am ount of money will persuade<br />

h er to reveal w hat she<br />

overheard in <strong>the</strong> Paris hotel<br />

suite <strong>the</strong>y regularly shared, or on<br />

h er trip s to Tripoli by private jet.<br />

G irlta lk , to im p re ss h e r<br />

friends, th a t she posed as a journalist<br />

to infiltrate M uam m ar<br />

Gadhafi’s desert hideout and<br />

slept w ith him , was ju st ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

foolish fantasy.<br />

Sure, <strong>the</strong> posturing dictator<br />

enjoys flirting w ith lady report-<br />

ers. He does it all <strong>the</strong> time,<br />

playing to <strong>the</strong> cam eras. B ut he is<br />

scrupulously.careful about flout­<br />

ing <strong>the</strong> Islam ic code w ith Someone<br />

as patently-transparent as<br />

• Pamella. .<br />

W hen Ahmed smuggled her<br />

<strong>the</strong>re! she would be locked inside<br />

his flat, forbidden to venture outside<br />

as he was petrified of upsetting<br />

his m aster, let alone his v ol-:<br />

atile wife.<br />

B ut Pam ella did mix '• w ith<br />

m onstrous folk w hose'business<br />

was to cause untold m isery. She<br />

was on Adnan Khashoggi’s yacht<br />

w hen deals w ere struck over<br />

„■ lunch to get Saudi Arabia to.sign<br />

a £5,000 m illion contract for Tornado<br />

fighter bom bers.<br />

A P aris-b ased a rm s d ealer<br />

claim s Pam ella played a prom inent<br />

role in <strong>the</strong> Saudi negotiations<br />

— because of h er contacts<br />

am ong MPs and .top officials in<br />

Britain.<br />

T he secu rity . services h ere<br />

knew of her friendship w ith Gad-<br />

dafadam b ut chose, for reasons<br />

<strong>the</strong>y* will never divulge, not to<br />

pass th is inform ation on when<br />

she applied for a H ouse of Comm<br />

ons security pass.<br />

W hile th is friendship continued,<br />

she was shepherded to <strong>the</strong><br />

Tory- P arty W inter Ball on.:<strong>the</strong><br />

arm of <strong>the</strong> Sports M inister Colin<br />

Moynihan, and revelled in her<br />

job as a research assistant to MP<br />

David Shaw.<br />

Only h er. closest girlfriends<br />

knew about Ahmed, though Libyan<br />

exiles here have cause, to<br />

rem em ber him and his bro<strong>the</strong>r<br />

Said as am ong <strong>the</strong> m ost feared<br />

m en in <strong>the</strong> Colonel's regime.<br />

Selective<br />

Amnesia<br />

I t w as A hm ed w ho ta rg e te d<br />

‘stray dogs’ and from a flat in<br />

Erinism ore Gardens in Kensington,<br />

he w ould select th e assassins<br />

who operated under <strong>the</strong> diplom<br />

atic ' cover of <strong>the</strong> so-called<br />

Peoples’ Bureau.<br />

Three m onths after he was<br />

. sent to London, W PG' Yvonne<br />

F letcher was gunned down outside<br />

<strong>the</strong> Peoples’ B ureau and<br />

Ahmed had to shift his operational<br />

base to Paris, though Scot­<br />

land Y ard would dearly love to'<br />

question him about th a t shooting<br />

and at least three bombings.<br />

W hile th e y s u rre p titio u s ly<br />

tracke d h is p ro g ress aro u n d<br />

E u ro p e, h e ; w ould; leave h is<br />

Egyptian wife at; hom e to enjoy<br />

weekends w ith Pam ella at <strong>the</strong><br />

Plaza A<strong>the</strong>nee H otel w here she<br />

was sufficiently well :knowri not<br />

to .have to bo<strong>the</strong>r w ith such form<br />

alities as registering..<br />

. ' Perhaps w isely' Pam elia has.<br />

selective am nesia w hen it comes<br />

to . questions on ; Ahmed, insisting:<br />

"I m et him when Iw a s living<br />

in Paris. W hat is wrong w ith<br />

that?”<br />

H er first trip to T ripoli'w as<br />

d istin ctly - urim em orable, ’ she<br />

says, as she was le ft.to mope<br />

aro u n d a t A hm ed’s:^ sea fro n t<br />

apartm ent for two days as he-<br />

was too busy to-.see her.<br />

Mad and bad /<br />

to know<br />

O <strong>the</strong>rs rem em ber; more lively<br />

times, where Ahmed would ensure<br />

<strong>the</strong>re was sufficient drink, drugs<br />

and girls for his influential friends<br />

while he was careful not to indulge<br />

his passipn for malt whisky for fear<br />

<strong>the</strong> Colonel would summon him for<br />

ano<strong>the</strong>r of his midnight summits.<br />

Abroad, he still masquerades as<br />

part of Libya’s trade, delegation,<br />

though, he has ultimate control<br />

over Gaahafi's bank accounts in<br />

Europe to purchase everything<br />

from <strong>the</strong> designer lea<strong>the</strong>r blousons<br />

<strong>the</strong> Colonel so covets to arms <strong>the</strong>1<br />

IRA rely on to stayin <strong>the</strong>ir murderous<br />

business.<br />

While Pamella doesn'tiesitate to<br />

rattle off <strong>the</strong> names of <strong>the</strong> great and<br />

<strong>the</strong> good j fro m .- h e r I diary, she<br />

remains, uncharacteristically coy<br />

about Ahmed, and'what she knows<br />

about his dirty work.:-<br />

• Her overactive imagination, combined<br />

with her iristcnctsmbw to tell<br />

all, no matter <strong>the</strong> hw tAtm ay cause;<br />

makes her mad arid7bddto have ever<br />

known. ,<br />

' Whe<strong>the</strong>r she is dangerous, we<br />

will never, know for. sure since MI5<br />

won’t break <strong>the</strong>ir silence over, <strong>the</strong><br />

ftfl d ri h fn H nm ■ • affftir, HTifi Pamella.<br />

knows it .would not be healthy to<br />

kiss'and tell aboutchim: -<br />

*She paints herself to anything you want her to be. It’s her job<br />

J \ . ' t > :M S r if -s i \ ! > i : I >■ ■ V ’• : . V 5 C If 3 t :■ DAILY; EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1 989 • ■ 21<br />

i-ife<br />

Full of Eastern promise: Pouting Pamella knew her face was her fortune.<br />

m m m m<br />

f i l l<br />

P A<br />

Courting publicity: Pamella with lawyer Carlo Colombotti<br />

M E L L A<br />

B ordes’ arriv al<br />

in L ondon in<br />

1984, w as to<br />

p re se n t h e r g rea te st<br />

-challenge.<br />

She w anted to take <strong>the</strong><br />

capital by storm but.<br />

quickly realised <strong>the</strong>re<br />

was a w h ole: string of<br />

sophisticated beauties<br />

sashaying around, hoping<br />

to catch a fabulously<br />

rich arid titled husband.<br />

T he , d u sk y m o d el<br />

knew h er origins would<br />

spoil th e m y sterio u s<br />

image she sought to portray,<br />

so she wove tales of<br />

life in an Indian noble<br />

famUy, adding t o ' her<br />

allure.<br />

She had always traded -<br />

on h er face and body<br />

and it was essential <strong>the</strong>y<br />

w ere kept in tip-top condition.<br />

Pam ella found a<br />

health club in Chelsea<br />

w hich w as th e b e st<br />

place not only to worko<br />

ut b u t also to ru b<br />

shoulders w ith wealthy<br />

women and collect useful<br />

telephone num bers.<br />

H er w inning sm ile<br />

an d flirta tio u s ways<br />

m ade h er popular w ith<br />

-th e In -c ro w d w h o .<br />

r e a d ily a c c e p te d<br />

Pam ella.<br />

Comedian Jlrii Davidson<br />

and. rock s ta r ' Bill<br />

W ym ari w ere p h o to ­<br />

graphed w ith her, and<br />

she loved mingling with<br />

<strong>the</strong> showbiz fraternity.<br />

H er path was eased in<br />

London by h er friendship<br />

w ith wealthy lawyer,<br />

Carlo Colombotti,<br />

45, who shared his Belg<br />

ravia home^ w ith<br />

Pam ella for a year. He<br />

took h er along to top<br />

p e o p le ’s g a th e rin g s<br />

w here she m ade sure<br />

she. was noticed. .<br />

“She b ehaved per-<br />

By SUE<br />

JOHNSON<br />

fectly norm ally w hen<br />

she came to parties with<br />

m e,” said Colombotti,<br />

“and I certainly did riot<br />

campaign to introduce<br />

h er Into society. She<br />

m et many.more: people.<br />

through certain editors<br />

th a n ; she ever -met<br />

■ through me. .';-v<br />

“Pam ella cam e to live'<br />

in my house when she<br />

was throw n out of <strong>the</strong><br />

accom modation she had<br />

been in. Initially she<br />

was due to. stay a m onth<br />

b u t she ended up stay-<br />

■ Ing a lot longer.<br />

“Pam ella had steady<br />

boyfriends w hen she<br />

lived w ith m e and <strong>the</strong>re<br />

was never any hin t of<br />

call-girl activities — certa<br />

in ly sh e , n e v e r<br />

-brought clients back to<br />

my house,” said Colombotti,<br />

who stresses he<br />

did not have an affair<br />

w ith her.<br />

Knowledge<br />

Language lessons added<br />

ano<strong>the</strong>r string to Pam ella’s<br />

bow and a cordon<br />

b le u cookery course<br />

gave h er <strong>the</strong> necessary<br />

key to enter th e w orld of<br />

boardroom lunches, and<br />

m eet com pany directors.<br />

P a m e lla re a lise d a<br />

good knowledge o f rid ­<br />

ing and horse-breeding-<br />

would be useful if she<br />

was to be com pletely at<br />

home with th e country-<br />

set th at she was spending<br />

m ore and m ore tiirie<br />

w ith as she clawed her<br />

way to <strong>the</strong> top. So she<br />

attended an equestrian<br />

course a t G lerieagles<br />

where she m et Captain<br />

M ark Phillips.<br />

Pam ella’s clim b was<br />

alm o st co m p lete. A<br />

friend said of Pam ella at<br />

th is tim e: “She targeted<br />

rath er ugly m en who<br />

were easy prey for h er<br />

u n d o u b te d c h a rm s.<br />

They w ere captivated by<br />

h e r sp ell an d w ould<br />

have done alm ost anything<br />

to help her.”<br />

It was at a party in a '<br />

London night club last..<br />

- : sum m er th a t <strong>the</strong> sultry<br />

In d ia n b e a u ty - m e t<br />

Andrew Neil, bachelor<br />

editor , of <strong>the</strong> th e Sunday<br />

Times newspaper. They<br />

had an'affair which cul-<br />

. m inated With Pamellal<br />

slashing Nell’s clo<strong>the</strong>s<br />

w ith scissors w hen he<br />

ended <strong>the</strong> relationship.<br />

An ugly end to an<br />

affair, and P am ella’s<br />

vengeful nature showed<br />

when she m ade friends<br />

w ith Donald Trelford,<br />

editor of The Observer.<br />

Pam ella says of <strong>the</strong><br />

powerful kings of newspapers:<br />

Andrew NeU: “He was<br />

so jealous of m e after<br />

. we broke up. He was so<br />

jealous of my friendship<br />

w ith Donald Trelford,<br />

he ju st couldn’t handle<br />

it. And he was so jealous<br />

of m y boyfriend Nick-<br />

Adam. I was drawn to<br />

Andrew because I like<br />

successful m en.”<br />

Donald Trelford: “He’s<br />

a sweet guy, very cool. It<br />

1 m ade Andrew so m ad to<br />

th in k . I ' was with his<br />

greatest rival.”<br />

David Sullivan, pub-,<br />

Usher of Sunday Sport:<br />

“He’s a nam e dropper. I .<br />

m et him through horses<br />

and racing b u t I haven’t<br />

spoken to him since <strong>the</strong><br />

scandal broke.”<br />

* Captivated by her spell ’


BBC1<br />

Carol D rinkw ater and K enneth<br />

Cranham a t 9.30 p.m .<br />

6.30 a.m. The Flintstones. 6.55 Wea<strong>the</strong>r. 7.0<br />

B reakfast Tim e. 8.55 Local News,<br />

wea<strong>the</strong>r. 9.0 News, wea<strong>the</strong>r. Followed by<br />

Open Air. 9 .2 0 Kilroy! 10.0 News,<br />

wea<strong>the</strong>r. Followed by Dr Kildare. 10.25<br />

Playbus. 10.50 Rupert. 10.55 Five to<br />

Eleven<br />

11.0 NEWS, WEATHER. Followed by OPEN<br />

AIR. Ano<strong>the</strong>r chance to comment on TV.<br />

12.0 NEWS, WEATHER. Followed by WORLD<br />

SNOOKER. A visit to <strong>the</strong> World Professional<br />

Championship in Sheffield.<br />

12.55 p.m. LOCAL NEWS, WEATHER.<br />

1.0 NEWS, WEATHER.<br />

1.30 NEIGHBOURS. The Robinson family<br />

learn <strong>the</strong> startling truth about Paul and<br />

Gail.<br />

1.50 THE TRAVEL SHOW GUIDES. Tenerife.<br />

2.15 FILM: THE BULLDOG BREED (1960).<br />

Norman Wisdom joins <strong>the</strong> navy<br />

3.50 CHUCKLEVISION. 4.10 HOKEY WOLF.<br />

4.20 JONNY BRIGGS.<br />

4.35 BELLE AND SEBASTIAN.<br />

5.0 NEWSROUND.<br />

5.5 THE LOWDOWN. Real-life stories about<br />

children, told by <strong>the</strong>mselves.<br />

5.35 NEIGHBOURS. This lunchtime’s episode.<br />

6.0 NEWS, WEATHER.<br />

6.30 LOCAL NEWS MAGAZINES.<br />

7.0 TOMORROW’S WORLD.<br />

7.30 EASTENDERS. Dot faces a~ sudden<br />

bereavement that shocks <strong>the</strong> Square’s<br />

community.<br />

8.0 W H IC K ER ’S W ORLD: LIVIN G W ITH<br />

W ALTZING MATILDA. Quick repeat of<br />

Whicker’s series on Brits Down Under<br />

which wasn’t a patch on his American<br />

travels. In <strong>the</strong> opener, <strong>the</strong> locals that he<br />

encounters include <strong>the</strong> Duchess of<br />

York’s sister who at <strong>the</strong> time was living<br />

with her rancher husband on a remote<br />

farm and who has since had marital problems.<br />

9.0 NEWS, LOCAL NEWS, WEATHER.<br />

9.30 THE PLAY ON ONE: THE MASTER OF<br />

THE M A R IO N E T T E S .* See Tonight’s<br />

Choice.<br />

10.45 FILM 89. Barry Norman takes a gander at<br />

The Tall Guy, Mel Smith’s debut as a film<br />

director. Plus a look at <strong>the</strong> Museum of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Moving Image’s centenary celebration<br />

of Chartie Chaplin. There’s a special<br />

exhibition including screenings of Chaplin’s<br />

City Lights.<br />

11.15 WORLD SNOOKER Fur<strong>the</strong>r coverage of<br />

<strong>the</strong> World Professional Championship<br />

12.15 -12.20 WEATHER. ,<br />

WALES: 9.30 p.m. Week in W eek O u t 10:0 Play on One: The<br />

Master of <strong>the</strong> Marionettes. 12.15 a.m. Film 89. 12.45-12.50 News,<br />

Wea<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

I R T E 1 :6 .0 The Angelus. 6.1 Six-One.<br />

EIRE<br />

7.0 What's My Line? 7.30 To <strong>the</strong><br />

I Waters and <strong>the</strong> Wild. 8.0 In Good<br />

Faith. 8.30 Police Squad. 9.0 News. 9.30 Today Tonight. 10.10<br />

The Tuesday Documentary. 11.30 Late News. 11.40 Close. RTE<br />

2 :6 .0 Jo-Maxi. 6.30 Home and Away. 7.0 Nuacht. 7.5 Cursai. 7.30<br />

Glenroe. 8.0 News/The Streets of San Francisco. 9.0 Cheers. 9.30<br />

News/Wiseguy. 10.30 Network News. 10.50 Nighthawks. 11.35<br />

Ciose.<br />

CENTRAL<br />

6.0 TV-am. 9.25 Keynotes. 9.55<br />

Central News. 10.0 The Tim e...<br />

The Place. 10.40 This Morning.<br />

12.10 Rod, Jane and Freddy.<br />

12.30 Short Story Theatre. 1.0<br />

News. 1.20 Central News. 1.30»<br />

The Treatment. 2.0 Donahue. 3.0<br />

Tell The Truth. 3.25 Central News.<br />

3.30 The Young Doctors. 4.0<br />

Tugs. 4.20 Bradley. 4.45 The<br />

Book Tower. 5.10 Connections.<br />

5.40 News. 6.0 Centra! News.<br />

6.30 Home and Away. 7i0<br />

Emmerdale Farm. 7.30 Citywatch:<br />

Health officers from Birmingham’s<br />

environmental service check out<br />

conditions in <strong>the</strong> city’s 3,000<br />

houses in multiple occupancy. 8.0<br />

The Bill. 8.30 After Henry. 9.0<br />

Survival Special. 10.0 News at<br />

Ten. 10.35 Fuhrar. 11.40 Sledge<br />

Hammer. 12.10 Ice Hockey Night.<br />

1.10 Film: Two On A Guillotine<br />

(1965). Connie Stevens and Dean-<br />

Jones star. An illusionist arranges<br />

to be chained into his coffin but' ,<br />

promises to return from.<strong>the</strong> dead.<br />

3.10 Central Weekend. 4.35<br />

Jobfinder. 5.0 News.<br />

BORDER<br />

Tonight’s choice<br />

SURVIVAL SPECIAL, ITV, 9 p.m. Striking<br />

<strong>document</strong>ary about <strong>the</strong> Colorado river which,<br />

for its first 20 miles, flows through a beautiful<br />

wilderness. Only here is it possible to glimpse<br />

<strong>the</strong> true glory of <strong>the</strong> river and <strong>the</strong> wealth of<br />

wildlife it supports.<br />

THE PLAY ON ONE: A MASTER OF THE<br />

MARIONETTES, BBC1, 9.30 p.m. (Wales, 10<br />

p.m.). Kenneth Cranham heads an exceptional<br />

cast as a security system salesman<br />

who sells his wares to prosperous yet fearful<br />

suburban homes. He practises what he<br />

preaches because his wife spends all morning<br />

switching off <strong>the</strong> sophisticated devices<br />

that he has installed to protect his family in<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir comfortable home on an executive<br />

estate. His paranoid but comfortable existence<br />

is turned upside down, however, when<br />

a violent street encounter begins a chain of<br />

events which calls into question all his beliefs<br />

and changes his life for good. Carol Drinkwater<br />

co-stars as <strong>the</strong> wife and <strong>the</strong> cast also<br />

BBC2<br />

6.55 -7.20 a m. OPEN UNIVERSITY.<br />

9.30 DAYTIME ON TWO. 9.30-10.0 Inset.<br />

10.15 Living Decisions. 10.40 Look, Look<br />

and Look Again. 11.0 Watch. 11.18<br />

Mach’s Gut! 11.35 Geography Casebook.<br />

12.0 Economics. 12.20 p.m. Textile<br />

studies. 12.40 Job Bank. 1.0 Berliners:<br />

1.25 King Rollo. 1.30 What’s Inside? 1.40<br />

Provision for Hearing-Impaired Children.<br />

2.0 News, wea<strong>the</strong>r. Followed by You And<br />

Me.<br />

2.15 SIGN EXTRA.<br />

2.40 WORLD SNOOKER.<br />

Fur<strong>the</strong>r co verage<br />

from Sheffield of <strong>the</strong><br />

W orld Professional<br />

Championship, with<br />

news and wea<strong>the</strong>r at<br />

3.0 and news, local<br />

news and wea<strong>the</strong>r at<br />

3.50.<br />

5.10 HORIZON. Repeat of<br />

last night’s <strong>document</strong>ary<br />

about <strong>the</strong>:<br />

brilliant philosopher<br />

Ludwig Wittgenstein.<br />

6.0 F IL M : R A ID ON<br />

RO M M EL (1971).<br />

Richard Burton stars<br />

as a British agent<br />

sent into North Africa<br />

in 1942 to knock out<br />

R o m m e l's gun<br />

em placem ents at<br />

Tobruk. His first task is to liberate a<br />

group of prisoners-of-war who are to<br />

become his commando unit.<br />

7.35 BUSINESS MATTERS. David Lomax<br />

looks at <strong>the</strong> lessons to be learned by any<br />

small business from <strong>the</strong> difficulties experienced<br />

by land speed record holder<br />

8.0<br />

6.0 TV-am. 9.25 Keynotes. 9.55<br />

Border News. 10.0 The Time . . .<br />

The Place. 10.40 This Morning.<br />

12.10 Rod, Jane and Freddy.<br />

12.30 Cover Story. 1.0 News. 1.20<br />

Border News. 1.30 The Treatment.<br />

2.0 The Love Boat. 3.0 Tell<br />

<strong>the</strong> Truth. 3.25 Border News. 3.30<br />

Sons and Daughters. 4.0 Tugs.<br />

4.20 Bradley. 4.45 The Book<br />

Tower. 5.10 Home and Away.<br />

5.40 News. 6.0 Lookaround<br />

Tuesday. 6.30 Take The High<br />

Road. 7.0 Hitman. 7.30<br />

Connections. 8.0 The Bill.<br />

8.30 AFTER HENRY.<br />

9.0 SURVIVAL SPECIAL.<br />

10.0 NEWS A T TEN.<br />

10.30 BORDER NEWS.<br />

10.35 FUHRER.<br />

11.40 ICE HOCKEY NIGHT.<br />

12.40 KOJAK.<br />

1.40 THE CHART SHOW.<br />

2.40 THE TW ILIG HT ZONE.<br />

3.0 AMERICA’S TOP 10.<br />

3.30 BOOKS BY M Y BEDSIDE.<br />

4.5 ABOUT BRITAIN.<br />

4.30 JOBFINDER.<br />

5.0 NEWS.<br />

Richard Noble’s light aircraft company.<br />

SPLIT SCREEN. New series of debates<br />

opens with <strong>the</strong> opposing views of two<br />

women on <strong>the</strong> subject of whe<strong>the</strong>r children<br />

should ever be smacked.<br />

8.30 TOP GEAR. Some old racing cars<br />

go through <strong>the</strong>ir paces at Silverstone.<br />

9.0 WORLD SNOOKER. Fur<strong>the</strong>r coverage.<br />

9.45 TAKING LIBERTIES. Plight of those who<br />

have lost jobs because <strong>the</strong>y or <strong>the</strong>ir partner<br />

have been found to be HIV positive.<br />

10.20 10 x 10. Wood sculptor Jon Mulvaney.<br />

10.30 NEWSNIGHT. 11.15 THE LATE SHOW.<br />

12.5 a.m. WEATHER.<br />

12.10 -12.40 OPEN UNIVERSITY.<br />

ULSTER<br />

6.0 TV-am. 9.25 Keynotes. 9.55<br />

Ulster Newstime. 10.0 The<br />

Tim e. . . The Place. 10.40 This<br />

Morning. 12.10 Rod, Jane- and<br />

Freddy. 12.30 The Young Doctors.<br />

1^0 News. 1.20 Ulster<br />

Newstime. 1.30 The Treatment.<br />

2.0 Mary. 2.30 Cover Story. 3.0<br />

Tell The Truth. 3.25 Ulster<br />

Newstime. 3.30 Sons And<br />

Daughters. 4.0 Children's ITV.<br />

4.20 Bradley. 4.45 The Book<br />

Tower. 5.10 Home And Away.<br />

5.40 News. 6.0 Six Tonight. 6.30<br />

Connections. 7.0 Hitman. 7.30<br />

Fresh Fields. 8.0 The Bill. 8.30<br />

After Henry. 9.0 Survivial Special.<br />

10.0 News at Ten. 10,30 Ulster<br />

Newstime. 10.35 Fuhrer— Seduction<br />

of a Nation. 11.25 Ice Hockey<br />

Night.<br />

12.40 KOJAK.<br />

1.40 THE CHART SHOW.<br />

2.40 THE TW ILIG HT ZONE.<br />

3.0 AMERICA’S TOP 10.<br />

3.30 BOOKS BY M Y BEDSIDE.<br />

. 4.5 ABOUT BRITAIN.<br />

4.30 JOBFINDER.<br />

5.0 NEWS.<br />

includes John Duttine and Kenneth Colley.<br />

, FUHRER, ITV, 10.35 p.m. As <strong>the</strong> centenary of<br />

Adolf Hitler’s birth looms large, tonight’s programme<br />

explores how a seriously maladjusted<br />

failure of a man managed to seduce<br />

<strong>the</strong> German population into handing him<br />

supreme power and plunging <strong>the</strong> world into<br />

war. Drawing on <strong>the</strong> techniques of modern<br />

psychiatry and media manipulation, <strong>the</strong> <strong>document</strong>ary<br />

attempts to answer <strong>the</strong> question by<br />

analysing Hitler’s character and explaining<br />

why he was prepared to destroy <strong>the</strong> world to<br />

gratify his fantasies.<br />

THE LATE SHIFT, Channel 4, 12.30 a.m.<br />

Ano<strong>the</strong>r musical double bill, beginning with<br />

<strong>the</strong> story of Marc Bolan, <strong>the</strong> ill-fated king of<br />

glam rock. Followed at 1.35 a.m. by Rock UK,<br />

a look at how British rock music revitalised<br />

<strong>the</strong> American musical scene in <strong>the</strong> late Sixties<br />

and Seventies.<br />

IAN LYNESS<br />

CHANNEL 4<br />

6.0 a.m. THE CHANNEL FOUR DAILY.<br />

9.25 SCHOOLS. 9.30 Search. 9.42 Talk, Write<br />

and Read. 10.4 Middle English. 10.21<br />

Inset. 10.43 Family Affairs. 11.5 Swings<br />

and Roundabouts (Ulster only). 11.5 Seeing<br />

and Doing. 11.22 Science Start Here!<br />

11.22 Looking Forward (Wales only).<br />

11.39 Science Matters (Scotland only).<br />

11.41 Believe It or Not.<br />

12.0 THE PA R LIA M EN T PROGRAMM E.<br />

U p-to-<strong>the</strong> minute coverage of both<br />

Houses.<br />

12.30 p.m . B U S IN E S S<br />

DAILY. High finance.<br />

1.0 HOW TO SURVIVE<br />

THE 9 TO 5. Stress<br />

is a four-letter word.<br />

1.30 OPEN VIEW. Catering<br />

with Care.<br />

2.0 SESAME STREET.<br />

With Elmo and pals.<br />

2.30 CHANNEL 4 RAC­<br />

ING. Under starter’s<br />

orders at Newmarket<br />

at 2.35, 3.10, 3.40<br />

and 4.10.<br />

4.30 F IF T E E N -T O -O N E .<br />

Quiz show.<br />

5.0 T H E L O N E<br />

R A N G E R . Classic<br />

Western series.<br />

M a r c B o l a n is r e m e m b e r e d 5.30 BROKEN SILENCE.<br />

o n C h a n n e l 4 a t 12 . 3 0 a s m .<br />

The surprising journeys<br />

that anim als<br />

undertake.<br />

6.0 MARBLEHEAD MANOR. Hilary invites'<br />

sex-symbol Steven Cassidy to dinner.<br />

6.30 STAR TEST. With Craig Charles.<br />

7.0 CHANNEL 4 N E W S .* Followed by<br />

WEATHER.<br />

7.50 COMMENT. Followed by WEATHER.<br />

8.0 CENTURY OF CHILDHOOD. How children's<br />

schooling has changed over <strong>the</strong><br />

past 100 years.<br />

8.30 MONEYSPINNER. The personal finance<br />

advice show.<br />

9.0 THE LIFE REVOLUTION. A report on<br />

how genetic engineering might provide<br />

<strong>the</strong> third world with cheap vaccines<br />

against many diseases.<br />

10.0 THE REAL EDDY ENGLISH. Eddy sets<br />

out to find <strong>the</strong> killers of his uncle.<br />

11.0 JUST FOR LAUGHS. More highlights<br />

from <strong>the</strong> Montreal Comedy Festival.<br />

11.30 MAPP AND LUCIA, (rpt).<br />

12.30-2.25 a.m . THE LATE SHIFT. See<br />

Tonight's Choice.<br />

YORKSHIRE<br />

A d o lf H itle r goes u n d e r th e<br />

m icroscop e a t 10.35 p.m .<br />

6.0 TV-A M . 9.25 Keynotes. 9.55 Calendar<br />

News;. Wea<strong>the</strong>r. 10.0 The T im e... The<br />

Place. 10.40 This Morning. 12.10 Rod,<br />

Jane and Freddy. 12.30 The Young<br />

Doctors.<br />

1.0 NEWS; W EATHER.<br />

1.20 CALENDAR NEW S; W EATHER. ,<br />

2.0 SANTA BARBARA. Lionel is laid out'<br />

motionless on a railway track.<br />

2.55 THE DOCTOR. Dietind<br />

3.0 TELL THE TRUTH. “Hosted by Fred<br />

Dinenage.<br />

3.30 A COUNTRY PRACTICE.<br />

4.0 TUGS. 4.20 Bradley.<br />

4.45 THE BOOK TOWER.<br />

5.10 HOME AND AWAY. Lynn attempts to<br />

persuade Sandra to come to Steven’s<br />

party and Bobby is determined to do well<br />

in her exams.<br />

5.40 NEW S; W EATHER.<br />

5.55 CALENDAR NEW S.<br />

6.30<br />

7.0<br />

7.30<br />

8.0<br />

8.30<br />

9 .0<br />

10.0<br />

10.30<br />

10.35<br />

11.40<br />

12.35<br />

1.30<br />

2.0<br />

3.0<br />

4.0<br />

4.30<br />

5.0<br />

CO NNECTIO NS. Simon Potter hosts <strong>the</strong><br />

quiz in which two contestants are tested<br />

on lateral thinking, mental arithmetic and<br />

general knowledge.<br />

FRESH FIELDS. Hester discovers that<br />

her fencing master has developed a<br />

deep passion for her (Rpt).<br />

HITM AN. Hosted by Nick Owen.<br />

THE BILL. An apparently ordinary man<br />

is found dead in a hotel and <strong>the</strong>n Tosh<br />

Lines discovers he was not what he<br />

seemed *<br />

AFTER HENRY. Sarah finds herself-<br />

caught in <strong>the</strong> middle when she has to<br />

listen to endless confidences from both.,<br />

her mo<strong>the</strong>r and her daughter about <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

love lives (Rpt).<br />

SUR VIVA L SPECIAL. See Tonight’s<br />

Choice:<br />

NEW S A T TEN; W EATHER.<br />

CALENDAR NEW S; W EATHER.<br />

FUHRER: SEDUCTION O F A NA TIO N .<br />

See Tonight’s Choice.<br />

SPECIAL SQUAD.<br />

NEW S HEADLINES. Followed by<br />

Eu r o p e a n d e t e c t iv e f r o m<br />

GERMANY: DERRICK.<br />

THREE’S COMPANY.<br />

NEW S HEADLINES. Followed by 60<br />

M INUTES. In-depth reporting from <strong>the</strong><br />

US.<br />

MUSIC BOX.<br />

ABOUT BRITAIN.<br />

JOBFINDER.<br />

NEW S.<br />

* Oracle/Ceefax<br />

WALES<br />

8 .0 C4 Daily. 9.30 Ysgoiion/Schools.<br />

12.0 Egwyl/lnterval. 12.10 Pobol Y<br />

Cwm (R) (S). 12.30 Newyddion/News,<br />

12.35 Ffalabalam Y Sioe Ffasiynau. 1.00 The Parliament<br />

Programme. 1.30 Business Daily. 2.00 Opinions. 2.30 Racing From<br />

Newmarket. 4.30 Fifteen-to-One. 5.0 Wagon Train. 6.0<br />

Newyddion/News. 6.15 Hafoc. 6.40 Pobol Y Cym. 7.0 Palu 'Miaen,<br />

7.30 Enigma. 8.0 Cadwyn Cerdd. 8.30 Newyddion/News. 8.55<br />

Snwcer 0 Sheffield. 9.30 Arolwg II. 10.5 Thirtysomething, 11.0<br />

Just For Laughs.11.30 Mapp and Lucia 12.30 The Late Shift. 1.35<br />

Rock UK. 2.25 Dlwedd/Close.<br />

HTV GRANADA TYNE TEES<br />

6.0 TV-am. 9.25 Keynotes. 9.55<br />

HTV News. 10.0 The Tim e. . . The<br />

Place. 10.40 This Morning. 12.10<br />

Rod, Jane and Freddy. 12.30 The<br />

Sullivans. 1.0 News. 1.20 HTV<br />

News. 1.30 The Treatment. 2.0 A.<br />

Country Practice. 3.0 Tell The<br />

Truth.. 3.25 HTV News. 3.30 The<br />

Young Doctors. 4.0 Tugs. 4.20<br />

Bradley. 4.45 The Book Tower.<br />

5 .1 0 Home-And Away. 5.40 News.:<br />

5.55 HTV News.<br />

6.30 CONNECTIONS.<br />

7.0 FRESH FIELDS.<br />

7.30 HITMAN.<br />

8.0 THE BILL.<br />

8.30 AFTER HENRY.<br />

9.0 SURVIVAL S P E C IA L<br />

10.0 NEWS A T TEN.<br />

10.30 HTV NEWS.<br />

10.35 FUHER.<br />

11.40 SHADY TALES.<br />

11.55 DONAHUE.<br />

12.55 F IL M : Deadfall (1968).<br />

Starring Michael Caine.<br />

3.5 60 MINUTES.<br />

4.0 ABOUT BRITAIN.<br />

4.30 JOBFINDER.<br />

5.0 NEWS.<br />

6.0 TV-am. 9.25 Keynotes. 9.55 Granada<br />

Reports. 10.0 The Time... The Place. 10.40<br />

This Morning. 12.10 Rod, Jane And Freddy.<br />

12.30 The Sullivans: 1.0 News. 1.20 Granada<br />

Reports. 1.30 The Treatment. 2.0 Charlie’s<br />

Angels. 2.55 Granada Reports. 3.0 Tell The<br />

Truth. 3.25 Granada Reports. 3.30 Sons And<br />

Daughters. 4.0 Tugs. 4.20 Bradley. 4.45 The<br />

Book Tower. 5.10 Home And Away. 5.40<br />

News. 5.55 Granada Reports. 6.30 Connections.<br />

7.0 Hitman. 7.30 Fresh Fields. 8.0 The<br />

Bill. 8.30 After Henry. 9.0 Survival Special.<br />

10.0 News At Ten. 10.30 Granada Reports.<br />

10.40 Fuhrer: Seduction of a Nation. 11.40 Ice<br />

Hockey Night 12.40 Kojak. Kojak and Croker<br />

are having difficulty in <strong>the</strong> courts when a new<br />

trial for a convicted murderer threatens to set<br />

him frese. 1.40 Chart Show. 2.40 The Twilight<br />

Zone: The Devil’s Alphabet, in 1976, a group<br />

of cynical Cambridge men who call <strong>the</strong>mselves<br />

<strong>the</strong> Devil's Alphabet Society sign a solemn<br />

oath in blood to meet annually on All Soul’s<br />

Day—forever. 3.0 America’s Top 10. 3.30<br />

Books By My Bedside. 4.5 About Britain: A<br />

Taste of <strong>the</strong> South. 4.30 Jobfinder. 5.0 News.<br />

6.0 TV-am. 9.25 Keynotes. 9.55 Regional,<br />

News. 10.0 The Time...The Place. 10.40<br />

This Morning. 10.55 News Headlines. 11.0'<br />

This Morning. 11.55 Regional News. 12.0 This<br />

Morning. 12.10 Rod, Jane And Freddy. 12.30<br />

Short Story Theatre. 1.0 News. 1.20 Regional<br />

News. 1.25 Lookaround. 1.30 The Treatment.<br />

2.0 A Country Practice. 3.0 Nexus. 3.25<br />

Regional News. 3.30 The Young Doctors. 4.0<br />

Tugs. 4.20 Bradley. 4.45 The Book Tower.<br />

5.10 Home And Away. 5.40 News. 5.55<br />

Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Life. 6.30 Connections. 7.0 Hitman..<br />

7.30 Fresh Fields. 8.0 The Bill. An apparently<br />

ordinary man is found dead is ah hotel and<br />

<strong>the</strong>n Tosh discovers he was not what he<br />

seemed. 8.30 After Henry. 9.0 Survival<br />

Special. See Tonight’s Choice. 10.0 News at<br />

Ten. 10.30"Regional News. 10.35 Fuhrer:<br />

Seduction of a Nation. See Tonight’s Choice.<br />

11.40 Ice Hockey Night. 12.40 News<br />

Headlines. 12.42 Kojak. 1.40 News. 1.42 The<br />

Chart Show. 2.40 News. 2.42 The Twilight<br />

Zone. 3.0 America’s Top 10.3.30 Books By My<br />

Bedside. 4.0 News. 4.5 About Britain. 4.30<br />

Jobfinder. 5.0 News.


SKY<br />

A n th o n y Perkins in a thriller,<br />

' S ky M ovie a t 10.0 p.m .<br />

SKY CHANNEL<br />

5.30 a.m. BUSINESS TV.<br />

1 0 THE DJ KAT SHOW.<br />

1 3 0 PANEL POT POURRI.<br />

1 0 0 THE SULLIVANS.<br />

1 0 3 0 SKY BY DAY.<br />

11.30 CLAIRE RAYNER.<br />

12.0 ANOTHER WORLD.<br />

I X GENERAL HOSPITAL.<br />

2 A AS THE WORLD TURNS.<br />

3.0 LOVING.<br />

3 3 0 FAMILY AFFAIR.<br />

4A COUNTDOWN.<br />

& 0 THE YOUNG DOCTORS.<br />

& 30 THREE’S COMPANY.<br />

& 0 SKY STAR SEARCH.<br />

7.0 SALE OF THE CENTURY.<br />

7.30 FRANK BOUGH’S WORLD.<br />

1 3 0 THE CHiSHOLMS.<br />

10.30 JAMESON TONIGHT.<br />

11.30 MATT HELM.<br />

12.30 LANDSCAPE.<br />

SKY MOVIES<br />

4J» CAROUSEL (1956): In <strong>the</strong> midst of <strong>the</strong><br />

robbery Billy Bigelow dies and goes to<br />

heaven. He asks <strong>the</strong> starkeeper if he can<br />

return to earth to help his unhappy daughter<br />

overcome her shame about her fa<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

Starring Gordon MacRae, Shirley Jones,<br />

Cameron Mitchell.<br />

•.1 0 KIDCO (1984). Based on <strong>the</strong> true<br />

slory of a pre-teen boy who decides to<br />

i how he fares in <strong>the</strong> world of business.<br />

BJO ENEMY MINE (1985). Space captain<br />

crashes on Dracon and befriends a lizard-<br />

Hce creature. A story of conflict, and<br />

friendship. Starring Dennis Quaid and<br />

Louis Gossett Jnr.<br />

10.0 DOUBLE NEGATIVE (1980). Michael<br />

Sarrazin stars as Michael, a mentally tor-<br />

reporter who becomes consumed<br />

i- guilt .when his wife is briutally tnur-<br />

:red <strong>the</strong> night he is with his Idver.<br />

11.40 BLACULA (1972). Two young decorators<br />

return to America with antiques<br />

ornate coffins <strong>the</strong>y’ve bought from<br />

tie Dracula. They unwittingly release<br />

ula, a vampire African Prince. Star-<br />

William Marshall and Vonetta McGee.<br />

SKY NEWS<br />

a.m. News. 6.30 European Business Channel.<br />

J t News. 9.30 Morning Magazine. 11.0 News.<br />

JO Our World. 12.0 News. 12.30 NBC Today.<br />

J0 News. 1.30 NBC Today. 2.0 News. 2.30<br />

2000. 3.0 News. 3.30 Good Health. 4.0<br />

. 4.30 Our World. 5.0 News. 5.30 Beyond<br />

. 6.0 News. 6.30 Wild West End. 7.0 News.<br />

The Reporters. 8.0 News. 8.30 The Frank<br />

Interview. 9.0 News. 9.30 Target: Austin<br />

'II MP and Norman Tebbit MP with guests.<br />

News. 10.30 The Reporters. 11.0 News. 11.30<br />

Nightly News. 12.0 News. 12.30 Wild West<br />

1.0 News. 1.30 Target. 2.0 News. 2.30 The<br />

Bough Interview. 3.0 News. 3.30 The<br />

rs. 4.0 News. 4.30 Beyond 2000.5.0 News.<br />

Entertainment Tonight<br />

EUROSPORT<br />

L30 a.m. Shell International Motor Sport. 11.30<br />

Hebcs. 12.30 Equestrian. 2.30 Ringside.~4.30<br />

iw of Eurosport Programmes. 6.0 EUros-<br />

R — What a Week! 7.0 Athletics. 8.0 Curling<br />

lLft-12.0 ice Hockey.<br />

MTV<br />

tu n . MTV. 10.0 The Steve Blame Show. 10.30<br />

[V. 12.0 Remote Control. 12.30 Kino. 1.30 MTV.<br />

It VJ Marcel Vanthilt. 4.45 Rock Block. 5.0 3<br />

1 At5.5.15 VJ Maiken Wexo. 6.30 Club MTV.<br />

I MTV At The Movies. 7.30 Remote Control. 8.0<br />

I'D Top 20. 9.0 MTV Spotlight. 9.30 Buzz. 10.0*<br />

Knstiane Backer. 11.0 MTV At The Movies.<br />

JO VJ Marcel Vanthilt. 12.0 Your Scene. 1.0<br />

D MTV. 1.30 Night Videos.<br />

M<br />

ANY a storm in a<br />

te a c u p brew ed<br />

up in ITV’s And<br />

A N ig h tin g a le<br />

S ang, a b u sy saga of<br />

com edy an d ro m an ce<br />

about working class life in<br />

Newcastle during <strong>the</strong> Second<br />

W orld War.<br />

A d ap te d fro m C .P.<br />

T ay lo r’s p la y by Jac k<br />

Rosenthal, it featured a<br />

family of m ildly eccentric<br />

characters for whom <strong>the</strong><br />

w ar was an inconvenience<br />

ra<strong>the</strong>r than a catastrophe.<br />

There was Dad (John<br />

W oodvine), who' when he<br />

w asn’t w orking in th e<br />

ship y ard ham m ered <strong>the</strong><br />

piano in <strong>the</strong> parlour and<br />

sang p o p u la r p a trio tic<br />

songs. In th e k itc h e n<br />

M am (Joan P low right)<br />

was m aking bread pudding<br />

w ith her hat on for<br />

some reason.<br />

The action opened up<br />

on <strong>the</strong> day w ar broke out<br />

in 1939. The family was<br />

aware of <strong>the</strong> event b ut its<br />

m em bers had problem s of<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir own to cope with.<br />

G ran d ad’s w hippet h ad<br />

ju st died and Joyce (Pippa<br />

RADIO<br />

^ \ K I C 5.0 Adrian John. 6.30 Bruno<br />

V J IN C Brookes. 9.30 Simon Bates.<br />

12.30 Newsbeat. 12.45 Gary Davies. 3.0<br />

Steve Wright. 5.30 Newsbeat. 5.45 Mark<br />

Goodier. 7.30 McCartney on McCartney. 8.30<br />

John Peel. 1Q.0 Nicky Campbell. 12.0-2.0<br />

Richard Skinner.<br />

TWO 4.0 Bill Rennells. 5.30 Chris<br />

Stuart. 7.30 Derek Jameson.<br />

9.30 Ken Bruce. 11.0 Jimmy Young. 1.5<br />

David Jacobs. 2.0 Gloria Hunniford. 3.30<br />

Adrian John. 5.5 John Dunn. 7.0 The Radio<br />

Orchestra Show. 9.0 Robin Ray’s Waxworks.<br />

10.0 Time Cycle. 10.30 The ABC Quiz. 11.0<br />

Brian Mat<strong>the</strong>w. 1.0 Alex Lester. 3.0-4.0 A<br />

Little Night Music.<br />

Wea<strong>the</strong>r: News. 7.0<br />

THREE Morning Concert. C 8.30 News.<br />

8.35 Composers of <strong>the</strong> Week. 9.35 CPE Bach<br />

and Haydn. 10.5 Dittersdorf. 10.35 Mendelssohn<br />

Siongs. 11.10 BBC Welsh Symphony<br />

Orchestra. 1.0 News. 1.5 Glasgow Lunchtime<br />

Recital. 2.0 Philadelphia Orchestra. 3.45<br />

French Piano Music. 4.45 A Great Master of<br />

Music. 5.30 Mainly for Pleasure. 7.0 News.<br />

7.5 Third Ear. 7.30 Prague String Quartet. 9.5<br />

Drama Now. 10.40 An Alternative Version.<br />

11.0 Composers of <strong>the</strong> Week, 12.0-12.5<br />

News.<br />

Shipping Forecast. 6.0<br />

FOUR News. 6/10 Farming Today lay.<br />

6.25 Prayer for <strong>the</strong> Day! 6.30 Today. 8.57<br />

Wea<strong>the</strong>r. 9.0 News. 9.5 Call Nick Ross. 10.0<br />

’News; Medicine Now. 10.30 Morning Story..<br />

10.45 Daily Service. 11.0 News; Citizens.<br />

11.25 From Our Own Correspondent. 11.50<br />

tines of Communication. 124) You and<br />

Yours. 12.25 Jiist a Minute. 12.55 Wea<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

1.0 World at One. 1.40 The Archers. 1.55<br />

Shipping Forecast. 2.0 Woman's Hour. 3.0<br />

Say Something Happened. 3.32 Richard<br />

Baker Compares Notes. 4.0 News. 4.5 In<br />

Business. 4.30 Kaleidoscope. 5.0 PM. 5.50<br />

Shipping Forecast. 5.55 Wea<strong>the</strong>r. 6.0 News.<br />

6.30 Growing Pains. 7.0 News. 7.5 Archers.<br />

7.20 The Thatcher Decade. 8.0 Antony Hopkins<br />

Talking About Music. 8.30 After Dread<br />

and Anger. 9.15 In Touch. 9.45 Kaleidoscope.<br />

10.15 A Book at Bedtime. 10.29<br />

Wea<strong>the</strong>r. 10.30 The World Tonight. 11.15The<br />

Financial World Tonight. 11.30 Today in Parliament.<br />

12.0-12.30 News. 12.33 Shipping<br />

Forecast.<br />

RADIO WALES<br />

4.0 As Radio 2. 6.25 Maldwyn Pope. 7.0<br />

Weekday Wales. 8.33 Roy Noble. 10.30<br />

Streetlife. 12.30 Meet for Lunch. 1.45 Bill of<br />

Health. 3.0 Radio Wales News. 3.2 The Day I<br />

Met G.O.D. in Swansea. 3.32 Get Gardening.<br />

4.0 Four-Five-Six. 6.0 As Radio 4. 6-30 Eye<br />

on Wales. 7.0 Radio Wales News. 7.5 As<br />

Radio 4. 9.45 Catchphrase 1. 9.50 Catchphrase<br />

2. 9.55 Radio 2 Sportsdesk. 10.0<br />

Radio Wales News. 10.2 Country Corral.<br />

11.0-4.0 As Radio 2.<br />

R A D IO U LSTE R<br />

4.0 As Radio 2. 6.30 Daybreak. 6.40 Farm<br />

Gate. 6.55 Thought for <strong>the</strong> Day. 7.0 Good<br />

Morning Ulster. 8.35 Sportsdesk. 8.40 Morning<br />

Extra. 9-30 The Gerry Anderson Show.<br />

10.30 John Bennett. 12.3 Talk Back. 1.0<br />

NeWsbreak. 1.30 Business News; 1.35<br />

George Jones. 2.30 Walter Love. 4.2 McClelland<br />

Abroad. 4.30 Johnston Talking. 5.0 PM<br />

Ulster. 5.30 Business Today. 5.35 Today's<br />

Sport. 5.40 78 Revs per Minute. 5.55 Radio<br />

Ulster News. 6.0 As Radio 4.6.30 Farm Gate.<br />

6.45 Rud Eile. 7.0 As Radio 2. 9.45 The Bottom<br />

Line. 11.0 Eleven Tonight. 11.5-4.0 As<br />

Radio 2.<br />

R A D IO LU X E M B O U R G<br />

6.45 Editorial. 7.0 Tony James. 9.0 Peter<br />

Antony including <strong>the</strong> C & A Show. 12.0 Jodie<br />

Scott..<br />

LBC<br />

5.0 Morning Music. 5.30 Dawn Traders. 6.0<br />

AM. 10.0 Brian haves. 12.0 Steve Jones. 2.0<br />

Phillip Hodson. 3.0 Pete Murray. 5.0 Update.<br />

7.0 The Night is Young. 9.0 Keltz's Country.<br />

10.0 Robbie Vincent. 1.0 Through <strong>the</strong> Night.<br />

4.0 A Question of Belief. 4.30 Tell Syd.<br />

A cosy tale of sex,<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

tea and sympathy<br />

Hinchley), <strong>the</strong> youngest" of<br />

his two grand-daughters<br />

was apprehensively awaiting<br />

<strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>* arrival of her<br />

boyfriend (Stephen Tomp-<br />

kinson) ofi leave from <strong>the</strong><br />

Army and bearing a ring.<br />

“I don’t like him ,” she<br />

wailed. Then, w ith <strong>the</strong> air<br />

of a tragic heroine willing<br />

to sacrifice herself for <strong>the</strong><br />

LAST NIGHT’S VIEW<br />

By IAN CHRISTIE<br />

war, she said m elodram atically:<br />

“B ut he m ight be<br />

going to m eet his death on<br />

<strong>the</strong> field of battle.”<br />

The m arriage duly took<br />

p lace w ith a w edding<br />

breakfast bought from a<br />

fish and chip shop. On <strong>the</strong><br />

way hom e w ith it th e<br />

bride expressed her fears<br />

about <strong>the</strong> sexual side of<br />

w edlock. “D on’t w orry,”!<br />

said her experienced comp<br />

a n io n . “I t ’s n o th in g<br />

worse than cold chips.”<br />

O ut <strong>the</strong>re in <strong>the</strong> real<br />

world <strong>the</strong> D unkirk w ithdraw<br />

al was glimpsed and<br />

E ric cam e hom e w ith an<br />

A rm y chum , N orm an,<br />

played by Tom W att, who<br />

used to be <strong>the</strong> w im pish<br />

Lofty in E astE nders. He<br />

was not exactly wim pish<br />

here b u t he wasn’t a rock<br />

of reliability ei<strong>the</strong>r. Norm<br />

an fell in love w ith<br />

Joyce’s elder sister Helen<br />

(Phyllis Logan) and her<br />

feelings were reciprocal.<br />

B ut by <strong>the</strong> tim e peace was<br />

d e c la re d N o rm an h ad<br />

ow ned u p n o t only to<br />

being m arried b u t also to<br />

being a fa<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

M am felt guilty about<br />

h a r b o u r in g l u s t f u l<br />

thoughts about <strong>the</strong> local<br />

priest and was distraught<br />

on discovering Dad had<br />

jo in e d th e C om m unist<br />

P arty and stuck a picture<br />

of Stalin on <strong>the</strong> mantle-<br />

piece. Helen was living in<br />

sin w ith N orm an and<br />

Joyce seem ed to have<br />

been sleeping w ith every<br />

Yank in town. E ric got<br />

q u ite u p se t w hen he<br />

found out.<br />

B ut <strong>the</strong> family had a<br />

sure-fire way of calming<br />

dow n h eated situ atio n s.<br />

You could rely on a voice<br />

p ip in g u p am ong th e<br />

a n g ry s h o u ts saying:<br />

“Let’s have a nice cup of<br />

tea. I’ll p u t <strong>the</strong> kettle on.”<br />

This was a handsome,<br />

e n te rta in in g p ro d u ctio n<br />

an d w artim e N ew castle<br />

w as recre a te d convincingly<br />

by director Robert<br />

K night and his team . Subsidised<br />

by a tea com pany<br />

perhaps.<br />

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_P’Code_<br />

1<br />

Post to:<br />

DESIGNER BATHROOMS LTD<br />

FREEPOST<br />

I<br />

DROITWICH, WORCS. WR9 7BR<br />

REQUIRES) I<br />

i _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ J<br />

I


24 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

Aspel dashes to see son<br />

jT V C H A T sh o w h o s t<br />

'M ichael A spel h as m ade h is<br />

second d ash to M elbourne<br />

in tw o m o n th s to th e b ed ­<br />

side of h is son Greg.<br />

Greg is suffering frofn a<br />

rare form of cancer which<br />

began as a tum our in <strong>the</strong> cavity<br />

behind his nose.<br />

He is now able to talk to his<br />

fath e r only by scrib b lin g<br />

notes on a pad.<br />

Michael said yesterday: “I<br />

w as told th a t this tim e <strong>the</strong>re<br />

w as cause for concern and I<br />

was advised to come out here<br />

as soon as possible.<br />

“B ut <strong>the</strong> boy has once again<br />

Boy falls<br />

to death<br />

off ferry<br />

A YOUTH who ignored<br />

w arnings about sittin g<br />

on th e rail o f a cross-<br />

C h a n n e l f e r r y w as<br />

feared dead yesterday<br />

afte r falling overboard.<br />

Stephen Wadd, 18, from<br />

Luton, Bedfordshire, was<br />

on a day trip to Zee-<br />

brugge when he slipped<br />

off <strong>the</strong> rail of <strong>the</strong> P rincess<br />

M arie Christine as it<br />

travelled back to Dover<br />

at <strong>the</strong> weekend.<br />

A 48-hour search-failed<br />

to find his body.<br />

Stephen, who was with<br />

a p a rty of w orkm ates<br />

from th e L ucas A erospace<br />

plant in Luton, had<br />

been d rin k in g on th e<br />

ferry.<br />

Danger<br />

A K ent police spokesm<br />

an said: “Stephen was<br />

seen by his friends sitting<br />

on <strong>the</strong> rail of <strong>the</strong> ship. He<br />

was w arned of <strong>the</strong> danger<br />

b u t it looks lik e he<br />

ignored <strong>the</strong> warnings.<br />

"He had been drinking<br />

during <strong>the</strong> course of <strong>the</strong><br />

day b u t it isn’t clear if he<br />

was drunk at <strong>the</strong> tim e of<br />

<strong>the</strong> accident.”<br />

The spokesm an added:<br />

“T he sea te m p e ra tu re<br />

was nine degrees Celsius<br />

and he would not have<br />

survived very long in <strong>the</strong><br />

w ater.”<br />

I t ’s love in<br />

<strong>the</strong> fast lane<br />

A MARRIED m an’s bid<br />

to propose to his m istre<br />

s s w ith a b a n n e r<br />

draped over a motorway<br />

bridge was stopped by<br />

police yesterday.<br />

They were alerted by<br />

drivers on <strong>the</strong> M4 near<br />

Sw indon, W ilts, who<br />

thought he was attem pting<br />

suicide.<br />

A police spokesm an<br />

said : “We s h a n ’t be<br />

. releasing his name. We<br />

also w ant to protect <strong>the</strong><br />

lady’s feelings — sh e ’s<br />

m arried too.”<br />

T h e free navigation aid in “i<br />

confounded th em all, and<br />

inside him self is as full of vigour<br />

as ever.”<br />

This is <strong>the</strong> star’s th ird visit<br />

to A ustralia to see his 29-year-<br />

old son. He flew out two years<br />

ago w hen doctors first diagnosed<br />

<strong>the</strong> tum our.<br />

M ichael said: “H e is an<br />

am azing fellow, he has confounded<br />

<strong>the</strong>m once again, he<br />

really has. H e has beaten all<br />

<strong>the</strong> odds.”<br />

G reg grew up w ith h is<br />

m o<strong>the</strong>r and publisher step-fa<strong>the</strong>r,<br />

R obert Sessions, in Melbourne.<br />

Aspel: Concern<br />

PR IN C ESS DIANA h as lo st<br />

th e title o f E u ro p e’s m ost<br />

b eau tifu l royal — by a nose.<br />

T hat is <strong>the</strong> verdict of thousa<br />

n d s of G erm an s w ho<br />

replied to a magazine’s question<br />

about w hich royal <strong>the</strong>y<br />

thought E urope’s prettiest.<br />

Top was Princess Caroline<br />

of Monaco, w ith 32 per cent of<br />

th e votes.<br />

Diana, who won <strong>the</strong> contest<br />

for <strong>the</strong> previous six ' years,<br />

slum ped to fourth place with<br />

ju st 13 per cent.<br />

The magazine readers gave<br />

Diana’s regal nose as <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

reason for her sudden unpo­<br />

p u la rity . R o y a l-w a tc h e r<br />

Jo h a n n S ch ro ed er of th e<br />

m ass circulation Neue Welt<br />

magazine said: “It sticks out<br />

too much.<br />

“B ut a quick nose job would<br />

m ake her perfection.”<br />

The Duchess of York ended<br />

up at <strong>the</strong> bottom of <strong>the</strong> chart,<br />

w ith no votes at all.<br />

The verdict was th at Fergie<br />

was “too fat” and had “appalling<br />

dress sense”.<br />

B ut th e poll was conducted<br />

before she began a diet which<br />

has won her many com plim<br />

ents on h er new slim line figure.<br />

Caroline: Winner<br />

TV watchdog launches a big<br />

crackdown on foul language<br />

Stephanie: Dynasty dazzler<br />

Nun’s <strong>the</strong><br />

word for<br />

By FIONA MOONEY<br />

DYNASTY s ta r S tephanie<br />

B eacham changes th e h ab it of<br />

a lifetim e for h e r la te st TV<br />

role. f<br />

Gone are <strong>the</strong> low-cut gowns,<br />

flashy jewellery and expensive<br />

furs favoured by h er bitchy character<br />

Sable in <strong>the</strong> long-running<br />

American soap.<br />

Instead, those famous curves are<br />

covered by <strong>the</strong> nun’s habit she<br />

will be wearing as Sister K ate in<br />

a new TV series.<br />

Stephanie, 42, seem s keen to put<br />

<strong>the</strong> Dynasty dazzle behind her.<br />

She is soon to be seen in a film<br />

where she plays a wicked Victorian<br />

governess. Pew! What a transformation from sexy Sable Picture: PAUL HARRIS<br />

By WILL STEWART Home Affairs Correspondent<br />

A CRACKDOWN on TV’s bad language<br />

is to be made by <strong>the</strong> new broadcasting<br />

watchdog in response to public anger.<br />

But viewers do not want a ban on sex<br />

scenes and some violence after <strong>the</strong> 9pm<br />

“decency” watershed.<br />

L ord Rees-Mogg, chairm an of th e B roadcasting<br />

S tan d a rd s C ouncil, h as set o u t h is policies afte r a<br />

nationw ide “roadshow ”<br />

to a s s e s s v iew s o n<br />

curbs.<br />

He claim ed th at while<br />

taking a “tolerant and<br />

fairly broadm inded view<br />

of adult television”, viewers<br />

were horrified at <strong>the</strong><br />

stream of foul language<br />

in some program m es.<br />

L ord Rees-Mogg, fo rm<br />

er editor of The Times,<br />

said: “People seem to be<br />

ex tre m e ly c o n c e rn e d<br />

about <strong>the</strong> language used<br />

on television and, indeed,<br />

on radio as well.<br />

“It isn’t m aiden aunts<br />

holding up <strong>the</strong>ir hands in<br />

h o rro r because <strong>the</strong>y hear<br />

a dirty word.<br />

Limits<br />

“It’s based on a feeling<br />

th a t it is <strong>the</strong> job of p arents<br />

in rearing children<br />

to m ake <strong>the</strong>m feel w hat<br />

language is appropriate.<br />

"There is a very strong<br />

feeling about that. It does<br />

com e over again an d<br />

again.”<br />

H is code for broadcasters<br />

will be redraw n to<br />

take account of <strong>the</strong> powerful<br />

feelings th at bad<br />

language m ust be curbed.<br />

H e refused to nam e <strong>the</strong><br />

TV shows th at violate his<br />

lim its on swearing, but -<br />

said Neighbours was an<br />

“an u n u su a l c u lt p ro ­<br />

gramme, w ith everybody<br />

reporting <strong>the</strong>ir 10-year-<br />

olds are glued to it, some<br />

of <strong>the</strong>m w atching twice a<br />

day.”<br />

P a rents could safely<br />

e<br />

Rees-Mogg: Views<br />

allow <strong>the</strong>ir children to<br />

watch it alone.<br />

L o rd R e e s : M ogg<br />

em phasised <strong>the</strong>re would<br />

be no attem pt to ban <strong>the</strong><br />

kind of sex scenes now<br />

shown on TV.<br />

H is m eetings w ith a<br />

cross-section of viewers<br />

from Aberdeen to B ristol<br />

had convinced him “<strong>the</strong><br />

public is not a puritanical<br />

public”.<br />

M ost people believed<br />

that producers could be<br />

more daring after 9pm.<br />

He is keeping an “open<br />

m ind” on w he<strong>the</strong>r his<br />

final rules should allow<br />

ad u lt view ers to su b ­<br />

scribe to satellite or cable<br />

p ay-chann els show ing<br />

soft-porn.<br />

T he co u n cil w ill be<br />

given a statutory role in<br />

new legislation on broadcasting<br />

to handle com ­<br />

plaints about <strong>the</strong> failure<br />

of TV program m es to<br />

uphold standards.


I<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 25<br />

Why didn’t you receive a cheque<br />

f you had started saving with Sun<br />

life 10 y ean ago, this m orning you<br />

could have received a cheque like<br />

this.<br />

It would be all yours. To spend as<br />

you wish. And even with this substantial<br />

amount of cash in your hands, you wouldn’t have<br />

to pay any tax on your proceeds.<br />

That’s because <strong>the</strong> Bonus Savings Plan offers<br />

you a simple way to save for 10 years without<br />

forcing you to hand over tax on <strong>the</strong> proceeds of<br />

your savings — no matter how much you stand to<br />

receive.<br />

Indeed, many savers have already received<br />

genuinely high lump sum payouts thanks to Sun<br />

Life’s investment expertise.<br />

A SUBSTANTIAL CASH LUMP SUM IN<br />

PROSPECT FOR YOU.<br />

The Bonus Savings Plan enables your<br />

savings to grow rapidly with <strong>the</strong> resulting cash<br />

payment to you being free of personal income tax<br />

and capital gains tax. Your premiums are paid into<br />

a fund upon which Sun Life is subject to tax on<br />

investment income and capital gains.<br />

So not only does <strong>the</strong> plan combine<br />

insurance with investment to give you a<br />

guaranteed sum after just 10 years paid free of<br />

income tax and free of capital gains tax; you will<br />

also receive annual bonuses which will be added<br />

to your savings to boost your lump sum payout<br />

Once added, <strong>the</strong>se bonuses are guaranteed and<br />

cannot be taken away from you. And after ten<br />

years a Terminal Bonus may also be added to<br />

increase your tax free return even fur<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

Of course, bonuses allotted to policyholders<br />

and <strong>the</strong> proportion of profits allocated to<br />

shareholders are determined by our directors<br />

subject to <strong>the</strong> policyholders receiving not less<br />

than 9Q% of <strong>the</strong> distributed profit.<br />

SUN LIFE - INVESTMENT EXPERTISE.<br />

With Sun Life’s investment Team winning<br />

no fewer than 5 independent investment awards<br />

in 1986 you can be sure that your savings are<br />

looked it e r by a truly professional team.<br />

YOU BENEFIT FROM THIS BUILT-IN<br />

“INVESTMENT ESCALATOR” FEATURE.<br />

The substantial lump sum you could look<br />

forward EXAMPLES to is not only OF due WHY to YOU <strong>the</strong> feet COULD that your<br />

BENEFIT BY INVESTING IN THE<br />

BONUS SAVINGS PLAN<br />

With his children now off his hands<br />

he is beginning to have more cash available.<br />

He really would like to commit himself to<br />

fur<strong>the</strong>r regular saving, with sound<br />

guarantees and with <strong>the</strong> prospects of real<br />

growth. The Bonus Savings Plan gives him<br />

<strong>the</strong> confidence he needs because of <strong>the</strong><br />

guarantees it provides.<br />

WOMAN AGED 30<br />

MAN AGED 45<br />

She likes <strong>the</strong> idea of making regular<br />

savings from her own income. The choice<br />

of premiums, from as little as £10 a month<br />

initially, means that she can suit her savings<br />

to her budget. She also likes <strong>the</strong> fact that<br />

<strong>the</strong> Bonus Savings Plan enables her to<br />

increase her savings each year to help keep<br />

pace with inflation, and her extra ability to<br />

save a little more.<br />

The Plan is available to people aged 18-74 and is<br />

designed to produce a large cash sum at <strong>the</strong> end of 10<br />

years.<br />

Examples of early cash-in values (for a plan for an initial<br />

monthly premium of £50) are set out below. Values for<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r monthly premiums are in direct proportion to <strong>the</strong><br />

guaranteed sums at <strong>the</strong> end of 10 years. These values<br />

have been calculated according to <strong>the</strong> Rules prescribed<br />

by LAUTRO.<br />

No. of years<br />

in force<br />

Total premiums<br />

paid<br />

Surrender values for a<br />

male aged at entry<br />

34 : 54 74<br />

£ £ £ £<br />

1 551 330 288 114<br />

2 1133 919 818 424<br />

3 1877 1561 1401 775<br />

4 2603 2359 2138 1286<br />

5 3371 3247 2974 1913<br />

These values include allowance for possible future<br />

bonuses and are not guaranteed. The amount actually<br />

payable would depend on <strong>the</strong> bonuses added to <strong>the</strong><br />

policy and <strong>the</strong> surrender basis current at <strong>the</strong> time. The<br />

values for a female of <strong>the</strong> same age will be<br />

higher.<br />

Bearing in mind <strong>the</strong> plan’s initial setting up<br />

charges, early surrender is not<br />

recommended.<br />

After 2 or more years you could <strong>the</strong>n apply<br />

N O T E S<br />

S U N L I F E<br />

savings are paid to you as mentioned above free of<br />

personal income tax and capital gains tax after 10<br />

years; it’s not only due to Sun Life’s proven<br />

investment expertise; it is also due to a feature<br />

we call <strong>the</strong> “Investment Escalator.”<br />

This means that your monthly savings are<br />

automatically increased at <strong>the</strong> end of each year by<br />

7% of <strong>the</strong> initial regular monthly amount.<br />

In this way, <strong>the</strong> Plan takes full account of<br />

your future savings ability - as a result of increases<br />

in income for example.<br />

Compared with a Sun Life level contribution<br />

plan of a similar type, <strong>the</strong> “Investment Escalator”<br />

feature gives a very real boost to <strong>the</strong> amount you<br />

can look forward to receiving.<br />

So save £10 now, and you’ll save £10.70 in<br />

year 2, £11.40 in year 3 and so on: This is a simple<br />

way of increasing your return, compared with a<br />

similar savings plan with premiums remaining at<br />

£10 each month.<br />

LIFE INSURANCE TOO<br />

- WITIIOI IT MF.DICAL EXAMINATION.<br />

From <strong>the</strong> day your application is accepted<br />

and all <strong>the</strong> time you are saving, your life will be<br />

automatically insured for a guaranteed death<br />

benefit which, like <strong>the</strong> cash sum payable at <strong>the</strong><br />

end of 10 years, would be free of personal income<br />

tax and capital gains tax.<br />

The amount of your life cover will be<br />

confirmed in your Personal Benefit Summary<br />

which you will be sent on acceptance. The table<br />

below gives examples of just how great that<br />

cover could be for a man who starts saving £20 a<br />

month.<br />

Age when plan<br />

taken out<br />

Up to 54 64 74<br />

Guaranteed<br />

Minimum £2,400 £1,860 £1,500<br />

Death Benefit<br />

ANY QUESTIONS?<br />

f No-one will visit you at home; ifyou<br />

have any questions just contact us on<br />

0 8 0 0 2 7 -2 1 -2 7<br />

Your call is free! Or speak to your financial adviser.<br />

for a loan secured by your policy, on which interest would<br />

be payable (full written details are available on request)<br />

- so satisfying any shorter term need for cash whilst<br />

enabling you to keep your policy in force.<br />

If <strong>the</strong> policy is not surrendered, and premiums are<br />

discontinued after at least 2 years premiums have been<br />

paid <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> benefits payable at <strong>the</strong> end of 10 years or<br />

on your earlier death would be appropriately reduced.<br />

If <strong>the</strong> policy is surrendered, or premiums are o<strong>the</strong>rwise<br />

discontinued, before 7V4 years’ premiums have been<br />

paid, <strong>the</strong>re could be a liability to higher rate tax on any<br />

profit on surrender, or survival until <strong>the</strong> end of 10 years or<br />

on earlier death.<br />

The maximum total initial payment for all Bonus Savings<br />

Plans and similar Savings Plans with Sun Life is £100<br />

per month.<br />

A copy of your completed application and/or a specimen<br />

of <strong>the</strong> policy will be available on request.<br />

This offer will remain open if you apply by <strong>the</strong> close date<br />

shown. The terms of <strong>the</strong> offer may be repeated in o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

advertisements which extend <strong>the</strong> application period<br />

shown. If we repeat <strong>the</strong> offer, <strong>the</strong>se terms may no longer<br />

be available.<br />

All statements made in this advertisement assume<br />

assurability at our ordinary rates of premium, payment<br />

of all premiums when due and current<br />

legislation remaining unaltered.<br />

Sun Life Direct Marketing Ltd is an<br />

Appointed Representative and wholly<br />

owned subsidiary of Sun Life Assurance<br />

Society pic, St. James Barton, Bristol.<br />

Simply answer <strong>the</strong> questions on <strong>the</strong> special<br />

Priority Application Form below and Sun Life will<br />

<strong>the</strong>n advise you of <strong>the</strong>ir decision. There is no<br />

medical examination required to apply for this Plan.<br />

I<br />

I<br />

AGE WHEN<br />

PLAN<br />

TAKEN OUT<br />

9<br />

FREE!<br />

Yes, apply for your Bonus<br />

Savings Plan before <strong>the</strong><br />

date shown and you<br />

will be sent on<br />

acceptance and<br />

receipt of your<br />

direct debit<br />

this superb<br />

wallet<br />

calculator<br />

absolutely<br />

free of charge!<br />

The wallet<br />

is finished in black hide and includes<br />

a quality calculator as well as a useful jotter<br />

pad. Additionally, <strong>the</strong>re’s space for up to 5 credit<br />

cards and, of course, ample room for banknotes.<br />

It can be yours - free with our compliments<br />

- when you apply for your Bonus Savings Plan<br />

before <strong>the</strong> date shown!<br />

HOW MUCH COULD YOU HAVE BEEN RECEIVING TODAY!<br />

Y O U R INITIAL M ONTHLY SAVINGS A M O U N T<br />

& ] 1 0 1 £ 2 0 I £ 5 0 |I £ 1 00 1<br />

A B c D A B C D A B C D A B C D<br />

MALE FEMALE £ £ £ £ £ £ - £ . £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £<br />

18*39 18-43 1269 739 814 2822 2538 1479 1627 5644 6345 3699 4067 14111 12690 7398 8134 28222<br />

44 48 1259 733 808 2800 2518 1467 1615 5600 6295 3669 4036 14000 12590 7339 8071 28000<br />

49 53 1250 728 802 2780 2500 1457 1603 5560 6250 3643 4007 13900 12500 7287 8013 27800<br />

54 58 1231 717 789 2737 2462 1435 1578 5475 6155 3588 3945 13688 12310 7176 7891 27377<br />

59-69 63-73 1203 701 771 2675 2406 1402 1542 5350 6015 3506 3856 13377 12030 7013 7711 26754<br />

74 - 1179 687 756 2622 2358 1374 1512 5244 5895 3436 3779 13110 11790 6873 7557 26220<br />

A = GUARANTEED SUM AT THE END OF 10 YEARS B = REGULAR BONUSES C = TERMINAL BONUSES D = TOTAL AMOUNT PAYABLE<br />

1. Although <strong>the</strong> Bonus Savings Plan was not available 10 years ago, <strong>the</strong> guaranteed sums shown in column A above<br />

are based upon <strong>the</strong> terms of <strong>the</strong> Plan as currently offered Ail past performance maturity values illustrated take into<br />

account Sun Life’s actual declarations of Regular Bonus for policies taken out in April 1979 for <strong>the</strong> 10 years up to<br />

April 1989, toge<strong>the</strong>r with <strong>the</strong> Terminal Bonus which would have been added on 1st April 1989.<br />

2. The Monthly savings shown increased by 7% of <strong>the</strong> initial regular monthly savings amount at <strong>the</strong> end of each year<br />

for <strong>the</strong> 10 year period.<br />

3. Benefits for ages and savings amounts not shown can be obtained approximately by reference to corresponding<br />

adjacent values in <strong>the</strong> table above. Fur<strong>the</strong>r details are available on request, or will be shown in your personal<br />

benefit summary which will be sent to you on acceptance of your application.<br />

The past is not necessarily a guide to <strong>the</strong> future; future bonuses come from profits and cannot be<br />

guaranteed. ' ___<br />

APPLY NOW AND SAVE UP TO £ 9 9<br />

You can apply now w ithout obligation. Just com plete<br />

<strong>the</strong> simple application form below. Then post it today with<br />

your cheque/P.O. for £1 for your first m onth’s investm ent<br />

regardless of <strong>the</strong> size of <strong>the</strong> plan you choose. This gives you<br />

an im m ediate saving of up to £99.<br />

On acceptance, you w ill receive your policy<br />

docum ent and a Direct D ebit Instruction for your future<br />

monthly payments. You will also receive a Personal Benefit<br />

Summary confirm ingyour exact guaranteed benefits, and a<br />

leaflet explaining bonuses and how <strong>the</strong>y are allotted.<br />

Ifyou wish to cancel, you have 30 days in w hich to do<br />

so - entirely w ithout obligation. This extends your legal<br />

right to cancel under <strong>the</strong> Financial Services (Cancellation)<br />

Rules.<br />

PLEASE SEND YOUR APPLICATION TO REACH US BY MAY 10th 1989<br />

YOUR BONUS SAVINGS PLAN NO OBLIGATION APPLICATION<br />

S end to : S u n Life A ssuran ce Society p ic, FREEPOST,<br />

D ep t NB, PO B ox 290, B risto l BS99 7XY.<br />

I—| YES please accept my proposal to join this Plan.<br />

*—' I enclose m y cheque/PO for £1 made payable to Sun Life<br />

Assurance Society pic for <strong>the</strong> first m onth’s paym ent of a Bonus<br />

Savings Plan policy, which you w ill send m e on 30 days<br />

no-obligation approval.<br />

1 .1 WISH TO SAVE THE FOLLOWING INITIAL<br />

MONTHLY AMOUNT:<br />

- ! £100<br />

[Z ] £ 5 0 CD £ 2 0 EH £10 EH O THErE<br />

I (m ax)<br />

(m in) Please state am ount<br />

in m ultiples o f &5<br />

| (BLOCK CAPITALS PLEASE)<br />

111/382J<br />

I 2. Surname (Mr/Mrs/Miss/Ms)<br />

I<br />

3. Forenames (in full)<br />

4. Address<br />

Postcode<br />

5. Are you: Married? Q Single? Q Widowed? Q<br />

Divorced? Q Separated? Q<br />

6. O ccupation<br />

7. Date o f Birth Day Month Year<br />

8. Please answer all questions carefully and Tick as<br />

accurately<br />

appropriate<br />

i. Have you within <strong>the</strong> last five years<br />

a) been incapacitated for more than two weeks at<br />

YES NO<br />

a time?<br />

b) been referred to or consulted a specialist Or<br />

been referred to or attended hospital as an<br />

n n<br />

in-patient or-out-patient?<br />

c) had an AIDS blood test or been counselled or<br />

advised in connection with AIDS or any sexually<br />

n □<br />

transmitted disease?<br />

d) received medical advice or treatment o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

n n<br />

than as described above?<br />

ii. Are you currently receiving medication<br />

□ □<br />

prescribed by a doctor?<br />

iii. Has any proposal for life insurance on your life<br />

been declined, deferred or accepted on<br />

□ □<br />

special terms? □ □<br />

Ifyou answer ‘Yes” to any of <strong>the</strong> questions, please give full details<br />

on a separate sheet of paper. We may be able to accept you for this<br />

special plan, or we wUl send you details of alternative plans that<br />

may be available. In completing your proposal please make sure<br />

that you answer each question fully and accurately indicating<br />

“No” where applicable. Failure to disclose all material facts could<br />

affect <strong>the</strong> payment of benefits. Material facts are those that an<br />

insurer would regard as likely to influence <strong>the</strong> assessment and<br />

acceptance of a proposal. Therefore, ifyou are in any doubt about<br />

whe<strong>the</strong>r certain facts are material, you are strongly advised to<br />

disclose <strong>the</strong>m. I understand that if my application is accepted I<br />

will be notified by <strong>the</strong> issue of an official acceptance from Sun Life<br />

and <strong>the</strong> plan will commence on <strong>the</strong> date shown in <strong>the</strong> policy<br />

provided that all <strong>the</strong> above statements are to <strong>the</strong> best of my<br />

knowledge and belief <strong>the</strong>n true and complete.<br />

9- Signature<br />

of Life to<br />

be Assured<br />

Tick here ifyou w ant an Application Form<br />

for your wife or husband.<br />

10. Date 4<br />

784T5<br />

L<br />

Sun life Assurance Society.plc. Registered Officc: 107 Cheapside, London, EC2V 6DU. Registered in England No. 776273. 7 ME<strong>MB</strong>ER OF LAUTRO.<br />

___<br />

.<br />

_______<br />

10ID


26<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

50 READERS WILL SHARE<br />

OUR £ 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 JACKPOT<br />

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MORTGAGE<br />

FOR A YEAR<br />

HAVE you joined In our<br />

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loans com petition? It’s<br />

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You could be one of<br />

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readers who won’t have<br />

to fret about mortgage<br />

repayments for 12 wonderful<br />

months.<br />

We will pick up <strong>the</strong> bill<br />

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Just think — you could<br />

forget about high interest<br />

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It' could mean a dream<br />

holiday — perhaps <strong>the</strong><br />

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desired cruise of a lifetime<br />

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The choice Is yours.<br />

Maybe <strong>the</strong> extra money<br />

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If you m iss one don’t<br />

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When you have collected<br />

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our fabulous FREE draw.<br />

HERE is your sixth token and <strong>the</strong>re are more to follow,<br />

so be sure you don't miss your Daily Express.<br />

j§ £ 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 # 3 f !<br />

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TAKE-OFF WITH STYLE IN OUR GREAT HIGH-FLYING CONTEST<br />

100,000 super<br />

Air Miles to<br />

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H E R E ’S h ow you can<br />

w in 100,000 Air M iles.<br />

L ast W ednesday w e<br />

p rin ted a b lan k Flight-<br />

p lan 6-day ACCUMU­<br />

LATOR grid for you to<br />

fill in wtyen any ofi<br />

y o u r c h o se n F lig h tp<br />

l a n n u m b e r s :<br />

m atched th o se printed<br />

a s a w in n in g Flight-<br />

p lan num ber during<br />

th e w ee k (in c lu d in g<br />

t o d a y ’s w in n in g<br />

F lightplan).<br />

(N ote: Y o u sh o u ld<br />

h ave O N E A ccum ulator<br />

grid m ade up for<br />

E ach o f your F lightp<br />

lan en tries.)<br />

T O D A Y O N E<br />

R EA D ER M UST WIN<br />

100.000 AIR M ILES.<br />

A ll you have to do is:<br />

C a lcu la te th e to ta l<br />

n um ber o f Air M iles<br />

accum u lated on each<br />

grid. If your total is<br />

60.000 or m ore, on any<br />

o n e A c c u m u la t o r 1<br />

Grid, w rite your nam e,<br />

address and d aytim e<br />

telep h o n e num ber on<br />

a b lank p iece o f paper.<br />

A ttach th is securely to<br />

your F ligh tp lan A ccum<br />

ulator G rid and send<br />

to : A c c u m u la to r -<br />

T hree, D aily E xp ress<br />

Air M iles F lightplan,<br />

52 B ritton S treet, L ond<br />

o n E C 88 1AU to<br />

arrive n o later th an<br />

A pril 22 1989.<br />

T h e f ir s t e n tr y<br />

d ra w n from t h o s e<br />

w ith over 60,000 Air<br />

M iles w ill w in 100,000<br />

Air M iles!<br />

M ake su re you k eep<br />

your co p ie s o f your<br />

o r ig in a l F lig h tp la n<br />

entries to p lay th e n ew<br />

gam es startin g tom orrow!<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Throw som ething round<br />

fat post on w h arf (7)<br />

5 On m otorw ay storm s can<br />

cause deceptive im ages<br />

9 lie’ll give a fellow gold<br />

10 k e g u la tlo n fo r one in<br />

m unitions (9)<br />

11 Money no longer used in<br />

th e country (6)<br />

12 H it and h it, softly —<br />

th a t'll rem ove p ain t (8)<br />

14 Reason fo r a note sen t in<br />

regret (5)<br />

15 Defeat, having finished<br />

la s t in to w , n eed in g<br />

wheel! (9)<br />

18 W ild flo w er m u st be<br />

m ine — it is seen on<br />

edges of a lake (9)<br />

20 Apply one way o r th e<br />

o th er (5)<br />

22 C losure of society having<br />

shed dem olished (4-4)<br />

24 Child’s skills in m axing<br />

m aps (6)<br />

26 B loom er of river vessel<br />

on bend, see! (9)<br />

27 Lift shafts, by th e sound<br />

of it (5)<br />

28 Awful ta ste in shiny fab*<br />

ric (7)<br />

29 T he c o n tin e n ta l m ales<br />

could be lim ited by alien<br />

com ponent (7)<br />

DOWN<br />

1 W ant a protector? Buy a<br />

dog for train in g on road<br />

2 P o u n d te rm in a tio n in<br />

giving loans (7)<br />

3 Approval for soldiers in a<br />

salu te (9)<br />

4 C ross over to exit (4)<br />

5 M elted and said to m elt<br />

in w o rld tro u b le sp o t<br />

changes round th e<br />

no rth to provide revival?<br />

7 A new lug forged into<br />

p a rt of ship’s side (7)<br />

rYOlJR FLIGHT<br />

NU<strong>MB</strong>ERS<br />

DESTINATIONS<br />

W e W<br />

AIR ^<br />

MILES<br />

DX 004 HANOVER 9 0 0 MILES<br />

DX 013 TUNIS 2,2 5 0 MILES<br />

DX 0 2 0 PERTH 18,000 MILES<br />

DX 029 MILAN 1,250 MILES<br />

DX 036 SAO PAULO 11,500 MILES<br />

DX 052 ZURICH 1,000 MILES<br />

DX 061 TURIN 1,150 MILES<br />

DX 068 AUCKLAND 2 2,000 MILES<br />

Check your numbers<br />

CHECK <strong>the</strong> eight flight<br />

num bers logged on <strong>the</strong><br />

copy of your Flightplan<br />

— if <strong>the</strong>y m atch <strong>the</strong> eight<br />

flig h t n u m b e rs show n<br />

h ere, you co u ld w in<br />

20.000 Air Miles.<br />

If all eight num bers<br />

match, simply call 01-922<br />

7626 TODAY between 9am<br />

and 2pm to claim.<br />

You need to have <strong>the</strong><br />

copy of your Flightplan<br />

entry form when claiming.<br />

No claim s w ill be<br />

accepted outside <strong>the</strong> stated<br />

times. If <strong>the</strong>re’s more than<br />

one winner, <strong>the</strong> prize will<br />

be shared.<br />

If no one claims, <strong>the</strong><br />

20.000 Air Miles will be<br />

added to <strong>the</strong> 20,000 offered<br />

tomorrow.<br />

The winning Flightplan<br />

CRUSADER CROSSW ORD<br />

numbers published daily in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Daily Express are chosen<br />

at random.<br />

, FLIGHTPLAN ACCUMU­<br />

LATOR: This runs for six,<br />

jdays, sta rtin g every<br />

Wednesday. You could win<br />

100,000 Air Miles.<br />

When your flight numbers<br />

are published each<br />

day fill in <strong>the</strong> details in <strong>the</strong><br />

Accumulator Form or on<br />

paper: Make up one form<br />

for each Flightplan logged.<br />

Add up <strong>the</strong> total Air Miles<br />

represented by your Flight-<br />

iplan numbers. Next Tuesday<br />

we will publish a level<br />

claim — all entries above<br />

that level will be entered<br />

into a grand draw and <strong>the</strong><br />

first entry drawn will win.<br />

Please do not telephone<br />

with Accumulator claims.<br />

Y E S TE R D A Y ’S S O LU TIO N :<br />

ACROSS: 1 It's n o t c ric k e t, 8 G lu tto n , 9 C ocaine, 11 E n ig m a , 13<br />

Penalise, 15 Fated, 16 O utrage, 18 R is o tto , 19 D e lh i, 21 O rga ndie, 23<br />

Beacon, 25 T ro u b le , 26 C onquer, 28 O ld B o y N e tw o rk<br />

D O W N : 2 T o u ris t, 3 N u t, 4 Tone, 5 R e cre a tio n , 6 Cocoa, 7 E d ific e , 8<br />

Goes fla t o u t, 10 E x e c u tio n e r, 12 M odes, 14 C o n trite ly , 17 Addle, 18<br />

Rag-doU, 20 Lacquer, 22 N abob, 24 A cre, 27 N ew<br />

8 Get so a re d w ith tim e in 19 111 get nfore gut after<br />

ooze (5)<br />

coolong! (7)<br />

13 Keep eye fixed on it w ith 21 In v en tiv e Judge raised<br />

us som ehow and do th e h at (7)<br />

sam e! (6,4)<br />

22 They show w ind strength<br />

16 E x p lo ite d la b o u r e r ’s in blow s (5)<br />

function — shore devel­ 23 W ithout guts — and w ithopm<br />

ent (9)<br />

out a w inner! (5)<br />

17 H orses sen t off w ill m ake 25 B it of crest on m onkey’s<br />

false discovery (5-4)<br />

head (4)<br />

Revel in Rio: Our contest could take you <strong>the</strong>re<br />

& EXPRESS OFFERS &<br />

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Sroduct for five years. The ideal kitchen Implement for<br />

lose of us who have weak wrists. Pickle Jars, Jam, coffee<br />

Jars, sauce bottles—you name It <strong>the</strong> “Maci-Twist ■ will open<br />

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“Magi-Twlst” Is 8" x 3 ............................... Vi" (widest point) and £4.95 * inclusive of<br />

postage. , „ u<br />

Y o u s h o u ld r e c e iv e y o u r o r d e r w i t h i n 2 1 d a y s f r o m t h e t i m e y o u r p a y m e n t h a s b e e n<br />

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O r d e r s a n d q u e r ie s to :<br />

DAILY EXPRESS “MAGI-TWIST” OFFER P.O. BOX 225,<br />

CUTLERS ROAD, SOUTH WOODHAM FERRERS,<br />

CHELMSFORD, ESSEX, CM3 5XT.<br />

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( in c l u d in g N o r t h e r n I r e l a n d ) -<br />

r - ------------------------------------- 1<br />

■ Please send me.________..“Magi-Twist(s)” at £4.95 each, j<br />

11 enclose my cheque (address on back) orcrossed postal |<br />

I orders for £------------------ made payable to DAIL<br />

! EXPRESS “MAGI-TWIST” OFFER and send to P.O. Box<br />

> 225, Cutlers Road, South Woodham Ferrers, Chelmsford,<br />

I Essex, CM3 5XT.<br />

I<br />

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I S e a . L o n d o n 1 4 1 7 4 1 V A T N o . 2 4 3 5712 72 R e g . O ffic e : E x p r e s s N e w s p a p e r s p i c . ,<br />

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m


DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 27<br />

And we’re working on <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r one.<br />

1 9<br />

Last Autumn, 90% of <strong>the</strong> payphones<br />

in Britain worked.<br />

Today, over 95% are working (96.5% to<br />

be exact). Yet we’re still not satisfied.<br />

We’ll continue to install new pay­<br />

phones at <strong>the</strong> rate of 400 a month. (There<br />

are currently 86,000 all over Britain.)<br />

We’ll be making more and more<br />

phones tough enough to beat <strong>the</strong> vandals.<br />

And we’ll be improving <strong>the</strong> ability of<br />

our payphones to automatically tell us when<br />

<strong>the</strong>y are full or out of order.<br />

Of course, this is only one of <strong>the</strong> areas<br />

in which we are improving our service to you.<br />

British<br />

TELECOM _<br />

It’s you we answer to<br />

For example, our engineers will now<br />

specify whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong>y will call in <strong>the</strong> morning<br />

or afternoon, so you don’t have to wait in<br />

all day.<br />

We won’t be totally happy with our<br />

service until you are.<br />

So you can be sure we’re giving it 100%.


28 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

by Marjorie Orr<br />

YOUR STARS TODAY, PLUS<br />

PHONE-IN HOROSCOPE LINE<br />

Calls cost 38p peak/standard and<br />

25p cheap rate per minute<br />

IF IT'S YOUR BIRTHDAY TODAY:<br />

Your year ahead will find you veering from extreme to<br />

extreme, wanting to be helpful <strong>the</strong>n wanting to<br />

fea<strong>the</strong>r your own nest. Career changes will keep you<br />

awake but emotionally you feel calmer.<br />

ARIES (March 21 ■ April 2 0 ) Starcall:<br />

0 8 9 8 30 0 4 4 4 .<br />

Discussions about career and cash find you a<br />

touch neurotic, as if you couldn't actually make up<br />

your mind what you wanted. Try to let <strong>the</strong> confusion<br />

clear before you commit yourself. Common sense is<br />

on hand to guide you.<br />

TAURUS (April 21 - May 2 0 ) Starcall:<br />

0 8 9 8 3 0 0 4 4 5 .<br />

Slow and stubborn you may be but your wits<br />

are sharp enough when it suits you. Today you are<br />

having to clarify a few of your ideas and outlooks but<br />

ultimately you win <strong>the</strong> day in major discussions<br />

T 7 I GEMINI (May 21 - J u n e 2 1 ) Starcall: 0 8 9 8<br />

3 0 0 3 3 4 .<br />

Nothing is above board and straightforward at<br />

<strong>the</strong> moment and you will have to live with that fact.<br />

Stick to close confidantes to unburden your thoughts<br />

about joint finances, work and emotional life. You<br />

cannot afford to antagonise too many people<br />

CANCER (June 2 2 - July 2 3 ) Starcall:<br />

0 8 9 8 3 0 0 3 3 5 .<br />

Team mates and friends are giving you all <strong>the</strong><br />

stability and intellectual stimulus that close relation-<br />

ships are not offering. Try to talk through partnership<br />

difficulties. It is not easy since both your outlooks<br />

tend to change from moment to moment.<br />

~ T | LEO (July 2 4 - A ugust 2 3 ) Starcall: 0 8 9 8<br />

3 0 0 3 3 6 .<br />

— Your sharp wits are working overtime on job<br />

situations at present. You may feel undermined and<br />

gloomy but that does not mean you should hot persevere<br />

with discussions and negotiations which will fur<strong>the</strong>r<br />

your cause.<br />

VIRGO (A ugust 2 4 - S ep tem b er 2 3 ) Starcall:<br />

0 8 9 8 30 0 33 7 .<br />

You are in danger of forcing <strong>the</strong> pace in discussions<br />

now and you may even be totally unaware of<br />

<strong>the</strong> vehemence with which you are expressing yourself.<br />

So smile a little more and be tighter hearted.<br />

Today your emotions are unsettled.<br />

LIBRA (S ep tem b er 2 4 - O ctober 2 2 ) Starcall:<br />

0 8 9 8 3 0 0 3 3 8 .<br />

You are pulling no punches at present whien<br />

facing up to extremely tricky situations. Truth be told<br />

you are delving into situations way out of your normal<br />

territory but it is right and proper that you should.<br />

SCORPIO (O ctober 2 3 , - N ovem ber 2 2 )<br />

Starcall: 0 8 9 8 3 0 0 3 4 0 .<br />

Close partners really do need to understand<br />

just how dissatisfied you really are with yourself and<br />

life in general. Your perpetual mood swings are not.<br />

just arbitrary but a genuine difficulty in. settling to a<br />

conclusion. Try to be flexible though. ^<br />

SAGITTARIUS (N ovem ber 2 3 } D ecem b er<br />

2 2 ) Starcall: 089.8 3 0 0 3 4 1 . J<br />

Your nit picking, fairly critical approach to life at<br />

present may well not be going down jto Well with<br />

workmates. Today, <strong>the</strong>y take exception to your contradictory<br />

approach to finances. You need to be<br />

aware of your motivation.<br />

CAPRICORN (D ecem ber 2 3 - January 2 0 )<br />

Starcall: 0 8 9 8 3 0 0 3 4 2 .<br />

You start <strong>the</strong> day vague but go on to take a<br />

more constructive view. Your ability to state your<br />

case with flair is helping you entertain, if not educate,<br />

your social companions. You need to be aware of<br />

how resentful you feel about a particular friendship.<br />

AQUARIUS (January 21 - February 19)<br />

Starcall: 0 8 9 8 3 0 0 3 4 3 .<br />

Home, emotional and domestic matters are<br />

gaining your full attention now though you are still<br />

desperately confused about what you really want.<br />

The main thing is not to be pushed around ei<strong>the</strong>r by<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r people's jealousy or by your own sense of<br />

powerlessness.<br />

PISCES (February 2 0 - March 2 0 ) Starcall:<br />

0 8 9 8 3 0 0 4 4 3 .<br />

Busy as bee, chattering like a canary, you are<br />

unlikely to settle easily to routines now. You want to<br />

thrash out major areas of concern in group efforts and<br />

also sort out your future. Close companions are being<br />

more difficult than <strong>the</strong>y need be.<br />

YOUR SOCIAL LIFELINE<br />

_A_ GETTING on with people can make all <strong>the</strong>,difference to your life, at<br />

home, at work, in following outside interests. Advice from Marjorie<br />

Orr on how to enjoy personal relationships is just a phone call away. All<br />

<strong>the</strong> numbers are 0 8 9 8 300. For example, for Leo call 08 9 8 3 0 0 484;<br />

Virgo 0898 3 0 0 485 etc. Calls are charged at 25p for one minute<br />

{cheap rate} and 38p for one minute at o<strong>the</strong>r times {including VAT}.<br />

LEO.................... 48 4 AQUARIUS...............................490<br />

----------------<br />

VIRGO......................... 485<br />

LIBRA................................ ......4 8 6<br />

SCORPIO...................................487<br />

SAGITTARIUS......................... 488<br />

CAPRICORN...' ............ 489<br />

PISCES ................... .491<br />

ARIES............................. 492<br />

TAURUS................................... 493<br />

GEMINI...................................... 49 4<br />

CANCER.:.; y. .,..,.4 9 5 .<br />

BEFORE and after <strong>the</strong> war,<br />

food prices were m aintained by<br />

<strong>the</strong> little corner shopkeepers<br />

who were satisfied with a regular<br />

weekly wage. Today, food<br />

prices are controlled by shareholders<br />

of large chain stores,<br />

who dem and a bigger and bigger<br />

slice of <strong>the</strong> cake. .<br />

The threat goes down <strong>the</strong> line<br />

“More sales, or else” and <strong>the</strong><br />

poor m anager is at his wits’ end.<br />

He has n o , m ore custom ers<br />

than last week, he cannot drag<br />

<strong>the</strong>m into his store, so, to show<br />

an increase on his last week’s<br />

figures, he is left with only one<br />

alternative — to reprice his<br />

existing stock to m ake m ore<br />

profit. This happens at very regular<br />

intervals and prices soon<br />

rise beyond th e rate of inflation.<br />

The only answer, is <strong>the</strong> re-introduction<br />

of Retail Price Maintenance,<br />

and punishm ent for non-<br />

compliance.<br />

H. Dallas<br />

Wigginton, York<br />

Cheque out<br />

THE £50 cheque card guarantee<br />

lim it is becom ing obsolete w ith<br />

th e appearance of Debit Cards.<br />

These cards, like cheques,<br />

transfer funds from your current<br />

bank account and have no<br />

limit.<br />

Barclays Connect arid Lloyds<br />

paym ent cards are accepted by<br />

alm ost all Visa outlets, while<br />

<strong>the</strong> switch cards . NatW est and<br />

M idland can be used at retailers<br />

with electronic term inals like<br />

those used for credit cards.<br />

Ian WiHiams,<br />

Amersham, Bucks.<br />

Small Crossword<br />

ACROSS:<br />

1 O<strong>the</strong>rwise (4).<br />

5 Scots, perhaps (5)<br />

10 Haymaker’s im plement<br />

(9)<br />

11 Declare positively (4)<br />

12 German forename (4)<br />

13 Feeling of disgust (9)<br />

14 Made tea (6)<br />

17 Choose (3)<br />

18 Command (5)<br />

19 Against (4)<br />

20 Placing apart (9)<br />

23 Cooking tat (4)<br />

24 Go and get (5)<br />

25 Fills with dread (4).<br />

26 Property of value (5)<br />

DOWN:<br />

2 A vital organ (5)<br />

3 Dock worker (9)<br />

4 Unbleached linen (4)<br />

5 Nasty disease (7)<br />

6 Newts (4)<br />

245 Blatkfriars Road, London, SE1 9UX<br />

in store over pricing<br />

Let Rushdie<br />

foot <strong>the</strong> bill<br />

I DO n ot agree w ith th e<br />

am ount o f m oney it is costing<br />

to safeguard Salm an<br />

R ushdie.<br />

I b elieve that th e m oney<br />

he is m aking out.of h is book<br />

should b e u sed to stand <strong>the</strong><br />

b ill!<br />

Robert Clayton,<br />

Scunthorpe, Humberside<br />

Little Englanders<br />

I AM a 20-year-old Germ an student<br />

on holiday in England.<br />

I have been watching television<br />

news, and.am full of consternation<br />

because th e English<br />

m edia pay so little attention to<br />

neighbouring countries’ political<br />

and cultural development.<br />

The extent to which English<br />

people are inform ed about daily<br />

life in E urope is highly unsatisfactory<br />

and insufficient.<br />

The intellectual horizon of<br />

English people should n o t end<br />

w ith news about <strong>the</strong> Royal Fam ­<br />

ily and union wars. Michael Schuster,<br />

Bayreuth, West Germany.<br />

A grain drain<br />

WHY IS it, th at with so many<br />

people starving in th e world,<br />

good food th a t we produce in<br />

this country is fed to cattle in<br />

order th a t we may eat meat. Ten<br />

7 Liquid cosmetic (6)<br />

8 Assembled company (5)<br />

9 Very close-fitting (4-5)<br />

10 Partly cook, in w ater<br />

O)<br />

15 Joins In m etal (5)<br />

16 F ruit from palm (5)<br />

21 Cutting tool (3)<br />

22 Of It (3)<br />

YESTERDAY’S SOLU­<br />

TION:<br />

ACROSS: 1 Flashbulb, 9<br />

Iona, 10 Knee, 11 Tactician,<br />

13 E<strong>the</strong>r, 14 Lord, 15 Thousands,<br />

17 Retrial, 21 Nos, 22<br />

Pois, 23 Imperfect, 24 Celery,<br />

25 Dee<br />

DOWN: 1 Pit, 2 Loathsome,<br />

3 Anchors, 4 Sate, 5 Hairs, 6<br />

Unionised, 7 Lear, 8 Bends,<br />

12 Clarify, 13 Ethnic, 16<br />

Dance, 18 Epee,- 19 Tor, 20<br />

Lute<br />

Rupert and <strong>the</strong> Golden Acorn — 14<br />

“As <strong>the</strong> boy was carried off he<br />

threw..." Rupert begins. But<br />

<strong>the</strong> girl is. not listening. “Wait<br />

here!" she orders him. “Do not<br />

stir until I return." With that she<br />

turns and hurries away through<br />

<strong>the</strong> trees. When she returns not<br />

many minutes later she is leading<br />

a big woodman by <strong>the</strong><br />

hand. “My fa<strong>the</strong>r would hear<br />

your tale," she says. ‘Tell him<br />

all.” So once again Rupert has<br />

to describe how he met <strong>the</strong> boy<br />

who was hiding in a cave and<br />

what happened to him.<br />

All rights reserved.<br />

Satanic bills: Salman Rushdie<br />

pounds w orth of grain will only<br />

produce one pound of meat.<br />

There would be enough food to<br />

feed <strong>the</strong> world three tim es over<br />

if we stopped giving our food to<br />

anim als.<br />

Not only is it cruel to breed<br />

anim als ju st for food, but eating<br />

too m uch m eat can m ake you<br />

overweight, raise your blood<br />

pressure and generally keep you<br />

unhealthy.<br />

Miss A. Thomson,<br />

Erith, Kent<br />

In poor health<br />

I RECENTLY had occasion to<br />

be referred to a hospital by my<br />

GP for a series of blood tests to<br />

be carried out under th e NHS.<br />

H e told m e th at w hen th e<br />

reform s come tests like this<br />

would not be possible as he<br />

could not afford <strong>the</strong>m out of his<br />

proposed budget of £60 per<br />

patient: So m uch for <strong>the</strong> NHS<br />

“being safe in our hands.”<br />

L. W. Hill,<br />

Upminster, Essex.<br />

16 1 /7<br />

R u p e rt fans can o b ta in a p e rfe ct re p ro d u c tio n o f th e 1937 A n n u a l fo r £7.90. Send cheque/postal<br />

o rd e r m ade pa yable to Express Newspapers pic, to : R u p e rt O ffer; P.O. B o x 7, M anchester M 19 2HD.<br />

C alvin and H obbes b y bhi w a tterso n .<br />

Wofcl, SUSIE GOT SENT 10<br />

TWEUEftDMRSTEKS OFFICE/<br />

SUES IK TROUBLE NON,<br />

M i. RiGHT.1<br />

* whemw* r sure was<br />

LUCKS BLAMED<br />

SUSIE TOR DIERflHlNG.<br />

W K BRENS.<br />

e g ©<br />

-aj’ o •!*"’<br />

OH,NO.' WHAT HF SUSIE<br />

RATS ON ME? SUPPOSE<br />

THEM MAKE HER S\N&.'<br />

SUPPOSE SHE SQUEMS/<br />

SUPPOSE. SHE FINGERS ME<br />

W \ |<br />

Don’t! miss thfe: Gambols oo Page 34:<br />

oh. i ’ia x^<br />

RELIEVED.<br />

I WAS<br />

fmiD'foO<br />

WOULDN'T<br />

BELIEVE ME.<br />

Ott,1ES, WHE<br />

SOT QU\TE A.<br />

FILE ON OUR<br />

FRIEND CALVIN.<br />

The image of<br />

Russia with<br />

love is folly<br />

AS someone who grew up and<br />

studied in an E astern Bloc<br />

country, I would like to reply to<br />

M r R. Bardsley’s letter in <strong>the</strong><br />

Express.<br />

Prom my experiences of <strong>the</strong><br />

1956 uprising in Budapest, H ungary,<br />

I believe Mr Bardsley and<br />

<strong>the</strong> Queen will be making <strong>the</strong><br />

deadliest m istake if <strong>the</strong>y decide<br />

to love th e Russians.<br />

Russia is using th e W est to<br />

pacify th e starving, uprising<br />

nations under its suppression.<br />

And when this use is over, it will<br />

tie a rope around th e W est’s<br />

neck and hang it high.<br />

Mr Bardsley has been free all<br />

his life in this beautiful and<br />

lovely country, so he can be forgiven<br />

for his naivety in believing<br />

every pleasant sm ile of perestroika.<br />

B ut people like m e who<br />

rem em ber all th e horrors of<br />

Com munism will never forgive<br />

its torture, killing and torm ent.<br />

Mrs Yutka Wild,<br />

Red car, Cleveland.<br />

Breadline B&B ?<br />

SEEING as this Governm ent,<br />

doesn’t give senior citizens any<br />

spare money tor holidays, it is<br />

difficult for u s to pay £8-£12 each<br />

for bed and breakfast.<br />

My husband and I have relatives<br />

and friends we would love<br />

to visit who cannot accommodate<br />

us overnight.<br />

We d o n ’t requ ire h ea te d<br />

room s or baths and we can even<br />

take our own soap. Surely it is<br />

possible to provide a room for<br />

£5 per night? W hat do guest .<br />

house owners think of cut-rate<br />

charges and how many o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

pensioners would take advantage<br />

and fill em pty rooms?<br />

L E T T E R L IN E<br />

Mrs Joan Springer,<br />

Hertford, Herts.<br />

YOU can phone your views to<br />

<strong>the</strong> Daily Express on our 24-<br />

hour Letterline. Please lim it<br />

your comments to 150 words.<br />

Phone 01-928 7311.<br />

TARGET<br />

N 0 T<br />

M0 R<br />

C 1 G<br />

HOW m any w ords of<br />

four le tte rs o r n>ore<br />

can you m ake from th e<br />

le tte rs show n here? In<br />

m aking a word, each le tte<br />

r m ay be used once<br />

only. E ach w ord m u st<br />

contain th e large le tte r,<br />

and th e re m u st be at<br />

least one 10-letter w ord<br />

in th e list. No plurals;<br />

no - foreign words; no<br />

p ro p er nam es.<br />

TODAY’S TARGET: 19<br />

w ords, good; 24 w ords,<br />

very good; 30 words,,<br />

e x c e lle n t. S o lu tio n<br />

tom orrow .<br />

Y e ste rd a y ’s so lu tio n :<br />

A crobat ac to r aircraft<br />

aortic bo ric b rac t ca rat<br />

carob c a rro t c a rt coat<br />

cobra coif coir co rf crab<br />

craft crib cro ft fabric<br />

F A B R IC A T O R fa c ia<br />

fa c t fa c to r o rca o tic<br />

ta ro c to re to ric tric a r<br />

jtrocar; ^ : r i


E U R O P E ’S DRIVING F O R C E<br />

! : DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April' 18 1989f ‘ 29<br />

0 ° /o FIN A N C E .<br />

N O W O N D E R<br />

w i<br />

FIAT PANDA750L 0% over 12 3.9% (APR 7.58%) 5.9% (APR 11.46%)<br />

months over 24 months over 36 months<br />

Cash Price IA) £4,479.84 £4,479.84 £4,479.84<br />

Deposit Iminimum) 120%) £895.92 133.33%) £1,493.13 133.33%) £1,493.13<br />

Balance financed £3,583.92 £2,986.71 £2,986.71<br />

Interest % p.a.f. 10%) Nil 13.9%) £232:89 15.9%) £528.69<br />

Payable by equal 1121 £298.66 124) £134.15 136) £97.65<br />

monthly instalments<br />

Total credit price £4,479.84 £4,712.73 £5,008.53<br />

!!Si<br />

■W v Pandas d o n ’t stay in showrooms for long.<br />

They’re so full of character. They’re easy to keep. They w on't<br />

e a t up <strong>the</strong> fuel.<br />

They’re also pow ered by new Fully Integrated Robotised<br />

Engines. (And everyone knows FIRE engines are fast.)<br />

So if you’d like to give one a hom e, ask your d e a le r about<br />

0 % finance and <strong>the</strong>se o<strong>the</strong>r deals. I f<br />

I T ’ S M O R E F U N I N A P A N D A<br />

IAI MANUFACTURER'S LIST PWCE IN C LU D IN G VAT Q 15% 8. B220 FOR DELIVERY, NU<strong>MB</strong>ER PIATES A N D £100 FOR 12 M ON THS ROAD FUND LICENCE. THESE OFFERS ARE AVAILABLE O N AGREEMENTS AS OUTLINED ABOVE AND APPLY TO A ll NEW FIAT PANDAS PURCHASED A N D REGISTERED UP TO APRIL 30TH 1989,<br />

AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS (OFFER DOES N O T INCLUDE CHANNEL ISLANDS. FINANCE ARRANGED THROUGH FIAT FINANCE LTD. 12 CAIIHORPE ROAD, EDG6ASTON, BIRM IN GH AM B151QZ. IUCENCED CREDIT BROKERS). APPLICANTS MUST BE OVER 18 YEARS OF AGE, UK RESIDENTS AND ARE SUBJECTTO ACCEPTANCE.<br />

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION SEE YOURDEAIER, C AU FIAT IN FORMATION O N O I-8 97 0922, ORDIALTHEOPERATORANDASK FOR FREEPHONE FIAT. PANDA 1000S (MODEL S H O W N I FUEL C O N SU M PTIO N : URBAN CYCLE 44.8 M PG; CONSTANT 56 M P H ,61.4 M PG; CONSTANT 75 M P H .43 .5 M P G .<br />

' t : ', " 5 - . I ' « i L - » W, » ■-<br />

m


30 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

WWW&<br />

T here’s no feeling like <strong>the</strong> feeling you get<br />

w hen you first open <strong>the</strong> door to your new home.<br />

Treasure it. Savour it.<br />

Because if you haven’t sorted out <strong>the</strong> right<br />

m o rtg ag e, it co u ld be th e<br />

last good feeling you get<br />

for an awfully long time.<br />

However, if you come<br />

into any branch of Halifax<br />

Building Society you’ll find<br />

o u r Easy Start M ortgages<br />

will allow you to do m ore<br />

th an m erely exist in your<br />

new hom e.<br />

THE FIRST STEP MORTGAGE<br />

w ant to buy furniture, or carpets, or decoration,<br />

or even a nice housewarm ing Hi-Fi.<br />

O ur First Step Mortgage is a case in point.<br />

W hile m ost mortgages have to be repaid over a<br />

period of 25 years, First Step<br />

allows you up to 40 years.<br />

That means, naturally<br />

enough, that your m onthly<br />

outgoings are smaller.<br />

W hich leaves you w ith<br />

a little ex tra cash for th e<br />

odd meal out, or whatever.<br />

For fu rth e r details of<br />

this and all our o<strong>the</strong>r Easy<br />

They will allow you to live. W e recognise Start M ortgages, simply call into your nearest<br />

th a t young hom e buyers rarely have any extra Halifax branch. W e’ll lend you th e m oney to<br />

m oney just w hen <strong>the</strong>y need it m ost. buy a place of your own.<br />

Like, for exam ple, w hen <strong>the</strong>y W ith enough left over to enjoy it<br />

HALIFAX<br />

YOUR PROPERTY AND ASUITABLE ENDOWMENT POLICY OR PENSION PLAN ARRANGED BY THE SOCIETY ARE SECURITY FOR A LOAN. YOU MUST INVEST AN AMOUNT EQUALTO 5 % OF THE PURCHASE PRICE WITH THE SOCIETY. THE SOCIETY WILL TAKE A CHARGE OVER THIS ACCOUNT WHICH WILL BE RE-USED TO REDUCE THE MONTHLY REPAYMENTS<br />

OVER 3 YEARS. FOR WRITTEN DETAILS CONTACT YOUR LOCAL OFFICE OR WRITE TO HALIFAX BUILDING SOCIETY, TRINITY ROAD, HALIFAX, WEST YORKSHIRE HX1 2RG. REGULATED INTHE CONDUCT OF INVESTMENT BUSINESS BY S.I.B.


MARKET<br />

REPORT<br />

Oil giant<br />

Shell<br />

moving<br />

into <strong>the</strong><br />

fast lane<br />

By TIM BLACKSTONE "<br />

STOCKBROKERS UBS<br />

Phillips & Drew rolled<br />

out th e barrel for Shell<br />

yesterday and <strong>the</strong> rest of<br />

th e C ity’s oil analy sts<br />

joined <strong>the</strong> party.<br />

P & D raised its forecast<br />

of Shell’s net 1989<br />

earnings by a m assive<br />

£810 million to £3,95 billion,<br />

m aking a gain of £1<br />

billion on last year.<br />

Analyst Jerem y Eldon<br />

said: “Shell is firing on all<br />

fo u r cylinders for th e<br />

first tim e in 10 years. It is<br />

g ain in g fro m h ig h e r,<br />

crude prices and from<br />

big m argins on refining,<br />

as well. Chemical prices<br />

have continued to soar<br />

and its m etals business is<br />

booming.”<br />

Shell rose 6V4p to 393p<br />

and BP gained 3V4p to<br />

278p.<br />

Elsewhere, w ith no follow<br />

-th ro u g h o n W all<br />

S treet after Friday’s biggest<br />

rise for six m onths,<br />

th e FT-SE 100 Index<br />

closed only 1.1 up at<br />

2054.7.<br />

Plessey tum bled lOp on<br />

fears th at GEC/Slem ens<br />

may not raise <strong>the</strong>ir offer'<br />

enough to win — even if<br />

<strong>the</strong>y get <strong>the</strong> Monopolies<br />

go-ahead.<br />

LEISURE giant MECCA<br />

recovered 7p to 187p<br />

amid talk of joint ventures<br />

with U.S. casinos<br />

and health club group<br />

BALLY CORPORATION in<br />

America and Europe,<br />

Q u a r ry in g g ro u p<br />

Evered, w hich last week<br />

appointed Sir Peter P ark<br />

er as chairm an, rose 5p<br />

to 1234p after an 18 per<br />

cent rise to £30 million.<br />

Morgan Crucible gained<br />

5p to 257p after profits up<br />

by a third.<br />

H a n s o n c l o s e d<br />

unchanged at 183p after<br />

<strong>the</strong> £224 m illion sale to<br />

m anagem ent of its Alld-<br />

ers stores and duty-free<br />

shops. M ini-conglom er-<br />

ate Eagle T rust gained lp<br />

to 19%p after a takeover<br />

approach, believed to be'<br />

from its bosses.<br />

• Noel Hayes, a directo<br />

r of Kleinwort Benson<br />

Securities , was sacked<br />

y e s te rd a y . H e h ad ,<br />

according to <strong>the</strong> firm ,<br />

broken one of its dealing<br />

r u le s . H ay e s w as<br />

re c ru ite d fro m riv als<br />

C itic o rp S c rim g e o u r<br />

Vickers on a £300,000-<br />

plus salary package one<br />

year ago.<br />

WALL St<br />

REPORT<br />

TALK th at So<strong>the</strong>by’s Is<br />

on th e b lock b id up<br />

sh a re s in th e auctio n<br />

house on Wall Street yesterday.<br />

So<strong>the</strong>by shares up $4.50<br />

in heavy turnover last<br />

week, ju m p ed a n o th e r<br />

$2.75 to $34 yesterday.<br />

C adbury S chw eppes’<br />

American shares rose 50<br />

cents to $59.50 on a weekend<br />

report th a t General<br />

Cinema, which has an 18<br />

p e r ce n t sta k e, m ight<br />

seek control.<br />

The Dow Jones Industrial<br />

Index, up 41 points<br />

on Friday, rose 0.73 points<br />

to 2,337.79 The pound rose<br />

three quarters of a cent to<br />

$1.7135.<br />

SN d a il y EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 31<br />

Businessl GROUP FINANCIAL EDITOR LEITH McGRANDLE<br />

The profitable jewel<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Ratner crown<br />

The suggested 195p offer is hardly likely<br />

GERALD RATNER is enjoying his<br />

to win m any friends. Chairm an Alec Monk<br />

position as <strong>the</strong> world’s largest and<br />

m ost successful jeweller. Display­ By T rev o r<br />

callis it "derisory,” Budgen’s John Fletcher<br />

failed with a 217p a share bid in February<br />

ing a pair of earrings w hich sell for<br />

99p, he quipped: “A pair of gold earrings for W e b ste r<br />

1988.<br />

The m ost irritating aspect of <strong>the</strong> W ar­<br />

<strong>the</strong> price of a praw n sandwich. The sand­ CITY EDITOR<br />

burg half-bid is th e tem porary anonym ity<br />

wich will probably last longer.”<br />

of <strong>the</strong> bidders. Today will bring news of<br />

B ut R atner can afford to m ake jokes at<br />

W arburg’s M ercury Asset M anagement and.<br />

his own expense. H e revealed yesterday<br />

th a t his Ratners em pire, which includes H, shops to 1,500 in five to 10 years. Eventually Globe Investm ent T rust’s m em bership of<br />

Sam uel and Zales, boosted profits 63 per he will add ano<strong>the</strong>r leg to <strong>the</strong> business. th e consortium . Superm arket rival Asda is<br />

believed to be ready to pay m ore than £700<br />

cent to £86 million last year. The dividend A nalysts exp ect R a tn e rs to m ake m illion for 62 of Gateway’s larger stores.<br />

is up 50 per cent to 7.5p and <strong>the</strong> shares rose upw ards of £100 m illion th is year. The<br />

lp to 214p.<br />

shares look as cheap as <strong>the</strong> jewellery and<br />

Some of Gateway’s m anagem ent are<br />

R atner now has 24.3 per cent of <strong>the</strong> £2.16 do not reflect th e above-average growth<br />

rum oured to be backing <strong>the</strong> consortium .<br />

The position of Garry W eston, who is a 15<br />

billion jewellery m arket, w hich has dou­ prospects.<br />

bled in <strong>the</strong> last five years, and is going for 50<br />

N<br />

per cent shareholder through his Associ-.<br />

per cent of <strong>the</strong> UK m arket and 10 per cent<br />

EWS th a t bankers S.G W arburg are ated B ritish Foods, is far from clear.<br />

lining up a £ 1.7 billion consortium<br />

of <strong>the</strong> U.S. m arket, writes Gillian Bowditch. HORROR stories about higher inter­<br />

bid for B ritain’s th ird biggest super­<br />

The only dull spot in yesterday’s figuresr<br />

est rates seem out of place after<br />

m arket group, G atew ay, caused<br />

is SaUsburys, w hich he acquired along w ith<br />

yesterday’s news th at spending in<br />

relief and disappointm ent in <strong>the</strong> City yes­<br />

Zales from Next in November, Toge<strong>the</strong>r<br />

<strong>the</strong> shops was flat in M arch and<br />

<strong>the</strong>y m ade £5 million. B ut R atner says Salterday.<br />

sales for <strong>the</strong> first quarter were down 0.25 per<br />

isburys was in a worse state than he expec­<br />

Relief for investors th a t a possible 195p- cent on <strong>the</strong> last quarter of 1988.<br />

ted w ith a lack of stock and poor controls,<br />

a-share offer may be ju st a sighting shot Interest rates of 13 per cent appear to be<br />

w hich he is now remedying.<br />

w hich will allow <strong>the</strong>m to exit from <strong>the</strong> poor- biting hard enough and we could have a<br />

ly-performing shares at a profit was tem ­<br />

Jewellery is one of <strong>the</strong> few success sto-‘<br />

m ore com fortable ride to <strong>the</strong> M arch trade<br />

pered by <strong>the</strong> unsatisfactory m anner in<br />

ries on th e High Street. R atner says that<br />

figures a week tom orrow. The pound, which<br />

w hich <strong>the</strong> news was delivered.<br />

<strong>the</strong> interest rate squeeze has not affected<br />

was benefiting from signs th at American<br />

Around 2 per cent of Gateway changed rates have peaked, rose 1.7 cents to $1.7160<br />

his shops as only 4 per cent of his sales in hands on Friday when <strong>the</strong> shares jum ped last night.<br />

<strong>the</strong> UK are done on credit and <strong>the</strong> average 8p to 181p — <strong>the</strong>y were up a fur<strong>the</strong>r 3p to t The threat of interest rates rising to 14<br />

sale is ju st £20.<br />

184p yesterday and W arburg said it was per cent should recede until we see <strong>the</strong><br />

H e believes th a t th e UK m arket will con­ m aking its announcem ent because of <strong>the</strong> im pact of higher rates already in <strong>the</strong> pipetinue<br />

to grow for <strong>the</strong> next five years b u t has recent share activity. The Stock Exchange line. A m illion Halifax borrow ers are being<br />

turned his attentions to <strong>the</strong> U.S. w here he is probing buying ahead of <strong>the</strong> announce­ hit w ith a rise of 50 per cent in <strong>the</strong>ir home<br />

plans to expand his Sterling chain of 317 ment.<br />

loan paym ents this month.<br />

ADT’s £210m link<br />

SECURITY alarm s-to-<br />

car auctions group ADT<br />

is wiping out its debts<br />

and acquiring a new p artner.<br />

This follows <strong>the</strong> sale<br />

of a 22 p er cent stake in<br />

M ichael Ashcroft’s Ber-<br />

m uda-based group to <strong>the</strong><br />

Canadian company, Laid-<br />

law Transportation, for<br />

£210 million.<br />

L aid law — which is 48<br />

per cent owned by Canadian<br />

Pacific — is one of<br />

N orth America’s biggest<br />

w aste d isposal com panies<br />

and <strong>the</strong> biggest operator<br />

of school buses.<br />

ADT got close to Laid-<br />

By STEPHEN KAHN<br />

law w hen <strong>the</strong> Canadians<br />

bought its 28 p er cent<br />

interest in <strong>the</strong> Attwoods<br />

w aste disposal business<br />

for £69 m illion in January.<br />

The deal, announced by<br />

A sh c ro ft y e s te rd a y ,<br />

brings a powerful friend<br />

on to <strong>the</strong> ADT board in<br />

L aidlaw b o ss M ichael<br />

deG roote. I t continues<br />

A shcroft’s effort to sim ­<br />

plify th e s tru c tu re of<br />

ADT.<br />

P a r t of L a id la w ’s<br />

investm ent includes <strong>the</strong> 8<br />

per cent of ADT held by<br />

- <strong>the</strong> H enlys Group of Canada.<br />

C lo ser tie s betw een<br />

ADT and L aidlaw are<br />

expected. “Laidlaw, like<br />

ADT, is a m ajor player in<br />

<strong>the</strong> service m arkets and<br />

it is a natural association,”<br />

says Ashcroft.<br />

The Canadian com pany<br />

has pledged not to make<br />

changes in its ADT stake<br />

w ithout prior agreement.<br />

ADT’s shares closed up<br />

7p at 165p last night.<br />

Anita tops tycoon charts<br />

BODY SHOP creator Anita<br />

Roddick and Richard Branson,<br />

head of <strong>the</strong> Virgin<br />

record and airline business,<br />

are Britain’s favourite<br />

tycoons — <strong>the</strong> two people<br />

young business<br />

leaders most want to be<br />

like.<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r top-rated tycoons<br />

in a survey of 200 young<br />

business people by <strong>the</strong> Nat<br />

West/Young Entrepreneurs<br />

Network include billionaire<br />

Sir James Goldsmith and<br />

Lonrho chief Tiny Rowland. Rowland Roddick Goldsmith<br />

Getting <strong>the</strong>re<br />

with Trafalgar<br />

TRAFALGAR HOUSE boss Sir Nigel<br />

Broackes is determ ined to prove that<br />

private m oney reaches <strong>the</strong> p arts public<br />

sector finance can’t.<br />

After m issing out on <strong>the</strong> contract to<br />

build <strong>the</strong> Channel Tunnel, Trafalgar<br />

h a s p ro d u ced p la n s to m ake th e<br />

high-speed rail link to <strong>the</strong> tunnel comm<br />

ercially viable — even though environm<br />

ental concerns have added an<br />

extra £500 m illion to <strong>the</strong> bill.<br />

The com pany is looking at a joint<br />

venture w ith BR which would involve<br />

taking over lucrative K ent com m uter<br />

lines. Joint ow nership is being considered.<br />

BR says it could not justify using its<br />

own money to build <strong>the</strong> link until <strong>the</strong><br />

tu rn of th e century. T rafalg ar is<br />

looking for profits by <strong>the</strong> mid-1990s.<br />

Bond stays on<br />

Lonrho hook<br />

AUSSIE tycoon Alan Bond is nursing a<br />

nasty paper loss after finding no ready<br />

buyers for his 20.4 p er cent stake in<br />

Tiny Rowland’s LONRHO group.<br />

BOND CORPORATION, which put<br />

<strong>the</strong> stake up for auction over a m onth<br />

ago w ith a price tag of £380 million,<br />

announced last night th a t it is still willing<br />

to entertain oners. The shares cost<br />

Bond around 360p each — some 35p<br />

above Lonrho’s price in <strong>the</strong> stock m arket<br />

when <strong>the</strong> auction closed last night.<br />

Bond’s best hope is for Lonrho to<br />

agree to buy back half or two-thirds of<br />

<strong>the</strong> stake but, so far, Rowland has not<br />

been w arm to <strong>the</strong> idea. Meanwhile <strong>the</strong><br />

money tied up in <strong>the</strong> stake is equivalent<br />

to Bond Corporation’s value on <strong>the</strong><br />

stock m arket.<br />

BACK SUFFERER?<br />

MEDICAL PROBLEM?<br />

H e re 's som e c o m fo rt!<br />

Sprung to match individual body contours, regular OBAS orthopaedic<br />

beds have brought relief to a whole generation of back pain sufferers,<br />

Now <strong>the</strong>re's Medibed - <strong>the</strong> first electrically operated truly<br />

affordable answer, providing comfort for a wide<br />

range of medical conditions. Two beds for two<br />

specific problems. Each costing no more<br />

than any o<strong>the</strong>r good quality single or<br />

double 'standard' bed.OBAS are <strong>the</strong><br />

Orthopaedic Bedding Advisory Service.<br />

O ur surgical orthopaedic technicians and<br />

professionally qualified consultants have<br />

designed thousands of single and double<br />

beds based on <strong>the</strong> weight, shape, and<br />

medical history of individual customers.<br />

Medibed is <strong>the</strong> latest step in our quest for /uf;n,Rcn<br />

<strong>the</strong> widest possible relief from problems at <strong>the</strong><br />

affecting natural rest and sleep. boitom<br />

JML O f»<br />

Right<br />

iheOBASbed gives<br />

correct support for<br />

each partner, helps to<br />

bring (hem relaxation<br />

and jeliel tiom pain.<br />

Years of experience<br />

teli us that standard beds may not be right for every<br />

human body. If <strong>the</strong>y provide excellent support for<br />

someone of heavy build <strong>the</strong>y're almost unlikely to suit<br />

anyone lighter. And vice versa. Ei<strong>the</strong>r way, at least one<br />

partner may experience aches and pains.<br />

What's <strong>the</strong> answer?<br />

A bed from <strong>the</strong> Orthopaedic Bedding<br />

Advisory Service. A double bed with<br />

two entirely different types of<br />

springing to suit <strong>the</strong> needs of each<br />

partner exactly; to ease <strong>the</strong>m gently into<br />

<strong>the</strong> right positions to keep <strong>the</strong> spine relaxed and<br />

flexible; to help lift <strong>the</strong> pressure off,bones,<br />

muscles,tendons, nerve endings and joints.<br />

Stores<br />

chief<br />

sacks<br />

bankers<br />

S TO R EH O U SE b o ss<br />

Michael Julien bared his<br />

teeth yesterday, declared<br />

“enough is enough” and<br />

sacked his bankers BAR­<br />

CLAYS.<br />

Julien has transferred<br />

<strong>the</strong> £3 m illion Mo<strong>the</strong>rcare,<br />

H abitat and BhS<br />

account to MIDLAND<br />

BANK. This Is because<br />

Barclays subsidiary Barclays<br />

de Zoete Wedd is<br />

acting as an adviser to<br />

A m erican a rb itra g e u r<br />

Asher Edelm an, who has<br />

7.8 p er cent of Storehouse<br />

shares and has consiste<br />

n tly c ritic ised th e<br />

Storehouse management.<br />

T he fin al straw was<br />

E d e lm a n ’s a tta c k on<br />

S to re h o u se’s p ro p erty<br />

agreem ent w ith London<br />

& Edinburgh Trust, says<br />

Julien.<br />

He is also unhappy th at<br />

D en n is B o o k sh e ste r,<br />

Edelm an’s chosen successor<br />

for Julien should he<br />

ever gain control of Storehouse,<br />

has been working-<br />

out of BZW’s offices.<br />

Barclays said <strong>the</strong>re was<br />

no lack of loyalty on th eir<br />

p art and have prom ised<br />

Julien th a t <strong>the</strong>y would<br />

not finance a b id for<br />

Storehouse.<br />

MEDIBED<br />

Elevated at<br />

<strong>the</strong> lop<br />

Medibed can be adjusted to give comfort for<br />

<strong>the</strong> following conditions and o<strong>the</strong>rs which<br />

require raising <strong>the</strong> head or foot of <strong>the</strong> bed.<br />

•Varicose Veins *Chronic Bronchitis<br />

•Varicose Ulcers • Hiatus Hernia<br />

•Oedem a of legs •Asthma<br />

•Back Pain *Oesophagitis<br />

If you have any of <strong>the</strong> above conditions you<br />

must consult a doctor.<br />

The orthopaedic Medibed's unique design is<br />

based on widely accepted medical principals.<br />

Automatic raising and lowering of <strong>the</strong> top or<br />

bottom half of <strong>the</strong> mattress can be closely<br />

controlled electrically while in bed. This<br />

enables you to select <strong>the</strong> best position for<br />

easing <strong>the</strong> condition and providing <strong>the</strong><br />

greatest degree of comfort.<br />

Fingertip control is both safe and simple . And<br />

because <strong>the</strong> springing in <strong>the</strong> mattress supports<br />

your particular body contours, it relieves or<br />

prevents ano<strong>the</strong>r problem. Back pain.<br />

If you have a back problem or suffer from a<br />

medical condition contact OBAS now.<br />

For your colour brochure return coupon<br />

(no stamp required) to; OBAS, Dept DX18/4<br />

FREEPOST, OBAS House, London E3 4BR<br />

Now available in Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Ireland and Eire.<br />

To OBAS: I a m in te re ste d in k n o w in g m o r e i— 1<br />

_ _ a b o u t OBAS O rth o p a e d ic b e d s. I___I<br />

OBAS<br />

ORTHOPAEDIC<br />

ANDMEDIBEDS<br />

N a m e (Mr, M rs, M s) -<br />

A d d re s s _____________<br />

M e d ib e d I 1<br />

I understand ihere is no obligation of any kind.<br />

BIOCK C API7AIS<br />

_ P o s tco d e -<br />

OBAS, Dept DX18/4 , FREEPOST, OBAS House, London E3 4BR


32 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

GOVERNMENT STOCK<br />

3Vz% Fund 99-04<br />

£5713/16 +7/16<br />

6% Fond 93<br />

£853/16 -1/8<br />

5% Treas 86-89<br />

£979/16 +3/16<br />

5%% Treas 08-12<br />

£653/4 + 5/i6<br />

6%% Treas 95-98<br />

£8111/16 + 3/ i 6<br />

8% Treas 02-06<br />

£875/8 +i/4<br />

m % Treas 87-90<br />

£961/4 +1/16<br />

8%% Treas 97<br />

£92 +7/16<br />

9% Treas 92-96<br />

£943/8 + 1/4<br />

9% Treas 94<br />

£9311/16 +1/4<br />

m Treas 99<br />

£967/8 + 7/l6<br />

12fe% Treas 93<br />

£1059/16 + 1/4<br />

13% Treas 90<br />

£1009/16<br />

13yk% Treas 97<br />

£ 1 1 4 ^ 6 + 3 /g<br />

UNDATED<br />

2V2% Consois<br />

£ 2 7 3 /4 + 3/g<br />

4% Consols<br />

£439/16 + S/16<br />

3%% Wartoan<br />

£383/4 + 3/s<br />

SHARES<br />

A B Elec 393 +2<br />

AAGId £40% - V 2<br />

AAH............... 389 +1<br />

Aaronson 111 -1<br />

Abbey Ufe 283 - 30<br />

AB Foods 335 +4<br />

Abbott Mead.-.284<br />

AB Ports...........581 +1<br />

ADT................. 165 +6<br />

Adwest............ 169<br />

Airtours............162<br />

Alliance............ 974 +4<br />

Allied Col 139-1/2<br />

Allied London...142<br />

AHIed-Lyons..... 437 - 2<br />

Allied Tex...;..... 377 +2<br />

AMEC..............428 +3<br />

Amersham....... 498 -5<br />

Amstrad-......... 145 - 7<br />

AngAm:___£12i/4 - 1/3<br />

Anglia A...........260 +1<br />

Ansbacher.........77<br />

Appleyard........ 182 + 11<br />

APV................. 150<br />

Aquasctum A....100 -2<br />

Argyll................185 +3<br />

Armstrong Eq.,.134<br />

Asda.................151 - 1/2<br />

Ashley L........... 107 + 1/2<br />

Ass Fish............171 - 9<br />

Ass Paper........240<br />

Avon................607<br />

BAA 351 +1<br />

Baird Wm......... 243 +1<br />

Bank Scotland....95<br />

Barclays........... 431 - 2<br />

Barrett.............. 191 +3<br />

Bass................ 896 +11<br />

BAT..................541 +1<br />

BBA................. 184 -1<br />

Beatson Cl.......355<br />

160<br />

193 +2<br />

Beecham......... 618 + 1/2<br />

Bellway............222<br />

Bemrose.......... 234 - 6<br />

Bentalls............203 -1<br />

Berisford..........156 +1<br />

BET................. 260 +1<br />

BHfcl.................134 + 1/2<br />

BH Prop.......... 360<br />

Bibby............... 159 - 2<br />

BICC................478 -1 2<br />

BiltonP.............491 -8<br />

Birm Mint......... 165<br />

Blacks............... 12<br />

Blackwood H..... 53<br />

Blue Arrow..........91 - V2<br />

Blue Circle........ 521 -1 5<br />

BoaseMassimi312 - 2<br />

BOC.................485 +2<br />

Boddington.......164 +1<br />

Bodycote....... 296+17<br />

Booker............. 437 -8<br />

Boots...............265 +3<br />

Borthwick.......... 40 +2<br />

Bougainville......125 - 2<br />

Bo water...........480 - 5<br />

Bowthorpe........193 +1<br />

BP................. 278 +3<br />

BPB............... 244 +1<br />

Brammer........ 258 - 9<br />

BrentChem....150<br />

Brent Walker....351 +1<br />

Bridon............ 188 -5<br />

Britannic........ 381<br />

Brit Air............196 -1<br />

Brit & Comm...205<br />

BritAero .....565 - 4<br />

BritArrow.......115 +1<br />

Brit Asset...........78<br />

BritDredging....160 -1<br />

BritGas;......... 175- 1/2<br />

Brit Inv............587 +1<br />

Brit Land........ 370 +6<br />

Brit Steel............8 2 - 1/4<br />

Brit Tel........... 273 - 2<br />

Brit Vita.......... 247<br />

Brixton........... 382 +5<br />

Brown &T...... 230<br />

Brown Shipley..347<br />

Bryant............ 114<br />

BSG.................. 75<br />

BSR...................59-1/2<br />

BTR............... 360 +1<br />

Budgens........ 125 +1<br />

Bulmer........... 168 +1<br />

Bunzl................ 147 -1<br />

Burmah............ 554 +2<br />

Burton Grp........205 +1<br />

Cable &W........ 489 -1<br />

Cadbury Schw..345 +6<br />

Caledonia........ 370<br />

CalorGas.........384 +1<br />

Campari...........282<br />

Canning W........245 + 3<br />

Cantors............575<br />

Cap & County...390 - 2<br />

Cape Ind........... 181 -1<br />

Carlton C.'........855 +14<br />

Cater Allen.......403<br />

Cattles ..... 72<br />

Cen &Sher..........7<br />

Chambrln P.......228 +8<br />

ChannelT 165. -1<br />

Charter.............499 +2<br />

CharterfiaH 2 3 + 1/4<br />

Chas Barker....... 88 +2<br />

Chloride 46 - 2<br />

Christies Int.......891 +1<br />

Chrysalis......... 215<br />

Clark M............ 445 +2<br />

Clayfbrm...........313 +2<br />

Cfayhi<strong>the</strong>..........171<br />

Coalite .,..385+12<br />

Coates B.......... 310 +1<br />

Coats Vlyella.... 157<br />

Com Union.;..... 369 +1<br />

Concentric....... 297<br />

Connells........... 208 -7<br />

ConsGold....£13i/2 - 1/16<br />

Control Secs...... 69 +1<br />

Cookson...........297 +2<br />

Costain............ 318 -5<br />

Courtaulds........ 297 +2<br />

Courts............. 186<br />

CowieT........... 123<br />

Crest Nich........203<br />

CRH................. 180 +4<br />

Croda............... 199 +1<br />

Cullens ........45<br />

Com m odities • Foreign Exchange • Livestock<br />

COMMODITIES<br />

TIN: Suspended<br />

COPPER: £1857.50 down 27.00<br />

LEAD: £363.00 down 7.50<br />

ZINC: $1549.50 down 50.50<br />

GOLD: $385.00 down 2.25<br />

KRUGER: £225.50 down 2.50<br />

SILVER: 338.75p down 6.00<br />

RUBBER: 59.50p down 9.75<br />

SUGAR: $267.00 up 2.00<br />

LONDON FUTURES<br />

POTATOES: May £149.50, Nov<br />

£90.50, Feb £99.50. BARLEY:<br />

May £108.40, Sep £102.15, Nov<br />

£105.00. WHEAT: May E120.7C<br />

Jun £121.70, Sep £105.00.<br />

FOREIGN EXCHANGE<br />

£'S EFFECTIVE EXCHANGE<br />

RATE: 95.7 (1985 down 100)<br />

UNITED STATES DOLLAR:<br />

1.7150 down 1.7160<br />

GERMAN MARK: 3.1797 down<br />

3.1833<br />

AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: 2.1040<br />

down 2.1065<br />

JAPANESE YEN: 226.23 down<br />

226.53<br />

LIVESTOCK<br />

GREAT BRITAIN<br />

Cattle (pence per live kg) 118.16<br />

down 2.60<br />

Sheep (pence per kg) 248.20 up<br />

5.06<br />

Pigs (pence per kg) 86.53 up<br />

3.08<br />

ENGLAND & WALES<br />

Cattle: Numbers up 11.10 Price<br />

118.08 down 2.77<br />

Sheep: Numbers up 5.60 Price<br />

248.47 up 4,68<br />

Pigs: Numbers up 0.90 Price<br />

86.56 up 3.11<br />

FT SE 100 Share Index: 2054.7 up 1.1<br />

FT Industrial Ordinary Share Index: 1686.1 down 4.9<br />

LIFFE FT-SE 100 Futures Index (Mar): 209.9 up 0.5<br />

• Dealings end April 14 Pay Day April 24<br />

Express CityLines<br />

General market report................ ......... 0898 700 107<br />

Active shares................................. ........0898 700 108<br />

Popular shares ............ ............. 0898 700 109<br />

Mortgage Line....................................... 0898 400 650<br />

Daejan ...£101/4<br />

Daily Mail £591/2<br />

Dale Bee 130 -1<br />

Dalgety 350 +1<br />

Davies N 835 -5<br />

Davis G 176<br />

Davy Corp. 233 -1<br />

Dawson Int..'.....203<br />

De Beers 890 -21<br />

DeLaRue 332 +5<br />

Delta Group 308 -6<br />

Dencora ;..237<br />

Desoutter 327 +2<br />

Devenish 299 -5<br />

Dewhirst »..43 - Vz-<br />

Dixons 154 + 1/2<br />

Dobson Pk 97 +2<br />

Douglas RM.... 308<br />

Dowty 249 -3<br />

DRG................430 - 3<br />

DrieftnCon 579 -8<br />

Eleco............... 181 - 2<br />

Etectrocomps...191 - 3<br />

Elliott B 111 +1<br />

Elsburg..............47 -1<br />

Elswick.............. 17<br />

Empire 192 +1<br />

Eng Ch Clay 516 +4<br />

England J 80 +5<br />

Enterprise 528 +1<br />

Etam ..... 156<br />

Euro Tunnel 825 +10<br />

Evered 123 +5<br />

Expamet.... 191 +2<br />

FameilElec 148 -1<br />

Fenner 174 -1<br />

Ferranti 104 - 2<br />

FllGp.............. 245+10<br />

Fine Art 215<br />

Fisher A 92 +1<br />

Fisons 290 - 5<br />

Fitch Lovell......262 -1<br />

Fleming Merc...203 + 1/2<br />

Folkes............... 57<br />

Forign&C. 131<br />

Foseco 284 -1<br />

Frogmore -.515 +6<br />

Gateway 184 +3<br />

GEC 233 - 2<br />

G.E.I. Int 120 -2<br />

Calls 25p a min (cheap rate) 38p a min o<strong>the</strong>r time (incl VAT)<br />

Gen Acc..... ....953 -3 5<br />

Gent.......... .....71 -1<br />

Gerrard Natl . m -1<br />

Gestetner.... ?6fi +2<br />

GFSA........ £111/16<br />

GKN........... as/<br />

Glaxo......... £13% 1/ifi<br />

Gleeson..... 813 -10<br />

Globe........ 166 + 1<br />

Glynwed..... ,304 -2<br />

Goldberg.... .1/6 +2<br />

GPG.......... 43 + 1<br />

Grampian.... ,335<br />

Granada A.. ....3/1 - 3<br />

Grand Met... ....536 + 4<br />

GRE........... ....197 -1<br />

Greenall , m<br />

GtPort....... ,,37«<br />

Greene King .*?? + 1<br />

G.U.S. A, „ £10 '/8+ Vlfi<br />

Guinness.... ....442 - /<br />

Hall Eng......<br />

Hambros.... m<br />

Hambro Cw 45 -2<br />

Hammerson .856 - 9<br />

Hanson....... 183<br />

Hardanger... 680<br />

Harrison &C „ 18R - 1/2<br />

Hartwells.... 135<br />

Hawker S.... 645 + 7<br />

Hazlewood.. ?45 + 1<br />

Heath CE.... .455 + 1<br />

Hepworth.... ?74 + 1<br />

Hestair....... ?47 -1<br />

Hewden S... 143 -2<br />

Hickson...... ??8<br />

Higgs & Hill.. 379 -11<br />

Highland..... . . . m +3<br />

Hillsdown..... . .. m<br />

HKShang.... 4^<br />

Hogg Rob.... ..1?7<br />

Howden...... , 154 + 1<br />

Hunting Grp ,,114 + 1<br />

Ibstock....... ..1SH - 4<br />

Iceland....... _340<br />

ICI............. E119/is Vlfi<br />

Illingworth.... 14/ -1<br />

(Ml.............. -b<br />

Inchcape..... ,?49<br />

I Thomson....... 790<br />

Jacobs J............ 69 -1<br />

Jaguar..............299 -1<br />

J Finlay............ 108<br />

Johnson Clean.691 +8<br />

Johnson Firth 56<br />

Johnson Math.,399 +1<br />

Jones Ship.......133<br />

Kingfisher........ 280 +3<br />

King &Sh....;...-..133<br />

Kingfisher......... 80 +3<br />

Kteinwort......... 305 +5<br />

Kloof................ 515 -11<br />

Kwik Fit............105<br />

Kwik Save........412<br />

Kunick...............56<br />

Ladbroke.........533<br />

Laing A.............355 +2<br />

Laird................ 255 -8<br />

Lamont............ 270<br />

Land Secs........562 +1<br />

Laporte............ 434 + 1/2<br />

Lasmo..............436 +2<br />

LdnandMan....276 +1<br />

Lee Refrig...... 2 9 3 -1 0<br />

LeeA................163 - 3<br />

Legal & Gen.... .320<br />

LepGrp........... 170<br />

Lex...................363 -1<br />

Lister............... 136<br />

LOFs................. 76 +75<br />

Lloyds............ 354'<br />

London Int.......217<br />

London Mer.....112<br />

Lonrho.............325 - 4<br />

Lovell .......269 -2<br />

Low-Bonar.......238 +1<br />

Lowndes Harris..44 +1<br />

Lucas...............630<br />

M&G................305<br />

Magnet.............291 - 2<br />

MAI.................... 87 +1<br />

Marks&Sp....... 161 +2<br />

Martey.............. 161 - 2<br />

Marston..........198<br />

Mat<strong>the</strong>ws B 65+1/2<br />

Maxwell Com...198 -7<br />

<strong>MB</strong> Group........269<br />

McAlpine..........358 +3<br />

McCrthy-Stone.348 +1<br />

McKechnie.......313 -5<br />

Mecca...............172 +6<br />

Menzies............335 +1<br />

MEPC............... 552 -1<br />

Metal Closures.198 - 2<br />

Meyer............... 438 +2<br />

Midland........... 444<br />

MIM...................79<br />

Molins............. 225<br />

Morgan Cr........ 256 +4<br />

Morg Grenfell...279 + 3<br />

Mountleigh.......161<br />

Mowiem....410 -1 3<br />

MS int...............140 +1<br />

Mt Charlotte.....174<br />

MY Holdings......88<br />

Myson............. 166<br />

Nat West..........576<br />

Neepsend...........52 -1<br />

NEI..................130 + 1/2<br />

NFC.................. 231 -1<br />

Neill J ................259 - 3<br />

Newarthill........ £20<br />

News Int............ 311 +2<br />

Next..................154 +2<br />

Norcros.............318 -1<br />

NorfolkCap........ 39 +1<br />

North Foods..... 294 +1<br />

Nurdin............. 178<br />

Ocean...............297 - 6<br />

Office & Elec......122 -1<br />

Oxford Inst.......211<br />

P&O ................ 655 +3<br />

P & P ...............223<br />

Paterson Zoch.312 -1<br />

Pearl................3 9 3 -1 5<br />

Pearson............ 708 - 8<br />

Peel.................293<br />

Pentiand Ind...... 94<br />

Pentos.............. 104 +1<br />

Perry H............ 229<br />

Persimmon........166 +1<br />

Petrocon........... 77<br />

Phillips £1015/i 6 + '716<br />

Pilklngton..........242 +2<br />

Plessey 257 -1 0<br />

Poly Peck..........314 - 4<br />

PortaBs............;.299 -5<br />

Powell Duff......377<br />

Premier.......93 + 1/2<br />

ProvFln...........320<br />

Pru.............. +2 Sedgewick.... 231 + 3 Turriff ...... 338 Aspen Comm...575 -5<br />

Queens Mt<br />

Racai.^........<br />

Rank Org......<br />

123<br />

+9<br />

+2<br />

S.E.ET.......... 1?1<br />

Senior Eng.... ,, 69<br />

Shell Trans.... 392<br />

-1<br />

+7<br />

TVAM............. 200<br />

Ultramar.... :..301<br />

UK Paper........214<br />

-1<br />

+5<br />

+4<br />

Asprey. 323<br />

Blenheim Exh... 875<br />

Borland Inti 81<br />

Ransomes Sim.454<br />

+ 1<br />

- 2<br />

Readicut 59<br />

Really Useful....622 +2<br />

Siebe............. 464<br />

Sime Darby.... ,109<br />

Simon Eng..... 376 -9<br />

600 Grp......... 118 -1<br />

Sketchley...... 4W + 2<br />

Unigate.......... .357 -1<br />

Uniiever............530 +2<br />

Union Disc...... 480 - 5<br />

Unitech........... 329<br />

Utd Biscuits.... 314 +2<br />

Broadwel!Land191<br />

Brookmount 530 +5<br />

Cityvision 150 +3<br />

CluffRes 77 +4<br />

Colorgen 19<br />

Reckitt&C.£11i/i6<br />

V16<br />

+ 5<br />

Reed Austin' 392<br />

+ 1<br />

+ 3<br />

Renold 85<br />

Rentokill ......294<br />

Rexmore 65<br />

RHM............<br />

RMC............<br />

Robeco........ +2<br />

Rockware 65<br />

+ 1<br />

+ 1<br />

+ 5<br />

+ 1<br />

Rotork......... -1<br />

Rover................ 95<br />

Royal........... - 1?<br />

-?<br />

+?<br />

Rugby....... + 1<br />

Runciman..<br />

Saatchi...... -1<br />

-1<br />

Sale Tilny........ 208<br />

Salvesen ir " -1<br />

Savoy ....a<br />

Scapa Group....279<br />

Scholes........... 227 +?<br />

Schroders........945<br />

Scot Met..........162<br />

ScotMort........ 121<br />

- 2<br />

-12<br />

Sears..<br />

+ 1<br />

+5<br />

Slebe............. 464<br />

Slough.......... 316 +2<br />

Smith D......... W / -2<br />

Smith &N....... 147 + 1<br />

Smith NC...... 1?7 -?<br />

Smiths Ind..... 306 - 3<br />

SmithWHA.... m + 1<br />

Spirax S........<br />

Spring Ram.... 758 - 5<br />

Stakis............ ,10?<br />

Standard Ch... -1<br />

Stavefy.......... ,177 -1<br />

S.T.C............. .305 -1<br />

Stead & Sim .£171/2<br />

Steetley........ .413 -7<br />

StModwin..... ..38<br />

Stocklake...... 780<br />

Storehouse.... 16?<br />

Stylo.............. ?75<br />

Sn Allianc.£1013/i6 - Vo<br />

Sun Life......... wno +2<br />

Sycamore...... ..40 +2<br />

T & N ..... ....... m - 6<br />

Tarmac......... 3ft? +3<br />

Tate&L......... m + 1<br />

Taylor Wood... m6 - 7<br />

Tesco............ .165 + 1<br />

Thames......... 441 + 1<br />

THF............... .284 -1<br />

Thorn EMI....,. .686 -1<br />

Ti.................. .431 +2<br />

Time Prod...... .232 + 1<br />

Tomkins....... ...38 +3<br />

Tootal............ 1?9<br />

Tozer Kemsfey.119<br />

Tratal House- .372 -1<br />

Transport Dev.. 248<br />

Trinity Int.,...... ?na<br />

Triplex Uoyd... 17?<br />

TSB............... 108 -1<br />

TSW.............. 77<br />

Utd News......429' - 3<br />

Vaal Reef £493/8 - 7/8<br />

VauxGroup.... 282 +3<br />

Vickers............ 180 -1<br />

Vinten............. 175<br />

Volex.............. 420<br />

VSEU............ 500 +1<br />

Vspr Thmycrft.,248 +1<br />

Waddington 198<br />

Wagon hid........360<br />

Ward White 272 +1<br />

Warburg 315 +2<br />

Weir. ...288 - 2<br />

Wellcome 481 - 7<br />

Wellman 48 + 1/2<br />

Westind .143<br />

Whessoe.a .144 -1<br />

Whitbread 342 +2<br />

Williams H!ds....261 -1<br />

Willis Faber 225 -7<br />

Wilson Con 177 +1<br />

Wimpy 272 - 2<br />

Wintrust... 458<br />

Wrtan ........133 +1<br />

W Mining 232<br />

Wolseley 277 - 3<br />

Wolstenholme..455 - 3<br />

Kingfisher 280 +3<br />

Yale & Valor. 330 +6<br />

YorksChem.353 -+3<br />

Yorks TV 274 +3<br />

Youghal 18<br />

YuleCatto 126 +1<br />

Zettersr. ....165<br />

USM<br />

Acsis ..... 60<br />

Am Business S.128<br />

Applied Hoiog...308 +3<br />

ASD................. 141<br />

Ashtead Gp 280 + 2<br />

Colorvision 200<br />

Cook%DC%....185<br />

Crown Comm...247<br />

Dewey Warren.116<br />

EJdridge Pope...208<br />

Fields 14Mrs%....32<br />

Ford SellarM.,..110 +4<br />

Fuller Smith 440<br />

Hawthorn Les 59<br />

Highland Part. ...257<br />

HodgsnsHldgsl67 -1<br />

Hughes Food .43 -1<br />

Inoco 34 + V2<br />

Interlink Exp 283<br />

Lon Forfeit 128 +3<br />

Marina Dev.......455 + 5<br />

Menvier-Swain.345<br />

Misys.............. 404 +2<br />

Monument Oil 24+ 1/4<br />

MowatGp 48 +1<br />

Norfolk Hse 188<br />

Nth Sea Gen 44 +1<br />

Parkway Gp 257<br />

pepe Gp...........355<br />

Perkins Food 93<br />

Psion............... 178<br />

Randsworth 273 +1<br />

RKFGp. 125 -1<br />

Savage Gp 187<br />

Select App 142<br />

Serif Cowells ....166<br />

Sherwood Gp..%365<br />

Sims Food Gpi.238<br />

Sthn Business..471<br />

Spandex ....415<br />

Stanhope 226 -1<br />

Trencherwood.,338 +5<br />

Triton...., 51<br />

Utd Friendly 780 + 72<br />

YorkTrustGp.....51 +3<br />

Zurich Gp 35 +3<br />

This is an indication of <strong>the</strong> rates<br />

available from banks in Britain:-<br />

AUSTRIA 21.90 schillings<br />

BELGIUM 65.70 francs<br />

CANADA ....... C$ 2.005<br />

DENMARK 12.21 krone<br />

EIRE............... 1.175 I punt<br />

FRANCE 10.57 francs<br />

W.GERMANY... 3.12 D-marks<br />

GREECE 264.00 drachma<br />

HOLLAND ..... 3.52 guilders<br />

ITALY............... 2290.00 lire<br />

JAPAN.............. 224.00 yen<br />

M O N EY & LO AN S M O N EY & LO AN S<br />

The Backford breakthrough in<br />

I borrowing-power from Banks, Building<br />

. Societies and Major Finance Houses!<br />

£1.000 £100.000<br />

A cheque<br />

within day s,<br />

if you apply now.<br />

You can raise <strong>the</strong> money you need<br />

now - to clear existing debts, buy a<br />

car, or for any purpose whatsoever -<br />

simply by sending in <strong>the</strong> application<br />

form opposite.<br />

With no worries, because Backford<br />

only deal through banks, building<br />

societies and major Finance Houses<br />

All we need to give you immediate<br />

in-principle approval are 3 recent<br />

wage slips (or your anticipated gross<br />

annual earnings if you are self-<br />

employed), <strong>the</strong>n you can expect your<br />

cheque within days!<br />

Compare <strong>the</strong> low monthly<br />

repayments on <strong>the</strong> chart - <strong>the</strong>y can cut<br />

credit card, storecard and HP<br />

repayments by up to 50%.<br />

• no fees • Confidential - no employer<br />

contact • Optional sickness/accident/<br />

redundancy protection • self employed<br />

- no accounts needed up to £15,000<br />

LOOK AT THESE LOW MONTHLY REPAYMENTS<br />

£ 15 yean 10 years 7 years 5 years 3 years<br />

20,000<br />

17,500<br />

16,000<br />

266.89<br />

233.53<br />

213.50<br />

14.000 199.40<br />

12.000 170.91<br />

10,000 142.43<br />

8,000<br />

6,000<br />

5.000<br />

4.000<br />

3.000<br />

2.000<br />

125.39<br />

94.04<br />

78.37<br />

65.45<br />

49.09<br />

32.72<br />

311.01<br />

272.14<br />

248.82<br />

228.97<br />

196.26<br />

163.55<br />

141.07<br />

105.80<br />

86.17<br />

73.00<br />

54.75<br />

36.50<br />

375.24<br />

328.34<br />

300.20<br />

272.98<br />

233.98<br />

194.99<br />

165.34<br />

124.00<br />

103.34<br />

84.91<br />

63.68<br />

42.45<br />

465.78<br />

407.56<br />

372.62<br />

335.71<br />

287.74<br />

239.79<br />

200.54<br />

150.40<br />

125.34<br />

102.36<br />

76.77<br />

51.18<br />

-<br />

A.P.R.<br />

(Variable)<br />

M<br />

487.79<br />

418.10<br />

348.42 16.7,<br />

286.82<br />

215.11<br />

179.26 18&<br />

145.33<br />

108.99<br />

72.66 M<br />

All rates available over 2 0 yrs & 25 yrs.<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r amounts & loan periods available on request. Typical<br />

example: £5,000 over 36 mths - £179.26 per month.<br />

(Total repaid £6453.36 Typical APR 18.8%)<br />

loans secured on property.<br />

0800269795<br />

For fast action and friendly advice, call FREE ON<br />

NEW LOW START LOAN<br />

BORROW £6,000<br />

AND PAY ONLY<br />

£74.10 A MONTH<br />

Low Start j q a a.p.R.<br />

Interest Only 10.0% (Variable)<br />

£ 1-3 Years 4 years*<br />

4,000 49.40 64.56<br />

0,000 98.80 129.12<br />

12,000 148.20 193.69<br />

15,000 185.25 242.11<br />

20,000 247.00 322.82<br />

(We (We pay fort for <strong>the</strong> call — if <strong>the</strong> freephone line is busy, call 051 336 7777<br />

or our Answerphone on 051-3361208)<br />

Licensed Credit Broker. Written details on request.<br />

VESTMENTS LIMITED<br />

' \ r "m ■ ■■ 5 5tc TOWN LANE, LITTLE NESTON, SOUTH WIRRAL L64 4DE<br />

'acfiforcC*<br />

FirsUyre<br />

payments ate<br />

j%baow<br />

nofmat A.P.R.<br />

Equivalent<br />

l Payments Guaranteed not to<br />

go up lor 3 WHOLE YEARS!<br />

i Loan from 5 to 20 Years<br />

i Repay loan or change to <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

scheme at any time<br />

for any<br />

purpose!<br />

The to u ris t’s £ today<br />

MALTA £M 0.565<br />

NORWAY 11.41 krone<br />

PORTUGAL 256.00 escudos<br />

S.AFRICA 4.60 rand*<br />

SPAIN............... 193.00 pesetas<br />

SWEDEN 10.69 krona<br />

SWITZERLAND 2.755 francs<br />

TURKEY... 3200.00 lira<br />

U.S........... .... $ 1.695<br />

YUGOSLAVIA.. 12600.00dinars<br />

* Maximum 200 rand: commercial/cheques<br />

rate : 4.60<br />

I Fast approval ,<br />

APPLICATION FORM I<br />

PLEASE COMPLETE IN FULL<br />

LOAN REQUIRED £ _<br />

FULL NAME ;<br />

PARTNERS FULL NAME_<br />

FUILADDRESS _ _<br />

TELEPHONE NO (HOME)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .<br />

PREVIOUS ADDRESS (IF LESS THAN 3 YEARS) _<br />

EMPLOYERS NAME AND ADDRESS _<br />

OCCUPATION_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _<br />

PARTNERS OCCUPATION •<br />

PARTNERS EMPLOYERS NAME 4 A DDRESS.,<br />

LOAN □ LOW START LOAN □<br />

DATE O F BIRTH .<br />

O A T EO F8IR T H .<br />

. POST CODE _<br />

WORK____<br />

ftfA * ncxeox<br />

YEARS EMPLOYED.<br />

YEARS EMPLOYED.<br />

PBSESBIYQETAllS<br />

NAME OF MORTGAGE COMPANY _<br />

ADDRESS_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ '<br />

ACCOUNT NU<strong>MB</strong>ER.<br />

WHEN DID YOU PURCHASE YOUR HOUSE: MONTH_<br />

PURCHASE PRICE £ -<br />

CURRENT VALUE £ _ _ _ _ _ _<br />

AMOUNT BORROWED £ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :__<br />

BALANCE Ot/TSTANOING £ _<br />

PLEASE STATE MORTGAGE ARREARS £ HIGHEST ARREARS IN PAST YEAR £ _ __ _ _ Z<br />

NOTE: k is important that mcrigaga arrears (il any) art daariy at « • do chack wifi th* mortgag* company. I<br />

Ptaawarcfe No. at County Court Judgment NIL 1 2 3 4 ocmoca. I<br />

DID YOU BUY THE HOUSE AS A SITTING TENANT Y ES/N O J<br />

IF YES, HOW MUCH DISCOUNT DID YOU RECEIVE £ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ' I<br />

WHO OWNS THE PROPERTY SELF D WIFE □ JOINT □ O T H E R O P Ie aseT ick asap p ro p ria tel<br />

HAVE YOU A SECONO MORTGAGE YES / NO IF YES BALANCE OUTSTANDING £____ _ _ _ _<br />

IF YES COMPANY NAME ACCOUNT N O_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ■ I<br />

INCOME I<br />

YOUR INCOME BEFORE TAX PER WEEK £_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ■<br />

PARTNERS INCOME BEFORE TAX PER Week £ _<br />

OTHER INCOME £ _<br />

m w m<br />

MORTGAGE MONTHLY PAYMENT<br />

OTHER LOANS, HP, etc<br />

I id d f you intend to oav ftem off outof <strong>the</strong> loan □<br />

I /W E CONFIRMTHE ABOVE INFORMATION IS CORRECT IN ALL RESPECTS<br />

I /W E AUTHORISE YOU TO CONTACT OUR MORTGAGE COMPANY AND THE LAND REGISTRY<br />

IF MORTGAGE IN JOINT NAME ALL PERSONS MUST SIGN<br />

SIGNED ■ DATE_<br />

SIGNED_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE_<br />

For Immediate Attention —<br />

. ilips —No Stamp Requii<br />

Backford Investments’Ltc<br />

Freepost, LWe Neston<br />

South Wirral ta i L64 LOH W4AB D I % l l I f 1 1 ■ 1 w ----<br />

DX18/4<br />

Co<br />

DX 18/4 V J


DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 33<br />

SAFEWAY<br />

mwm flfiil<br />

v i<br />

•SsS&SSsS<br />

W&M.<br />

^ r n m r n m > m m<br />

x¥AS:?S?<br />

H i<br />

liwi? tm rnm m m m m M<br />

w&mw<br />

SAWSK<br />

mmss<br />

mmm<br />

$S&K&5£fc<br />

£|fiPi<br />

tt»|P<br />

®ltt|*<br />

|fpl§§|<br />

l l t l<br />

&&&#&&<br />

w A w a sv<br />

WKOK^tffefe syyy&«yS-$i<br />

usi$&m<br />

£:%?:•:•»:•&>:•:<br />

stxwsAs®<br />

U lt l<br />

3 * x &Vk iS:iiSS:S:*Si'<br />

mmm<br />

PRODUCE, MEAT, DELICATESSEN, BAKERY & DAIRY ITEMS VALID TO SATURDAY 22nd APRIL<br />

- ALL OTHER ITEMS VALID TO SA TURDAY 29th APRIL (WK 3)<br />

ITEMS REDUCED HAVE BEEN ON SALE AT THE HIGHER PRICKS<br />

IN AT LEAST 20 OF O U R 236 S'TORJES


34 DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

^ P r o p e r ty P lu s O versea s *<br />

TO PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT RING 01-353 3200 OR 353 8000 EXT. 3423<br />

VILLAS &TOWNHOUSES ON<br />

THE COSTA BLANCA<br />

• Cx>lt,Tennis&<br />

Warcr sporrs<br />

• Sea Views<br />

• Regular Inspection Flights<br />

• 24 hour Answering Service<br />

— EL PRESIDENTE — ,<br />

f r o m £ 1 9 , 9 0 0<br />

RING FOR DETAILS<br />

M M I PROPERTIES LTD<br />

01-676-9105 114 A n e r l e y P a r k , A n e r le y , L o n d o n S E 2 0 8 N U<br />

FUERTEVENTURA<br />

CANARY ISLANDS<br />

This is <strong>the</strong> last of <strong>the</strong> islands to be developed, but its potential is<br />

enormous. Miles of unspoilt golden beaches and a peaceful,<br />

relaxed atmosphere offer <strong>the</strong> potential investor <strong>the</strong> very best of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Canary Islands. As <strong>the</strong> major UK company based in<br />

Fuerteventura Sunshine Associates services include:<br />

* Full before and after sales service<br />

* Property management contract<br />

* Letting contracts arranged<br />

* Offices in Fuerteventura and UK<br />

* Holidays arranged<br />

For ft/rtfter details of land and property available, write or telephone:<br />

Sunshine Associates,<br />

Weston Green, Thames Ditton, Surrey KT7 0JP.<br />

Tel: 01-398 4746/7427<br />

VILLAS FROM £30,000<br />

SOUTH COSTA BLANCA!<br />

ALL REQUIREMENTS CATERED FOR IN THETORREVIEJA<br />

AREA FROM FRONT LINE APARTMENTS AND A WIDE RANGE<br />

OF PUEBLOS, TO LUXURY DETACHED VILLAS BORDERING<br />

THE PRESTIGIOUS VILLA MARTINGOLF COURSE.<br />

Prices sta rt a tE l 7,000<br />

PROPERTUNITIES OF ABINGDON IS A LONG ESTABLISHED<br />

AGENCY SPECIALISING IN PROBABLY THE<br />

WIDEST RANGE OF SUPERIOR, FREEHOLD<br />

PROPERTIES SOUTH OF ALICANTE.<br />

YOU’LL BE SPOILT FOR CHOICES<br />

Telephone or send for brochure:<br />

PROPERTONmES<br />

Dept DE 20/21 Market Place, Abingdon, Oxon 0X14 3HA.<br />

Tek 0235 554655 (24 hours) Agent for ATOL holders<br />

H O M E S O V E R S E A S<br />

E X H I B I T I O N<br />

A t th e<br />

NEW CONNAUGHT RO O M S<br />

E xhibition halls.G reat Q ueen Street,L ondon WC2<br />

A P R I L 2 8 t h - 3 0 t l i<br />

llu x i'S p m Friday .lla m -6 p m Saturday & Sunday<br />

Over 4 0 stand s offering property in SpaintPortugal,<br />

France.K enya.Florida.Turkey e tc ..<br />

H O M E S For *wo **e invitations and a latest issue of<br />

O V E R S E A S HomCS ° verseas m&g&zine send £1 to Dept.EXP<br />

EXHIBITION<br />

Homes Orerseas.387 City Road.London EC IV 1NA<br />

A D M I S S I O N F R E J E J<br />

UNIQUE INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY<br />

AT THE GATEWAY TO MONACO<br />

300m. from <strong>the</strong> Monaco border, and 1.5km. from th$ Sporting Club<br />

de Monte-Carlo. C ath erine M a m e t is building <strong>the</strong> VILLA MEDICIS<br />

AT BEAUSQLEIL W ith uninterrupted views across Monaco and <strong>the</strong><br />

sea, <strong>the</strong>se one bedroom apartments are for sale only on a 9 or 11<br />

year leaseback arrangement.<br />

6 designs of one bedroom apartments priced between 443,000 and<br />

650.000FF. These prices can be reduced by as much as 30%<br />

depending upon <strong>the</strong> leaseback arrangement chosen.<br />

Full details of <strong>the</strong>se and o<strong>the</strong>r developments along <strong>the</strong> Cote d'Azur<br />

a t Cannes, Antibes, Venice, Frejus and Cavalaire;<br />

CATHERINE MAMET,<br />

29a Union S treet Woodstock, Oxon 0X71JF.<br />

Telephone: 0993 812171. ______<br />

COSTA BLANCA<br />

QUALITY PROPERTIES & CAR HIRE<br />

VISIT OUR EXHIBITION A t:<br />

SUNDAY 23RD APRIL.<br />

11AM— 5PM THE CREST HOTEL,<br />

E X IT 11.M 1, LUTON<br />

AND ALSO AT:<br />

THE GREEN LAWNS<br />

HOTEL, FALMOUTH<br />

JAVEA MOR AIR A Ca LP£. ALT6A JALON,TORP£VI£JA<br />

_______Limited / I ■<br />

COSTlI<br />

20 locations Alicante Region<br />

Superb range properties<br />

£16000 - £200000+, new &<br />

resale, GolfTenius/Satellite<br />

SStationRoad<br />

His ton<br />

Tel 0223 23 2667 (24hrs)<br />

SEND FOR OUR 1 9 8 9 BROCHURE<br />

FOPDAC A<br />

E9TD 1976 ME<strong>MB</strong>ER ®<br />

35 Frtors Gordens, Hughenden Volley J<br />

High Wycombe- Tel: 02402 4 -4 4 4 4<br />

TV, Letteri<br />

Regular ins<br />

FREE LEGAL SERVICE.<br />

msdatt Qmttry Qub<br />

Rutland Water<br />

STAR holiday opportunity<br />

• C o n fe re n c e F a c ilitie s (free of charge to members)<br />

• Special Weekend Breaks Available<br />

S p o rts C lu b in clu d ed in m em b ersh ip o ffe rs :<br />

• Squash • Indoor swimming pool<br />

• Tennis •S p a pools<br />

• Bowls • Croquet lawns<br />

• Gymnasium • Miniature golf<br />

• Fly-fishing • Childrens adventure playground<br />

• Sailing •H o rs e riding<br />

• Windsurfing • Cycling<br />

and of course<br />

Health and Beauty Salon<br />

and A la Carte restaurant and bars<br />

Your visit will be entirely without obligation or pressure I<br />

Please send me fur<strong>the</strong>r details about DE18/4<br />

Bamsdale Country Club D I would like to visit <strong>the</strong> Estate_Q<br />

Name................................................................................................<br />

Address...........................................................................................<br />

Telephone........................................... '........................ ...................<br />

Post coupon to: Bamsdate Country Club, Bamsdate, Exton,<br />

N r O akham , Rutland, Leicestershire LE15 8AB.<br />

O r ph o n e between 9.00 and 6.00 any day.<br />

0 5 7 2 7 5 7 9 0 1<br />

A HOME IN TENERIFE<br />

AER LINGUS ESPANA is pleased to announce<br />

that ourapartments in <strong>the</strong> final two phases or our<br />

luxury development Sansofe Puerto, are now<br />

available for purchase.<br />

Our apartments are built to <strong>the</strong> highest standards,<br />

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lifestyle that owning one of our homes<br />

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or writing to 67 Burntwood<br />

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Our full colour brochure will<br />

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EXHIBITION SUNDAY 23RD APRIL<br />

M0ATH0USE PETERBOROUGH<br />

TK0RPEW00D 12a.m. till 6p.m.<br />

2 BEDROOM BUNGALOWS<br />

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Soothing way of life<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Spanish sun<br />

T H<br />

E Costa de Almeria<br />

is probably <strong>the</strong> least<br />

d e v e lo p e d o f a ll<br />

Spain’s M editerranean<br />

coastlines — and travel companies<br />

have had an uphill b attle<br />

to establish its image in<br />

B ritish eyes.<br />

Now <strong>the</strong> developers are having<br />

a try, reckoning th at <strong>the</strong><br />

arrival of <strong>the</strong> big charter jets<br />

to A lm eria a irp o rt and a<br />

steady im provem ent of facilitie<br />

s w ill te m p t b u y e rs<br />

deterred by <strong>the</strong> bustle and <strong>the</strong><br />

prices of <strong>the</strong> Costa del Sol.<br />

M ojacar, an old Moorishstyle<br />

town b uilt on <strong>the</strong> side of<br />

a m ountain w ith its maze of<br />

alleyway shops, restaurants<br />

and bars looking down on<br />

seafront developments, was<br />

<strong>the</strong> first focus of developm<br />

ent; two bedroom ed apartm<br />

ents at nearby G arrucha by<br />

B ritish -b o rn , b u t locallybased<br />

builder M ichael Gem,<br />

have been selling fast around<br />

<strong>the</strong> £30,000 m ark.<br />

“The developm ent has two<br />

bowling greens, a large swimm<br />

ing pool, tennis and squash<br />

courts, all free for residents,”<br />

says ex-subm arine officer<br />

Gem, “and <strong>the</strong> beach is all of<br />

50 yards away.”<br />

Development<br />

Now M ichael Hess, of London-based<br />

Cheltenham Associates,<br />

has tied up a deal w ith<br />

th e H oteles P laya G roup,<br />

w hich has 11 hotels in <strong>the</strong><br />

A lm eria region, to handle<br />

sales and also take a direct<br />

sh a re in d evelopm ent in<br />

schem es from Almeria to San<br />

Jose on ei<strong>the</strong>r side of th e '<br />

Cabo de G ata headland.<br />

At <strong>the</strong> Balcon de Aguadulce<br />

scheme, on a sloping site<br />

looking far out to sea, Hess<br />

says th a t prices have risen by<br />

n ea rly a fifth since sales<br />

began a year ago and B ritish<br />

dem and has also been strong<br />

in th e fishing village of San<br />

Jose, where early sales from<br />

F e b ru a ry s ta rte d aro u n d<br />

£30,000 and th ree bedd er<br />

Almerimar marina.. .nearby properties go for £100,000<br />

By JEREMY GATES<br />

apartm ents w ent fast around<br />

£47,000.<br />

H e is linking <strong>the</strong> San Jose<br />

schem e to a country club, and<br />

a separate retirem ent village<br />

project w ith a proposed leisure<br />

centre in Roquetas de<br />

Mar. The retirem ent village,<br />

at' San Jose, is likely to begin<br />

building on a 25-acre site in<br />

<strong>the</strong> second half of this year;<br />

108 two and three bedroom ed<br />

villas w ith a m inim um 850 sq<br />

ft living space and clearly<br />

designed for sem i-perm anent<br />

occupation ra<strong>the</strong>r than holiday<br />

hom e use.<br />

The schem e will be m anaged<br />

by <strong>the</strong> Retirem ent Care;<br />

o p e ra tio n , w hich already<br />

looks after 4,000 units in B ritain.<br />

There will be a resident<br />

m anager, and regular visits by<br />

chiropodist, hairdressers and<br />

doctor. Prices are likely to<br />

s ta r t aro u n d £60,000, and<br />

facilities will include tennis<br />

courts, putting green, hobby<br />

room and restaurant.<br />

F inally, to th e w est of<br />

A lm eria, th e p o rt village<br />

schem e a t A lm erim ar is<br />

steadily looking m ore interesting.<br />

M ontpelier In te rn a ­<br />

tional is selling here and<br />

Susie Ogilvy at M ontpelier<br />

e stim a te s th a t th ree b ed ­<br />

room ed units sold for £20,000<br />

three years ago have doubled.<br />

Prices have now zoomed<br />

beyond £100,000 for four bedroom<br />

ed apartm ents. Besides<br />

<strong>the</strong> m arina, tennis courts are<br />

nearby and Susie Ogilvy says<br />

th a t golf at £15 a round is p articularly<br />

attractive because<br />

<strong>the</strong> course does not have <strong>the</strong><br />

queues of <strong>the</strong> Costa del Sol.<br />

Tranquil<br />

F or both yachting and golfing<br />

set, as well as for retirem<br />

e n t folk, th e C osta de<br />

Almeria . is com ing strongly<br />

into <strong>the</strong> frame.<br />

B ut as M ichael H ess points<br />

out: “T his is a tranquil hideaway<br />

w here you can encounte<br />

r <strong>the</strong> ‘real Spain’ and w here<br />

life continues to exist at a<br />

sn a il’s pace. O bviously it<br />

w ould n o t appeal to <strong>the</strong>.<br />

M arbella crowd.”<br />

INFORMATION: C heltenham<br />

Associates is at 11a St<br />

George’s Mews, Primrose Hill,<br />

L o n d o n NW 1 8XE, te l<br />

01-483-2141. Montpelier International<br />

is at 17 Montpelier<br />

Street, L ondon SW 7 1HG.<br />

M ojacar D evelopm ents via<br />

Spanish Properties, 35 North<br />

Street, Wilton, near Salisbury,<br />

Wiltshire.<br />

It’s tim e for crossing over to M alta<br />

■<br />

IT looks as though <strong>the</strong> M altese authorities<br />

have at last persuaded <strong>the</strong> British to<br />

buy holiday homes.<br />

L eading a g e n t F ra n k S a lt claim ed<br />

recently: “Sales in February to buyers from<br />

outside <strong>the</strong> island were extrem ely good and<br />

prices are now beginning to increase ra<strong>the</strong>r<br />

m ore than <strong>the</strong>y should be.” Even after <strong>the</strong><br />

rises, <strong>the</strong>re is still m uch property available<br />

for £20,000 or less.<br />

■<br />

TWO new guid,es ensure th a t we need not<br />

go into overseas property blind.<br />

Homes Overseas magazine publishes one<br />

on buying procedures in European countries<br />

and America. It costs £2.50. And Blackstone<br />

Franks, <strong>the</strong> financial services specialists, have<br />

produces Guide to Living in Spain, covering<br />

COSTA<br />

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IBERIAN TIMES<br />

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Spain or Portugal? If so <strong>the</strong>n your<br />

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TANY selection of properties<br />

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■<br />

published by Kogan Page.<br />

ACCORDING to Simon M alster, <strong>the</strong> north<br />

London solicitor who set him self up as an<br />

estate agent in Switzerland, 1992 m ight provide<br />

a good reason for buying on <strong>the</strong> slopes<br />

ra<strong>the</strong>r than on <strong>the</strong> costas.<br />

M alster reckons th a t <strong>the</strong> dawn of <strong>the</strong> single<br />

European m arket may give <strong>the</strong> UK Governm<br />

ent <strong>the</strong> chance to take closer interest in<br />

second hom es and probably to levy extra<br />

taxes on <strong>the</strong>m . B ut Switzerland seems likely<br />

to rem ain outside <strong>the</strong> net — because nobody<br />

tells anybody anything about money <strong>the</strong>re.<br />

“We have sold a num ber of properties costing<br />

upwards of £250,000 to clients who are worried<br />

about <strong>the</strong> consequences of 1992,” he comm<br />

ented.<br />

AIR BARGAINS<br />

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I SUPPOSE IN<br />

Y O U R . DAY<br />

ruey u


l i g h t<br />

a t l a s t<br />

By MALCOLM FOLLEY<br />

GABRIELA SABATINI<br />

h a s r e m in d e d th e<br />

te n n is w orld th a t Steffi<br />

G raf is n o t an invincib<br />

le cham pion.<br />

H er three-set victory<br />

over th e world N o.l in<br />

<strong>the</strong> sunshine of Florida<br />

w ill offer a shaft of hope<br />

to those labouring in <strong>the</strong><br />

shadow of G rafs b rilliance.<br />

S a b a tin i— G o rg eo u s<br />

Gaby to th e advertising<br />

agents who have m ade<br />

h e r a m illio n airess—<br />

in flic te d G raf’s first<br />

defeat for five m onths<br />

w hen she beat th e West<br />

G erm an 3-6, 6-3,. 7-5 to<br />

win th e Bausch & Lpmb<br />

tournam ent a t Amelia*<br />

Island.<br />

The victory on clay also<br />

su g g ests th a t G ra f’s<br />

French Open crown is<br />

vulnerable to attack in<br />

June from th e 18-year-<br />

old Argentine.<br />

“If I w ant to be N o.l I<br />

have to beat th e top players<br />

m any tim es,” said<br />

Sabatini.<br />

H er refusal to be swept<br />

away on a tide of euphoria<br />

is a sign world No.3<br />

Sabatini has not allowed<br />

one trium ph to detach<br />

h er from <strong>the</strong> reality of<br />

th e events of last year.<br />

Imaginary<br />

Twelve m o n th s ago,<br />

Sabatini beat Graf twice<br />

in four weeks. With <strong>the</strong><br />

big action of <strong>the</strong> sum m er<br />

still ahead, <strong>the</strong> game was<br />

thought, in some quarters,<br />

to be sliced wide<br />

open.<br />

Of course, <strong>the</strong> th reat to<br />

G raf proved imaginary.<br />

She responded by winning<br />

<strong>the</strong> French Open,<br />

W im bledon, th e US<br />

Open and a gold medal<br />

a t <strong>the</strong> Seoul Olympics to<br />

com p lete an h isto ric<br />

Golden Slam.<br />

Since losing to Pam<br />

Shriver in New York last<br />

November, <strong>the</strong> 19-year-<br />

old G erm an had compiled<br />

a 31-match winning<br />

streak.<br />

“Losing will definitely<br />

help m e,” she argued in<br />

<strong>the</strong> wake of Sabatini’s<br />

victory. “I’m going to<br />

work harder.”<br />

B ut Sabatini, a t her<br />

m ost menacing in <strong>the</strong><br />

build-up tow ards Paris,<br />

warned: “The im portant<br />

difference from last year<br />

is th a t I’m now playing<br />

every week at <strong>the</strong> same<br />

high level.”<br />

Graf m ight have found<br />

in defeat <strong>the</strong> inspiration<br />

she needs to m aintain<br />

h er enthusiasm for <strong>the</strong><br />

sum m er ahead.<br />

W hat is certain is th at<br />

Sabatini has given a' lot<br />

of players a glim m er of<br />

op tim ism , no m a tte r<br />

how fleeting it m ight<br />

prove to be.<br />

Senior service: Bates promises to bring best out of Andrew<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

Bates mission<br />

to get Andrew<br />

buzzing again<br />

ST E V E BATES,<br />

n a m e d y e ste r d a y a s<br />

E n gland ’s n ew scrum -<br />

h alf,h as p rom ised to<br />

get th e b est ou t of<br />

Stand o ff R ob Andrew.<br />

B ates—W asps clu b m ate of<br />

A ndrew —h a s been b ro u g h t<br />

in to th e E n g la n d s id e<br />

again st R u m ania in B u ch arest<br />

o n M ay 13 in place of<br />

Dewi M orris.<br />

“ He said: “Rob suffered<br />

because of <strong>the</strong> service he got<br />

from Dewi.<br />

“B ut I know w hat Rob w ants<br />

from playing w ith him at club<br />

level.<br />

“I know w hat he’s looking<br />

for at different stages of <strong>the</strong><br />

game and in different areas of<br />

<strong>the</strong> field. I also know w hen he<br />

really w ants <strong>the</strong> ball because<br />

his voice goes up a notch..<br />

“It’s going to help me a trem<br />

endous am ount in my first<br />

international knowing exactly<br />

w hat Rob w ants and being<br />

able to find him quickly, and<br />

obviously th a t’s going to be<br />

good for <strong>the</strong> rest of <strong>the</strong> team .”<br />

B ates, a 26-year-old S t<br />

By DAVID LLEWELLYN<br />

Albans teacher who has been<br />

on <strong>the</strong> England bench for <strong>the</strong><br />

last five internationals, also<br />

p ro m ised fire w o rk s from<br />

ano<strong>the</strong>r Wasp, England wing<br />

C hris Oti.<br />

“For O ti only to get a couple<br />

of passes in th e whole of <strong>the</strong><br />

Cham pionship was ludicrous,”<br />

he said.<br />

“H e’s such a potent weapon.<br />

H e should have been used<br />

more.<br />

Priority<br />

“I will certainly open <strong>the</strong><br />

game up, it will be my priority.<br />

I t ’s also Rob’s priority at club<br />

level to move <strong>the</strong> ball wide.<br />

H is game is b etter for trying to<br />

do th at.”<br />

England nam ed ano<strong>the</strong>r new<br />

cap, N ottingham full back<br />

Sim on Hodgkinson, who has<br />

had a fine season with <strong>the</strong> boot<br />

for England B. He com es in<br />

for B ristol’s Jon Webb, who is<br />

unavailable because of medical<br />

exams.<br />

Delighted Hodgkinson said:<br />

“I’m excited and relieved to<br />

have m ade it. I ’ve been waiting<br />

I’ll be even better now <strong>the</strong><br />

pressure is off says Faldo<br />

N IC K FALDO, th e glow of<br />

-Augusta still radiatin g from<br />

h is b lue eyes, yesterday gave<br />

an in sig h t into th e m aking of<br />

a M aster golfer.<br />

After his Miiiirfield m ission in<br />

1987,w hen hp becam e O pen<br />

cham pion, an d donning th e<br />

G reen Jacket" nine days ago,<br />

Faldo adm its: “I have nothing<br />

m ore to prove to anybody.”<br />

And as he prepared to put his<br />

feet up in his Ascot home, Faldo<br />

said: “My life has been transform<br />

ed by one round of golf.”<br />

Faldo, 31, at <strong>the</strong> sum m it of a<br />

career which has been sculptured<br />

from natural gifts and<br />

Geoff Boycott-style dedication,<br />

believes his second m ajor will<br />

help ease <strong>the</strong> pressure he puts<br />

on him self in <strong>the</strong> constant quest<br />

for perfection.<br />

“It’s always been my nature<br />

to be intense,” says Faldo, who<br />

a t one tim e could be forgiven<br />

for believing th at <strong>the</strong> m ore he<br />

Newcombe’s having fun<br />

T H R E E -tim es W im bled<br />

o n c h a m p io n J o h n<br />

N ew com b e y e s te rd a y<br />

spoke of th e b o n u s th a t<br />

fath e r an d son ten n is<br />

h as given him .<br />

N ew com be,in Lugano,<br />

Switzerland w ith his 20-<br />

year-old son Clint as Australa<br />

s ia ’s n u m b er one<br />

pair a t <strong>the</strong> Remington<br />

International Fam ily and<br />

K iam C up C ham pionships,<br />

said: “At last I have<br />

th e ch an ce to enjoy<br />

playing tennis w ith my<br />

son.<br />

From JEFF IVES<br />

in LUGANO<br />

“Although Clint has hit<br />

tennis balls since he was<br />

two years old he never<br />

played as a boy; Rugby<br />

was his game. T hat way<br />

no one could ever compare<br />

him w ith me.”<br />

T h e N e w c o m b e s<br />

o p ened in th is D aily<br />

E x p re ss-b ac k ed event<br />

w ith a sparkling m atch<br />

a g a in st 10-tim es Swiss<br />

From MARTIN HARDY<br />

in SOUTH CAROLINA<br />

p rac tised th e lu ck ier o th e rs<br />

seem ed to get.<br />

“W hen I stand up and play<br />

each shot I set myself a target.<br />

If I don’t achieve it <strong>the</strong>n I am<br />

annoyed because I know I am<br />

capable of doing it.<br />

“I’ve always believed th at it’s<br />

good to kick yourself up <strong>the</strong><br />

backside and m ake yourself go<br />

for it.<br />

“Y ears ago I show ed my<br />

intensity too m uch, b ut now it’s<br />

a little less and winning <strong>the</strong><br />

M asters will help all <strong>the</strong> m ore<br />

because now I have nothing to<br />

prove.<br />

“If <strong>the</strong>re were people who<br />

believed my Open win was a<br />

fluke—not th a t any m ajor could<br />

be won in such fashion—<strong>the</strong>n<br />

those doubts m ust have disappeared.”<br />

The long, lonely hours prac­<br />

cham pion Theo Stalder<br />

and his son Daniel, coming<br />

from behind in both<br />

pets before w inning 7-5<br />

6-3.<br />

Rain forced yesterday’s<br />

a c tio n in d o o rs, w here<br />

B ritish pairs Ray and;<br />

Paul’ Ranson,<br />

D avis Cup v e te rans<br />

Geoff and John Paish and<br />

David and M ark Tom linson<br />

w ent th ro u g h .B u t<br />

K eith and Kevin Dewick<br />

lost to a New Zealand<br />

pair.<br />

tising, <strong>the</strong> tinkering to create<br />

<strong>the</strong> right feel w ith <strong>the</strong> putter,<br />

<strong>the</strong> rem orseless grind were all<br />

rew arded w ith <strong>the</strong> p u tt that<br />

m ade him £2,500,000 richer.<br />

Faldo will still keep one eye<br />

on h is b an k b alan c e even<br />

though money is no longer a<br />

m otivation.<br />

“Next year will be a globetrottin<br />

g y ear for th e fin an cial<br />

rew ards,” he says.<br />

Scared<br />

“Japan and A ustralia come<br />

back into my thinking, b ut I<br />

will pace myself and go to <strong>the</strong><br />

right place at <strong>the</strong> right time."<br />

After three m onths off last<br />

winter, Faldo will spend <strong>the</strong><br />

next one on <strong>the</strong> road, playing<br />

until <strong>the</strong> niiddle of December,<br />

returning to <strong>the</strong> U nited States<br />

for <strong>the</strong> Tournam ent of Champions<br />

and <strong>the</strong>n com ing back for a<br />

six-week rest.<br />

F irst, Faldo has a date at <strong>the</strong><br />

T H E F A L D O F O R M U L A<br />

/fi<br />

35<br />

for th is since <strong>the</strong> England<br />

Under-23’s to u r to Spain in<br />

1984. Nigel Redm an and Rob<br />

Lozowski, Rob Andrew and<br />

Kevin Sim m s were all on th at<br />

to u r and won England caps<br />

alm ost im m ediately. So it’s<br />

great to have got in at last.<br />

“B ut I don’t think <strong>the</strong> Rum anians<br />

will be easy. They’ve<br />

beaten W ales and beat Italy,<br />

over <strong>the</strong> weekend. I expect<br />

<strong>the</strong>m to test m e a lot since<br />

<strong>the</strong>y base th eir game on high<br />

kicks into <strong>the</strong> opponents’ half.<br />

“B ut apart from my goal-<br />

kicking, for w hich I ’m sure I<br />

w as selected, I w ant to show I<br />

can do <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r things expected<br />

of a full back—I don’t drop<br />

high balls and I’m good at<br />

com ing into th e line.”<br />

One W asp who will be disappointed<br />

is prop Jeff Probyn,<br />

who is again on <strong>the</strong> replacem<br />

ents’ bench. H e has been<br />

kept out by B ath’s new B ritish<br />

Lion G areth Chilcott.<br />

TEAM.- H o d g k in s o n (N o ttm ),<br />

U nderw ood (Leics), C arling (H arleq<br />

u in s c ap t), H a llid a y (B ath ), O ti<br />

(W asp s), A ndrew (W asp s), B a te s<br />

(W asp s), R en d a ll (W asps), M oore<br />

(N o ttm ), C h ilc o tt (B a th ), D ooley<br />

(P re sto n G ra ss h o p p e rs), A ckford<br />

(H a rle q u in s ), T e a g u e (G lo u c s),<br />

R obinson (B ath), R ichards (Leics).<br />

Belfry and <strong>the</strong> Ryder Cup,which<br />

is already high in his thinking.<br />

“The Ryder Cup has now<br />

joined The Open, Wimbledon,<br />

<strong>the</strong> Boat Race and one or two<br />

o th e r sp o rtin g ' occasions as<br />

national events,” he says.<br />

“You get <strong>the</strong> sam e pressure<br />

<strong>the</strong>re as in <strong>the</strong> m ajors, real gut<br />

pressure and th at’s why it will<br />

be im portant to have proven<br />

w inners in our team.<br />

“Every m atch is like <strong>the</strong> last"<br />

nine holes on Sunday when you<br />

are involved in <strong>the</strong> thick of it.<br />

“B ut we’ll all be looking forw<br />

ard to it. Tony Jacklin was<br />

right when he once said th at we<br />

used to be scared of <strong>the</strong> Americans.<br />

“We no longer are and I’ll<br />

never forget <strong>the</strong> last time. The<br />

American players looked across<br />

and we puffed out or chests and<br />

said: ‘Too right pal, we’re here’.”<br />

Nobody is m ore ‘here’ right<br />

now than Faldo, <strong>the</strong> m aster of<br />

his craft. Jacklin:“He’s right”<br />

PLAYINCr A BUNKER SHOT FROM CLOSELY -<br />

PACKED SAND IS MOT AS FEARSOME AS YOU<br />

MIGHT THINK<br />

OPEN THE FACE<br />

OF YOUR SAND -<br />

WEDGE AS NORMAL<br />

BUTHIT'DOWN<br />

THROUGH THE _<br />

SHOT EVEN MORE<br />

THAN USUAL'.<br />

W M m m<br />

Be c a u s e t h e c l u b w i l l b o u n c e , d o n o t h i t t o o<br />

FAR BEHIND THE BALL - PERHAPS AN INCH IS<br />

ENOUGH.<br />

TOO FAR BEHIND<br />

THE BALL FOR<br />

HARD SAND,BUT<br />

CORRECT FOR<br />

SOFT SAND<br />

» m<br />

ENTRY POINT 15<br />

ABOUTONE<br />

INCH BEHIND<br />

THE BALL IN<br />

HARD SAND<br />

m .


36<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

Racing,<br />

Vets fight shutdown threat<br />

NEWMARKET...C4: 2.35, 3.10, 3.40 and 4.10. Guide by Danny Hall<br />

TOP JOCKEYS ON THIS COURSE RIDING TODAY: S.Cau<strong>the</strong>n, Pat Eddery,<br />

W.Carson, R.Cochrane.<br />

TOP TRAINERS ON THIS COURSE WITH RUNNERS: H.Cecil, L.Cumani,<br />

M.Stoute, G.Harwood.<br />

GOING: Good.<br />

2 . 0 — E B F B A R T L O W M A ID E N F IL L IE S S T A K E S 2 Y 0<br />

£ 2 . 9 2 4 5 f ( 1 3 )<br />

101 (13) 4 BAGDAD CAFE (11) Lord John FitzGerald 8 11 R Hills<br />

102 (8) BALLYHOOLY N Callaghan 8 1 1 .......... Pat Eddery<br />

103 (3) BETWEENTHE STICKS RHannon8 11 ....... B Rouse<br />

104 (9) COLD BLOW1 Mat<strong>the</strong>ws 8 1 1 .........................W New nes<br />

105 (12) 2 LANZAROTE (6) A Bailey 8 1 1 ......................... J Quinn (3)<br />

106(11) MAGIC BULLET (US) WO'Gorman8 11 ... Tlves<br />

107 (5) M ISS GOLDIE LOCKS G Slum 8 1 1 ..................... W Ryan<br />

108 (1) PREMIERE MOON H Collingridge 8 1 1 ............. M Rimmer<br />

109(10) PRETTY COOL Dr J Scargill 8 1 1 ..................... RCochrane<br />

110 (7) SHARP INVITE P FeBden 811 ................... G Duffield<br />

111 (6) SHERNA LAVENDER (DEN) R Guest 8 11 ....Paul Eddery<br />

112 (4) STORMY BELLE {F)M Jarvis 8 11 .................. B Raymond<br />

113 (2) SUNDAY SPORT'S PET J Berry 8 11 ..................J Carroll<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 3 Magic Bullet, 7-2 Stormy Belte, 11-2<br />

Bagdad Cafe, BaDyhooly, 8 Lanzarote, 10 Sunday Sport's Pet, 12 Pretty Cool, 14<br />

Cola Blow, Between The Sticks, 16 O<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: Desert Dawn 2 8 11 R Hills 5-1 (Lord John FitzGerald) 8ran<br />

r i l i n C . desert Dawn won this for Lord JohnFitzgerald last season after a<br />

U U IU C a prep at Kempton and Bagdad Cafe follows that route. Neville<br />

Callaghan and Pat Eddery team up with Ballyhooiy but she is a May foal and<br />

may not be mature enough. M agic Bullet, from that reliable source of fast<br />

two-year-olds, BiltO'Gorman, must be respected. M iss Goldie Locks' should<br />

have pleenty.of speed, her haff sister Carols Treasure was in <strong>the</strong> top drawer<br />

among sprinters, STORM Y BELLE has a hardy sprint pedigree and is <strong>the</strong><br />

subject of encouraging-reports. The ubiquitous Jack Berry sends Sunday<br />

Sport's Pet down from Lancashire and no one has a better line to juvenile<br />

form than Jack.<br />

2 . 3 5 — C O N S T A N T S E C U R IT Y M A ID E N S T A K E S 3 Y 0<br />

£ 3 . 8 1 7 . 5 0 1 m 4 f ( 1 3 )<br />

201 (8) 42- • DE RIVERA (US) (169) (S) G Harwood 9 0 ...Pat Eddery<br />

202 (13) 30505- DOMINICUS (164) C Brittain 9 0 ..........................W Ryan<br />

203 (10) 64- DRUMHEAD (168) P Walwyn 9 0 ................ R Cochrane<br />

204 (12) KNIFEBOARD H Cecil 9 0 ................................. S Cau<strong>the</strong>n<br />

205 (11) 0-2 LEXDEN (22) G Wragg 9 0 ..................................Paul Eddery<br />

206 (6) 305- METHANO (169) C Brittain 9 0 .......................... M Roberts<br />

207 (7) 003-3 MYSTERY BAND (US) (18) G Huffer9 0 RonHillis(5)<br />

208 (9) 6- NORINSKI (182) Lord John FitzGerald 9 0 ..............R Hills<br />

209 (2) 23- O l/T O F FUNDS (200) R Hollinshead 9 0 .............S Perfts<br />

210 (3) ROYAL BEQUEST (CAN) (F)M Stoute 9 0 W R Swinbum<br />

211 (1) 6- SILK DEGREES (202) CCyzer9 0 .................BCrossley<br />

212 (4) STILL TIM E LEFT W Hastings-Bass 9 0 ..Dean McKeown<br />

213 (5) 0 - TREMEIRCHION (201) J Toller 9 0 ..................G Duffield<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast:— 2 De Rivera, 7-2 Knifeboard, 9-2 Royal<br />

Bequest, 6 Lexden. 7 Drumhead, 10 Mystery Band, 12 Norinski, 14 O<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: Knight Line Dancer 3 9 0 B Raymond 9 -4 (M A Jarvis) 5ran<br />

T V l a l l l l l C 1 De Rivera, half bro<strong>the</strong>r to top class R B Chesne, had a quiet<br />

I v U lllU C a introduction down here before finding <strong>the</strong> smart Folly Foot<br />

just too good at Lingfield. Knifeboard's sire and dam, Kris and Catalpa, were<br />

both top class racers trained by Henry Cecil, but a mile and a half is far enough<br />

for him on pedigree at least. Norinsla was 6th in a blanket finish at Leicester<br />

last season and is definitely <strong>the</strong> type to do better at three. ROYAL BEQUEST,<br />

a son of Mill Reef, is <strong>the</strong> only Derby entry here. If Sheik Mohammed hasn't<br />

wasted his money, <strong>the</strong> newcomer should be good enough to deal with <strong>the</strong>se.<br />

S ilk Degrees came home with a rattle in one of <strong>the</strong> best Newmarket maidens<br />

last year behind Konigsberg.<br />

3 . 1 0 — J U D D M O N T E F A R M S N E L L G W Y N S T A K E S<br />

(G ro u p 3 ) 3 Y 0<br />

£ 2 3 , 3 0 1 7 f (8 )<br />

301 (3) 212- M ISS DEMURE (199) R Armstrong 9 0 M Roberts<br />

302 (2) 112- • MUHBUBH (US) (243) H Thomson Jones 8 12 ..R Hills<br />

303 (1) 112450- ALDBOURNE(1 7 8 )(QRGuest8 9 ................PHam blett<br />

304 (5) 342330- ALWAYS ON A SUNDAY (206) PKelleway 8 9 S Cau<strong>the</strong>n<br />

305 (8) 11- ENSCONSE (US) (208) LCumani8 9 .............. RCochrane<br />

306 (4) 2- GUEST ARTISTE (208) G Wragg 8 9 ...............Pat Eddery<br />

307 (6) 34205-4 KATIE SCARLETT (15) JBridger 8 9 ...................... .JReid<br />

308 (7) V- M YTH YA A R (U S )(178)(F)M S toute&9 .W RSwm bum<br />

W -Factor Muhbubh (1T0); Always On A Sunday (107); Aldboume (106).<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 6-4 Mythyaar, 4 Ensconse, 9-2 Guest<br />

Artiste, 11-2 Muhbubh,7 Mb s Demure, 14 Aldboume, Always On A Sunday,<br />

1988: Ghariba 3 8 9 M Roberts 11-2 (A C Stewart) 10ran<br />

T U A i i m c . The three. principals from <strong>the</strong> Low<strong>the</strong>r Stakes — M iss<br />

I V U U IIIC a Demure, Mubhubh and Alw ays on a Sunday —<br />

reoppose here. Always on a Sunday finished b£st of all that day after nearly<br />

unseating Cash Asmussen early in <strong>the</strong> race and may be <strong>the</strong> pick of <strong>the</strong> trio<br />

today. Despite glowing reports of Guest A rtiste's well being, I expect her<br />

Ascot conqueror, ENSCONSE to come out oh lop again. Ensconse's victory<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Blue Seal at Ascot was a third in a row for*Luca Cumani but his previous<br />

two winners. W hite Mischief and New Trends, failed to win a race<br />

subsequently. However, Ensconse has such a lovely temperament I expect her<br />

to have trained on better. Much touted M ythyaar will be a false price on what<br />

she has done on <strong>the</strong> track — a win in a minor event at Doncaster.<br />

3 . 4 0 — A B E R N A N T S T A K E S (L is te d R a c e )<br />

£ 1 1 , 1 6 0 6 f ( 1 5 )<br />

4 0 1 (1 5 ) 31200-6 POINT OF LIGHT (17) (C and D) G Lewis 4 9 9<br />

Paul Eddery<br />

402 (14) 60000-2 SHARP REMINDER (22) (D) C Williams 5 9 9 ..G Starkey<br />

403 (5) 60060-1 INTIMIDATE (22) (D) J Gosden 4 £ 6 .............. M Roberts<br />

404 (12) 11022-2 M AC'S FIGHTER (17) (C and D,S) W O'Gorman 4 9 6<br />

T lves<br />

405 (6) 161443- SLEEPY M OUNTAIN (191) (C and D) BHanbury 4 9 6<br />

Pat Eddery<br />

406 (7) 05000-2 LONELY STREET (11) (D) P Arthur 8 9 3 S Cau<strong>the</strong>n<br />

407 (1) 401000- STOP DAY (USA) (170) (C and D )J Dunlop 4 9 3 ..JReid<br />

408 (2) 116430- CHUM M Y'SFAVOURITE(185) (D)NCallaghan4 9 2<br />

RCochrane<br />

409 (4) 1 /36-2 HEROES SASH (USA) (15) (C and D) R Guest 4 9 2 PCook<br />

.410 (11) 0-5 HONOUR'S DEGREE (15) CWmiams 4 9 2 B Rouse<br />

411 (9) 20050-3 MARBELLASILKS(2 2 )(D )M R y a n 4 9 2 .W R S w in b u m<br />

412 (3) 21214-5 YOUNGHAL(17) (Cand D) P W a lw y n 4 9 2 N Howe<br />

413 (13) 20130-3 ACCESS TRAVEL (17) (Cand D) RBoss3 8 6<br />

B Raymond<br />

414 (10) 123- • DANCING DISSIDENT (USA) (286) (D) M Stoute 3 8 2<br />

W Carson<br />

415 (8) 322160- MARCROFT (213) (D)R Whitaker 3 7 1 3 JLo w e<br />

BUNKERS.- No.4. VISOR.- No.1.<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast:— 7-2 Dancing Dissident, 4 Intimidate, 11-2<br />

Mac's Fighter, Sharo Reminder, 6 Young Hal, 8 Access Travel, Point of Light, 14<br />

MarbeHa Silks, 20 where.<br />

1988: Rich Charlie 4 9 12 Paul Eddery 8-1 (C R Nelson) 14ran<br />

T l f r i i m C - Intim idate repelled <strong>the</strong> stubborn challenge of Sharp<br />

I ¥ U U I I r C i Reminder in Kempton's Quail Stakes. ) would expect<br />

Intimidate to confirm <strong>the</strong> form with Sharp Reminder but <strong>the</strong> third horse,<br />

M arbella Silks may prove more of a handful. He looked less sharp than his<br />

two main rivals that day and will have come on a lot. M A C 'S FIGHTER won<br />

five of his 16 starts last year but his best run came in defeat when beaten a<br />

nose on a trip to Laurel Park in Washington. Ridden.by a girl unable to claim<br />

her 7lb allowance, he ran a blinder first time at Doncaster. Sleepy M ountain<br />

missed <strong>the</strong> bulk of last season but has always boasted <strong>the</strong> physical presence<br />

to hold his own .in <strong>the</strong> best sprint company. Lonely Street, fifthhere last year,<br />

should again run with credit.<br />

BLINKERS FIRST TIME: 4.10 Albert's Way Out.<br />

BEATEN FAVOURITES: 2.0 Lanzarote. 4.10 Admiralty Way (hep). 4.40 House<br />

of Commons.<br />

BEST TRAINING HINTS: De Rivera (Pulborough, 2.35). Mac’s Fighter (New­<br />

market, 3.40). Ahsanta Sana (Thirsk, 4.10).<br />

THE DRAW: R.H.course, No Advantage. (Stalls: Far sjde except 1st and last<br />

races - stands side).<br />

Bendex<br />

2.0 Stormy Belle<br />

2,35 De Rivera<br />

3.10 Muhbubh<br />

3.40 Point of Light<br />

4.10 Langtry Lady<br />

4.40 NAHAR<br />

5.10 Storm Free<br />

Computerman<br />

12.0 —<br />

1 2,35 De Rivera<br />

I 3.10 Muhbubh<br />

I 3.40 Mac’s Fighter<br />

I 4.10 Miss Blitz<br />

4.40 K-BRIGADE (nap)<br />

I 5.10 Prorutori<br />

Scotia<br />

2.0 Bagdad Cafe<br />

2,35 Mystery Band<br />

3.10 MYTHYAAR (nap)<br />

3.40 DANCING<br />

DISSIDENT (lib )<br />

4.10 Swing Shift<br />

4.40 K-BR1GADE<br />

5.10 Brush Aside<br />

NEWMARKET BEST: 2.0 Stormy Belle 2.35 Royal Bequest 3,10 Mythyaar 3.40<br />

Mac’s Fighter (nap) 5.10 Brush Aside<br />

CLOCKWISE DOUBLE: Muhbubh and Herbert United (3.20 Devon)<br />

(21)<br />

4 . 1 0 — L A D B R O K E H A N D IC A P 3 Y 0<br />

£ 5 . 8 4 5 7 f<br />

501 (1) 3111- GREENSMITH (168) (D) G Harwood 9 7 Pat Eddery<br />

502 (5) 6221- TOP-BOOT (190) J Dunlop 9 3 ..............................B Rouse<br />

503 (9) 521- DISTANT RELATIVE (213) B Hills 9 2 ................... M Hills<br />

504 (21) 22214-0 ULY'S LOVER (US) (19) (D) G Pritcharcl-Gordon 91<br />

PCook<br />

505 (17) 31- SW ING SHIFT (215) L Cumani 9 1 ............... .RCochrane<br />

506 (8) 1331- SUHAILDANCER(1 9 0 )MrsLPiggott8 11 W Caison<br />

507 (12) 2160- SPECIALISED BOY (199) C Wall 8 1 0 ..................NDay<br />

508 (6) 041-1 M ISS BLITZ (15) W O'Gorman 8 7 ........................ Tlves<br />

509 (10) 342015- COTTENHAM (200) (D) C Brittain 8 6 ............. M Roberts<br />

510 (4) 160440- SNO SERENADE (224) R Boss 8 6 ................ B Raymond<br />

511 (19) 021- SAFA W AN (173) M Stoute 8 6 .............. ...W R Swinbum<br />

512 (7) 103-4 AHSANTA SANA (17) (S) Mis JRamsden 8 6 W Newnes<br />

513 (2) 046-412 TY R N IP P Y (6)(D )M B rittain 82 M W igham<br />

5 1 4 (1 4 ) 15000- AARDVARK(1 7 8 )RWhitaker8 0 .................. ......J lo w e<br />

5 1 5 (1 6 ) 33-1 LANGTRY LADY(22) M Ryan8 0 .............N Gwilliams(7)<br />

516 (15) 4643- MIDFIELDER(1 7 5 )PW alwyn7 12 ................ TW illiam s<br />

517 (20) 01320- LUCY'S DAY (241 )(D)PW alw yn 7 1 1 ............... C Rutter<br />

518 (13) 0330-13 • ADMIRALTY W AY (17) (D,T)J Watts 7 10 ..AMereer<br />

519 (18) 124 0 0 0 ALBERT'S W A Y OUT (5) S Dow 7 9 ....................J Carter<br />

520 (11) 43063-0 VAIGLY PERCEPTIVE (8) B Stevens 7 7 D McKay<br />

521 (3) U00550- SONAR (200) Pat Mitchell 7 7 ................................... RFox<br />

BUNKERS.-No. 18. VISO R.-No. 19.<br />

W-Factor: Miss Blitz (96); Tymippy (94); Admiralty W ay (93).<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast:— 5 Greensmith, 13-2 Distant Relative, 8<br />

Suhail Dancer, Swing Shift, 10 Safawan, Ahsanta Sana, 12 Langtry Lady, Miss Blitz,<br />

Vatgly Perspective, 14 Tymippy, Admiralty Way, 16 Cottenham, Aardvark, 20<br />

O<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: Bold Citadel 3 9 1 M Hills 4-1 (B W Hills) 16ran<br />

W c i l i n c . Guineas entry G REENSMITH can make his class tell. His<br />

U U IU E a only defeat came behind Zayyani on his debut but he looked<br />

most impressive in his three subsequent victories. I'm always wary of lightly<br />

raced types from Cumani and Stoute but both Swing' S h ift and Safaw an<br />

seemed to- struggle when gaining <strong>the</strong>ir wins in lesser company. M iss Blitz<br />

comes from a prolific and speedy family and is already in winning form this<br />

season. Ahsanta Sana trounced Barry Hills hotpot D istant Refative on his<br />

Chester debut and was promptly snapped up by Robert Sangster. Very<br />

talented; watch for a market move. Sno Seranade and M idfielder are<br />

good-looking types who could leave <strong>the</strong>ir two-year-old form behind now <strong>the</strong>y<br />

are fully mature.<br />

4 . 4 0 — C R A W F U R D H A N D IC A P<br />

£ 5 , 4 8 1 1 m 2 f ( 1 7 )<br />

601 (8) 432131- BABIL(204) (D)PW alwyn4 1 0 0 ................... TW illiams<br />

602 (12) 652 RIVERHEAD (US) (11) D Elsworth 5 9 1 3 ........ S Cau<strong>the</strong>n<br />

603 (1) 1- A L SAH IL(U S)(277)(C)H Thom sonJones496 ..RHills<br />

604 (11) 5/12126 - SKY CONQUEROR (US) (263) (D) A Scott 4 9 5<br />

Pat Eddery<br />

605 (2) 11225-0 DEFENCE POLICY (17) B H *s 4 9 5 .......................M Hills<br />

606 (17) 32340-2 HOUSE OF COM MONS (24) C Brittain 4 9 3 ..MRoberts<br />

607 (15) 13/122-0 N IC K L£P L A TE D (22)G W ragg 492............ Paul Eddery<br />

608 (14) 216102- AUNT MABEL (185) (D) J Toller 4 9 0 ...Jaki Houston (7)<br />

6 09 (1 0 ) 10000-1 MAHRAJAN (22) (C and D) C Benstead 5 9 0 T Quinn<br />

6 10 (13) 2515-10 QUEENS TOUR (11 )(D )M Brittain 4 8 1 2 A M unro(5)<br />

611 (7) 121020- FAST CHICK (171) (D) J Dunlop 4 8 9 WCarson<br />

612 (9) 10100-2 # K-BRIGADE (22) (D) C Elsey 4 8 6 .....................K Fallon<br />

613 (3) 52/26-1 M IZA J(19)(D ,F)G Moore 5 8 3 Dean McKeown<br />

614 (16) 0 3 3 6 0 -NAHAR(1 8 7 )S D ow 4 8 2 .................................. .W Ryan<br />

615 (4) 31211-6 SUTOSKY (22) (D) I Mat<strong>the</strong>ws 5 8 2 ..................N Carlisle<br />

616 (6) 11450-5 GIBBOT(19)(D)PHowling4 7 8 N Gwilliams(7)<br />

617 (5) 600010- REGGAEBEAT(185)ICam pbell47 7 ............ D Biggs(7)<br />

W-Factor: K-Brigade (106); Sutosky (103); Aunt Mabel (102).<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast:— 11-2 K-Brigade, 13-2 Defence Policy/.<br />

Mahrajan, 7 House of Commons, 8 Sky Conqueror, Sutosky, 10 Riverhead, Al Sahil,x<br />

Nahar, 12 Fast Chick, Queens Tour, 14 Aunt Mabel, Mizaj, 16 Babil, 20 o<strong>the</strong>rs. .<br />

1988: Mill Plantation 9 8 8 Pat Eddery 8-1 (G Wragg) 9ran<br />

f M l i n C ' Conqueror has not been seen since his game 6th in <strong>the</strong> Extel<br />

t lU IU C a Handicap at Goodwood. Changed trainers, though not stables,<br />

since <strong>the</strong>n arid his-new handler Alex Scott, has sent out a couple of winners<br />

already. Nickle Plated dropped away very quickly in <strong>the</strong> Rosebery won by<br />

Queens Tour. The one from that race I would put in your notebook is<br />

Sutosky who was given a very easy time when held. M AHR AJAN came from<br />

last to first with a brilliant sustained turn of foot to win ano<strong>the</strong>r handicap at<br />

Kempton and I cannot oppose him even though he will be nothing like 16-1<br />

today. The rugged K-Brigade, runner-up at Newcastle on his comeback, is <strong>the</strong><br />

sort to run into <strong>the</strong> frame.<br />

5 . 1 0 — M U S E U M M A ID E N S T A K E S 3 Y 0<br />

£ 3 , 1 8 3 1 m 1 f ( 2 4 )<br />

BAY TERN (US) L Cumani 9 0 ........................RCochrane<br />

BITONE (187) L Cumani 9 0 ........................ L Dettori (5)<br />

BRAASHEE A Stewart 9 0 ................................ M Roberts<br />

BRUSH ASIDE (US) (F) H Cecil 9 0 .................. S Cau<strong>the</strong>n<br />

1 (9)<br />

2 (D 3-<br />

3 (21)<br />

4 (19)<br />

5 (22) 455-<br />

6 (16)<br />

7 (15)<br />

8 (14) 6<br />

9 (2) 02-<br />

10 (20) 00000-<br />

11 (6)<br />

12 (3) 624-<br />

13 (8) 40-<br />

14 (7) 00-<br />

15 (5) 3-<br />

16 (11) 0-<br />

17 (12) 060-<br />

18 (18) 2-<br />

19 (4)<br />

20 (13) 0-<br />

21 (17) 653-<br />

22 (24)<br />

23 (10) 03-<br />

24 (23) 0<br />

FANIL1E P Walwyn 9 0 .......................................... N Howe<br />

HIGHFLYING B Hills 9 0 .............................. Pat Eddery<br />

POLAR VISION C Brittain 9 0 ......................... .^....ABond<br />

• PRORUTORI (US) (172) M Jarvis 9 0 ........ B Raymond<br />

RUDJIG (US) (171) J Gosden 9 0 ......................G Starkey<br />

RUSCAROFF (178) J Hills 9 0 .................. R Hills<br />

STATE BANK (164) M Ryan 9 0 ..................... G Bardwell<br />

STORM FREE (US) (193) M Stoute 9 0 ....W R Swinbum<br />

TEMPERING H Cecil 9 0 ......................................... W Ryan<br />

WORLDSPORTFLYER A Lee 9 0 ............... G Duffield<br />

E ELUSIVE (165) H Collingridge 8 11 M Rimmer<br />

EN BEAUTY (17) K Ivory 8 11 ...................N Adams<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 5-4 Brush Aside, 5-2 Storm Free, 7 Bay<br />

Tem, 8 Highflying, 10 Tempering, 12 Bitone, 14 O<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: No cotresponding race.<br />

A l l i n E ” ®est t0 con^ne our attentions to <strong>the</strong> Derby entries — Brush<br />

U U IU E p Aside, Island Forest, Polar Vision, Rudjig and Storm Free —<br />

that's <strong>the</strong> first process of elimination. BRUSH ASIDE has been talked of as a<br />

potential Derby winner this spring and if <strong>the</strong> rumours are accurate, he should<br />

win. Rudjig was third to Vincent O'Brien's Classic Secret on his Irish debut.<br />

Now with John Gosden, he appeals more than Storm Free who couldn't beat<br />

his lesser fancied stable companion Charming Molly at Ascot. Of those<br />

without Classic engagements, Ghariba's half bro<strong>the</strong>r Braashee and<br />

Highflying, related to that decent stayer Trampship, catch <strong>the</strong> eye.<br />

• B efore you b et, dial th e Joh n Francom e N apsline on 0898<br />

6543 69.<br />

• F in d o ut w hat th e “clever m oney1* is on w ith our Mid-<br />

M orning M arket U pdate on 0898 100 lift*<br />

• F o r a com prehensive m orning preview an d th e resu lts,<br />

ju s t call 0898 10T115. . •<br />

• And for a ta ste of live racecourse action, you can’t heat<br />

o u r com m entary line on 0898 400 715.<br />

• D ogsune tip s (from 9.30 a.m .) and re sults (from 2 p.m .& 9<br />

p.m.)089» 100 I lf ,<br />

• C alls cost 38p a m in u te p eak and 25p a m in u te off peak.<br />

By THE SCOUT<br />

(John G arnsey)<br />

V ETS a t th e A nim al<br />

H ealth T ru s t a re trying<br />

to tra c e th e so u rce of a<br />

h erp es o u tb reak w hich<br />

could sh u t dow n racing.<br />

The virus can lead to<br />

paralysis and has already<br />

struck two eventing stables<br />

in C am bridgeshire and<br />

Windsor. It also threatens<br />

a racing stable in York­<br />

shire.<br />

Now concern is growing<br />

th a t <strong>the</strong> disease could<br />

spread fur<strong>the</strong>r. Both event­<br />

ing stables affected have<br />

been put into immediate<br />

isolation.<br />

Disease<br />

“We’re not sure how or<br />

why this particular strain<br />

of herpes has occurred in<br />

stables so far apart,” said<br />

<strong>the</strong> Trust’s publicity man­<br />

ager Paul Cunningham.<br />

“The disease is transmitted<br />

by physical contact — it is<br />

not an airborne infection —<br />

and <strong>the</strong>re’s no evidence<br />

that <strong>the</strong> horses concerned<br />

have crossed paths.”<br />

The last herpes outbreak<br />

to affect raceh o rses<br />

occurred in Lamboum 10<br />

years ago but did not lead<br />

.to a general ban.<br />

TODAY’S TOP TIPS<br />

SCOUT’S TREBLE<br />

GUEST ARTISTE (nap)<br />

(3.10 Newmarket)<br />

SUHAIL DANCER (nb)<br />

(4.10 Newmarket)<br />

KNIFEBOARD<br />

(2.35 Neivmarket)<br />

BENDEX’S BEST<br />

LAUNDRYMAN (nap)<br />

(2.50 Devon)<br />

OGENDEBA (nb)<br />

(4.20 Devon)<br />

NAHAR<br />

(4.40 Neivmarket)<br />

Cunningham continued:<br />

“We feel confident that <strong>the</strong><br />

current outbreak will be<br />

contained as long as racing<br />

establishm ents adopt a<br />

responsible attitude and<br />

are quick to isolate any ani­<br />

mals showing suspicious<br />

symptoms.”<br />

The Trust, funded by<br />

charity, is still some way<br />

off advising Government to<br />

restrict all movement of<br />

horses but it is closely-<br />

monitoring <strong>the</strong> outbreak<br />

and plans to issue constant<br />

progress reports.<br />

The Jockey Club last<br />

night reported “indica­<br />

tions” of <strong>the</strong> virus in one<br />

Yorkshire racing stable.<br />

G uest A rtiste, quietly<br />

backed in <strong>the</strong> 1,000 Guineas<br />

ante-post m arket, could<br />

emerge as a live Classic<br />

hope after today’s Nell<br />

Gwyn Stakes at Newmar­<br />

ket. Her owner Sir Philip<br />

Oppenheimer won <strong>the</strong> big<br />

one in 1982 with On The<br />

House, ano<strong>the</strong>r daughter of<br />

Be My Guest.<br />

G uest A rtiste showed<br />

abundant promise on her,<br />

Ascot debut last September<br />

by running Ensconse to a<br />

length despite lack of expe­<br />

rience.<br />

Ensconse, whose recent<br />

home work is said to be<br />

patchy, had <strong>the</strong> benefit of a<br />

previous outing on that<br />

occasion which may offset<br />

<strong>the</strong> fact that she renews<br />

rivalry on 51b more favour­<br />

able term s with Guest<br />

Artiste.<br />

Aldboume, representing<br />

first-season trainer Rae<br />

Guest, could be <strong>the</strong> one for<br />

th e fo re ca st because<br />

reports from some quar­<br />

te rs indicate M ichael<br />

S toute’s M ythyaar has<br />

proved hard to settle in her<br />

home gallops this season.<br />

DEVON NH CARD<br />

Bendex<br />

2.20 Hitarion<br />

2.50 LAUNDRYMAN (nap)<br />

3.20 Broofcmount<br />

3.50 Delkusha<br />

4.20 OGENDEBA (n.b)<br />

4.50 Gifted Nephew<br />

SCOTIA: 2.20 Old Kilpatrick 2.50 Firth of Forth 3.20 Herbert United<br />

3.50 Delkusha 4.20 Bobby Kelly 4.50 Whiskey Grain<br />

Computerman<br />

2.20 Hllarion<br />

2.50 CHAMPAGNE RUN (n.b)<br />

3.20 Herbert United<br />

3.50 Delkusha<br />

4.20 RUBIKA<br />

4.50 Colonel James<br />

GOING: Chases soft. Hudles heavy.<br />

2.20—WEST OF ENGLAND NOVHDLE<br />

£ 1 ,088 2 m 1f (18)<br />

1 14 HILARI0N(FR)(17)JEdward$5 1 2 0 .TMorgan<br />

2-104 DOC'S COAT (63) (C and D) C Wildman 4 1 1 9 B Wright<br />

3 041 0LDKILPATRiCK(21)MPipe4 11 9 P Scudamore<br />

4 000/ DENROSS (1172 J Elliott8 1 1 7 .................... RStronge<br />

5 0 EVENLODE(57)TForster5 1 1 7 ..................CUwellyn<br />

6 4-0 GROCERJACK(11)CRoach6 1 1 7 .................JS hortt<br />

7 0 0 0 JAYJAY'SVOYAGE(19)JRoberts6117..MWKams<br />

8 6- LADDIEBAUJNGER(341)PHobbs7 117 Peter Hobbs<br />

9 0 MONTYS GUNNER (22) Mrs H Parrott 5 1 1 7 R Bellamy (7)<br />

10 F TIMES ARE HARD (32) P Davis 5 117 Tamya Davis (4)<br />

11 WINTER'S LANE D Thom 5 1 1 7 RDunwoody<br />

12 54 BALLYANTO(11)MissJThome4 11 2 NDawe<br />

13 24- • COUNTRY DAMSEL (379) R Barber 5 112 S McNeill<br />

14 2FP4 LUREXGlRl(22)DRTucker5 11 2 ..............NColeman<br />

15 0 MISSPATCH(10)NKemick9112 MYeoman<br />

16 00-0 MUCKYLADY(17) JF o x 6 11 2 ...................... SMoore<br />

17 40 TERMAUEN (US) (17) S Meflor 4 11 2 .G Charies-Jones<br />

18 P BRACELET (22) MrsJ Retter4 1 0 1 1 ................B Powell<br />

BUNKERS.-Nos. 3 ,1 7<br />

DaMy Express Betting Forecast;— 7-4 Hilarion, 2 Old Kilpatrick,<br />

13-2 Country Damsel, 8 Doc’s Coat, 12 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: No corresponding race.<br />

2 . 5 0 — WEST OF ENGLAND NOV HDLE<br />

£1 ,088 2 m 1f (18)<br />

1 0314 FIRTH OF FORTH (46) (S)0 Sherwood 6 120<br />

S Sherwood<br />

2 3142 HEAVENLYBR0THER(11)NMitchell 6 120<br />

MrT Mitchell (7)<br />

3 3441 ROMANY KING (11) (C and D)G Balding 6 120 R Guest<br />

4 1244 •CHAMPAGNERUN(7)(D)WTumer411 9<br />

G Charies-Jones<br />

5 0140 GOLDTINT(3)TMcGovem4 11 9 ................PCorrigan<br />

6 46P- AVALON (474) NAyliffe6 1 1 7 ....................... MAyliffe<br />

7 P HOLWORTHY (96) J Payne 6 1 1 7 ............A Chariton (4)<br />

8 20 LAUNDRYMAN (117) N Gasetee 6 1 1 7 K Mooney<br />

9 0-0F MOUNTAlNTRAIL(22)PHobbs6117 ...PeterHobbs<br />

10 23-2 PLAID (22) P Rodford 6 1 1 7 ....................... .W Irvine (4)<br />

11 205 SUPPERYMAX(255)DNicholson5 11 7 . RDunwoody<br />

12 00 SUNBURN (138) T Forster 5 1 1 7 ....... .............H Davies<br />

13 356 INDIAN STREAM (166) J Bradley 5 1 1 2 G Davies<br />

14 PO UNDANJAN(11)NKemifck5 1 1 2 ................MYeoman<br />

15 0 MIGHTy PRINCE (24)M Pipe411 2 PScudamore<br />

16 P PEGGYS ELDORADO (26) P Hobbs 8 11 2 ....D Hood (7)<br />

17 ROYAL POPPET P Bowden 7 1 1 2 ...................R Dennis<br />

18 0 STEVIE LAD (74) J Bosley 4 1 1 2 .................... M Bosley<br />

BUNKERS.- Nos. 5,9<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 3 Champagne Run, 7-2 Firth of<br />

Forth, 5 Gold Tint, Romany King, 13-2 Laundryman, Heavenly Bro<strong>the</strong>r, 10<br />

Plaid, 12 Slippery Max, 14 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: No corresponding race.<br />

3 . 2 0 — HEAVITREE NOV H'CAP CHASE<br />

£4,117 2m 1f (15)<br />

1 314U BROOKMOUNT(6) J Gifford 712 7 ....... TPfnfieW(4)<br />

2 3142 • HERBERT UNITED (6) (S) G Balding 1010 6 ....J Frost<br />

3 1FF3 THE LEGGETT(26) Mrs JRetter6 1 0 4 ........... B Powell<br />

4 4135 DEMOCRATIC BOY (14) J King 7 1 0 3 ............ DTegg<br />

5 0F61 BLUE DANUBE(US)(141 )DGandotfo5 100 iSMcNeiK<br />

6 5151 TIDAL STREAM (22) T Forster 6 1 0 0 .......CUeweHyn<br />

7 412F GREEN MARBLE (7)NMitchell7 1 0 0 Mr A Tory (7)<br />

8 035F SKIPPINGT1M|26)PHobbs10 1 0 0 .....Peter Hobbs<br />

9 5020 HANDY LANE (22) D Barons 8 1 0 0 ....... N Hawke (4)<br />

10 P-02 TREMAYNE (24) T Forster 6 1 0 0 ...................H Davies<br />

11 5P63 STARDUST ROC (155) J Bradley 6 1 0 0 .....G Davies<br />

12 P333 NEARLY MEDINA (17) R Hodges 7 1 0 0 W Irvine (4)<br />

13 6626 JEZAIL (75) J Fox 9 10 0 ...................................S Moore<br />

14 P4P LEVANT WAY (187) W Fisher 9 1 0 0 ...... MrPFenton<br />

15 • -PP4 TELEMACHUS (20) C Popham 5 1 0 0 ... 1 Lawrence (7)<br />

W-Factor Herbert United (107); Democratic Boy (106); Green<br />

MaiWe (104).<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 5*2 Herbert United, 7*2<br />

Democratic Boy, £-2 Brookmourrt, 13-2 Tidal Stream, 9 The Leggett, 12<br />

Green Marble, 14 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: Paddyboio 10 11 4 R Rowe 4-5 (J T Gifford) 7ran<br />

TOP JOCKEYS ON THIS COURSE RIDING TODAY: P.Scu-<br />

damore, B.Powell, J.Frost, H.Davies.<br />

TOP TRAINERS ON THIS COURSE* WITH RUNNERS:<br />

M.Pipe, G.Balding, D.Barons, J Jenkins.<br />

3.50—WEST OF ENGLAND S HDLE<br />

£1 ,030 2m I f (7)<br />

1 0110 • DELKUSHA (59) (C and D)M Pipe 4,11 5 P Scudamore<br />

2 430 ALKHALf*D(11)DRTucker4,1 1 0 NCoteman<br />

3 P SMART ART (22) N Kemick 4 ,1 1 0 M Yeoman<br />

4 THE TANNER (US) WReed 4 ,1 1 0 Mr R Greene (7)<br />

5 0 VALTAKI(18)DCarey4,110..................... MWBIiams<br />

6 56 ENCHANTlNGRIVER(61)RBart>er4,109 Peter Hobbs<br />

7 LAKE TIBERIAS Mrs JRetter 4 ,1 0 9 .................BPowell<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 1-2 Delkusha, 7-2 Al Khaled, 7<br />

Enchanting F&ver, 10 Valtaki, 14 Lake Tiberias, 16 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: Nayshan 5 11 2 P Scudamore 3-1 (M C Pipe) 15ran<br />

4.20—WEST OF ENGLAND H'CAP CH<br />

£1,898 3m 1f (17)<br />

1 -2FP IVY LEAGUE (22) (F) J Gifford 9 11 1 0 EMurphy<br />

2 1166 FORTASCUE (32) (D) 0 Sherwood 9 1 1 9 ..S Sherwood<br />

3 23U3 BOBBY KELLY (17) D Nicholson 7 119 The Princess Royal<br />

4 4F23 MR PEAPOCK (54) T Hallett 13 1 1 4 ............... D Morris<br />

5 11F2 FARMWEEK(11)(F)GBalding7 11 3 .................JFrost<br />

6 4P21 OGENDEBA (22)PBailey911 2 .................... BdeHaan<br />

7 2021 FLYING GOD (11) (Cand D)J Baker 9 111<br />

W McFarland (4)<br />

8 3243 RUBIKA (FR) (21) S Mellor 6 1 1 1 G Charies-Jones<br />

9 32P3 PADDYBUCK(11)(D)JHoneybail9 110 ..PeterHobbs<br />

10 P05P PROSETT (55) J Fox 111011.......................... S Moore<br />

11 -434 ROADSTER(20)CNash 13 1 0 8 ............... RDunwoody<br />

12 P-P3 MEAT THE FOULKES (NZ) (27) G Ham 8 10 7 P Richards<br />

13 3202 GREY TORNADO (22) C Popham 810 6 BPowell<br />

14 F156 •SCOTSLAD(199)(CandD)DJefmy8105 RStronge<br />

15 030/ USIARY LAD (787) J Bradley 9 1 0 5 ............... GDavies<br />

16 612P BEAC0NSIDE(1B7)(CandD)PLeach 12103<br />

. N Hawke (4)<br />

17 , 45U2 MEISTER (20) (D) J Old 9 10 0 ...................... .SMcNeill<br />

BUNKERS.* Nos. 8 ,1 6<br />

W 'Factor Rubffca (91); Meister (90); Ogendeba (88).<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 5-2 Flying God, 7*2 Ogendeba,<br />

5 Bobby Kelly, 13-2 Farm Week, 7 Fortascue, 10 Ivy League, Rubika. 14<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: No corresponding race.<br />

4.50—WEST OF ENGLAND HCP HDLE<br />

£2 ,547.50 2m 1f (18)<br />

1 1P4- TROPICALMIST(FR)(379)(D)GHam9 11 10<br />

MrSBurrough (7)<br />

2 3U44 CIMA(22)JOfd 1 1 1 1 9 .................................SMcNeill<br />

3 5313 WHlSKFYGRAlN(159)GHam7 11 6 SMackey(7)<br />

4 2043 MIDNIGHT f STRIKE (US) (152) (C and D) J Baker 5 1 1 6<br />

WMcFarland (4)<br />

5 6420 RECORD FUGHT (6) (C and D) R Hodges 5 114 W Irvine<br />

6 0514 CANTORIAL(l9)(D)CPopham8112.; BPowell<br />

7 0250 MUSIC WONDER (6) N Mitchell 8 1 1 1 DSkyrme(7)<br />

8 0P60 GIFTED NEPHEW (33) (C and D) N MHchefl 5 10 13<br />

MrATory(7)<br />

9 0452 C0L0NELJAMES(21)MrsNSharpe7 1012<br />

P Scudamore<br />

10 P060 GANOON (USA) (6) (Cand D) J Jenkins 61011<br />

RDunwoody<br />

11 2-04 UZZY LONGSTOCKING (19) (D) Mrs J Wonnacott 7 10<br />

9 ......................................................... DWonnacott<br />

12 4003 •GOODWYNSLAD(22)ABarrow5 1 0 9 .SEarie<br />

13 33-P MCCALLUN (68) P Rodford 5 1 0 8 M Williams<br />

14 6560 TAFFY JONES (71) (D)M McCormack 10106<br />

Mr C Maude (7)<br />

15 -F43 CUTN DRY (19) (D) P Bowden 9 1 0 6 ............. R Dennis<br />

16 25UF GLEN ROAD (50) M Pipe 10 1 0 3 ......................J Lower<br />

17 6603 BLUESPARKIE(22)(D)J0td81 0 0 CUewettyn<br />

18 14-0 SILVER THORN (29) M Scudamore 5 1 0 0 DTegg<br />

W*Factor. Colonel Jam es (85); Gifted Nephew (84); Goodwyn’s Lad<br />

(83).<br />

Daily Express Betting Forecast— 100-30 Colonel James, 4<br />

Cantonal, 6 Gen Road,Midnight Strike, 8 Cima, 10 Music Wonder, 14<br />

Gifted Nephew, Whiskey Grain, 16 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

1988: MiHbrd Quay 5 10 6 A Webb 5 -t (J L Spearing) 18ian<br />

BEATEN FAVOURITES: 2.50 Slippery Max (hdfe). 3.50<br />

. Delkusha (hep hdle). 4.20 Ivy League (hep ch), Farm Week<br />

(ch), Roadster (hep ch), Beaconside (hep ch).<br />

BEST TRAINING HINTS: Firth of Forth (Lamboum, 2.50).<br />

Herbert United (Fyfield, 3.20).


DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989 37<br />

Mubhubh to upset<br />

betting for Guineas<br />

¥<br />

MYTHYAAR puts her repu­<br />

tation on <strong>the</strong> line in <strong>the</strong><br />

Nell Gwyn Stakes at New­<br />

market today and may well<br />

have her bubble burst by<br />

Muhbubh (3.10).<br />

Tom Jones’s filly Mub­<br />

hubh boasts by far <strong>the</strong> best<br />

public form, though she’s<br />

25-1 In most books for <strong>the</strong><br />

1,000 Guineas, and looks<br />

sure to be well suited by<br />

this step up to seven fur­<br />

longs.<br />

Best bet of <strong>the</strong> day is-<br />

INDEX<br />

S a y s BENDEX<br />

L aundrym an (2.50) at<br />

Devon. Nick Gaselee’s nov­<br />

ice has shaped well In his<br />

two runs af Chepstow and<br />

Lingfield and now tackles<br />

much easier opposition.<br />

The testing track and<br />

muddy conditions look tai­<br />

lor-m ade for Ogendeba<br />

(4.20), a smooth winner at<br />

Uttoxeter last time out. He<br />

may get <strong>the</strong> better of Bobby<br />

Kelly and <strong>the</strong> Princess<br />

Royal.<br />

D-DEVON<br />

N'NEWMARKET<br />

Aardvark...............N 4.10<br />

Access Travel...... N 3.40<br />

Admiralty W ay... N 4.1 0<br />

Ahsanta Sana...... N 4.10<br />

Al Khaled............. D 3.50<br />

A lSahil.................N 4.40<br />

Albert's Way Out N 4.10<br />

Aldboume.............N 3.10<br />

Always On A Sunday<br />

N 3.10<br />

Aunt Mabel.......... N 4.40<br />

Avalon...................D 2.50<br />

Babil...................... N 4.40<br />

Bagdad Cafe........ N 2.00<br />

Baifyanto......... D 2.20<br />

Battyhooly-_____ N 2.00<br />

B ayTem N 5.10<br />

Beaconside.......... D 4.20<br />

Between The Sticks<br />

N 2.00<br />

Bitone N 5.10<br />

Blue D anube------D 3.20<br />

Blue Sparkie..___D 4.50<br />

Bobby Kelly_____D 4.20<br />

Braashee......... „..N 5.10<br />

Bracelet................D 2.20<br />

Brookmount........D 3.20<br />

B rushA side.........N 5.10<br />

Cantonal...............D 4.50<br />

Champagne Run D 2.50<br />

Chum m y's Favourite<br />

N 3.40<br />

Cima......................D 4.50<br />

Cold Blow.............N 2.00<br />

Colonel Jam es.... D 4.50<br />

Cottenham ........... N 4.10<br />

Country Damsel<br />

D 2.20<br />

C ufnO ry..............D 4.50<br />

Dame Elusive.......N 5.10<br />

Dancing Dissident<br />

N 3.40<br />

Da Rivera............. N 2.35<br />

Defence Policy... N 4.40<br />

Dalkusha.............. D 3.50<br />

Democratic Boy<br />

D 3.20<br />

Denross................ D 2.20<br />

D istant Relative<br />

N 4.10<br />

D oc's Coat............D 2.20<br />

Dominicus............ N 2.35<br />

Drumhead............ N 2.35<br />

Enchanting River<br />

D 3.50<br />

Ensconse............. N 3.10<br />

Evenlode...............D 2.20<br />

Familiar Sp in t....N 5.10<br />

FaniUe...................‘N 5.10<br />

Farm W eek.......... D 4.20<br />

Fast Chick............ N 4.40<br />

FirthofForth........ D 2.50<br />

Flying God............ D 4.20<br />

Fortascue............. D 4.20<br />

Ganoon.................D 4.50<br />

Gibbot................... N 4.40<br />

Gifted Nephew... D 4.50<br />

Glen Road.............D 4.50<br />

Gold T in t..............D 2.50<br />

Goodwyns Lad....D 4.50<br />

Green Marble.......D 3.20<br />

Greensmith.......... N 4.10<br />

Grey Tornado....... D 4.20<br />

Grocer Jack..........D 2.20<br />

Guest Artiste........N 3.10<br />

Handy Lane. D 3.20<br />

Heavenly Bro<strong>the</strong>r D 2.50<br />

Herbert United.... D 3.20<br />

Heroes S a sh N 3.40<br />

Hidden B«sauty....N 5.10<br />

Highflying N 5.10<br />

Hilarion................D 2.20<br />

Hoi worthy D 2.50<br />

Honour's Degree N 3.40<br />

House of Commons<br />

N 4.40<br />

Indian Stream D 2.50<br />

Intimidate N 3.40<br />

islandForest N 5.10<br />

Ivy League D 4.2 0<br />

Jay J a / s Voyage<br />

D 2.20<br />

JezaH._________ D 3.20<br />

K'Brigade~..r..-...N 4.40<br />

Katie Scarlett N 3.10<br />

Kemosabe. N 5.10<br />

Knifeboard. N 2.35<br />

Laddie Ballinger D 2.20<br />

Lake Tiberias...... D 3.50<br />

LangtiyLady. N 4.10<br />

Lanzarote N 2.00<br />

Laundryman D 2.50<br />

levant W ay D 3.20<br />

Lexden..... .N 2.35<br />

Uly'sLover N 4.10<br />

Undanjan D 2.50<br />

LisiaryLad D 4.20<br />

Lizzy Long stocking<br />

D 4.5 0<br />

Lonely S treet N 3.40<br />

Lucy's Day N 4.10<br />

LurexGiri D 2.20<br />

M ac's Fighter..... N 3.40<br />

Magic Bullet N 2.00<br />

M ahrajan. N 4.40<br />

MarbeHa Silks N 3.40<br />

M arcroft N 3.40<br />

Mccailun D 4.5 0<br />

M eat The Foulkes<br />

D 4.2 0<br />

M eister.................D 4.20<br />

M ethano N 2.35<br />

Midfielder. N 4.10<br />

Midnight Strike D 4.50<br />

Mighty Prince D 2.50<br />

M iss Biiu ..N 4.10<br />

M iss Demure N 3.10<br />

M iss Goldie Locks<br />

N 2.00<br />

M iss Patch D 2.20<br />

Mizaj.................... N 4.4 0<br />

Montys Gunner<br />

D 2.20<br />

Mountain Trail.... D 2.50<br />

M rPeapock. D 4.2 0<br />

Mucky Lady D 2.20<br />

M uhbubh N 3.10<br />

Music W onder....D 4.50<br />

Mystery Band ....N 2.35<br />

M ythyaar ,....N 3.10<br />

Nahar................... N 4.40<br />

Neariy Medina.... D 3.20<br />

Nlckie Plated N 4.40<br />

Norfolk Thatch....N 5.10<br />

Norinski N 2.35<br />

Ogendeba..., D 4.20<br />

Oid Kilpatrick D 2 .2 0<br />

Out of Funds N 2.35<br />

Paddy Buck D 4.20<br />

Peggys Eldorado D 2.50<br />

Plaid................... D 2.50<br />

Point of Ught..... N 3.40<br />

PolarVision.. .. N 5.10<br />

Premiere Moon N 2*00<br />

Pretty Cool......... 2.00<br />

Prorutori............ N 5.10<br />

P ro sett.............. D 4.20<br />

Queens Tour...... N 4.40<br />

Record Flight.... D 4.50<br />

Reggae Beat..... ,N 4 4 0<br />

Relief Pitcher..... .N 5.10<br />

Riesener........... .N 5.10<br />

Riverhead.......... N 4.40<br />

Roadster............ D 4.20<br />

Romany K ing... D 2.50<br />

Royal B equest.. N 2.35<br />

Royal Poppet..... D 2.50<br />

Rubika__ _____ D 4.20<br />

Rudjig...______ N 5.10<br />

Ruscaroff._____ N 5.10<br />

Safawan............. N 4 .10<br />

Scots Lad.......... D 4.20<br />

Sharp Invite....... N 2.00<br />

Sharp Reminder<br />

N 3.4D<br />

Shem a Lavender N 2.00<br />

Silk Degrees...... 2.35<br />

Silver Thom....... 4 .50<br />

Skipping Tim..... D 3.20<br />

Sky Conqueror.. N 4 .40<br />

Sleepy Mountain N 3.40<br />

Slippery Max. .. D 2.50<br />

Sm art Art........... D 3.50<br />

Sno Serenade.... N 4.10<br />

Sonar................. N 4.10<br />

Specialised Boy<br />

N 4.10<br />

S tardust R oc.... D 3.20<br />

S tate Bank........ N 5.10<br />

Stevie Lad......... D 2.50<br />

Still Time Left.... N 2.35<br />

Stop D ay........... N 3.40<br />

Storm F ree....... N 5.10<br />

Storm y Belle...... 2 .00<br />

Suhaii Dancer.... N 4.10<br />

Sunburn............. D 2.50<br />

Sunday Sport’s Pet<br />

N 2.00<br />

Sutosky.............. 4.4 0<br />

Swing Shift....... N 4.10<br />

Taffy Jones....... D 4 .50<br />

Telem achus...... D 3.20<br />

Tempering........ N 5.10<br />

Term alien.......... D 2.20<br />

The Leggett....... D 3.20<br />

The T anner....... D 3 .50<br />

Tidal Stream ...... D 3.20<br />

Times Are Hard D 2.20<br />

Top-Boot............ N 4.10<br />

Tremayne........... D 3.20<br />

Tremeirchlon .. N 2.35<br />

Triplicate............ N 5.10<br />

Trojan Lancer..... N 5.10<br />

Tropical M ist.... D 4.50<br />

Tvmippy............. 4.10<br />

Vaigly Perceptive N 4.10<br />

Vaftaki............... D 3.50<br />

W hiskey Grain... D 4.50<br />

W inter's Lane... D 2.20<br />

Woridsportflyer j N 5.10<br />

Young Hal......... 3.40<br />

YESTERDAY’S 123<br />

EDINBURGH: Good to soft<br />

2.0— Jalopy (G Duffield, 11-4 fav)<br />

1; Blue Mischief (.10*1) 2; Kali Kopeiia<br />

(5-1 jt 2nd favj 3.1 1 ran. V2I, hd. (M<br />

Prescott, Newmarket). Tote: £3.00; pi<br />

£1.20, £2.00, £4.30; df £8.50 csf<br />

£25.22.<br />

2.30— Beachy Glen (G Duffield,<br />

100-30 2nd fav) 1; Anytime Anywhere<br />

(7-2) 2; Shewhomustbeobeyed (20-1)<br />

3 .9 ran. VM IVzl. (C Tinkler, Malton;<br />

Glen Maddie 3-1 fav). Tote: £7.10; pi<br />

£1.60, £1.50, £1.20; df £5.60; csf<br />

£14.53.<br />

3.0— Alpha Helix (G Duffield, 11-1)<br />

1; French Gondolier (13-2) 2; Awkas<br />

(5-1 2nd fav) 3 .1 4 ran. V/z\, H. (J S<br />

Wilson, Ayr; Beau Nash 11-4 fav).<br />

Tote; £12.60; pi £3.20; £4.90, £2.30;<br />

df £166.30; csf £74.13; tricast<br />

£369.20.<br />

3.30— Key Royal (K Fallon, 9-1) 1;<br />

Kirkby Flyer (9-2 2nd fav) 2; Fiery sun<br />

(8-1 )3. 11 ran. 41, 2!. (M Naughton,<br />

Richmond; Susan Henchard 3-1 fav).<br />

Tote: £7.90; pi £2.10, £3, £3.50; df<br />

£11.70; csf £47.30; tricast £314.11.<br />

After stewards’ inquiry, result stands.<br />

4 .0 — Dream Of Fam e (Dean<br />

McKeown, 9-2) 1; Angus Hab>t (4-1<br />

2nd fav) 2; Wheatsheaf (10-1) 3. 15<br />

ran. Vfel, 31. (J W Watts, Richmond;<br />

Skirbeck 11-4 lav). Tote: £5.50; pi<br />

£2.30, £1.10; £5.70; df £13.90; csf<br />

£22.37. Non-runner: th e Doodler.<br />

4.30— Suprem e O ptim ist (S<br />

Wood, 20-1) 1; Grey Fellow (20-1) 2;<br />

Gothic Ford (8-1) 3 .1 3 ran. 71, hd. (R<br />

Peacock, Tarporiey; Nafuat 5-2 lav).<br />

Tote: £19.40; pi £5.30, ££20, £2.30;<br />

df £176.30; csf £321.17; tricast<br />

£3,116.94.<br />

Placepot: £353.<br />

FOLKESTONE: Soft<br />

1.45— Ghassanah (P Cook, 4-1 jt-<br />

fav) 1; Billie Blue (9-2) 2; Just A Step<br />

(14-1) 3 .1 5 ran. 41,2V2I. (G Pritchard-<br />

Gordon, Newmarket; False Start 4-1<br />

jt-fav). Tote: £5.80; pi £1.50, £2.20,<br />

£2.90; df £18,80; csf £23.46.<br />

2.15— Fresh From Victory (B<br />

Rouse, 25-1) 1; Jealous Lover (15-2)<br />

2; Forcello (11-4 jt-fav) 3. 15 ran. 21,<br />

V2I. (A 'Moore, Woodingdean; Pealla<br />

11-4 jt-fav). Tote: £26.50, pi £9.60,<br />

£3.30, £1.10; df£429.50; csf £214.06;<br />

tricast £645.54.<br />

2.45— Mo Ceri (S Dawson, 13-2) 1;<br />

Run Free (11-4 fav) 2; Falling Shadow<br />

(10-1) 3; Call A Truce (7-1) 4 .1 7 ran.<br />

81,41. (D Elsworth, Whitsbury). Tote:<br />

£9.80; pi £1.80, £2, £4.40, £2.90; df<br />

£13.90; csf £29.13; tricast £188.88.<br />

3.15— Shuttlecock Corner (T Ives,<br />

2-1) 1; Silks Princess (6-4 fav) 2;<br />

Paddy Chalk (15-8) 3. 3 ran. 1%l, 8l.<br />

(P Felgate, Melton Mowbray). Tote:<br />

£3.30; df £2.40; csf £4.73.<br />

3.45— Splintering (N Howe, 7-2 jt<br />

2nd fav) 1; Pringipoula (7-2 jt 2nd fav)<br />

2; My Sporting Lady (16-1) 3. 13 ran.<br />

2Vzl, 61. (P Walwyn, tam bourn;<br />

Enchanted Goddess 11-8 fav). Tote:<br />

£5.50; pi £2.60, £1.10, £18.50; df<br />

£10.30; csf £16.80. After stewards’<br />

inquiry, results stands.<br />

4.15— Creefieur (Kim McDonnell,<br />

9-2) 1; Moor Frolicking (3-1 it-fav) 2;<br />

Villa Bianca (20-1) 3 .1 3 ran. nk, VM.<br />

(K Brassey, Lambourn; Starch<br />

Express 3-1 jt-fav). Tote*. £5; pi £1.80;<br />

,£1.70, £5.30; df £10.40; csf £19.12;<br />

tricast £240.50. Non-runner: Always<br />

Great.<br />

4.45— Lively Cockney (T Ives,<br />

13-2 2nd fav) 1; Just Three (14-1) 2;<br />

Ensharp (11-10 lav) 3.14 ran. 11,41.<br />

(J Gosden, Newm arket). Tote:<br />

£13.50; pi £3.70, £3.00, £1.60; df<br />

£111.80; csf £99i57.. Non-runner;<br />

Double Handfull'.<br />

5.15— Full Speed Ahead (N<br />

Adams, 10-1) 1; Somebody (3-1 2nd<br />

fav) 2; Cuva (12-1) 3. 12 ran. IVal, 81.<br />

(R Smyly, Lamboum; Monetary Fund<br />

6-4 fav). Tote: £5.40; pi £2.20, £1.50,<br />

£1.30; df £14.00; csf £40.61; tricast<br />

£341.51.<br />

ptacepot: £160.40.<br />

HACKNEY<br />

HAWKEYES FANCIES—2.19 Black Aries,<br />

2.37 Slender Hope, 2.52 Dip Again, 3.11<br />

Rejected Susie/ 3.29 Slippy Duchess, 3,49<br />

Offshore Storm, 4/6 Sarsfields Rock, 4.22<br />

Tracton Charm, 4.39 Rays Magpie, 4,55<br />

Pauls Opinion (nap).<br />

2.19 (A18) 484 METRES<br />

435 HARROW BOYSSARN(r) 30.96<br />

636 KILTEERY BELIE (r)............... 31.08<br />

TRACTON SWANK (qi 31.00<br />

36 CL0NBRIN LAD (q)................. 30.90<br />

134 BLACK ARIES (r) ........... 30.93<br />

DEUCY ACE (w).................... 31.06<br />

Betting.—5-2 Black Aries. 7-2 Barrow Boys<br />

Sam. 4 Tracton Swank. 9-2 Clonbrin Lad. 7<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

2.37 (AS) 484 METRES<br />

441 COOKIE CRU<strong>MB</strong>LE (s) ....... 30.81<br />

436 GLENBRIEN CHANCE |r )........ 30.94<br />

344 BANGOR GRILL (r).................. 31.07<br />

56 WILL HE (q).............................. 30.69<br />

M0VEAL0NG KAY (w)........... 30.93<br />

442 SLENDER HOPE (q)................. 30.73<br />

Betting.—5*2 Slender Hope. 3 Cookie<br />

Crumbles, 4 Will He, 5 Bangor Grill, 6 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

2.52 (M6) 523 METRES<br />

25 TI<strong>MB</strong>ER GATE ( s ) ................... 33.33<br />

422 LEE CUFF PRINCE (r)............. 32.91<br />

434 DIP AGAIN |s ) ........................ 33.10<br />

354 ANTlLLY (s )........................... 33.05<br />

425 CREF0GUEJAZZER fw) ...... 33.02<br />

553 DEENSIDE HASTY (w)........... 33.28<br />

Betting.— 5*2 Dip Again. 7-2 Crefogue<br />

Jazzer. 4 Antilly, Deenside Hasty. 7 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

3.11 (A7) 484 METRES<br />

214 MAKE A DEAL (r).................... 30.64<br />

366 MARIES SPARK (s).......... 30.84<br />

133 MACAM0RE CHAMP (s)....... 30.56<br />

626 TRACTON DASHER (q).......... 30.74<br />

211 REJECTED SUSIE (q) ......... 30.52<br />

335 HAMMER SOLE (w)................ 30.76<br />

Betting.—9-4 Rejected Suae, 3 Make A<br />

Deal, 4 Macamore Champ, 5 Tracton Dasher, 6'<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

3.29 (A6) 484 METRES<br />

122 J0SIES FRIEND (r)................. 30.54<br />

534 SLIPPY DUCHESS (q) .......... 30.67<br />

616 0ERRYCHRIER (r)............ 30.57<br />

134 SWBBEREEN DRIP (w )...... 30.47<br />

NANAS PRIOE(w)................. 30.75<br />

312 RIVER ROAD HERO (wl 30.69<br />

Betting.— 5-2 Slippy Duchess. 7-2 Jostes<br />

Friend. 4 River Road Hero. 5 Derrychrier. 6<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

3.49 (M4) 523 METRES<br />

125 0FFSH0REST0RM (q)....... 32.72<br />

3 MORALSOCIETY(r) ........... 32.94<br />

311 T0<strong>MB</strong>REAN CHAMP (r)...... 32.73<br />

323 NUADA (r).................. 32.70<br />

ANNIES GIRlfw) ___ 33.02<br />

165 BALIHAI MAJOR (q).............. 32.77<br />

Betting.—9-4 Offshore Storm, 7-2 Bali Hai<br />

Major, 4 Nuada, 9*2 Tombrean Champ, 7 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

4.6 (A5) 484 METRES<br />

253 SHES NO ANGEL(q).............. 30.49<br />

663 GOLDSTAR JOHN (s) ......... 30.67<br />

463 SARSFIELDSROCK (r)........... 30.49<br />

125 CLUB RED JACKET (q)........... 30.43<br />

166 EVERYBODY KNOWS (w)...... 30.68<br />

SAM JO ANNE (q ).................. 30.77<br />

Betting.—5-2 Sarsfields Rock, 7-2 Goldstar<br />

John, 4 Club Red Jacket. 5 Shes No Angel, 6<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

4.22 (Ml) 523 METRES<br />

331 CALL BACK PADDY M 32.68<br />

261 TULLYVIN MONARCH [ r|....... 32.42<br />

336 LARNACA |q )......................... 32.44<br />

321 EAGLES STREAK (w)............. 32.37<br />

211 TRACTON CHARM (w).......... 32.48<br />

131 STORMY LAD (q).................... 32.49<br />

Betting.—9-4 Tracton Charm, 7-2 Tullyvin<br />

Monarch, 4 Eagles Streak, 5 Call Back Paddy, 7<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

4.39 (A4) 484 METRES<br />

421 REISKAS BEAU (r).................. 30.45<br />

632 RAYS MAGPIE (w )................ 30 49<br />

462 LULUS DYSERTlq) ....... 30.44<br />

APPLE GARDEN (q) ........... 30.56<br />

211 WAIT ROGER (q).................... 20.11<br />

312 WHITE CLOUD (q).................. 30.50<br />

Betting.— 9-4 Rays Magpie, 7-2 Reiskas<br />

Beau, 4 Wait Roger, 9*2 White Cloud,.7 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

4.55 (M3) 512 METRES<br />

143 PAULS OPINION (r)................ 32.56<br />

225 INSIDE LINE (r)....................... 32.70<br />

' 646 RIADA BOB (q)....................... 32.29<br />

431 TRICI AS SLIPPY (s)............... 32.66<br />

211 OILSHEIKjw)........................ 32.64<br />

335 BARROWBOYS MONEY (we). 32.81<br />

Batting.—9-4 Pauls Opinion, 3 Riada Bob, 4<br />

Oil Sheik, 5 Tricias Slippy, 7 o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

B r o u g h P a r k<br />

HAWKEYE’S FANCIES— 1.6 S m art<br />

A lec. 1.22 Killea Boy, 1.39 Slippy<br />

C am ogue, 1.55 L eah a M ack, 2.11<br />

B uglar Boy, 2.26 P e tite E ncounter,<br />

2 .44 C annon M iss, 2.59 M ore S u p ­<br />

p o rt, 3.19 P ad d y E gan (nap), 3.39<br />

Q u e e n s A c c o u n t<br />

NOTTINGHAM: Heavy<br />

2.0— Early Breeze (R Wemham,<br />

9-2 jt 2nd fav) 1; You Missed Me (9-2<br />

jt 2nd fav) 2; Precentor (25-1) 3. 14<br />

ran. 3), 41. (M McCourt; Wantage;<br />

Castle Cary 7-2 fav). Tote: £6.40; pl<br />

£2.50, £2.50, £5.30; df £13.10; csf<br />

£23.19.<br />

2.30— Rose of High Leah (A<br />

Bacon, 7-2 fav) 1; Annabelle Royale<br />

(12-1)2; Sleepline Royale (25-1) 3.14.<br />

ran. Vz\ 11. (J Berry, Cockerham).<br />

Tote: £4.20; pi £1.10, £3.60, £9.70; df<br />

£23.60; csf £47.84.<br />

3.0— Sarah Carter (Pat Eddery,<br />

11-4 jt-fav) 1; Just Go (9-2) 2; Tina’s<br />

Momento (11 -4 jt-fav) 3 .8 ran. %i, hd.<br />

(J Berry, Cockerham). Tote: £3.20; pl<br />

£1.10; £2.70, £1.10; df £6.20; csf<br />

£15.05.<br />

3.30— Royal Astronaut (T Quinn,<br />

5-1) 1; Gaelgoir (25-1) 2; Burnt Fin­<br />

gers (4-1 2nd fav) 3; Take Issue (8-1)<br />

4 .1 9 ran. 21,11. (R Akehurst, Epsom;<br />

Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Alliance 7-2 lav). Tote:<br />

£10.80; pl £1.90, £8.10; £1.20; £1.10;<br />

df (1st or 2nd with any o<strong>the</strong>r) £3.60;<br />

csf £120.94; tricast £519.19. Non­<br />

runner: Quessard.<br />

4.0— M ichelozzo (Paul Eddery,<br />

13-2) 1; Ladderman (7-1) 2; Val Redt<br />

(5-2 2nd fav). 5 ran. 101, 41. (H Cecil,<br />

Newmarket; Belhomnie Evens fav).<br />

Tote: £11.20; pl j-3.50, £1.70; df<br />

£27.40; csf £39.65.<br />

4.30— Nearctic Flame (W R Swin-<br />

burn, 11-1) 1; Helens Dreamgirl (5-4<br />

fav) 2; Ashwaq (7-1) 3 .6 ran. 2V2I, nk.<br />

(M Stoute, Newmarket). Tote: £9.10;<br />

pl £4.40, £1.20; df £11.40. csf £23.08.<br />

Arctic Play (14-1) was withdrawn, not<br />

under orders. Rule 4 applies to all<br />

bets. Deduction 5p in £.<br />

5.0— Sacre D’Or (W Newnes, 6-1)<br />

1; Uncle Ernie (9-2 2nd fav) 2; Green-<br />

hills Pride (4-1 fav) 3; Verbarium (7-1)<br />

4. 22 ran. %I, hd. (J Mackie, Church<br />

Broughton). Tote: £10.40; pl £2.90,<br />

£1.50, £1.30, £1.70; df £29.70; csf<br />

£37.28; tricast £123.05. Non-runnen<br />

Woodlands Crown.<br />

Placepot; £1,522.20.<br />

It’s a Grand comeback<br />

Z E T TE R S are to p erse­<br />

v e re w ith th e ir new<br />

G rand N ational com pe­<br />

titio n d e s p ite la s t<br />

w eek ’s d isa p p o in tin g<br />

dividend.<br />

P u n te rs w ere hoping<br />

for a five-figure rew ard<br />

for nam ing six horses to<br />

c o m p le te th e ra c e .<br />

Instead <strong>the</strong>y had to settle<br />

for £1.10p.<br />

B ut Zetters still regard<br />

th e ir re tu r n to th e -<br />

1-2-X CHART<br />

By The Banker<br />

(Philip Osborn)<br />

N ational field after a 20-<br />

year absence as a suc­<br />

cess,<br />

“We had an extremely<br />

good response from our<br />

clients, b etter th an we<br />

h ad expected,” said a<br />

spokesm an.<br />

“W hile som e people<br />

m ay have been d isap­<br />

po in ted w ith th e divi­<br />

dend, <strong>the</strong> fact is thou­<br />

sands of clients won and<br />

many collected m ultiple<br />

dividends.<br />

. “There were 14 finish­<br />

ers and m ost of <strong>the</strong>m<br />

were am ong <strong>the</strong> first ten<br />

in <strong>the</strong> m orning’s betting.<br />

It is certainly w orth try­<br />

ing again next year.”<br />

Vernons topped <strong>the</strong> div­<br />

idend list w ith £7,632 to<br />

each of th ree p u n te rs<br />

who forecast <strong>the</strong> first<br />

four in correct order and<br />

£186 to each of 120 punt­<br />

ers who nam ed <strong>the</strong> first<br />

four in any order,<br />

“About 20 per cent of<br />

our football clients had<br />

an e x tra b e t on th e<br />

National,” said a spokes­<br />

man.<br />

L ittle w o o d s w ere<br />

p le a s e d w ith th e ir<br />

response b u t declined to<br />

say how m any punters<br />

received <strong>the</strong>ir m ajor divi­<br />

dend of £3,197.<br />

BARCLAYS LEAGUE DIVISIO N I<br />

Goalpwr Last 5 Hm Last 5 A w<br />

H A Games Games<br />

1.2 0.9 WLSDW WLDLD X<br />

1.5> 1.0 W SLW W DDWWL 1<br />

1.1 0.8 W W SLW W W W LD X<br />

1.4 1.6 SLLSS W W W W L 2<br />

1.0 o.b SLWLL ....... N ew castle v Luton.................... LLSLL X<br />

1.1 1.0 W W W LL ............ Norwich v A.V illa................. SLLLW 1<br />

1.4 1.2 LSLLW ...Southampton v W im bledon........ SLWSL X<br />

1.6 O.b W W LW D SLLSL 1<br />

0.8 1.1 SLSLL ....... W est Ham v M illw a ll............... WDWSL ?<br />

BEST IN S IX SEASONS:Coventry four w ins, one draw .<br />

PLAYING SU N D A Y’.Liverpoo! v Arsenal.<br />

LEAGUE DIVISION II<br />

0.8 1.1 LDWLL ......Birm ingham v Blackburn........... LLSSS 2<br />

1.7 1.3 W LW W W ............. Brighton v Swindon............ DWWLL 2<br />

2.2 1.0 W SW W W LWSLL 1<br />

1.5 1.1 LWSLL SSSLL 1<br />

1.7 1.0 LWWLS SSDDD 1<br />

2.1 1.0 SW LW W ............ M an.C ity v vBam sley........... SLWSL 1<br />

1.7 0.8 W SSW W LLLSL 2<br />

1.6 1.2 LLSWW ...... Plym outh v C. Palace............ SW LW W 2<br />

1.4 1.0 LWDSW SLWSL 1<br />

1.4 o.b WWSSD SLLLL 1<br />

1.7 0.7 LLWSW LSLWL 1<br />

1.7 1.0 W LW SW LLSLD 1<br />

LEAGUE DIVISION IV<br />

2.0- .1.0 W W W W S . Cambridge Utd v Crew e............. DLWLL X<br />

1.1 1.5 WLWLS •..........Darlington v Scarboro......... SLDSL 2<br />

1.7 0.8 WSWSS ............ Hereford v Doncaster....... LLLLW 1<br />

1.5 0.8 SW W DW LLLLL 1<br />

1.7 0.5 WSWLS LLLDL 1<br />

1.7 1.1 W W DW S ...... .Scunthorpe v Lincoln............ LLLLW 1<br />

1.5 0.7 LW W W D .............. Torquay v Exeter.............. LWLLL 1<br />

1.4 1.1 W D W W W ..........Tranmere v Grimsby........... LLDLS 1<br />

1.8 1.1 LWDDW ............ York C ity v L.O rient........... SWSLW 2<br />

BEST IN S IX SEASONS: Exeter one w in, three draw s.<br />

PLAYING FRIDAY: Colchester v Carlisle, Stockport v Peterboro, W rex­<br />

ham v Halifax.<br />

1.1<br />

1.4<br />

1.2<br />

1.4<br />

GM VAUXHALL CONFERENCE<br />

0.9 WLDWD Altrincham v W elling.............. WWLDL<br />

1.1 LWSDW ......... Aylesbury v Cheltenham LLWLL<br />

1.5 SLLLS Chorley v Yeovil .......... SWSLS<br />

1.0 WLLSL ..................Fisher v Telford................ LWLLD<br />

B & Q SCOTTISH PREMIER<br />

C eltic v Dundee..<br />

..Dundee Utd v M o<strong>the</strong>rw ell..<br />

Hamilton v Hibernian.....<br />

..H earts v Aberdeen.....<br />

SLLLL<br />

WDWLL<br />

LWLDL<br />

SW W W W<br />

LW SW W<br />

BEST IN S IX SEASONS: Ipsw ich, four w ins, one draw.<br />

LEAGUE DIVISION III<br />

1.3 0.6 LLSLL ...... Blackpool v Chesterfield...... LLLSL 1<br />

1.7 0.9 W W DW S ... ............ Bolton v Aldershot........... " LSLLS 1<br />

1.6 1.0 SWSWS ... .... Bristol Rov v Northam pton.... LSLLW 1<br />

1.5 1.0 DDWSS ... SLDSW 1<br />

1.7 1.0 LSSDW .......... Chester v Preston.............. WWSLL X<br />

1.4 1.3 WLSWL ... ...... M ansfield v Bury.................... SLLLL X<br />

1.3 1.3 W W LW W ... ....... Notts Co v Huddersfield....... W LW W L 1<br />

1.8 0.9 LS W W W ... .........Reading v Gillingham .......... LLLWL 1<br />

2.b 1.2 W W SW L ... LLWLW 1<br />

1.2 1.2 S W LW W ... LW W W L 2<br />

2.7 0.7 W W W LW ... LSLLL 1<br />

BEST IN S IX SEASONS: Bury three w ins, tw o draw s.<br />

PLAYING FR ID AY:Port V ale v Bristol City,<br />

2.0 0.6 W W LW L<br />

1.1. 0.8 SDSLW<br />

0.4 0.8 LLLLW<br />

1.3 1.3 W DW LW<br />

1.0 1.1 SWW LS ........... S t M irren v Rangers..<br />

BEST IN S IX SEASONS: Celtic 1 0 wins, one draw.<br />

SCOTTISH LEAGUE DIV.I<br />

2.0 1.1 SW W SL ...............Ayr Utd v Dunferm line........<br />

1.0 0.9 LLWDS .................... Clyde v Queen o f South.<br />

2.2 1.6 WWLLS ...Clydebank v Partick .<br />

1.2 1.5 WLSWL ....M eadow bank v Airdrie .<br />

1.0 1.1 SSSLW ................. Morton v Kilmarnock........<br />

1.3 1.4 W SW W L ...;........................R a ith v Forfar............<br />

1.7 1.7 WSLWS .....S t Johnstone v Falkirk...................<br />

BEST IN S IX SEASONS: Morton five w ins, tw o draws.<br />

SCOTTISH LEAGUE DIV.II<br />

1.9 0.8 WLSSW ..................Albion v Dumbarton........<br />

ALSO PLAYING: (not on pools coupons): Alloa v M ontrose, Arbroath v<br />

East Stirling, Brechin v Berwick, Cowdenbeath v Stranraer, Queens Park<br />

v East Fife, Stenhousem uir v Stirling.<br />

• Goalpower is based on <strong>the</strong> average num ber o f goals scored in home<br />

and aw ay League m atches respectively.<br />

• Sequences cover League m atches only.<br />

• Last night's results are not included.<br />

LWWLD 2<br />

LLLLL 1<br />

LWSDS 1<br />

WLSSS 2<br />

SSLDW 1<br />

LLSSS 1<br />

LSLWD X<br />

SSSLL 1<br />

Best bets<br />

TREBLE CHANCE:<br />

Charlton, Derby Co,<br />

Southampton, Chester,<br />

Mansfield, Cambridge.<br />

Utd, Altrincham, Hearts.<br />

FOUR DRAWS: Charl­<br />

ton*, Derby Co*, Sou­<br />

tham pton, C h e s te r<br />

.Hearts* Perm any 4<br />

from 5 = 5 bets.<br />

FIVE AWAYS: Miff-<br />

wall, Blackburn*, Bour-.<br />

nemouth, Fulham, Scar­<br />

boro*, L.Orient*, Perm<br />

any 5 from 6 =» 6 bets.<br />

TEN HOMES: Coven­<br />

try, Norwich*,<br />

Tottenham*. Chelsea*,<br />

Ipswich, Stoke, Bolton,<br />

Rochdale, Torquay,<br />

Celtic*, Dundee Utd.<br />

Perm any 10 from 11 =<br />

11 bets.<br />

“Best for Fixed Odds.<br />

Sequences<br />

SINCE HOME DRAW<br />

Hamilton......................16<br />

Wolves........................ 15<br />

'Notts Co....................... 7<br />

SINCE AWAY DRAW<br />

Gillingham................... 18<br />

Exeter......................... 11<br />

Queen o fS th................ 9<br />

SINCE SCORE DRAW<br />

(Home or away)<br />

Altrincham, .'..'...19<br />

Torquay.......................15<br />

Hamilton......................14<br />

Hibernian.................... 14<br />

Hartlepool................... 12<br />

Norwich............... 12<br />

Telford..... ....12'<br />

A fternoon<br />

greyhounds<br />

MONMORE — 2.19<br />

Copper Candle 6-1 (4-3<br />

Bags F £21.69). 2.37<br />

Super Fire 5-2 (2-4<br />

£20.29). 2.52 S tit-<br />

chacres Luck 2-1 F (2-6<br />

£13.06). 3.11 Colour Of<br />

Money 5-1 (7-4 £29.72).<br />

3.29 Gallant March 5-2<br />

JF (2-5 £13.45). 3.49<br />

Hasty Sarah 3*1 F (6-1<br />

£ 27.65). 4.06 Kings<br />

Lane 6-1 (6-2 £22.48).<br />

4.22 Sprig Hill Boy 5-1-<br />

(6-8 £34.94). NR: T7<br />

Res ran. 4.39 Knockhilf<br />

Flame 3-1 (3-4 £25.16).<br />

4.55 Eagles Best 7-2<br />

(6-5 £1371).<br />

LEAGUE TABLES<br />

BARCLAYS LEAGUE<br />

Division I<br />

Home Away P W D<br />

P W D L F A W 0 L F APts Tranmere__41 13 5<br />

Arsenal........ 33 9 5 2 27 15 10 4 3 35 17 66 Crewe....... 40 12 6<br />

Liverpool .....32 8 5 2 25 8 10 4 3 30 16 63 Ro<strong>the</strong>rham. 41 11 5<br />

Norwich......32 7 6 4 2018 9 2 4 23 17 56 Scunthon)e.41 10 7<br />

Nottm For.... 32 6 7 3 22 13 8 5 3 27 21 54 Scarboro.... 7<br />

Tottenham...35 7 6 5 29 23 6 6 5 24 21 51 Leyton 0.... 41 15 1<br />

Millwall....... 33 10 2 5 2615 4 7 5 18 23 51 Cambridge. 40 12 6<br />

Coventry..... 34 9 3 5 26 18 4 8 5 17 18 50 Wrexham.... 39 9 7<br />

Deity Cnty ..32 7 3 7 20 17 7 4 4 15 12 49 Lincoln....... 41 12 6<br />

Wimbledon..32 9 3 5 25 17 4 4 7 18 23 46 Exeter........ 41 13 4<br />

Man Utd...... 31 8 5 2 23 10 3 7 615 16 45 Grimsby..... 40 10 8<br />

Everton...„.^32 8 6 2 29 17 3 5 8 14 23 44 York.......... 39 9 6<br />

Q . P . R . 33 6 5 5 18 14 4 6 7 17 19 41 Torquay.... 38 13 2<br />

Middiesbro~34 6 7 4 25 25 3 4 10 15 29 38 Carlisle,..... 40 8 6<br />

Sheff Wed .-34 5 5 618 21 4 6 8 13 25 38 Hereford..... 41 9 8<br />

Aston Villa... 33 7 4 5 22 18 2 6 9 17 30 37 Stockport... 41 8 9<br />

Southmptn...33 5 5 6 23 25 3 7 7 24 38 38 Burnley..__ 40 11 6<br />

Chartton...... 32 3 7 6 20 24 4 5 7 17 24 33 Doncaster.. 41 9 5<br />

Luton..----- .33 5 6 5 23 19 2 4 11 10 30 31 Halifax........ 40 10 6<br />

Newcastle... 33 3 4 9 17 25 4 4 9 13 29 29 Hartlepool.. 41 9 5<br />

West Ham....31 1 61 0 1 5 3 0 4 2 8 10 22 23 Rochdale.... 40 9 7<br />

Division IV<br />

Home<br />

L F A W D<br />

2 29 10 6 10<br />

2 35 20 8 6<br />

4 35 17 8 9<br />

3 35 21 9 5<br />

3 29 19 7 7<br />

5 56 17<br />

2 40 21<br />

3 38 26<br />

3 37 22<br />

4 44 21<br />

3 30 18<br />

4 38 21<br />

3 28 14<br />

7 23 22<br />

3 3423<br />

Division II<br />

Home<br />

P W O L F A W O<br />

Chelsea 41 12 6 2 44 2313 5<br />

Man City 41 12 6 2 43 22 10 4<br />

Blackburn.... 41 14 4 3 45 22 5 7<br />

Crystal Pal... 39 12 6 2 36 16 7 4<br />

W.BA. 41 12 6 3 4018 411<br />

Watford 4012 4 3 34 16 6 7<br />

LeedsUM....41 11 5 5 3 3 2 0 4 9<br />

Swindon 39 10 8 2 30 15 5 6<br />

Barnsley 40 10 8 3 35 21 5 6<br />

Ipswich 41 10 3 7 34 22 7 4<br />

Stoke 40 10 8 2 29 17 5 5<br />

Boumemth.. 41 12 2 7 29 18 5 4<br />

Leicester..... 41 11 5 5 2816 2 9<br />

Sunderfnd....41 10 7- 3 35 20 3 6<br />

Oxford......... 41 10 6 4 35 25 3 6<br />

Portsmth 41 10 6 4 29 14 3 6<br />

Brighton 41 11 4 5 35 20 3 3<br />

Bradford 41 7 10 4 26 20 4 6<br />

Plymouth 40 10 4 5 31 16 3 6<br />

Oldham 41 9 8 4 45 28 1 9<br />

Hull .....41 7 8 5 30 20 4 4<br />

Shrewsbry...41 4 9 821 27 4 6<br />

Walsall...,,...,40 3 9 9 24 37 1 6<br />

Birminghm...40 3 4 12 16 31 2 7<br />

Division III<br />

Home<br />

P W O L F A W<br />

Wolves........ 39 16 2 1 53 14 8<br />

Port Vale 39 13 3 3 42 18 8<br />

Sheff Utd.....3814 2 3 4816 8<br />

Bristol R 39 9 8 3 32 19 9<br />

Fulham 40 12 6 3 39 24 7<br />

Preston........41 13 6 2 51 27 4<br />

Chester. .39 10 6 3 34 16 6<br />

Brentford 38 13 3 4 33 19 3<br />

Huddersfld..39 10 6 4 33 22 7<br />

Bury 41 11 5 5 27 22 5<br />

Sw ansea„.^4011 7 3 32 20 4<br />

NottsCnty...40 8 7 5 27 21 6<br />

Reading 40 10 6 3 35 20 4<br />

Bristol City...40 8 3 9 24 23 6<br />

Mansfield.... 40 9 6 5 28 20 3<br />

Botton ...39 9 6 3 32 18 3<br />

Cardiff 38 8 7 2 26 14 4<br />

Sou<strong>the</strong>nd.....39 9 7 4 30 24 3<br />

Northmptn... 41 10 2 9 36 31 4<br />

Chesterfld...41 9 5 7 32 29 3<br />

Blackpool....39 7 6 626 23 3<br />

Wigan. ..3 7 7 3 8 22 19 3<br />

Gillingham...41 6 3 12 21 28 4<br />

Aldershot... 40 6 5 9 27 27 1<br />

Away<br />

L F APts<br />

3 42 22 86<br />

7 24 22 76<br />

8 22 32 68<br />

8 24 28 67<br />

5 20 20 65<br />

8 26 3a 65<br />

719 24 59<br />

8 25 33 59<br />

8 20 31 59<br />

10 27 38 58<br />

10 23 41 58<br />

11 17 34 57<br />

9 21 37 53<br />

12 19 37 52<br />

12 21 32 51<br />

12 20 37 51<br />

15 19 39 49<br />

10 20 32 49<br />

1218 42 49<br />

10 23 38 47<br />

13 20 41 45<br />

10 14 33 39<br />

12 11 29 27<br />

12 9 35 26<br />

Away<br />

0 L F APts<br />

7 5 31 26 81<br />

7 5 29 25 73<br />

4 7 31 27 72<br />

5 5 30 24 67<br />

1 11 23 38 64<br />

6 10 21 28 63<br />

5 y 24 39 59<br />

7 8 23 29 58<br />

1 11 25 34 58<br />

510 27 41 58<br />

5 1 0 1 5 24 57<br />

5 9 24 29 54<br />

5 12 26 39 53<br />

6 8 18 27 51<br />

8 9 14 28 50<br />

7 11 13 29 49<br />

5 12 13 36 48<br />

511 20 41 48<br />

3 1 3 2 0 37 47<br />

2 15 12 47 43<br />

6 11 18 28 42<br />

7 9 21 29 40<br />

1 15 19 42 34<br />

7 12 18 43 33<br />

4 3219 1 6<br />

7 30 29 4 4<br />

5 40 24 3 2<br />

7 29 30 4 3<br />

3 29 24 3 3<br />

Petertjoro....40 8 3 . 9 23 28 3 8<br />

Darlington.... 41 2 12 6 23 32 4 6<br />

Colchester...40 5 6 8 25 26 2 7<br />

Away<br />

L F APts<br />

5 27 28 72<br />

6 21 19 72<br />

4 29 16 71<br />

7 34 31 69<br />

6 31 27 68<br />

7 22 28 67<br />

11 23 35 59<br />

8 28 30 58<br />

13 23 34 57<br />

15 14 39 54<br />

10 22 33 53<br />

10 15 32 53<br />

1212 31 53<br />

7 23 23 52<br />

1124 37 51<br />

8 2329 50<br />

12 11 30 48<br />

12 16 38 48<br />

14 22 39 47<br />

13 1640 47<br />

15 20 51 46<br />

9 2 0 3 9 44<br />

11 21 32 36<br />

12 20 46 34<br />

B & Q Scottish<br />

/ Home<br />

P W D L F A<br />

Rangers...... 31 13 1. 1 33 8<br />

Aberdeen....3210 5 1 26 10<br />

Dundee Utd. 31 6 7 3 1914<br />

Celtic ...32 11 1 4 32 1 7<br />

Hibernian.... 31 7 3 5 1713<br />

StMirren 31 5 6 5 1716<br />

Hearts 32 6 5 5 21 17<br />

Dundee 32 7 4 5 20 19<br />

Mo<strong>the</strong>rwell.. 32 4 6 6 16 20<br />

Hamilton__ 32 4 0 12 7 38<br />

Prem ier<br />

Away<br />

0 L F APts<br />

3 4 19 14 48<br />

7 2 22 14 46<br />

3 3 22 7 40<br />

2 7 30 26 39<br />

5 714 19 30<br />

1 8 21 29 29<br />

6 812 20 27<br />

1 510 10 24 25<br />

2 4 10 13 22 22<br />

0 2 14 9 33 10<br />

Scottish Division I<br />

Home Away<br />

P W O L F A W D L F APts<br />

Dunfrm!ine,..35 13 3 2 35 15 7 5 5 20 18 48<br />

Falkirk 3512 3 3 31 9 8 4 5 30 22 47<br />

Airdrie 34 10 5 2 32 15 6 7 4 27 18 44<br />

Clydebank... 35 9 6 2 39 24 6 6 6 30 23 42<br />

StJohnstne.3411 4 2 30 14 3 7 7 19 21 39<br />

Morton 35 7 .5 5 17 19 7 4 7 24 24 37<br />

RaithR 35 7 5 5 23 21 6 4 8 20 27 35<br />

Forfar 35 6 8 4 22 21 3 7 7 24 2633<br />

partick 35 6 6 6 22 23 6 3 8 28 29 33<br />

Kilmamck....35 5 6 7 19 26 4 7 6 20 29 31<br />

Ayr Utd -.35 7 6 4 35 33 4 3 11 16 36 31<br />

MeadOwbk..35 6 4 7 21 24 4 5 9 16 22 29<br />

Clyde 35 4 6 7 17 24 2 9 7 16 25 27<br />

Queen Sth...35 1 611 19 39 1 2 14 16 43 10<br />

Scottish Division II<br />

Home Away<br />

P W O L F A W O L F APts<br />

Albion R 35 12 4 1 33 16 7 3 8 26 27 45<br />

Brechin 35 7 5 5 26 22 6 8 4 28 23 39<br />

Alloa 35 11 5 1 37 17 3 5 10 20 28 38<br />

. East Fife..-.. 35 9 7 2 29 16 4 5 8 23 32 38<br />

Stirling A— 35 10 6 2 31 19 3 6 8 21 31 38<br />

QeensPark.35 8 7 2 25 16 2 10 6 22 26 37<br />

Montrose .....35 10 4 4 25 19 4 5 8 21 26 37<br />

Arbroath......35 5 5 72631 6 8 4 25 21 35<br />

E. Stirling 35 9 3 6 29 28 3 6 8 21 25 33<br />

Cowdenbth..35 6 10 1 29 24 5 3 10 15 26 33<br />

Stranraer.....35 5 7 6 28 30 6 3 8 28 30 32<br />

Dumbarton..35 9 2 7 28 25 1 8 8 14 25 30<br />

Berwick— 35 5 6 7 17 25 4 5 8 28 30 29<br />

Stenhsmuir..35 4 7 6 20 21 3 3 12 1 7 33 24<br />

T H E C O M P L E T E<br />

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FOR THE FOLLOWING<br />

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-• . .. ............................... ~ .<br />

RACELl<br />

Live Commentaries<br />

Fast fiesirirs<br />

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Calls charged at -5p per mm. cheap rate.<br />

35p per mia at a/l och


38<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

COUNT DOWN TO COUNTY CHAMPIONSHIP<br />

-------------------- 1<br />

Both<br />

in line<br />

for axe<br />

By COLIN BATEMAN<br />

IAN BOTHAM was at<br />

<strong>the</strong> centre of a selectio<br />

n d ilem m a for<br />

W orcestershire last<br />

night.<br />

The champions start<br />

th e ir coun ty title<br />

defence against Notts<br />

at Trent Bridge on<br />

Thursday and <strong>the</strong> all-<br />

mm<br />

rounder’s form is an<br />

unknown quantity.<br />

Bain washed out <strong>the</strong><br />

day’s play against <strong>the</strong><br />

MCC at Lord’s yesterday<br />

leaving Botham<br />

high and dry in <strong>the</strong><br />

pavilion.<br />

Gentle<br />

So far his comeback<br />

has been restricted to<br />

four days play in<br />

friendly matches on<br />

Worcester’s tour to<br />

Australia and <strong>the</strong> Far<br />

East.<br />

He has scored 72<br />

runs and bowled 29<br />

gentle overs—hardly<br />

ideal preparation.<br />

After today’s final<br />

day Botham has a<br />

maximum 21 days<br />

cricket before England<br />

pick <strong>the</strong>ir squad for<br />

<strong>the</strong> one-day in tern<br />

a tio n a ls a g a in s t<br />

Australia starting on Derbyshire skipper (centre) provides extra cover for<br />

May 25.<br />

John Morris (left) and Bernie Maher.<br />

Kim can set pace<br />

-if <strong>the</strong> sun shines<br />

KIM BARNETT is hoping<br />

for a ray of sunshine this<br />

summer. The 28-year-old<br />

Derbyshire skipper has at<br />

his disposal one of <strong>the</strong><br />

county games best attacks,<br />

but he admits: “We need<br />

some firm wickets to get<br />

<strong>the</strong> best out of <strong>the</strong>m.”<br />

Michael Holding, Devon<br />

Malcolm, Ole Mortensen,<br />

Allan Warner, Paul Newman<br />

and Simon Base will, in May,<br />

be backed up by new signing<br />

Ian Bishop, <strong>the</strong> West Indian<br />

star who Barnet hopes will<br />

finally help Derbyshire to<br />

land one of <strong>the</strong> big prizes.<br />

They haven’t won <strong>the</strong><br />

championship since 1936.<br />

And in <strong>the</strong> last 53 years <strong>the</strong><br />

REPORT by JIM M Y ARMFIELD<br />

only trophy won was <strong>the</strong><br />

NatWest one day cup in 1981.<br />

Last year Barnett led his<br />

men to <strong>the</strong> final of <strong>the</strong><br />

Benson and Hedges Cup. Now<br />

he believes his players are<br />

ready to make <strong>the</strong> big<br />

breakthrough.<br />

Progressed<br />

“In recent years we. have<br />

gone close but never quite<br />

achieved,” says Barnett,<br />

currently on duty with <strong>the</strong><br />

MjCC team at Lords.<br />

put he adds: “We have<br />

progressed both on and off<br />

<strong>the</strong> field, but really we need<br />

★ ALTHOUGH Yorkshire fast bouSler Paul Jarvis dismissed<br />

England captain David Gower for only five in <strong>the</strong> one-day<br />

friendly against Leicestershire at Headingley yesterday, both<br />

Nigel Briers, 1.1 fours, and Peter Willey, 12 fours and five sixes,<br />

plundered centuries for Leicestershire who reached 261 for four<br />

in <strong>the</strong>ir 55 overs. Yorkshire could only make 181 for seven in<br />

reply, Ashley Metcalfe and Richard Blakey being joint top<br />

scorers w ith 49.<br />

Evans in as Murphy<br />

eyes <strong>the</strong> form book<br />

WIGAN and St. Helens<br />

will know just about<br />

everything <strong>the</strong>re is to<br />

know about one ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

w hen th e y m eet at<br />

Wembley in <strong>the</strong> Silk Cut<br />

Final a week on Saturday.<br />

It will be <strong>the</strong>ir third<br />

meeting in 18 days and<br />

brought <strong>the</strong> wry comment<br />

from Wigan coach<br />

Graham Lowe: “At this<br />

rate we could b e , going<br />

down in <strong>the</strong> same bus."<br />

Reflecting on <strong>the</strong> first<br />

round Stones Premiership<br />

clash this Sunday<br />

Lowe said: “ It is a bit of a<br />

By ALAN THOMAS<br />

blow. We could have done<br />

without playing Saints<br />

again."<br />

Bid<br />

Saints boss Alex<br />

Murphy is not too disappointed<br />

at <strong>the</strong> pairing. He<br />

told me: “ We need <strong>the</strong><br />

game. Some players need<br />

to convince me of <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

form and <strong>the</strong>y can’t hide<br />

against Wigan.”<br />

Former Welsh Union<br />

to win something to convince<br />

everyone that we are a good<br />

side.”<br />

D erby sh ire la s t year<br />

finished 14th in <strong>the</strong> table, but<br />

<strong>the</strong>y lost only three games.<br />

They had three batsmen who<br />

topped 1,000 runs<br />

Four bowlers took over 30<br />

wickets but now Barnett says<br />

<strong>the</strong> arrival of Bishop could<br />

Just provide <strong>the</strong> spearhead<br />

necessary to take <strong>the</strong> team to<br />

higher plains.<br />

Admits Barnett: “I haven’t<br />

seen him yet, b u t he<br />

comes highly recommended.<br />

M alcolm M arsh all and<br />

Gordon Greenidge rate him<br />

as <strong>the</strong> top pace prospect in<br />

<strong>the</strong> West Indies.<br />

Among <strong>the</strong> batsmen Peter<br />

Bowler, who hit 1563 runs<br />

In his first season, John<br />

Morris, 1163 last summer,<br />

and Barnett himself will<br />

carry <strong>the</strong> main hopes.<br />

prop Stuart Evans will<br />

play in a desperate bid to<br />

clinch a final spot. He has<br />

not played since damagin<br />

g a knee against<br />

Oldham at <strong>the</strong> beginning<br />

of March.”<br />

Definitely out of <strong>the</strong><br />

Central Park game is<br />

Saints o<strong>the</strong>r prop Tony<br />

Burke and centre Paul<br />

Loughlin. Burke suffered<br />

a bad injury to his right<br />

ear at Halifax on Sunday<br />

w hich needed p lastic<br />

surgery and 43 stitches.<br />

Burke, who has had an<br />

outstanding season, was<br />

Stuart Evans<br />

adamant yesterday: “ I<br />

will be fit for <strong>the</strong> final.”<br />

The message was <strong>the</strong><br />

same from Loughlin who<br />

was supporting a twisted<br />

left ankle with crutches.<br />

Lowe, however, is still<br />

hoping international halfbacks<br />

Shaun Edwards<br />

and Andy Gregory will be<br />

ready for Sunday.<br />

Lowe said: “Both are<br />

responding to treatment.<br />

England place<br />

for Clough as<br />

Robson kicks<br />

out Cottee<br />

By STEVE CURRY<br />

NIGEL CLOUGH w as<br />

finally granted his overdue<br />

promotion to <strong>the</strong> England<br />

senior squad yesterday.<br />

Bobby Robson included <strong>the</strong><br />

young Nottingham Forest star<br />

in his 22-man selection for next<br />

W e d n e sd a y ’s W o rld C up<br />

qualifier against Albania at<br />

Wembley. v<br />

Clough replaces Everton’s out-<br />

of-form £2 million striker Tony<br />

Cottee and surely clinched his<br />

call-up with a sparkling two-goal<br />

display in Forest’s 3—1<br />

Littlewoods Cup Final victory<br />

over Luton Town.<br />

Robson explained yesterday<br />

that 23-year-old Clough is a<br />

player of many facets who has<br />

earned h is opportunity of<br />

promotion to <strong>the</strong> game’s biggest<br />

echelon.<br />

Crescendo<br />

The England manager said:<br />

“ Nigel deserves this. In fact, he<br />

has been in form for quite some<br />

time.<br />

“ The only reason I have<br />

resisted bringing him in is<br />

because <strong>the</strong> squad has been<br />

compact and I really want to<br />

keep it like that.”<br />

Robson had to balance <strong>the</strong><br />

overw helm ing clam our for<br />

C lough’s in c lu sio n , w hich<br />

reached a crescendo after <strong>the</strong><br />

Littlewood’s Cup Final, with <strong>the</strong><br />

knowledge that he may lack pace<br />

at <strong>the</strong> highest level.<br />

Said Robson: “ He has shown<br />

a continuation and development<br />

of <strong>the</strong> things I saw in him a<br />

ENGLAND: Shilton, Seaman, Woods,<br />

Stevens, Butcher, Walker, Adams,<br />

Parker, Pearce, Dorigo, Webb, Robson,<br />

Hodge, Gascoigne, NfcMahon, Rocastle,<br />

Smith, Lineker, Beardsley, Clough,<br />

Waddle, Barnes.<br />

SCOTLAND: Leighton, Goram, Gough,<br />

Nicol, Gillespie, McLeish, Malpas, Aitken,<br />

I Ferguson, McStay, Speedie, Nevin,<br />

Durie, McCoist, Johnston, Nicholas,<br />

Gallacher.<br />

Nigel Clough<br />

couple of years ago when he was<br />

brought into Under-21 football.<br />

“ But he is doing those things<br />

much better now. He has a good,<br />

quick, football brain and it is a<br />

great asset to him because he is<br />

not a fast, darting player.<br />

“ Nigel is more a studious<br />

player. He likes it to feet but once<br />

he gets it he can hold it up and<br />

distribute it well. He spots <strong>the</strong><br />

people running beyond him.<br />

Robson has also gone for form<br />

in his choice of Liverpool’s Steve<br />

McMahon who has certainly<br />

merited his recall in place of<br />

Paul Davis, still plagued by<br />

injury and Norwich’s Mike<br />

Phelan.<br />

Fit-again Chris W oods is<br />

restored as second goalkeeper<br />

w hich m eans an exit for<br />

Chelsea’s Dave Beasant.<br />

I do not believe that Clough or<br />

McMahon will Win immediate<br />

promotion to <strong>the</strong> side though<br />

both could be on <strong>the</strong> bench.<br />

Dave Sexton will manage an<br />

England “ B ” side to tour<br />

Switzerland, Iceland and Norway<br />

between May 16-22.<br />

N. IRELAND: Wright, McKnight,<br />

Donaghy, Worthington, Rogan,<br />

McDonald, McClelland,- O’Neill,<br />

McCreery, D Wilson, Sanchez,<br />

Whiteside, K Wilson, Quinn, Clarke,<br />

Black, Dennison.<br />

WALES: Southall, Norman, Phillips,<br />

Bowen, Slatter, Van den .Hauwe,<br />

Ratcliffe, Nicholas, Horne, Blackmore,<br />

Hughes, Rush, Saunders, Williams,<br />

Pascoe, Allen.<br />

Warren blast at<br />

Clint cop-out<br />

PROMOTER Frank<br />

Warren yesterday called<br />

on <strong>the</strong> Boxing Board to<br />

strip Clinton McKenzie of<br />

his British light-welterweight<br />

title if he fails to<br />

defend again st Tony<br />

Willis at St Albans on May<br />

9- M cKenzie, who has<br />

been nominated for a<br />

E uropean title sh ot,<br />

yesterday pulled out of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Press conference to<br />

announce <strong>the</strong> fight.<br />

Said Warren: “ He put<br />

him self up for purse<br />

offers and I won with <strong>the</strong><br />

highest bid. If <strong>the</strong>y try to<br />

By TONY BODLEY<br />

postpone this fight I’ll hit<br />

<strong>the</strong>m with a writ.”<br />

□ NIGEL BENN’S<br />

C om m onw ealth<br />

middleweight title showdown<br />

with London rival<br />

Michael Watson at Finsbury<br />

Park is a 7,000 ticket<br />

sell-out<br />

□ CENTRAL area<br />

champion Mike<br />

Whalley of Manchester is<br />

to bid for Racheed<br />

Lawaal’s European super<br />

fea<strong>the</strong>rweight championship<br />

in Copenhagen<br />

Norman W hiteside<br />

Norman<br />

bounces<br />

back for<br />

Bingham<br />

By PETER EDWARDS<br />

NORMAN WHITESIDE<br />

is back in Nor<strong>the</strong>rn<br />

Ireland’s international<br />

squad for <strong>the</strong> first time<br />

in 11 months.<br />

The 23 - year • old<br />

Manchester United star,<br />

who has already appeared<br />

In two World Cup finals,<br />

makes his first<br />

appearance for B illy<br />

B ingham ’s Group Six<br />

qualifiers In Malta next<br />

week.<br />

The A chilles tendon<br />

injury which has plagued<br />

him for more than a year<br />

cost him his place just a<br />

few hours before <strong>the</strong><br />

opening game against<br />

Malta in Belfast last May.<br />

Doubtful<br />

GARY GILLESPIE’S stop-<br />

start International career<br />

looks like being put on<br />

“hold” again, despite his<br />

inclusion In <strong>the</strong> Scottish<br />

squad to face Cyprus<br />

a t Hampden next<br />

Wednesday.<br />

The 28-year-old Liverpool<br />

defender, who turned<br />

In a virtuoso performance<br />

In <strong>the</strong> 2—0 win over<br />

France last month, Is a<br />

doubtful starter for <strong>the</strong><br />

match which could push<br />

Scotland to <strong>the</strong> brink of a<br />

place in <strong>the</strong> World Cup<br />

Finals.<br />

Gillespie, sidelined for<br />

most of this season with<br />

knee trouble, now has a<br />

groin injury and Scotland<br />

manager Andy Roxburgh<br />

says: “His chances look<br />

slim.”<br />

EVERTON’S Pat Van Den<br />

Hauwe has been given<br />

ano<strong>the</strong>r chance to add<br />

som e steel to W ales’<br />

defence in time for <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

crucial World Cup<br />

qualifier against West<br />

Germany next month.<br />

Van Den Hauwe, axed<br />

for <strong>the</strong> trip to Israel in<br />

February, Is recalled for<br />

n ext . w eek’s friend ly<br />

against Sweden at<br />

Wrexham.


G eorge Graham<br />

Defiant<br />

Arsenal<br />

call off<br />

match<br />

By BARRY FLATMAN<br />

ARSENAL have called<br />

o ff to n ig h t’s g am e<br />

against W imbledon in<br />

defiance of <strong>the</strong> Football<br />

League.<br />

They were told by <strong>the</strong><br />

League yesterday afternoon<br />

th a t <strong>the</strong>y m ust stage ‘<br />

<strong>the</strong> m atch at Highbury.<br />

B ut as a m ark of respect<br />

for <strong>the</strong> people left dead by<br />

<strong>the</strong> H illsborough horror,<br />

<strong>the</strong>y went over <strong>the</strong> heads<br />

of <strong>the</strong> football authorities<br />

and told Dons not to tu rn<br />

up.<br />

George G rah am ’s<br />

G unners now risk a heavy<br />

fine and <strong>the</strong> possibility of,<br />

precious cham pionship<br />

points deducted by <strong>the</strong><br />

League for refusing to toe<br />

<strong>the</strong> line and play on.<br />

Lead<br />

K en F ria r, A rsenal’s<br />

chief executive said after<br />

a special board meeting<br />

held a t Highbury.<br />

“O ur hearts go out to<br />

<strong>the</strong> people of Liverpool.<br />

“In view of <strong>the</strong> sad<br />

events at <strong>Hillsborough</strong>,<br />

we feel it would be entirely<br />

inappropriate to play<br />

our league m atch against<br />

W imbledon so soon after<br />

Saturday’s tragedy.”<br />

A spokesm an for<br />

W im bledon said: “We<br />

agree w ith Arsenal.”<br />

The League had already<br />

agreed to call off gam es<br />

Involving th e two Mersey<br />

giants Everton and Liverpool,<br />

including Sunday’s<br />

live TV gam e against<br />

Gunners.<br />

And th e League now<br />

face accusations of being<br />

insensitive after refusing<br />

Arsenal perm ission.<br />

QPR, who play M an-=<br />

Chester United at Loftus<br />

Road tom orrow could<br />

follow Arsenal’s lead.<br />

Rangers secretary Ron<br />

Phillips said: “While no-<br />

one has suggested to us<br />

th at <strong>the</strong> game should be<br />

p u t off, in <strong>the</strong> light of<br />

w hat Arsenal have done, I<br />

will now tell my directors<br />

who m ay well reconsider.”<br />

ONLY those who at <strong>the</strong> deepest<br />

level confuse a football game<br />

w ith life itself will say <strong>the</strong>re is<br />

an overwhelming case to abandon<br />

<strong>the</strong> FA Gup.<br />

More realistic and fitting, I<br />

believe, is <strong>the</strong> suggestion by John<br />

Barnes th at Liverpool may forfeit<br />

<strong>the</strong> semi-final.<br />

Barnes and his m anager Kenny<br />

Dalglish have eloquently made<br />

<strong>the</strong> point th a t <strong>the</strong> results of<br />

football games have for <strong>the</strong> rest<br />

of this season become utterly<br />

secondary to <strong>the</strong> proper m ourning<br />

of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Hillsborough</strong> dead.<br />

By surrendering <strong>the</strong>ir chance<br />

to win one of <strong>the</strong> great prizes of<br />

<strong>the</strong> game Liverpool would be<br />

providing a perm anent m em orial<br />

to <strong>the</strong>ir lo st fans—and a protent<br />

th a t was caused by official<br />

neglect.<br />

The Cup of 1989 would carry<br />

<strong>the</strong> m ost poignant asterisk In <strong>the</strong><br />

long lists of football records.<br />

I t would carry <strong>the</strong> nam r of a<br />

good team , ei<strong>the</strong>r Evertori or<br />

Nottingham Forest, and for ever<br />

be known to be yielded by a great<br />

one.<br />

Liverpool’s greatness on this<br />

occasion would be seen to extend<br />

beyond <strong>the</strong> field of play. It would<br />

em brace compassion and <strong>the</strong><br />

need to properly m ourn and,<br />

perhaps most preciously of all, an<br />

understanding th a t If any game Is<br />

only about winning and losing It<br />

degrades everybody.<br />

N ottingham Forest and Everton<br />

would do soccer <strong>the</strong> best<br />

service by playing a final whose<br />

proceeds would go exclusively to<br />

<strong>the</strong> care of <strong>the</strong> injured and <strong>the</strong><br />

bereaved.<br />

When grief is so thick in <strong>the</strong> air<br />

logic tends to w ant for oxygen but<br />

one can only say th a t <strong>the</strong><br />

*■<br />

" 7 t o M t o *<br />

reactions of <strong>the</strong> two clubs involved<br />

a t <strong>Hillsborough</strong> have thus far<br />

been Impeccable.<br />

Liverpool’s mood yesterday,<br />

when <strong>the</strong>y travelled back to<br />

Sheffield, was th a t of a stunned<br />

and grieving family.<br />

Waved<br />

That, anyone who has ever<br />

stood In <strong>the</strong> press of hum anity<br />

heaving in a blg-match Kop, will<br />

know, is a tragic fulfilm ent of <strong>the</strong><br />

greatest driving force in <strong>the</strong> lives<br />

of so many genuine football fans.<br />

It is to have a common identity<br />

w ith <strong>the</strong> m en who colour <strong>the</strong>lr<br />

dream s week by week.<br />

Back in <strong>the</strong> seventies I spent a<br />

cold night w ith <strong>the</strong> young and<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

notorious fans of Leeds United. I<br />

was trooped to <strong>the</strong> ground<br />

between columns of police. I had<br />

urine running over my shoes. 1<br />

was alarm ed every tim e a piece of<br />

dram atic action brought a surge<br />

of <strong>the</strong> great crowd.<br />

In all th a t godforsaken night<br />

<strong>the</strong>re was one m om ent of genuine<br />

joy, an uplifting of <strong>the</strong> spirit of<br />

young people treated w ith no<br />

more dim ity than cattle in<br />

transit. I t was when <strong>the</strong> players<br />

of Leeds briefly waved to <strong>the</strong> fans.<br />

I thought of those young people<br />

at <strong>Hillsborough</strong> last Saturday<br />

when I saw <strong>the</strong> mostly young and<br />

poor victim s being earned away<br />

to th e ir crowded m oturary.<br />

And <strong>the</strong>n I thought of <strong>the</strong>m<br />

again when Kenny Dalglish said<br />

yesterday that, for <strong>the</strong> mom ent,<br />

football didn’t m atter any more.<br />

Dalglish seemed to be saying<br />

th at In death <strong>the</strong> fallen of<br />

<strong>Hillsborough</strong> were his own. And,<br />

of course, in life <strong>the</strong>y had never<br />

asked for anything more.<br />

Derby, Spurs set to<br />

rip down <strong>the</strong> fences<br />

By BARRY FLATMAN<br />

DERBY and Spurs yesterday<br />

ordered workmen to move into<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir grounds at 9 a.m. today and<br />

rip out <strong>the</strong> 15-feet high steel<br />

fences.<br />

Newcastle are likely to follow suit<br />

and Liverpool and E verton are<br />

exploring <strong>the</strong>-possibility of removing<br />

<strong>the</strong> fences at Anfield and Goodison.<br />

Chairm an and club secretaries<br />

throughout football were last night<br />

applauding moves and considering<br />

how quickly to follow su it in th e wake<br />

of <strong>the</strong> H illsborough tragedy ^<br />

Derby secretary M ichael Dunford<br />

said: “ We have acted quickly in <strong>the</strong><br />

interests of safety.<br />

Im petus<br />

“ Having watched <strong>the</strong> awful scenes at<br />

H illsborough <strong>the</strong>re seem ed no doubt <strong>the</strong><br />

perim eter fencing was a m ajor factor.<br />

“ Quick action was heeded and after a<br />

m eeting w ith th e police and <strong>the</strong><br />

licencing authority it was decided <strong>the</strong><br />

fences on all p arts of <strong>the</strong> ground will be<br />

taken down by Saturday.<br />

“ I think <strong>the</strong> im petus will grow<br />

throughout <strong>the</strong> League and <strong>the</strong> fences<br />

will come down. It will m ean extra<br />

policing b u t we are hoping <strong>the</strong> public<br />

will appreciate th is action is being taken<br />

for <strong>the</strong>ir well-being.<br />

Meanwhile, Liverpool chief executive<br />

Peter Robinson said last night: “ We<br />

have sought an urgent m eeting w ith <strong>the</strong><br />

police and <strong>the</strong> city licensing authority in<br />

Mira is told<br />

he must stay<br />

BRAZILIAN ace<br />

M irandinha is heading<br />

for a showdown w ith<br />

N ew castle b o ss Jim<br />

Sm ith after pleading in<br />

vain for <strong>the</strong> chance to go<br />

home.<br />

Sm ith has told <strong>the</strong><br />

29-year-old striker, th at<br />

he is going nowhere<br />

before <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong><br />

season.” It’s ju st not bn.<br />

We pay h is wages,”<br />

rapped th e G eordie’s<br />

manager.<br />

B ut M ira replied last<br />

n ig h t: “ I think it is<br />

wrong to keep m e if <strong>the</strong>y<br />

are not going to play me,<br />

ju st because I am under<br />

contract.<br />

“ If I was in <strong>the</strong> side<br />

th e re w ould b e no<br />

problem . B ut it is possible<br />

th at I may .have<br />

kicked my last ball for<br />

<strong>the</strong> club.<br />

“ If <strong>the</strong>y don’t w ant m e<br />

<strong>the</strong>n I think <strong>the</strong> right<br />

thing is to let m e go and<br />

stop paying my wages.”<br />

Sheffield U nited last,<br />

night signed Dundalk<br />

centre-half Jam es<br />

G annon for £65,000.'<br />

YES’ CUP VOTE<br />

★ DAILY EXPRESS readers believe <strong>the</strong> FA<br />

Cup should go ahead in <strong>the</strong> wake of <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>Hillsborough</strong> tragedy.<br />

We asked for your opinion after Britain’s<br />

worst Soccer disaster and you voted: FOR <strong>the</strong><br />

FA Cup to continue 3,582; AGAINST 3,060.<br />

Readers who telephoned us to explain<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir verdicts pointed out <strong>the</strong>y would consider<br />

<strong>the</strong> game to be a memorial to <strong>the</strong> 94 victims at<br />

Sheffield.<br />

All proceeds from <strong>the</strong> phone vote will be<br />

donated to <strong>the</strong> disaster fund.<br />

<strong>the</strong> light of Saturday to find out <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

opinion on security fencing.<br />

“ The result is we will hold a meeting<br />

w ith Everton an d th e two authorities on<br />

W ednesday at Goodison P ark to discuss<br />

<strong>the</strong> m atter.”<br />

Newcastle chairm an Gordon McKeag<br />

plans to m eet police and local authority<br />

representatives th is morning.<br />

H e said last night: “ My personal<br />

feeling is th a t wherever and whenever<br />

p o ssib le an d fencing sh o u ld be<br />

dispensed with. I have always had<br />

reservations about it on safety grounds.<br />

“ B ut w e have to abide by existing<br />

safety regulations and I don’t expect any<br />

decision to be taken until <strong>the</strong> results of<br />

<strong>the</strong> inquiry are known.”<br />

The m ain stum bling block to many<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r clubs following <strong>the</strong> Derby and<br />

Spurs example is <strong>the</strong> Safety and Sports<br />

G rounds Act w hich in some cases<br />

requires grounds to have perim eter<br />

fencing in order to obtain <strong>the</strong> necessary<br />

safety certificate.<br />

EXPRESS SPORTS RESULTS SERVICE<br />

ASSOCIATION<br />

NORTH RIDING SENIOR CUP —<br />

semi-final: Middlesbrough 1, York 2.<br />

(tfter extra time).<br />

FA YOUTH CUP.—semi-final,<br />

second leg: Newcastle 0, Man City 1<br />

(City win 3—1 on agg).<br />

CRICKET<br />

FENNERS KJlamorean 307 (H<br />

Morris 102, M Cann 58; M F Mullins 5<br />

for 77), Cambridge Unlv 135 for 6.<br />

Drawn.<br />

LORD’S: Worcester 474 for 3 (G<br />

Hick 173 n.o., T Curtis 92, G Lord 80,<br />

P Neale 50 n.o.), MCC. No play, rain.<br />

THE PARKS: Nortbants 356 for 6<br />

(W Larkins 126), Oxford Univ. No<br />

play, rain.<br />

FRIENDLY (Old Trafford).—55<br />

overs: Lancashire 206, Cheshire 167.<br />

MOTORCYCLING<br />

GRAND PRIX (Monterey).—W<br />

Rainey (US), Yamaha, 58 min 56.1?<br />

sec, 1; K Schwantz (US), Suzuki,<br />

59:03.02, 2; E Lawson (US), Honda,<br />

59:16.09, 3. Also S Buckniaster (GB)<br />

13. World Championship standings<br />

(after three rounds): Rainey 54 pts;<br />

Lawson 41; K Magee (Aust),<br />

Schwantze 37.<br />

SHOWJUMPING<br />

WORLD CUP FINAL (Tampa).—I<br />

Miller (Can) Big Ben. 0 faults, 1; J<br />

Whitaker (GB) Next MUton, 10.75, 2;<br />

G Lindemann Jr (US) Jupiter 78,<br />

14.50, 3.<br />

SNOOKER<br />

E<strong>MB</strong>ASSY WORLD PR O ­<br />

FESSIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS<br />

(Sheffield). First round: D Taylor<br />

(NI) bt F Hughes (Rep of Ire) 10—3; D<br />

Roe (Eng) bt T Knowles (Eng) 10—6;<br />

M Hallett (Eng) bt D Mountjoy<br />

(Wales) 10—7; C Thorbum (Can)<br />

leads E Charlton (Aust) 4—3.<br />

BCE ENGLISH AMATEUR<br />

CHAMPIONSHIPS (Blackpool).<br />

Quarter-final: D Henry (Glasgow) 8, R<br />

Lawler (Liverpool) 5.<br />

SQUASH<br />

HI TEC BRITISH OPEN FINALS<br />

(Wembley).—Women : S Devoy (NZ)<br />

bt M Le Moignan (Eng) 8—10, 10—8,<br />

Grieving Ian Rush in Sheffield yesterday<br />

9—3,9—fr.Over 40: A Murphy (Essex)<br />

bt J Candlin (Surrey) 9—1, 9—4, 9—5.<br />

Over 35: A Smith (Staffs) bt R<br />

Anderson (Aust) 9—5,9—4,4—9,9—4.<br />

Men, Over*55: J Cox (Hereford) bt J<br />

Kampel (Aust) 10—8, 9—4, 9—7.<br />

Over-45: J Barrington (Ire) bt M<br />

Thurgur (Devon) 9—2, 9—3, 9—0.<br />

0ver-40: A Aziz (Egypt) bt A Safwat<br />

(Egypt) 9—6, 7—9, 9—7, 9—6. Over-<br />

35: H Jahan (Surrey) bt G Hunt<br />

(Aust) 9—5, 9—3, 9—2.<br />

GREYHOUND<br />

SELECTIONS<br />

WINSFORD.—All 476 metres<br />

except 7.45, 8.30 and 9.15 (276m). 7.30:<br />

SAMANTHA’S BOY, Tiny Tim. 7.45:<br />

ZULU, Simon’s Folly. 8.0: G AND T,<br />

Head Case. 8.15: SUSIE’S GIRL, Park<br />

Top. 8.30: BLACK PRINCE (nb),<br />

Chine Blue. 8.45: FLASH, Late Starter.<br />

M AR TIN E L E M O IG NAN fa ile d la st n ig h t to add<br />

<strong>the</strong> H i-T e c B ritis h Open squash title to h e r w o rld<br />

crown. The 26-year-old fro m G uernsey was beaten 8— 10,<br />

10— 8, 9—3, 9—6 by defending cham pion Susan D evoy o f<br />

New Zealand in th e fin a l a t W embley.<br />

I t was sweet revenge fo r <strong>the</strong> K iw i, w h o lo st h e r w o rld<br />

title to Le M oignan in H o lla n d la st m onth, an d Le<br />

M o ig n a n a d m itte d afte rw a rd s: " / am disappointed b u t I<br />

d id eve ryth in g I could. I lo s t to a be tte r p la y e r to n ig h t<br />

N ext tim e we m eet sh e d b e tte r w a tch o u t.”<br />

9.0: PAUL’S BOY, Rupert. 9.15: YOUR<br />

DEAL (nap), Black Ivy. 9.30: APPLE<br />

TART, Ray’s Lad. 9.45: O’DELL’S<br />

SON, College Girl. 10.0: FIREFLY,<br />

Black Velvet.<br />

Today’s diary<br />

ASSOCIATION<br />

(7.30 unless stated)<br />

BARCLAYS LEAGUE<br />

DIVISION TWO<br />

Birmingham v Swindon II .<br />

Watford v Walsall (7.45) II......<br />

DIVISION THREE<br />

Bristol C ity » Huddrsfid (7.45)11. . . . . .<br />

C ardiff» Notts Co... II. . . . . .<br />

Sou<strong>the</strong>nd v Brentford (7.45)...ll......<br />

SHERPA VAN TROPHY<br />

F inals, se c o n d le g<br />

N o rth ern S ectio n<br />

Blackpool (0) * Bolton (1) IL. .<br />

Hallett<br />

takes<br />

it out<br />

on Doug<br />

By PETER EDWARDS<br />

DOUG MOUNTJOY, a<br />

w inner of two titles<br />

this season, crashed<br />

10—7 to Mike H allett<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Em bassy W orld<br />

Championship at<br />

Sheffield yesterday.<br />

The 46-year-old from<br />

Pontypool, in line for<br />

“Player of <strong>the</strong> Year,”<br />

suffered his first opening<br />

roUnd defeat since<br />

h e lost to Eddie<br />

Charlton ten years ago.<br />

English champion<br />

Hallett made two<br />

brilliant fightbacks, but<br />

claim ed Mountjoy had<br />

given him <strong>the</strong> hump.<br />

He quipped: “I got <strong>the</strong><br />

hum p over a newspaper<br />

article where he m entioned<br />

<strong>the</strong> world<br />

ru n n e rs and d id n ’t<br />

include me. I don’t<br />

m ind him sp o u tin g<br />

after a m atch, b ut not<br />

before.”<br />

P o p u la r D oug led<br />

6—4, b ut lost <strong>the</strong> next<br />

five fram es and had to<br />

watch <strong>the</strong> Grimsby m an<br />

m ake a 111 break in <strong>the</strong><br />

15th. He said: “I did<br />

m ention several players<br />

who I thought could<br />

win <strong>the</strong> title. H allett<br />

wasn’t on my list and he<br />

still isn’t. H e’s not a<br />

champion!”<br />

Shock<br />

Mountjoy, <strong>the</strong> reigning<br />

UK cham pion and<br />

M ercantile Credit title<br />

holder added: “A lot<br />

goes on <strong>the</strong> ru n of <strong>the</strong><br />

ball and I had it twice at<br />

3—0 and 6—4. He<br />

started to get in <strong>the</strong> long<br />

shots and he was doing<br />

m e.”<br />

H allett now m eets<br />

debut boy David Roe<br />

from Derby in a quarter<br />

final shootout on<br />

Friday. The 23-year-old<br />

pulled off a shock 10—7<br />

win over w orld No. 10<br />

Tony Knowles.<br />

Knowles, ow ner of<br />

natio n al h u n t horse<br />

Cool S trik e b la ste d<br />

sn o o k e r’s e s ta b lis h ­<br />

m ent after his defeat.<br />

The system is all<br />

wrong for <strong>the</strong> to p<br />

players,” he said. “We<br />

don’t get enough m atch<br />

practise before coming<br />

nto tournam ents and it<br />

is destroying us.<br />

The low er ranked<br />

players have this<br />

chance. There’s nothing<br />

wrong w ith my ability<br />

b u t confidence and th at<br />

only com es w inning<br />

m atches b ut we are not<br />

getting <strong>the</strong> opportun-<br />

ty.”<br />

S o u th ern S ectio n<br />

Wolves (2) v Torquay ( I) II. . . . . . .<br />

SCOTTISH CUP<br />

S em i-final rep lay<br />

Rangers v St Johnstne II. . . . . . .<br />

(Celtic Park)<br />

NORTHERN COUNTIES EAST<br />

LEAG UE.—P rem ier. D lv lson :<br />

Harrogate R v Guiseley; Hatfield<br />

Main v North Ferriby (6.15).<br />

SKOL NORTHERN LEAGUE.—<br />

Dlvlson One: Easington v Blyth, Tow<br />

Law v North Shields.<br />

CRICKET<br />

LORD'S.—MCC V Worcester (11.0).<br />

THE PARKS.—Oxford Univ v<br />

Northants (11.0).<br />

RUGBY LEAGUE<br />

SLALOM LAGER ALLIANCE.—St<br />

Helens v Wigan; Leeds v Widnes.<br />

SNOOKER<br />

BCE ENGLISH AMATEUR CHAM­<br />

PIONSHIPS.—Quarter-finals: (Blackpool,<br />

7.0).<br />

E<strong>MB</strong>ASSY WORLD CHAMPION­<br />

SHIPS.—(Sheffield, 10.30).


-Tt*-<br />

DAILY EXPRESS Tuesday April 18 1989<br />

We<br />

of ticket<br />

By JOHN BEAN<br />

SPORTS M inister Colin<br />

M oynihan was sent a<br />

D aily E x p ress sto ry<br />

warning about th e acute<br />

shortage of tickets for<br />

Liverpool fans m ore<br />

th an three weeks before<br />

<strong>the</strong> H illsborough Disaster.<br />

The cutting was forwar­<br />

• Our March 22 story<br />

ded by Liverpool MP being wise after <strong>the</strong> event.<br />

David Alton who finally B ut no notice was taken<br />

allocated only 24,400<br />

received a reply from <strong>the</strong> of th e W arnings. The<br />

tickets to F orest’s 28,000.<br />

M inister yesterday. M inister should now care­ M oynihan’s reply said:<br />

. Liverpool m ade it quite fully consider h is own “The choice of venue and<br />

clear th at H illsborough position,” he added. allocation of tickets for<br />

<strong>the</strong>se m atches is entirely<br />

was an unsuitable ground In <strong>the</strong> Express article a m atter for <strong>the</strong> football­<br />

for <strong>the</strong> m atch,” said Alton<br />

yesterday.<br />

Liverpool chief executive ing authorities:-<br />

P eter Robinson accused “I understand th e FA<br />

“On <strong>the</strong> very sam e day I <strong>the</strong> FA of “showing com­ took account of Liver­<br />

sent <strong>the</strong> article to <strong>the</strong> plete disregard for <strong>the</strong> pool’s views in consider­<br />

M inister who refused to fans and pointed out th at ing <strong>the</strong> venue of <strong>the</strong><br />

o v e rru le <strong>the</strong> PA's Liverpool’s 38,000 average m atch b ut decided that, in<br />

decision.<br />

gate was 17,000 higher all th e circum stances,<br />

Dalglish in despair: th e anguished Anfield manager yesterday<br />

“W ith nearly 100 dead than Forest’s.<br />

H illsborough w as th e<br />

Picture: KEVIN SMITH <strong>the</strong>re is little point in L iv erp o o l- were<br />

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T o : H e r ita b le C a p ita l P la n L im ite d , F re e p o s t ( n o s ta m p r e q u i r e d ) , ‘<br />

R e a d in g RG1 l B R .T e l: 0 7 3 4 3 9 3 9 3 9 . F a x : 0 7 3 4 S 0 0 8 3 2 . ■<br />

L<br />

are ready<br />

to pull out of <strong>the</strong> Cup<br />

LIVERPOOL are ready to<br />

withdraw from <strong>the</strong> PA Cup<br />

as a gesture of respect for<br />

<strong>the</strong> victims of <strong>Hillsborough</strong><br />

tragedy.<br />

T he FA last- night<br />

scheduled May 7 at Old<br />

Trafford to re-stage Liverpool’s<br />

disaster struck FA Cup<br />

semi-final with Nottingham<br />

Forest.<br />

th e English cham pions are<br />

likely to pull Out o f <strong>the</strong> Cup after<br />

<strong>the</strong> H illsborough tragedy which<br />

cost 94 lives.<br />

The club’s board meets early this<br />

m orning and m anager K e n n y<br />

Dalglish says:<br />

“ I have said all along that <strong>the</strong><br />

wishes of <strong>the</strong> families o f <strong>the</strong><br />

James Lawton—Page 39<br />

bereaved and injured are paramount,<br />

iney come first.<br />

We have said we are not playing<br />

tor <strong>the</strong> time being. 6<br />

. How long <strong>the</strong> time being is we<br />

don^t know. If it’s <strong>the</strong> wishes of <strong>the</strong><br />

families that we don’t play <strong>the</strong>n we<br />

have to respect those wishes:”<br />

^ k iXerp°£1 h?7e <strong>the</strong> right to<br />

fhiil' v Wi .<strong>the</strong> competition and<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir England star John Barnes who<br />

q w l L i supporters in<br />

Sheffield, with <strong>the</strong> rest of <strong>the</strong><br />

Liverpool team yesterday said •<br />

, contemplate <strong>the</strong> FA Cup<br />

wrthLiverpoo! in it a n d 1 don’t think<br />

we ran play Nottingham Forest again<br />

in <strong>the</strong> semi-final..<br />

“ Football is secondary now to<br />

Garfield<br />

' by Jim Davis<br />

I TRlEP TO IMPRESS /VtV PATE.<br />

UH-OH<br />

Printed and published by Express Newsi<br />

Preston PR2 4WT. Registered at-<strong>the</strong> Post 01<br />

sr M r<br />

By JOHN KEITH<br />

what we can do for <strong>the</strong> families of <strong>the</strong><br />

victims. And I understand that <strong>the</strong><br />

view s of B arnes are echoed<br />

throughout <strong>the</strong> Liverpool dressing<br />

room with <strong>the</strong> players feeling <strong>the</strong>y<br />

cannot continue with <strong>the</strong>ir C u d<br />

campaign. K<br />

_ Liverpool chief executive, P eter<br />

Robinson, said last night: “The FA<br />

have ^ been in contact w ith us<br />

tonight and inform ed u s of <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

decision. ,<br />

Views<br />

“We have called a special board<br />

m eeting and Kenny Dalglish will<br />

also be present. I hope in arriving<br />

a t a decision we can take into<br />

account <strong>the</strong> views o f <strong>the</strong> players<br />

and <strong>the</strong> fans because this is<br />

all-im portant in th is m atter." '<br />

The FA plans, include a vastly<br />

redesigned final a t Wembley on<br />

May 20, giving both clubs a m uch<br />

higher than usual 35,000 ticket<br />

allocation.<br />

Th® FA’s executive com m ittee<br />

will .m eet again later today if <strong>the</strong><br />

word from Anfield is no.<br />

And Dalglish gave a clear indica- •<br />

taon when J i e said: ’'Football has<br />

been my life for 30 years. I know<br />

how m uch I love <strong>the</strong> game and <strong>the</strong><br />

feeling-I have. B ut football does<br />

not m atter any m ore.”<br />

G raham Kelly, th e FA’s chief<br />

executive, announced <strong>the</strong> plans by<br />

saying: “It is a very, very sensitive<br />

situation and we recognise that.<br />

We recognise th e feelings of <strong>the</strong><br />

people directly involved.”<br />

AT PINNER I STOCK CARROT<br />

STICK6 IN MV EARS ANP 5MEAREP<br />

MASHEP P0TAT0E5 ALL OVER<br />

G><br />

THEN WHAT<br />

HAPPENEP?<br />

. |:|^ |||<br />

BARNES . . . ‘Football is<br />

secondary now’<br />

THEN SHE &ORROWEP<br />

„ A QUARTER ANP<br />

CALLEP THE POLICE<br />

OUCH<br />

Anfield<br />

fans<br />

‘beasts<br />

furore<br />

By PAT SHEEHAN<br />

A FURIO U S row last<br />

n ig h t e ru p te d w hen<br />

U EFA p resid e n t Jac-<br />

q u es G eorges<br />

b rand ed th e .Liverpool<br />

fans as “b e a sts”.<br />

Speaking on Euro-<br />

■ pean radio, Georges<br />

said : “T h is region<br />

seem s to have a partic<br />

u la rly aggressive<br />

m en tality . O ne can<br />

talk of people's frenzy<br />

to enter th e stadium<br />

com e w hat may, whatever<br />

<strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong> risk to <strong>the</strong><br />

lives of o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

“W hen you see <strong>the</strong><br />

faces of <strong>the</strong> people<br />

w ho w ere in , th e<br />

sta n d s, <strong>the</strong>y looked<br />

like beasts who had<br />

ju s t been released,<br />

w ith <strong>the</strong>ir eyes popping<br />

out. It was not far<br />

from hooliganism ,”<br />

Tragedy<br />

B u t o u trage d FA<br />

spokesm an Glen Kir-<br />

to n fum ed: “T hose<br />

com m ents are untrue,<br />

d isrespec tfu l of <strong>the</strong><br />

d ea d a n d utterly<br />

insensitive.<br />

“If this strong cond<br />

em n atio n on -our<br />

part offends M r<br />

Georges and <strong>the</strong>reby<br />

prejudices <strong>the</strong> possib<br />

ility of o u r clubs<br />

re tu rn in g to E u ro ­<br />

pean competition,<br />

th a t will have been a<br />

sm all price to pay for<br />

having set <strong>the</strong> record<br />

straight.” .<br />

G eorges said th e<br />

tragedy had p ut a serio<br />

u s q u estio n m ark<br />

over E n g lish clu b s’<br />

retu rn to Europe.<br />

B ut UEFA later said<br />

it would not alter <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

executive com m ittee’s<br />

u n anim o u s decision<br />

ta k e n la s t w eek to<br />

.readm it English clubs .<br />

from season 1990-91.

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