T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
8.1 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Fri Jan 03 1997 17:07 | 6 |
8.2 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Like to help me avoid an ulcer? | Mon Jan 06 1997 07:58 | 4 |
8.3 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Like to help me avoid an ulcer? | Tue Jan 14 1997 12:13 | 10 |
8.4 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Like to help me avoid an ulcer? | Tue Jan 14 1997 13:12 | 11 |
8.5 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Jan 22 1997 14:42 | 7 |
8.6 | as you were... it was a false alarm | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Jan 22 1997 16:02 | 8 |
8.7 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Jan 29 1997 12:48 | 6 |
| Jamie,
I really miss the Electronic Telegraph extracts. Is there any chance of
your finding the time to start doing them again?
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.8 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Like to help me avoid an ulcer? | Wed Jan 29 1997 13:34 | 5 |
| It depends on how much free time I have and whether the internet is
running or walking. Currently I am in the process of picking up today's
ET.
Jamie.
|
8.9 | | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Jan 29 1997 14:42 | 2 |
|
isn't he a saint, laurie?
|
8.10 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Wed Jan 29 1997 15:21 | 5 |
| isn't he a saint, laurie?
Hang on, I thought he was alive and well?
//atp
|
8.11 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Jan 29 1997 15:32 | 3 |
| He's a treasure: whatever you can do Jamie, it's all much appreciated.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.12 | ;-) | IRNBRU::61549::Spike | Do you munch stump? | Wed Jan 29 1997 16:23 | 3 |
| What is this EF_Friends?
Rgds, Steve.
|
8.13 | you're better off here, honest. | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Jan 29 1997 16:40 | 11 |
|
you DON'T want to know, steve.
trust me.
full of huggy wuggies
positive energy channeling
good thoughts
sweetness
n light
|
8.14 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Jan 29 1997 17:04 | 3 |
| I think you missed off "bright blessings", Denise.
Helpfully, Laurie.
|
8.15 | forever in your debt | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Jan 29 1997 18:22 | 3 |
|
thank you, laurie, forever the helpful hannah.
|
8.16 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Wed Jan 29 1997 18:33 | 9 |
| Apparently some group of smelly people are trying to entomb themselves
underneath some road extension somewhere. People building the road are
attempting to stop the smellies from having their wish.
Is it not about time we just built the damned road and let the smellies decide
whether they want to get out or die?
regards,
//alan
|
8.17 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Like to help me avoid an ulcer? | Thu Feb 06 1997 07:49 | 9 |
| Sorry for the lack of news for the last couple of days. I am currently
rotting with a cold. I felt better yesterday and foolishly came into
work today and I now seriously wish I had not.
Reuters has temporarily disappeared from CompuServe and is threatened
to return as a paid service. I can still get their headlines free from
an alternate source. I shall see what other arrangements can be made.
Jamie.
|
8.18 | it's the bluest blues & it cuts me to the bone... | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Feb 06 1997 14:41 | 5 |
|
bummer about the cold....
and the news....
sigh
|
8.19 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | I feel all feak and weeble, doc | Fri Feb 07 1997 07:04 | 6 |
| Well Reuters is back, it says it is now a premium service, but all
other premium services tell you exactly how much you will have to pay
before you get into them. Reuters just lets me access as before. I
suppose that I'll have to mail them and find out what is going on.
Jamie.
|
8.20 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | I feel all feak and weeble, doc | Thu Feb 13 1997 13:30 | 4 |
| The currency report is in and I'm off until Tuesday. Talk among
yourselves.
Jamie.
|
8.21 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Tue Feb 25 1997 10:58 | 11 |
| 7.840
That minister must be a bit soft in the head.
Mind you, the "less than 25 miles from Dunblane" line is pretty irrelevant.
That 25 miles is a _big_ separation. Uddingston (where I use to live and my
parents still do) is essentially part of the city of Glasgow. Dunblane is a
rural town. The differences are extreme.
regards,
//alan
|
8.22 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | I feel all feak and weeble, doc | Thu Feb 27 1997 11:06 | 3 |
| Yesterday's and today's news can be found on TERRI::ES96 topic 67.*
Jamie.
|
8.23 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | I feel all feak and weeble, doc | Thu Feb 27 1997 12:49 | 18 |
| >E-MAIL ADS
>
>CARSON CITY, Nevada (AP) -- Nevada could be the first state to bar
>unsolicited electronic mail advertising under a bill being considered
>by lawmakers. The measure would make it a misdemeanor to send
>unsolicited ads directly to e-mail accounts. State Senate Majority
>leader Bill Raggio said the bill was modeled on a previous measure that
>prohibits unsolicited advertising over fax machines. California,
>Virginia and Connecticut are all considering similar e-mail advertising
>bans.
Given the fact that the vast majority of the Internet is outside the
jurisdiction of the State of Nevada, one can but wonder how they intend
to enforce this law. One can also speculate on the theory that the
sole function of the head of a member of a Nevada State Senator is to
keep the ears apart.
Jamie.
|
8.24 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | I feel all feak and weeble, doc | Thu Mar 06 1997 07:08 | 5 |
| It is only Thursday but the currency report is in. Tomorrow the medical
profession have requested the use of my body, so I'll be back on
Monday.
Jamie.
|
8.25 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Red goldfish | Tue Mar 11 1997 11:21 | 9 |
| Re 7.1015
> A DOUBLE motorway pile-up in fog which left three motorists dead and 62
> injured was blamed last night on drivers travelling too fast, being
> too close to the car in front and not concentrating.
Same old story. No-one learns, do they?
Goldy.
|
8.26 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Red goldfish | Tue Mar 11 1997 11:39 | 18 |
| Re 7.1021
> Calls would be interrupted at intervals advising the user how much he
> or she had spent, and conversations would be cut off if they exceeded a
> "maximum spend time" yet to be decided.
If the user isn't paying the phone bill, would they care about the
cost?
> In seeking to ban under-18s it would require
> the operator to ask a caller's age and date of birth and cut off a
> caller if the answers were unsatisfactory.
And what's to stop the caller giving a date of birth that makes them
over 18? Will the operator be able to check the ages of the people who
live at the address the call is being made from?
Goldy.
|
8.27 | | 45862::DODD | | Tue Mar 11 1997 12:44 | 5 |
| 7.1020
What's an "industrial fish"?
Andrew
|
8.28 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Red goldfish | Tue Mar 11 1997 13:02 | 7 |
| Re 8.27
> What's an "industrial fish"?
Me?
Goldy.
|
8.29 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Spring has sprung! | Tue Mar 11 1997 13:35 | 35 |
| >THE headmaster of a private girls' school has been dismissed after the
>board of governors announced they had "a total loss of confidence" in
>him.
>Colin Brooks has been the head of The Royal School in Haslemere,
>Surrey, whose patrons are the Queen and Queen Elizabeth, the Queen
>Mother, for the last year and a half. But parents of children at the
>school were shocked to receive a letter yesterday announcing the
>dismissal, to take effect instantly, with no explanation.
One can but wonder what he was up to.
A while back the head of a private boys' school. I actually found out
the truth of that one.
It seems the kids were having a party and wanted to record it for
posterity, so they asked to borrow the school video camera. The head
agreed and gave them the camera.
Everything went off ok and the kids decided to make some still shots
from the tape using the school's PC so that they could mail them to
their parents. In the process of doing this they let the tape run on
beyond the party and saw what they had overwritten.
It was a full frontal of the esteemed head er, um, cough, taking
himself in hand, as it were. Naturally the kids reported it to the
deputy head who took it to the governors and the head was given the
bum's rush.
However no one knows what happened in the interval between the kids
seeing the shot and them reporting it. Knowing kids, they most likely
made a copy.
Jamie.
|
8.30 | | 45862::DODD | | Tue Mar 11 1997 14:22 | 10 |
| > > What's an "industrial fish"?
> Me?
Not an industrious fish, an undustrial fish.
Any ideas?
Andrew
|
8.31 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Red goldfish | Tue Mar 11 1997 14:51 | 4 |
| Yes, it's a typo. u and i are next to each other on a keyboard.
Helpfully yours,
Goldy.
|
8.32 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Tue Mar 11 1997 16:46 | 3 |
| Well, roger me! One learns something new every day.
Laurie.
|
8.33 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Tue Mar 11 1997 18:34 | 2 |
|
are you trying to wind the fish up, laurie?
|
8.34 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Spring has sprung! | Wed Mar 12 1997 06:02 | 5 |
| >are you trying to wind the fish up, laurie?
So an industrial fish is a clockwork fish?
Jamie.
|
8.35 | | 45862::DODD | | Wed Mar 12 1997 08:46 | 3 |
| curiouser and curiouser
Andrew
|
8.36 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Mar 12 1997 14:15 | 6 |
|
we all knew she was a clockwork fish...
its the other part that's truly an enigma.
someone, slap me out of this real quick before
i get into trouble?
|
8.37 | | RIOT01::SUMMERFIELD | Sic Transit Gloria Mundi | Wed Mar 12 1997 18:11 | 7 |
| denise, just for you
<slap> <Slap> <SLAP!>
That any better?
Balders
|
8.38 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Mar 12 1997 19:43 | 7 |
|
wow.
i think i'm in love.
care for a mistress, balders?
|
8.39 | | 45862::DODD | | Thu Mar 13 1997 08:39 | 10 |
| Regarding the date of the election...
Someone on R4 this morning was making the point that if parliament is
disolved before April 8th all the MPs lose valuable pension and
employment rights.
Now would nice Mr Major really upset all those MPs? Of course not - so
I predict no end to this parliament until that dealine has passed.
Andrew
|
8.40 | | RIOT01::SUMMERFIELD | Sic Transit Gloria Mundi | Thu Mar 13 1997 08:40 | 3 |
| re .38
Sounds interesting......
|
8.41 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Mon Mar 17 1997 14:20 | 7 |
| Today is St Patrick's day. Traditionally my birthday is celebrated the
next day, well it has been for the last 55 years.
So I'm having it off, as it were, and you lot will have to forage for
your own news, or rediscover the art of conversation.
Jamie.
|
8.42 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | That's me in the corner | Mon Mar 17 1997 14:24 | 10 |
| Re 8.41
> So I'm having it off, as it were, and you lot will have to forage for
> your own news, or rediscover the art of conversation.
Fnarr! Some chance!
Happy Birthday, Jamie.
Goldy.
|
8.43 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Mon Mar 17 1997 14:32 | 3 |
| Many happy letulns...
//atp
|
8.44 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Mon Mar 17 1997 16:00 | 5 |
| Wot 'e said.
Cheers, Laurie.
PS. Nice one, Mr. Potter!
|
8.45 | Just an idea. | GIDDAY::HOBBS | Andy Hobbs. Sydney CSC. -730 5964 | Mon Mar 17 1997 22:46 | 7 |
|
J, ever consider sending your old surgeon a birthday card for
yourself, from yourself ? Might give him something to smile about.
Happy birthday.
A/.
|
8.46 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Tue Mar 18 1997 14:36 | 9 |
|
St.Patrick's day?
Here in Galway I never even noticed. There was some mumbling about a
great parade but by the time I'd dragged myself out of bed and into
town round about one in the afternoon especially early it had finished.
After that it was as dead as a Sunday afternoon.
Chris
|
8.47 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Tue Mar 18 1997 17:09 | 6 |
|
happy birthday, jamie!!!
st patrick's day, a great holiday, honouring a great st.
GUINNESS!!
|
8.48 | Surely?? | CHEFS::16.42.3.208::CONNELLA | | Wed Mar 19 1997 08:37 | 3 |
| Only if you're Irish though..
Andrea
|
8.49 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Wed Mar 19 1997 08:46 | 28 |
| Well I got 5 cards, (thank you Denise) 3 rose bushes and a bottle of
whisky.
I had a nice long lie until 08:30 then I got up and made myself a ham
omelet by way of breakfast.
I was just sitting down at the table when I discovered an extra present
from one of the cats. This took the form of, most of a medium sized dead
rabbit.
The missing part was the throat. For those of you who are not familiar
with dismantling rabbits, when you take the throat out they tend to
leak a lot.
This sort of put me off my omelet but with perseverance I managed to
get it down. Later, when I felt up to it, I began to clear up the mess.
I got a dustpan and used it to lift the corpse. Unfortunately I put it
only under the body and when I lifted it up the head fell off, hit the
floor with a disgusting thump and rolled under the table, hotly pursued
by some of the onlooking cats.
This just about caused me to review the omelet. The corpse was donated
to a pair of crows who spent most of the morning noisily consuming it.
Cats, don't you just love them.
Jamie.
|
8.50 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Wed Mar 19 1997 08:50 | 8 |
| cats....a pair of crows
:-)
Y'know in some ways you may have got off lightly...
regards,
//alan
|
8.51 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Mar 19 1997 16:01 | 2 |
|
honestly andrea, you really do crack me up.
|
8.52 | | CHEFS::16.42.3.208::CONNELLA | | Wed Mar 19 1997 16:09 | 1 |
| Gld to be of service Denise.. I presume you're not Irish then...
|
8.53 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed Mar 19 1997 20:10 | 3 |
|
but i thought you knew i was a yank.
haven't you been paying attention???
|
8.54 | To be sure to be sure | CHEFS::16.42.3.208::CONNELLA | | Thu Mar 20 1997 08:40 | 4 |
| Oh sorry, of course I forgot about Americas plasticus paddiuis
syndrome.. sorry I hope all the "Irish" out there enjoyed themselves...
Andrea
|
8.55 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu Mar 20 1997 13:16 | 15 |
|
Re: 7.1182, JFK-TEXT
> Herald Square in Manhattan. The AP has an original copy of the same
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
WTF is an original copy?
The lengths some people will go to in order to make ridiculous claims.
It was the same with the cloning thing. Those yanks claimed to have
cloned a monkey but it wasn't quite cloning in fact nowhere near just
a feeble attempt to claim a first.
Chris
|
8.56 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Thu Mar 20 1997 15:09 | 17 |
| The Dutch Farming community long famed for being honest as the day is
long (during December in Alaska), is in a bit of a tizz.
Due to the intensive farming methods they produce more pig dung that
they can recycle. To stop a pig dung mountain, or lake, forming they
are limited in the number of pigs that they can keep.
Unfortunately they tended to keep more than they were allowed to. So
when there was an outbreak of swine fever where was a bit of
surreptitious moving of pigs. Naturally this spread the disease.
Now they are having to slaughter a lot of animals and the Dutch
government is compensating the farmers for all the licensed pigs but is
not paying a cent for the unlicensed ones. The farmers think this is
most unfair.
Jamie.
|
8.57 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Mar 20 1997 16:00 | 2 |
|
it's DISCRIMINATION, DAMMIT!
|
8.58 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Fri Mar 21 1997 09:29 | 9 |
| Re. 56
I think the farmers should be made to pay a fine for every additional pig.
It's about time people who disregard agricultural policies or who
engage in irresponsible agricultural practices started facing up to the
consequence of their actions. IMO, compromising public health for a few
extra bucks should be penalised.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.59 | they are criminals. | MKTCRV::MANNERINGS | | Fri Mar 21 1997 11:32 | 11 |
| re .58
quite right CHARLOTTE. Here in Ireland they are now doing on the spot
sheep inspections and a small number of farmers who had applied for grants
for hundreds
of sheep didn't have a single sheep! These clowns should be banned from
all grants for 10 years, they rip us all off and give honest farmers a
bad name. For some reason I don't understand, this kind of criminal
fraud is not treated as it should be.
..Kevin..
|
8.60 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:11 | 12 |
| The Wicked Witch of the West arrives on Sunday with a view to parking
her broomstick in our hall for two weeks.
Due to a cock-up on the holiday schedules at Harry's practice he is
unable to be there for the first week. Due to a second cock-up on my
part I took two weeks off to look after her instead of just the one.
So there will be nothing for you lot to read in here unless you write
yourselves.
Jamie.
|
8.62 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Misdirected goldfish | Wed Mar 26 1997 11:46 | 11 |
| Re .61
> A GENE that may be linked with nearly a third of breast cancers has
> been discovered by scientists.
Gerbil,
Any idea where I can get more information on this news story?
Cheers,
Goldy.
|
8.63 | www.telegraph.co.uk | TERRI::SIMON | Semper in Excernere | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:04 | 4 |
| But it is timing out at the moment.
Simon
|
8.64 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:18 | 11 |
|
Re: 7.1248
> SECURITY weaknesses at the Maze jail were ignored for more than 13 years
> after they were revealed by a Government-ordered inquiry into the mass
> IRA breakout in 1983, The Telegraph has learned.
So much for the current Government (RIP) being tough on crime.
Chris
|
8.65 | Oh! Clash with Simon! | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:30 | 7 |
| All news stories come from the Electronic Telegraph.
Point your web browser at www.telegraph.co.uk
It's free to register!
Kevin
|
8.66 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Misdirected goldfish | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:33 | 3 |
| Thanks Gerbil.
Goldy.
|
8.68 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu Mar 27 1997 09:56 | 10 |
|
> TEACHERS claim that the new television comedy Chalk is a malicious
> travesty of life in a secondary school and gives their profession a bad
> name.
Any teacher who takes that drivel seriously should be fired as should
the script writers of said drivel and programme schedulers who allowed
it airtime. Bring back Rimmer.
Chris
|
8.69 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu Mar 27 1997 10:33 | 4 |
| I've never seen said programme, but the couple of trailers I saw
demonstrated something on an intellectual par with Crackerjack.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.70 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Thu Mar 27 1997 10:48 | 4 |
| I just happened to catch about 5 minutes of said rubbish the other
night. The script and acting was so appaling that it made one cringe.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.71 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Mar 27 1997 15:12 | 9 |
|
mr::WINPENNY!
what's this about rimmer?
where'd he go???
who's the hologram taking his place??
i have oodles of questions.
aghast in nashua
|
8.72 | | RIOT02::SUMMERFIELD | Sic Transit Gloria Mundi | Thu Mar 27 1997 16:18 | 12 |
| re .69
>>I've never seen said programme, but the couple of trailers I saw
>>demonstrated something on an intellectual par with Crackerjack.
>>
>>Cheers, Laurie.
Compared with most of the juvenile-oriented (sp?) trash foisted upon
the younger viewers by TV companies today, Crackerjack was the epitome
of intellectual program making.
Balders
|
8.73 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu Mar 27 1997 18:19 | 14 |
|
Denise,
I don't know where Rimmer went. I missed the first few episodes of the
current series and have not had it explained and I'm not sure I want to
know, all I do know is that it misses him. The best episode of the
current series was when they had the tribute to Rimmer, they should
release the single.
Re: .72
Fully agree.
Chris
|
8.74 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Misdirected goldfish | Thu Mar 27 1997 18:50 | 3 |
| He turned into Ace Rimmer (sort of) and went off to save the universe.
Goldy.
|
8.75 | | KOOLIT::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Fri Mar 28 1997 12:54 | 4 |
|
if you don't know, goldy, its alright to just say so.
goldfish haven't a brain the size of the universe,
and we all know that.
|
8.77 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Fri Apr 04 1997 11:13 | 13 |
|
Re: .76
> THE television programmes Blind Date and Gladiators encourage a growing
> addiction to real-life violence, a criminologist said yesterday.
I can understand this, I've never seen Gladiators but on the few
occasions I have catched a brief glimpse of Blind Date I've had an
overwhelming desire to go out and do over the first red headed scouser
I came across. Fortunately, probably for me, I haven't yet met such a
person.
Chris
|
8.78 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Fri Apr 04 1997 12:00 | 12 |
| I'm pleased to say I have never seen more than a few seconds' worth of blind
date, but I do rather enjoy Gladiators.
The young ladies do seem rather attractive and manage to build up quite a
swweat. I'm not sure why the contestants don't get to wear quite such
revealing outfits, but nothing's perfect.
My wife tells me that some of the young gentlemen are also physically
attractive, though obviously not as much so as I am.
regards,
//alan
|
8.79 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Fri Apr 04 1997 12:11 | 6 |
| Blind Date's enjoyable to watch IMHO. I do dispair of some of the
people, but there's usually the odd person who makes you laugh.
Cheers,
Chris
|
8.80 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Fri Apr 04 1997 12:31 | 9 |
| I must confess that I do find myself watching Blind Date simply because
it's the ultimate in corn and it's enjoyable to watch people making
fools of themselves. Also, I like the bit when they slag each other
off after the date - best part of the show actually.
As for gladiators, way too much hype and Americanism. Nice bods
though.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.82 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Mon Apr 07 1997 14:49 | 10 |
| Re 7.1257
>"I have never nailed myself on the cross of three percent. When I said
>in the past 'three percent means three percent' I did not necessarily
>mean 3.0 percent," the Guardian quoted Waigel as saying.
Is it just me, or is he using double talk to wriggle out of something
he was most emphatic about earlier?
Jamie.
|
8.83 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Mon Apr 07 1997 15:49 | 4 |
| It's not just you, Jamie; heezawrigglin'... I still think it won't
happen...
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.84 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Tue Apr 08 1997 07:47 | 5 |
| There will be a hitch in the main news service tomorrow as the medical
profession once more requires the use of my body. Perhaps this time the
scanner will actually work.
Jamie.
|
8.85 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Tue Apr 08 1997 15:28 | 2 |
|
one day is fine. but this 2 week business is unacceptable.
|
8.86 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Tue Apr 08 1997 15:57 | 6 |
| >one day is fine. but this 2 week business is unacceptable.
OK you have got a deal. I'll spend the two weeks at work, and you spend
two weeks looking after Harry's mother, AKA the bigot's bigot.
Jamie.
|
8.87 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Misdirected goldfish | Tue Apr 08 1997 16:04 | 3 |
| Do we get a "What I did to my mother-in-law on my hols" note?
Goldy.
|
8.88 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Tue Apr 08 1997 16:24 | 5 |
|
so jamie,
what does the she-beast think of yanks??
i bet i could charm her with my basic sense
of humour and all.
|
8.89 | set mode/jamie=off | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Wed Apr 09 1997 09:29 | 73 |
| A HUSBAND who "hated women" tried to poison his wife of 27 years by
lacing her early morning cups of tea with rat poison, a jury was told
yesterday.
PRINCE Michael of Kent is to pursue a career as a television presenter,
becoming the latest - and perhaps the least likely - member of the Royal
Family to seek a living from the media.
MICHEL Roux, the restaurant owner, and his wife face an estimated
�400,000 tax bill after a High Court judge ruled yesterday that the
Inland Revenue was entitled to penalise them over a tax avoidance scheme
involving a pension fund.
THE obsessed former boyfriend of a primary school teacher was jailed for
two years yesterday after "quite shamefully" stalking her for nine
months.
ONE of Britain's highest-earning union officials has been sacked by
British Airways following a fracas at Heathrow Airport when he allegedly
assaulted and spat at a rival union representative.
A COUNTY council was criticised by a High Court judge yesterday for its
decision to withdraw community care services from an 86-year-old woman
because of an apparent lack of resources.
A LEGAL action for damages has begun against the Government, claiming
that negligence by coastguards contributed to the Lyme Bay canoeing
disaster in 1993 in which four teenagers drowned.
ONE of a gang of robbers who preyed on the Tube's Metropolitan Line was
caught when he responded on his home telephone to a message placed by
police on a radiopager he had stolen, an Old Bailey jury was told
yesterday.
A FATHER and son trapped on a sandbank by an incoming tide saved
themselves by climbing on their fishing rods to keep their heads above
water.
THE missing matter of the Milky Way, which astronomers have been hunting
for 20 years, has been found lying like a rugby ball enclosing our
galaxy, astrophysicists report today.
A HAUL of about �500,000 in cash hidden under a bed in a house near
Heathrow Airport was an unexpected bonus yesterday for police mounting
anti-burglary raids around the London region.
TWO women who were best friends at school when they were nine years old
met 20 years later when they each received a kidney from the same donor
in separate transplant operations.
AN eight-year-old boy who died after being pulled from a Center Parcs
swimming pool had been on holiday at the complex before re-starting
treatment for cancer.
THE new commission set up to deal with suspected miscarriages of justice
faces a risk of being submerged by its workload and hampered by
inadequate financing, its chairman said yesterday.
THE first detector alarms for mobile telephones have been installed in a
hospital after staff found the phones interfered with medical equipment.
RESIDENTS of Royal Tunbridge Wells blocked their streets with cars
yesterday in an escalation of an extraordinary protest to protect their
cherished red pavements from council "asset-stripping".
SCIENTISTS have long known that being an underdog is bad for your health
but yesterday it emerged that being a stressed minion may impair the
development of your brain as well.
Source: Electronic Telegraph -
Electronic Telegraph is a Registered Service Mark of The Telegraph plc
For more details on any of the above headlines stories, visit the
Electronic Telegraph on the Web at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
|
8.90 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | All that sheep tupping worked! | Thu Apr 10 1997 07:08 | 4 |
| There is no way that I wish to relive such a horrible experience, never
mind burdening you lot with it.
Jamie.
|
8.91 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Apr 10 1997 14:58 | 3 |
|
aw come on, jamie, there has to be an interesting
anecdote in there somewhere.
|
8.92 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu Apr 10 1997 15:05 | 10 |
| Sample conversation.
Her opinion on the film "Four weddings and a funeral."
"I thought it was a terrible film. The only bit that I enjoyed was
when the guy died, That made me laugh!"
See what I mean?
Jamie.
|
8.93 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Clear blue eyes that cannot see | Thu Apr 10 1997 15:06 | 5 |
| All the more reason to post a full trip report.
Please Jamie, she sounds hilarious.
Goldy.
|
8.94 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Apr 10 1997 15:06 | 3 |
|
and she's HARRY's mother!?!?
did she suffer a really bad menopause or something?
|
8.95 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Thu Apr 10 1997 15:19 | 17 |
| Taxing Ciggarettes for health insurance is making a pact with the devil
IMHO.
1. The tax is supposed to generate X dollars while reducing new
smokers by 15%. If the new smokers drop as older ones quit or die
off, how will they maintain the funding for insurance purposes? Get
the insured kids to take up the devil weed?
2. The government says they are discouraging smoking. By taxing it
for a legitimate need, (Insurance for the children of the working poor)
isn't the government lending legitimacy to tobacco?
3. Why not work on getting real insurance and medical reform in the
US, instead of the hodgepodge mess that leaves some people insured, and
others being one serious illness from the dole or bankruptcy?
meg
|
8.96 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Apr 10 1997 17:20 | 8 |
|
i think the logic behind that one is to get the people
(smokers) where they hurt the most...not their own
health or conscience...but in the wallet.
i'm not saying that is the perfect answer...
but with all things being equal... it's a feasible
option.
|
8.97 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu Apr 17 1997 08:37 | 5 |
| Yes the currency report is in a day early. Well Synod time has come
round again ant tomorrow at this time I be heading south towards
Masstricht to become the sole disbeliever amongst the faithful.
Jamie.
|
8.98 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | New romantic goldfish | Thu Apr 17 1997 09:33 | 7 |
| Re .97
> Masstricht to become the sole disbeliever amongst the faithful.
I thought the spelling was Maastricht?
Goldy.
|
8.99 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu Apr 17 1997 10:29 | 1 |
| yup
|
8.100 | SCARF! | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu Apr 17 1997 11:18 | 1 |
|
|
8.101 | Yawn ! | CURRNT::WARBURTON | | Thu Apr 17 1997 12:09 | 7 |
|
I don't believe this spelling lark is still going on !
I thought you might have got bored with that by now.
Later,
Julie.
|
8.102 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu Apr 17 1997 12:17 | 3 |
| Oh you missed all the good bits.
Jamie.
|
8.103 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Fri Apr 18 1997 17:56 | 8 |
|
play on words, i would think...
i mean, jamie's off to a mass/synod do and it's
in maastricht... etc...
shall i be more detailed, goldy?
<rolls her eyes in disbelief>
|
8.104 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Sun Apr 20 1997 18:37 | 15 |
|
Eight young thugs ranging in age from 14-17 have been sent to prison
for the gang rape of an Austrian tourist. I get a lot of hassle off the
wife about how the streets of England aren't safe for people to walk on
but it must be said that in this case the offenders were of Columbian,
Venezeuelan, Greek and Filipino origin, only the Greek was born in
Britain. Now if it's considered racist to say that these people should
be flogged and that they and their families should be sent back to
whence they came then I'll be a racist.
The only consolation is that now that they have gone to prison if there
is any real justice then they shall encounter a taste of their own
medicine.
Chris
|
8.105 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Mon Apr 21 1997 12:01 | 3 |
| Reply. .104
Ditto. Sick little monsters.
|
8.106 | justice ?? | MKTCRV::MANNERINGS | | Mon Apr 21 1997 12:16 | 12 |
| re 104
>> and their families
The families of these people are innocent, are they not?
If a member of your family commited a crime do you think you should be
punished for it?
Or are you calling for their punishment because of their origin?
..Kevin..
|
8.107 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Mon Apr 21 1997 13:13 | 5 |
| Well said Chris.
Gerbs, don't talk 2.12
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.108 | | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Mon Apr 21 1997 13:54 | 7 |
| >>Gerbs, don't talk 2.12
Er um...?
Whatdoyameanboy?
gerbil$confused
|
8.109 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Mon Apr 21 1997 14:55 | 17 |
| This wasn't the only crime that these yobs had committed. They spent
much of their time out late at night mugging in order to feed their
egos and in a couple of cases their drug habit. If their families had
shown more control over their respective children this would have been
less likely to occur, hence, in this case, the families are as much to
blame.
In general however, yes, negligent parents should be held responsible
for the actions of their children, and I cannot see anything other than
a negligent parent that would allow a 14 year old out on the streets
until the early hours of the morning.
There are cases of genuinely 'bad' children which no amount of effort
other than that provided by the legal system could even attempt to
control.
Chris
|
8.110 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Mon Apr 21 1997 15:29 | 3 |
|
sometimes even the parents can't control the kid...
so what happens then, eh??
|
8.111 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Mon Apr 21 1997 15:57 | 3 |
| Retroactive abortion then becomes justified.
Jamie.
|
8.112 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Mon Apr 21 1997 16:07 | 5 |
| If parents can't control their own children, then those children should
be taken from them, just as they would if they were abusing them in a
more conventional way.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.113 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Mon Apr 21 1997 16:15 | 9 |
|
you make it sound so easy, laurie....
parents can't control the kid... so they have them taken
away... the kid becomes a ward of the state... tangled
in the bureaucracy of a cold government and becomes no
better off.
i think you're worsening the problem IMHO.
|
8.114 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Mon Apr 21 1997 19:33 | 10 |
|
Denise,
If you'd bothered to read to the last paragraph I did make an exception
for genuinely 'bad' children and I am in full agreement with Laurie,
take them away from the society in which they have no place and put
them somewhere where their criminal tendencies can be controlled and
preferably beaten out of them.
Chris
|
8.115 | you really are a right tit, sometimes... | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Mon Apr 21 1997 21:18 | 8 |
|
at a cost to the rest of the taxpayers, of course...
you know mr::CWINPENNY, if you'd keep your nose at a level
parallel to the ground you'd find that it isn't that
hard comprehending things ... even to the extent that
perhaps you could begin to understand what the cost is
to `regular folk', unlike you high payed scumbags...
laurie inclusive.
|
8.116 | | GIDDAY::HOBBS | Andy Hobbs. Sydney CSC. -730 5964 | Tue Apr 22 1997 00:02 | 2 |
|
Bundle! Bundle!
|
8.117 | | CHEFS::16.42.3.208::CONNELLA | | Tue Apr 22 1997 09:54 | 8 |
| re Chris .144. How about Public Boarding school, keeps the riff raff
out of normal everyday living, the parents can get on with whatever
makes them happy (palying golf, going down the bingo, getting
pissed..) without the responsibility.
Fancy helping to fund it Chris??
Andrea
|
8.118 | why is crime increasing? | MKTCRV::MANNERINGS | | Tue Apr 22 1997 11:30 | 7 |
| Public Boarding School ? No no no, what we need are Universities of
Crime. Really shitty prisons with brutal regimes for 12 year olds. That
should produce a generation of real head bangers alright. All that
liberal crap about rehabilitation and decent opportunity for youth is
boring. Who cares about the crime rate? Let's just find a few examples
of nasty crime to work out our prejudices on. And if there are a few
wogs involved, well so what? Are we supposed to ignore it or what?
|
8.119 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Tue Apr 22 1997 14:47 | 9 |
| Chocolate carrots?
Ick! Why not just encourage kids to garden? Veggies taste better to
my monsters when they are picked, the dirt rubbed off, and eaten right
there in the sun. Also, kids pick up a lot of what they eat/don't eat
by what their parents do. If veggies are approached as something you
"have to eat" why bother liking them?
meg
|
8.120 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Tue Apr 22 1997 15:21 | 15 |
| I have also been wondering about these chocolate carrots.
Correct me if I am wrong but surely children, especially in the
formative years, will eat whatever their parents give them to eat?
Okay, fair enough, as they develop there will be certain flavours that
they dislike, but surely not all vegetable flavours? I would say the
problem lies more in their conditioning, which IMO, is the parents'
responsibility.
Also, it seems a little strange that in encouraging children to follow
a healthy diet, these vegetables are flavoured with pizza flavour etc,
- surely the flavourants and preservatives can't be that healthy anyway?
Also, what about the sugar and fat content in the chocolate flavouring?
CHARLOTTE
|
8.121 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Tue Apr 22 1997 15:34 | 13 |
| >Correct me if I am wrong but surely children, especially in the
>formative years, will eat whatever their parents give them to eat?
I didn't. I hated cooked vegetables with a blinding passion. There was
only one attempt at insisting I ate a cooked vegetable, cooked turnip.
I choked it down then vomited it across the table. This was completely
effective.
For some strange reason my mother has it stuck in her head the "fact"
that raw vegetables are not good for you, and I quite like them raw.
Jamie.
|
8.122 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Tue Apr 22 1997 16:01 | 13 |
| that raw vegetables are not good for you, and I quite like them raw.
As a general rule, I pretty much dislike vegetables. I suppose that some
folk must like them, but to me they're just some kind of muck that have to
be tolerated in order to get a 'balanced' diet. I'd much rather be eating
good, red meat.
The only way in which I can tolerate vegetables is when they are raw, or
stir-fried so little that they are just as firm as when they're raw.
regards,
//alan
|
8.123 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Tue Apr 22 1997 16:17 | 4 |
| My children like vegetables. They love raw carrots especially, and eat
loads and loads of them.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.124 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Tue Apr 22 1997 16:30 | 16 |
| >Correct me if I am wrong but surely children, especially in the
>formative years, will eat whatever their parents give them to eat?
I hated vegetables as a child, tried them once and threw up, never
tried them again. Now I introduce the odd vegetable here and there,
but generally they present the food of satan to me :-).
I don't see what the fuss is about, some people don't like meat, so
they don't eat it, I don't like vegetables so I don't eat them.
This balanced diet stuff isn't dependant on vegetables anyway. When I
was young my mum took me to the doctors, he explained that I was
getting the right balance so she could quit worrying.
Chris "I don't like peas" Sumner
|
8.125 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Tue Apr 22 1997 19:01 | 7 |
|
I like vegetables. In fact I will eat just about any food presented to
me with the exception of olives which I personally wouldn't class as
food anyway. I will refrain from giving my advice to young men about
women who eat olives.
Chris
|
8.126 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Tue Apr 22 1997 19:02 | 6 |
|
Re: 7.1417
Brings a whole new meaning to the phrase, 'raising a stiffy'.
Chris
|
8.127 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Tue Apr 22 1997 19:09 | 10 |
|
Rehabilitation? Nonsense. Lock 'em up and throw away the key. And it
wouldn't cost so much if they weren't kept in the lap of luxury. They
are meant to be in a prison not a five star hotel. They are there to be
punished not pampered. If they are considered by wishy washy do-gooders
to be too young to be sent to prison then send them to a work house
until they are old enough. The main thing is to keep them out of
society to prevent them comitting further crimes.
Chris
|
8.128 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Tue Apr 22 1997 20:26 | 4 |
|
mr::CWINPENNY,
you talk a load of gar-baaahge.
|
8.129 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed Apr 23 1997 07:22 | 3 |
| Off with their goolies!
Jamie.
|
8.130 | | 45862::DODD | | Wed Apr 23 1997 09:14 | 5 |
|
Labour's lead down to 5% - 5 more glorious years for Britain ahead.
Andrew
|
8.131 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Apr 23 1997 11:10 | 4 |
| That's good news Mr. Dodd. I think my prediction of an almost hung
parliament is looking better all the time.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.132 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed Apr 23 1997 11:39 | 7 |
|
Don't get your hopes up. It was one targeted poll with leading
questions not directly aimed at who you will vote for but an assessment
of probable voting tendencies based on answers given. All other direct
polls out today still give Labour a 20 point lead.
Chris
|
8.133 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed Apr 23 1997 12:10 | 8 |
| Way back in 1974 I realised that opinion polls were more likely to be
works of fiction rather than fact.
Personally I have never answered a question truthfully whenever I get
cornered by the ones with the clipboard. I somehow suspect that others
do the same.
Jamie.
|
8.134 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Apr 23 1997 13:04 | 3 |
| As usual, I'm with Jamie on this one.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.135 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Sleepy goldfish | Wed Apr 23 1997 13:18 | 3 |
| As usual, I'm with Jamie and Laurie on this one.
Goldy.
|
8.136 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed Apr 23 1997 13:57 | 6 |
|
Re: .134
You seem to be pretty much accepting them in .131
Chris
|
8.137 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Apr 23 1997 14:25 | 3 |
| I was referring to Mr. Dodd's prediction, not the poll.
HTH, Laurie.
|
8.138 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed Apr 23 1997 14:58 | 8 |
|
Mr. Dodd's prediction was based on a poll.
And WTF is HTH
I've figured it out and no it doesn't.
Chris
|
8.139 | WAKE UP AND SMELL THE BLOODY COFFEE | CHEFS::16.42.3.208::CONNELLA | | Wed Apr 23 1997 17:48 | 30 |
| Well I don't believe that that number of people can be so stupid and
selfish to put the rest of the country through another 5 years of
running down our social structure, introducing a make or buy policy
into every aspect of society, further breakdown of health, education,
transport, employment....
Oh sorry I forgot Tory's don't see past their own comfortable little
worlds and panic when they hear Labour incase they get a penny on income
tax (never mind the tax burden is now as high as in 1979 - old
labour!!!) , how their subsidies for little Johnnies private education
might go and that the better off might actually be asked to contribute
something to society other than producing "smart", middle class children
to carry on in their footsteps and further widen the gap between the
haves and have nots.
I sincerely hope that the nation wakes up to itself and does not put
them back in for a further 5 yers, regardless of "politics." I don't
believe in a magic wand and I am sure that a Labout Govt will make
mistakes.. but to carry on with a govt who have fatally harmed the
fabric of this country, created an underclass and a generation of young
people who can't even be arsed to vote... a new broom sweeps clean and
who knows, you might even like the Blair regime - how do you know if you
don't look up from your own navels (or its it backsides) and give it a
try. As the papers say, the two are looking more and more similar..
Angry yet hopeful
Andrea
|
8.140 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed Apr 23 1997 18:30 | 6 |
|
Middle class? I'm all for people wanting to improve their lot but what
a dreadful thought that such a group could even think of considering
themselves true blue. So from now on, upper class if you please.
Chris
|
8.141 | | 45862::DODD | | Wed Apr 23 1997 18:47 | 9 |
| re .139
How quaint.
Andrew
PS A change would be good but only for the variety.
AJD
|
8.142 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Wed Apr 23 1997 18:48 | 7 |
| Can't remember what I heard, but apparently Labour aren't bringing back
student grants as such.
I'm not a student anymore, but I feel sorry for them. They should
really get free prescriptions like old codgers. :-)
Chris
|
8.143 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu Apr 24 1997 08:32 | 6 |
| Sorry about the reduced number of news items and the format changes.
CompuServe seem to have severed their links to the AP wire services and
I had to scrounge around the web to find other sources. Hopefully by
tomorrow I'll find better links.
Jamie.
|
8.144 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu Apr 24 1997 11:11 | 12 |
| RE: <<< Note 8.139 by CHEFS::16.42.3.208::CONNELLA >>>
-< WAKE UP AND SMELL THE BLOODY COFFEE >-
As Mr. Dodds said, how quaint.
>> Oh sorry I forgot Tory's don't see past their own comfortable little
^
>> labour!!!) , how their subsidies for little Johnnies private education
^
ODE (times two).
Laurie$"smart".
|
8.145 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu Apr 24 1997 12:21 | 12 |
|
Re: 7.1458
> LIMA, April 23 (UPI) _ Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori denies that
> commandos involved in the dramatic rescue of 71 hostages were told to
> take no prisoners.
As the phrase goes, and I'm the tooth fairy.
Serves them right and will save more expense prosecuting them anyway.
Chris
|
8.146 | | 45862::DODD | | Thu Apr 24 1997 19:10 | 7 |
| re .144
I think you might spell my name properly, Lorry.
HGV
Andrew
|
8.147 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu Apr 24 1997 20:35 | 4 |
| Sorry, brain slippage, and that's the second time today I've typed your
name as "Dodds". I plead burn-out and tiredness.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.148 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Apr 24 1997 21:12 | 3 |
|
too piggin' lazy to do a quick check before hittin'
return, if you ask me.
|
8.149 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Fri Apr 25 1997 11:50 | 32 |
| Re. 139
Andrea,
Please don't get me wrong here, I am not entirely anit-Labour, but
a few comments on your note.
< ...how their subsidies for little Johnnies private education
might go and that the better off might actually be asked to contribute
something to society other than producing "smart", middle class
children to carry on in their footsteps and further widen the gap between
the haves and have nots.>
Under the Conservative government the middle classes, who earn in excess
of �27K per year, pay 40% income tax. Also, based on their earnings,
they are not entitled to many housing and social benefits from the
state. Also, by producing smart and educated children they are
contributing to society in terms of economics by creating business and
job opportunities, investment etc., thereby increasing the Gross
Domestic Product thus improving the Gross National Product. So, IMO, they
are contributing to society.
Also, Tony Blair has constantly been proposing that a Labour government
would invest in education because he believes that a better educated
workforce will improve the economy. He personally wouldn't send his kids
to a government funded school - but that's another rathole. Anyway, what I
am saying is that the only way to bridge the gap between the classes is
to vastly improve education and job prospects for the "have nots" so that
they can further contribute, instead of being a burden on the welfare
state.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.150 | Grant-maintained isn't private | LINGO::SILVERMAN | | Fri Apr 25 1997 14:56 | 7 |
| >Tony Blair ...personally wouldn't send his kids to a government
>funded school
Yes, he does. His son goes to a grant-maintained school. That's
government funded. It's not a private (or "public") school. I
personally may not agree with his decision, but that's another
matter.
|
8.151 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Sat Apr 26 1997 00:58 | 10 |
| Kids will pretty much develop similar tastes to what their parents do
around veggies. My kids help me in the garden from a very young age,
and have quite the taste for veggies right off the plants, unwashed and
warm from the sun.
I'm not much for cooked beggies with the exception of spinach pizza and
quiches, but put up with them through the winter when fresh stuff is
expensive and not very appealing or tasty.
meg
|
8.152 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Mon Apr 28 1997 10:39 | 10 |
| Re. 150
<Yes, he does. His son goes to a grant-maintained school. That's
government funded. It's not a private (or "public") school.>
I believe the school in question is also funded by "contributions" from
parents. Either which way, it is not the type of institution that Mr
Blair is advocating for the children of Joe Public.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.153 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Mon Apr 28 1997 11:18 | 9 |
| Re. 151
I agree that the parents' opinion could have a significant influence on
a youngster's tastes. To those of you who dislike veggies, what was
your parents' opinion? Also, I notice that most of you say that you
will eat them raw but not cooked, so I take it that you don't mind
salad then?
CHARLOTTE
|
8.154 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Mon Apr 28 1997 11:34 | 12 |
| I agree that the parents' opinion could have a significant influence on
a youngster's tastes. To those of you who dislike veggies, what was
your parents' opinion? Also, I notice that most of you say that you
will eat them raw but not cooked, so I take it that you don't mind
salad then?
In my case, my parents both like vegetables. My mother loves salads - I still
shudder at the very thought of yet another lettuce leaf when we go over to
visit them!
regards,
//alan
|
8.155 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Mon Apr 28 1997 11:46 | 20 |
| >To those of you who dislike veggies, what was your parents' opinion?
My parents both enjoy veggies and tried to get me to eat them for
years, until the Doctor told them it was pointless and I'd eat them if
I wanted. They gave up then, but people (granny, uncle, aunt etc)
still tried to get me to eat "just one sprout". I used to hate meals
at relations for this very reason. Now I just say that I don't like
veggies, some people are very surprised and do try to get me to eat
them. Usually they're left at the side of the plate.
Saying that, I now enjoy the odd grilled tomato, fried mushrooms and
lettice and cucumber. Radish, peas and sweetcorn still taste **** in
my opinion so I don't eat them.
At the end of the day it's choice, I choose not to eat things I don't
like.
Chris.
|
8.156 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Mon Apr 28 1997 12:15 | 15 |
| Hating vegetables, in my case, seems to be a genetic trait, running
down my mother's side of the family.
I don't have an extreme case come of my cousins are much worse. I will
eat most raw fruit and some raw vegetables. I also love milk, cheese
etc.. Most of my cousins will will not eat any fruit, vegetable (cooked
or raw) and hate milk and cheese.
Since leaving Scotland I have run across quite a few of my fellow
expatriates who have a marked aversion to vegetables.
Like Chris I positively hated visiting do-gooders who tried to force
me to eat vegetables.
Jamie.
|
8.157 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | De-stressed goldfish | Mon Apr 28 1997 12:20 | 17 |
| I hate all veggies except carrots, cucumbers and potatoes. When I was a
child, my mother would serve all kinds of food, including veggies. If I
chose not to eat anything on the plate, she wouldn't mind, and would
ensure that I was "fed" by offering me a bar of chocolate. On the other
hand, my ex-husband was fed all kinds of food and if he didn't clear
his plate he would have the meal re-served at the next meal and this
would keep happening until he ate the food. He claims that this
"forced" him to eat every and any food he was ever served, whereas I am
very fussy about what I eat.
My mother should have had more sense and tried to encourage me to
try/eat all different kinds of food instead of just offering a
chocolate bar if I said "I don't like that particular food". However,
it's easy to say this with hindsight, my mother probably thought she
was doing things for the best, ie, keep the child happy.
Goldy.
|
8.158 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Mon Apr 28 1997 12:55 | 7 |
| > On the other hand, my ex-husband was fed all kinds of food and if he
> didn't clear his plate he would have the meal re-served at the next meal
> and this would keep happening until he ate the food
Chundering and yacking easily solves the above.
Chris ;-)
|
8.159 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Mon Apr 28 1997 14:41 | 20 |
| Re. 157
Goldy,
I think you raise an interesting point in this note, that being if
children are made to eat what they are given they end up being less
fussy about food. If they are given a choice they become more
selective.
I guess it is the same with animals. Some puppies can be quite
obstinate with their food and if they won't eat it, some owners are
inclined to change their food/brand resulting in the pet becoming
selective and only eating certain food. However, if you keep feeding
them the original food and they realise there is little choice, they
eventually end up liking it.
It's all psychological, I tell you :^)
CHARLOTTE
|
8.160 | | TERRI::SIMON | Semper in Excernere | Mon Apr 28 1997 14:49 | 1 |
| One man and his dog, Pavlov...
|
8.161 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Mon Apr 28 1997 16:36 | 5 |
| <----
As in the stimulus being vegetables and the response being to vomit?:^)
CHARLOTTE
|
8.162 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Mon Apr 28 1997 18:22 | 12 |
|
Re: .152
Yes he is, but he's advocating it for all children not just those that
have parents able to afford it. These assisted places are all very well
but still don't cater for talented children of poor families as the
Tories seem to think they do.
It is the difference between looking upon socialism as dragging
everybody down to the same level or up to the same level.
Chris
|
8.163 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Tue Apr 29 1997 10:16 | 7 |
| In the Netherlands tomorrow is the Queen's birthday, or Rabbit day as
dear old Wendy used to call it. So upon the morrow I shall be making
merry and frolicking around the streets of the local towns, whilst you
lot sit staring at blank screen wondering what is going on in the
world.
Jamie.
|
8.164 | Wot no news ! | CURRNT::WARBURTON | | Wed Apr 30 1997 13:29 | 5 |
|
Where's the news today then ?
Julie.
|
8.165 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Wed Apr 30 1997 13:34 | 4 |
| I think today Jamie is wandering the streets of Holland dressed as a rabbit
or something.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.166 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Wed Apr 30 1997 14:53 | 3 |
| Do try to keep up, Jules.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.167 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Spidermum | Thu May 01 1997 09:26 | 9 |
| All the polls seem to be indicating that Labour have/will have a
majority. I seem to remember that the polls in 1992 indicated the same
yet the Conservatives were returned to power. Could this happen again?
Tune in tomorrow morning and find out.
Goldy.
PS: It dawned on me last night that John Major is effectively
re-applying for his own job!
|
8.168 | | CHEFS::16.42.3.171::CONNELLA | | Thu May 01 1997 12:10 | 14 |
| Exactly, CHARLOTTE, which is why we need a change in Govt to ensure that
it is not just "middleclass" children who have access to good education
facilities and teaching. A good quality education system for all and
not for the top 10% is vital to the success of this country.
I am not against smart educated people, I am pro that choice being given
to every child in this country. I believe personally that we have more
chance of achieving this with a Labour Govt who are commited to lowering
class sizes rather than funding grammar schools for example.
Anyway todays the day so don't just hope for a Labour Government, Vote
for a Labour Government!!
Andrea
|
8.169 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Thu May 01 1997 12:32 | 15 |
| >I am not against smart educated people, I am pro that choice being given
>to every child in this country. I believe personally that we have more
>chance of achieving this with a Labour Govt who are commited to lowering
>class sizes rather than funding grammar schools for example.
Andrea,
The Labour party claims that they will reduce class sizes but don't tell us
where the money for that is coming from. If you really believe that this is
an important issue, you should probably vote LibDem. That party at least is
honest enough to say "it will cost more taxes to pay for better educationsal
standards."
regards,
//alan
|
8.170 | | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Thu May 01 1997 13:23 | 7 |
| So,
Any news on the early exit polls then?
I'm attempting to get the hinote into Virgin Radio but the
network's a real dog today
gerbil$Voted_Weeks_ago
|
8.171 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu May 01 1997 13:59 | 5 |
|
There should not be any political news until after the polling stations
have closed. Whether that extends to exit polls I'm not too sure.
Chris
|
8.172 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu May 01 1997 14:05 | 5 |
|
If that's the case it doesn't apply to Ireland anyway, just heard on
the radio that the exit polls show Labour in front.
Chris
|
8.173 | Don't believe them | VAXCAT::GOLDY | Smart goldfish | Thu May 01 1997 14:22 | 4 |
| Being a wicked sort of goldfish, if I was asked in an exit poll how I'd
voted, I'd lie!
Goldy.
|
8.174 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu May 01 1997 14:45 | 14 |
| I well remember the first time I voted. As I left I was pounced upon by
the exit pollsters, who inquired which way I had voted. I pointed out
that it was a secret ballot and I had no intention of telling them. One
said that as it was just an exit poll it didn't matter.
I continued to decline. Another said that I must tell them. I offered
to go back inside the polling station and have that "fact" verified by
the election officials. This brought a sudden back down on the part of
the pollster.
A third asked nicely and I just said."What if I tell you a lie like he
just did?" They let me go after that.
Jamie.
|
8.175 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Thu May 01 1997 15:06 | 10 |
| So today's the day we get to choose between the fat-cat Capitalists and
the hopelessly optimistic Socialists :^)
I'm gonna vote for the Green Party and if anyone asks me who I voted for,
I will lie, unshamedly, and say the Monster Raving Loonies.
BTW, in South Africa I think is is illegal for canvassers to ask you
who you voted for. It certainly goes against election protocol.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.176 | | TERRI::SIMON | Semper in Excernere | Thu May 01 1997 15:24 | 10 |
| �Monster Raving Loonies.
Apprently Lord Such isn't standing this year as his mother
isn't well and he is looking after her.
What a nice chappy.
Simon
|
8.177 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | A hangover is the wrath of grapes | Thu May 01 1997 15:47 | 14 |
| Talking about Monster Raving Loonies, I met the candidate for Wokingham
at a fireworks party, hosted by none other than former EFer, John Bennet.
This guy was dressed in a great big yellow, inflatable banana costume.
When he told me he was standing for election I really thought he was
kidding and I started to "take the mick", as you do. He turned out be
be a really interesting and effortlessly charming guy.
Apparently, part of the Raving Loonies manifesto is passports for pets
and the creation of pathways for hedgehogs, which sounded very good at the
time, although upon reflection, I suspect it was the alcohol talking.
Needless to say, CHARLEY still claims he is going to vote for them.
CHARLOTTE
|
8.178 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu May 01 1997 17:17 | 6 |
| RE: 7.1564
When, oh when (rhetorical question) will people learn that Big Ben is
the bell in the tower, not the tower, and not the clock?
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.179 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed May 07 1997 08:07 | 9 |
| Due to the fact that the Dutch compress all their public holidays, with
the exception of Christmas and New Year, into the 7 week stretch
between Easter and Whitsun, the news service will once more be
disrupted until Monday.
So while you lot are slogging it out and wondering what is going on in
the world, I'll be enjoying a 4 day weekend.
Jamie.
|
8.180 | | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Wed May 07 1997 09:36 | 4 |
| Same for me except I should be poking my head in on Friday so I'll
attempt to throw VNS in here
Gerbil$happy_to_see_the_sun_is_back_today
|
8.181 | <raspberry> to you, jamie | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Wed May 07 1997 15:29 | 3 |
|
it's so unbecoming to brag like that, jamie.
|
8.182 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed May 07 1997 15:49 | 5 |
| Kittens, here I come.
See you all Monday.
Jamie.
|
8.183 | | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Fri May 09 1997 12:39 | 136 |
| ZAIRE's rebel forces were said yesterday to have resumed their advance
on Kinshasa as reports reached the capital that retreating government
soldiers had massacred more than 100 civilians earlier this week.
TONY Blair stamped his authority on the first meeting of Labour Cabinet
ministers yesterday by insisting that they honour a pledge to freeze
their salaries for a year.
SKY Television is considering the introduction of a pay-per-view system
for international football matches, despite backing down yesterday from
a threat to block radio broadcasts of a series of England games.
DIANA, Princess of Wales expressed her "deep disappointment and sadness"
yesterday after a patient with an eating disorder disclosed to a
newspaper personal details of the Princess's own struggle against
bulimia.
JOHN Bruton, the Irish Prime Minister, last night hailed Tony Blair's
election as an "improvement for the better" for Ireland after their
first meeting as heads of government.
A MAN "obsessed" by the break-up of his marriage murdered four of his
young nieces and nephews by setting fire to their home after his wife
returned temporarily, a court was told yesterday.
CHARLES Lewington, the Tories' director of communications, resigned
yesterday.
A SHIPPING magnate, whose �800 million fraud on the Bank of Credit and
Commerce International led to its collapse, was jailed for 14 years
yesterday amid renewed controversy over the decision to grant him �4
million in legal aid.
BART'S Hospital, scheduled for closure by the Conservatives, was given a
seven-month stay of execution by the Government yesterday.
TWO youths stole a family's pony before lashing it to a railway line
with its head on the track and setting its mane on fire.
A MILLION women aged between 50 and 64 are to be invited to take part in
a unique study to find whether hormone replacement therapy increases the
risk of breast cancer.
TRAIN companies face tougher fines for poor services because of
ministers' anger that a loophole has allowed South West Trains to escape
its recent cancellations crisis without major penalty.
MARGARET Beckett, the Trade and Industry Secretary, has won a Cabinet
battle against David Blunkett, the Education and Employment Secretary,
for control over implementing Labour's manifesto commitments on a
minimum wage and the social chapter.
JACK Straw, the Home Secretary, is expected to go ahead with his
predecessor's policy of building private prisons to avert a population
crisis in the system.
A PRIEST who was cleared last night of sexually abusing altar boys at
his church said he bore no ill-will towards his two accusers.
A NIGHTCLUB hostess who blamed former World Champion boxer Nigel Benn
for a vicious attack on her boyfriend told a court yesterday that she
had made a mistake.
ANTHONY and Julie Cohn never lost faith that one day a miracle would end
their childlessness.
A GIRL of nine who alleges that she was raped by boys at her primary
school was receiving counselling from social workers at her home
yesterday while police inquiries continued.
A LARGE part of Britain was isolated yesterday when an engineer switched
off the power at Telehouse, a maximum security telecommunications and
computing back-up centre.
THE world's oil supplies will start to run out in 20 years, an article
in the journal Nature has warned.
MICHAEL Heseltine, the former deputy prime minister, had an operation
for his heart condition at a Harley Street clinic yesterday.
A WOULD-BE thief yesterday won compensation against a pig farmer who
kicked him in the face as he crawled on all fours at the scene of his
crime.
THOUSANDS of British Airways long-haul passengers had to carry their
meals on board yesterday because of industrial action by the airline's
catering staff at Heathrow.
A FORMER soldier who walked into a shop brandishing a three-foot long
machine gun was freed at the Old Bailey yesterday because he had not
committed a criminal offence.
A CAMERA crew for Blue Peter refused to film a group of children dressed
as chimney sweeps for a traditional May Day festival because they had
blacked-up faces.
STEPHEN Dorrell, the former Health Secretary, signalled a dramatic
about-turn over the Conservative Party's opposition to constitutional
change yesterday.
AFTER the Dinkies, meet the Sinmoos. If "Dual Income No Kids" households
were the phenomenon of the 1980s, then the 1990s have been marked by the
rise of the "Single Income Never Married Owner-Occupier".
WORKERS tormented a German storeman with Nazi salutes and Adolf Hitler
drawings, an industrial tribunal was told yesterday.
THE world's first commercial sea-borne space satellite launch platform
has completed successful trials in Stavanger, Norway.
THE battle for the Tory leadership may be under way already but
Conservative MPs are preparing for a more pressing contest - the
elections for the powerful back-bench 1922 Committee.
MOVES to decommission Trawsfynydd nuclear power station in Snowdonia
have been set back because a local committee has insisted on planning
permission.
FOUR dogs at the centre of a noisy neighbours' row have been silenced by
a pet therapist.
PROPOSALS by Lord Woolf, the Master of the Rolls, to hear personal
injury claims of up to �10,000 in a fast-track system with fixed costs
were attacked at a lawyers' conference in London yesterday.
SIR Michael Shersby, who was re-elected Conservative MP for Uxbridge
last Thursday with a majority of 724 votes, died yesterday.
HUNDREDS of people queued in the rain yesterday to be the first to buy a
virtual pet, the electronic toy chicken craze that has swept Japan and
America.
Source: Electronic Telegraph -
Electronic Telegraph is a Registered Service Mark of The Telegraph plc
For more details on any of the above headlines stories, visit the
Electronic Telegraph on the Web at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
|
8.184 | | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Fri May 09 1997 15:29 | 3 |
|
thanks gerbs...
a little something to go with my coffee.
|
8.185 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu May 15 1997 10:47 | 10 |
| This evening Harry and I will entrust the kitten's welfare to Barbi as
we hightail it south to Paris. There we will make merry and enjoy the
last Dutch public holiday until Christmas. To avoid holiday traffic we
have taken the Friday and Tuesday off as well. So you will have to chat
amongst yourselves until Wednesday.
Mind you, any of you who have access to the internet could download the
Electronic Telegraph and shove it in here.
Jamie.
|
8.186 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu May 15 1997 11:13 | 11 |
|
Not in the news but BT may fight any plans for a windfall tax in the
courts. They only made 3.2 billion pounds profit last tax year and
claim that this is not excessive as it is just about equal to their
payroll bill. This means that for every pound a BT employee earns a
pound is donated to some capitalist share holder sitting on his/her fat
arse doing nothing. If I were a BT employee supposedly rewarded for
productivity I'd be rather disturbed by this and demand at least a 50%
pay increase.
Chris
|
8.187 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Thu May 15 1997 12:13 | 11 |
| This means that for every pound a BT employee earns a
pound is donated to some capitalist share holder sitting on his/her fat
arse doing nothing.
I think this translates -- in reality -- to "a pound is donated to City
institutions managing the saving and pension funds of individuals throughout
the world"
regards,
//alan
|
8.188 | | 45862::DODD | | Thu May 15 1997 12:33 | 4 |
| Not all profit goes to shareholders and fat cats. Quite a lot goes back
in to the business.
Andrew
|
8.189 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu May 15 1997 14:15 | 4 |
| Shareholders only get a dividend, they don't actually get the
"profits".
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.190 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu May 15 1997 14:20 | 4 |
|
Whatever, it's not going to the poor sods who earned it.
Chris
|
8.191 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu May 15 1997 14:28 | 3 |
| And I'm a shareholder in BT.
Jamie.
|
8.192 | the rich are getting richer and the poor... | MKTCRV::MANNERINGS | | Thu May 15 1997 14:50 | 14 |
| >>"a pound is donated to City institutions managing the saving and pension
funds of individuals throughout the world"
Well that would be nice wouldn't it, if that was how wealth is
distributed. But that is not the way things are is it ? Estimates of
these things are suspect in my book, but 3% owning 70% is not an
unreasonable guess in my book.
Then there is the little matter of how the pension funds are managed.
Robert Maxwell was rather bril at it wasn't he?
..Kevin..
|
8.193 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Thu May 15 1997 14:52 | 4 |
| Side effects of marijuana, like drwsieness? I take it these people
don't believe in treating pain with opiates either.
meg
|
8.194 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Thu May 15 1997 15:09 | 9 |
| Personally I do not see why marijuana is banned and the ban imposed
with such ferocity. Smoking tobacco is much more prevalent and tobacco
smokers tend to smoke a lot more.
I have tried it, and unlike Clinton I actually inhaled. (BTW it is not
illegal in the Netherlands). It was a bit like the USA or a theme park,
a nice place to visit but I wouldn't want to live there.
Jamie.
|
8.195 | | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Thu May 15 1997 16:49 | 7 |
| I'm with Jamie on this one.
I like the odd piece of SpaceCake but I happily live without it.
Here it's freely available ;-)
Kevin
|
8.196 | | TERRI::SIMON | Semper in Excernere | Thu May 15 1997 17:23 | 3 |
| Apparently it is quite a good pain killer, is this true?
Simon$prolapsed_disc_/_sciatica
|
8.197 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu May 15 1997 17:42 | 9 |
| RE: <<< Note 8.190 by 45080::CWINPENNY >>>
>> Whatever, it's not going to the poor sods who earned it.
Chris, without the investors (shareholders), the company wouldn't have
had the money to invest to create the wealth and the jobs in the first
place. Not only that, but didn't those "poor sods" get paid a wage?
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.198 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu May 15 1997 17:46 | 6 |
|
As far as I remember it was a public utility and the current round of
shareholders came in later to reap the benefits with virtually no risk,
so in this case I don't think that argument is valid.
Chris
|
8.199 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Thu May 15 1997 23:59 | 15 |
| As far as I remember it was a public utility and the current round of
shareholders came in later to reap the benefits with virtually no risk,
so in this case I don't think that argument is valid.
Again, I've got to disagree. Grantedm the risk was nothing like that which
one would face starting a new company from scratch. However, there was still
a whole pile of money had to be funnelled into rebuilding the UK phone network
pretty much from scratch.
To be honest, I think they've done a fine job. I just wish we were as good at
making profit. And I wish our salaries were as good as those of my Uni
contemporaries who are working at Martlesham!
regards,
//alan
|
8.200 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Fri May 16 1997 12:35 | 4 |
| Wot 'e said. BT is a bloody good company these days, and has changed
out of all recognition.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.201 | | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Fri May 16 1997 15:20 | 11 |
|
ad,
thank you so very much for giving me the news to go
with this morning's coffee.
it is very appreciated, and i'm so grateful to you.
shall i lick your bootheels?
denise
|
8.202 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Fri May 16 1997 15:42 | 4 |
|
BT was given away, as were most of the other utilities.
Chris
|
8.203 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Fri May 16 1997 18:01 | 4 |
| As they were nationalised industries, it is perfectly appropriate that
they were offered at a discount.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.204 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Fri May 16 1997 18:32 | 21 |
| I saw a documentary about the process of selling BT off on TV some time ago.
The big problem was that nobody knew what appetite the public would have for
selling off a nationalised industry.
A sucessful sell-off was essential (ie, all the shares had to be sold). So
the price was deliberately left low. However, the folk in charge were not
sure up until about the second last day that they would be able to sell all
the shares at the asking price.
So I think it's unfair to accuse the BT sell-off as being excessively cheap.
It may be a valid accusation against subsequent sell-offs, but that's a
different discussion.
Have a good weekend, y'all
regards,
//alan
PS Thanks to Andy and Kevin for signing my guest book. I tried mailing Kevin
and my mail bounced, I promised myself I'd reply to Andy after reading his
'whingeing Pom' tales. I'm still not at the end of them :-)
|
8.205 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Fri May 16 1997 19:31 | 6 |
|
Brown,
I can recognize a wind-up when I see one.
Chris
|
8.206 | | KOOLIT::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Mon May 19 1997 15:36 | 2 |
|
yeah, but how many times were you wrong, mr::CWINPENNY?
|
8.207 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Mon May 19 1997 18:22 | 4 |
|
Wrong? What a novel concept.
Chris
|
8.208 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Mon May 19 1997 20:30 | 3 |
|
you delude yourself, mr::CWINPENNY.
then again, isn't that what makes you what you are?
|
8.209 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Thu May 22 1997 17:14 | 12 |
|
Re: 7.1906
> ONE third of children think that oranges sold in shops and supermarkets
> are grown in Britain, while 90 per cent believe that tomatoes are
> exotic fruits which are only produced abroad, according to a survey
> published today......
It would be interesting to know what the parents of these children knew
as well.
Chris
|
8.210 | | VAXCAT::LAURIE | Desktop Consultant, Project Enterprise | Thu May 22 1997 19:24 | 7 |
| Years ago I met an American in Ipswich; we worked together for a while.
He had two University degrees, and came from a wealthy New York family.
He confessed that until he came to England and saw peas in the pod in
the shops, he believed that peas were made in a factory... Nothing
surprises me any more.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
8.211 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Tue May 27 1997 14:10 | 10 |
|
Re: 7.2008
If I heard correctly on the radio this morning the bloke is 'allowing'
the abortion to go ahead.
So much for the Scots wanting independence if they go crying to the
House Of Lords when they can't get their own way.
Chris
|
8.212 | Love means never having to apologize? | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Tue May 27 1997 20:33 | 16 |
| Let me get this straight if I can.
This man beat up the mother of his 18-month-old and tossed her out of
the house, and now he....
1. Wants to gain custody of the daughter that is 18 months despite
evidence that he uses women for punching bags.
2. Wanted to force his future ex wife to have another baby so he could
also have custody of it as well.
3. Feels he is the agrieved party, despite items 1 and 2?
|
8.213 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Wed May 28 1997 09:37 | 27 |
| > Let me get this straight if I can.
>
> This man beat up the mother of his 18-month-old and tossed her out of
> the house, and now he....
Was the violence ever proven? He should be treated as innocent until proven
guilty.
> 1. Wants to gain custody of the daughter that is 18 months despite
> evidence that he uses women for punching bags.
That seems a trifle emotive, Meg. There is an allegation that he hit _one_
woman.
> 2. Wanted to force his future ex wife to have another baby so he could
> also have custody of it as well.
A man is 50% responsible for the conception, and is held to be 50% responsible
for providing for a child. It seems reasonable that he should have some
choice in whether the child is born or not.
> 3. Feels he is the agrieved party, despite items 1 and 2?
I'd say he has more of a case than most of the media seems willing to admit.
regards,
//alan
|
8.214 | | CURRNT::WARBURTON | | Wed May 28 1997 09:38 | 6 |
|
Does anybody know why there are strikers outside the Belgian office
today ?
Julie.
|
8.215 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Wed May 28 1997 09:38 | 9 |
| So much for the Scots wanting independence if they go crying to the
House Of Lords when they can't get their own way.
1. Trust me, we don't _all_ want independence.
2. The House of Lords is the highest court with jurisdiction over Scotland
(EU bodies excepted). Where else should we go for legal redress?
regards,
//alan
|
8.216 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed May 28 1997 10:08 | 27 |
| Re .213
>Was the violence ever proven? He should be treated as innocent until
>proven guilty.
7.2008
>During the case, the courts heard that Mr Kelly was convicted a year
>ago of assaulting his wife.
He is guilty.
>A man is 50% responsible for the conception, and is held to be 50%
>responsible for providing for a child. It seems reasonable that he
>should have some choice in whether the child is born or not.
7.2022
>Mrs Kelly, who is contracted to the Daily Record, has alleged that her
>husband had "a secret love child" - a three-year-old girl whom, she
>claimed, he had not seen for nine months.
Looks like his track record to date tends to indicate that he is not
keeping his end of the bargain. So why should he have the right to force
a woman to bear yet another of his children?
Jamie.
|
8.217 | | 45862::DODD | | Wed May 28 1997 12:05 | 5 |
| This man was on breakfast TV and he was quite clear that he had stopped
because he could not afford to continue. He could not afford to clarify
the law, someone else would have to do that.
Andrew
|
8.218 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed May 28 1997 12:53 | 11 |
|
Re: .214
National holiday? Sun's shining? Workers council felt like a day off?
An 'employee' was asked to button up his shirt for showing too much
chest hair?
I was going to ask that if you are in Belgium say hello to all my old
friends but then I realised that they've all left.
Chris
|
8.219 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed May 28 1997 12:54 | 7 |
| The law doesn't seem to need clarification. He was only given leave to
appeal on the technicality that he brought the case in Scotland.
His possibility of winning was zero. In the UK the fetus does not have
any rights if the mother wishes to have an abortion.
Jamie.
|
8.220 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed May 28 1997 13:33 | 28 |
|
Re: 29.20
And why is that topic write locked?
> -- In April, the town council of Cambre, in Galicia state in northern
> Spain, voted legal, marriage-like status to nontraditional unions, but
> the controversy was not over a same-sex couple. The precipitating
> event was the recent nuptials of Daniel Pena and his sister Rosa Moya
> Pena, who have lived together for 18 years and have kids aged 5 and
> 11. The council's decision provoked outrage almost everywhere else in
> Spain.
This is not quite as reported. The two people in question were
seperated during childhood and hadn't seen each other for years and
started a normal relationship upon meeting. It wasn't until much later
that couple realised they were brother and sister and by then they were
too far down the road anyway. As far as I know it is only the church
which is upset by this.
The article doesn't give the males full name otherwise it would be
easier to say if they had the same mother as the children take their
parents surnames, for example our boy is Eduardo Winpenny Tejedor,
taking my surname first then his mothers. This may have given an
indication to the couple that they were related but Pena as a surname
in Spain is not far from Smith in England.
Chris
|
8.221 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://www.vmse.edo.dec.com/~potter/ | Wed May 28 1997 13:55 | 5 |
| Apart from the question of in-breeding of any children, why is it considered
wrong for a brother and sister to have sexual relations?
regards,
//alan$only_child
|
8.222 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed May 28 1997 14:00 | 6 |
| And why is that topic write locked?
To stop you carrying on a discussion in a topic that is used for
putting news of the weird in.
Jamie.
|
8.223 | | 45080::CWINPENNY | | Wed May 28 1997 14:23 | 4 |
|
So why not a "Comments on the News Of The Weird" topic?
Chris
|
8.224 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Wed May 28 1997 15:22 | 3 |
| Feel free to start one if you think there is a need.
Jamie.
|
8.225 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Wed May 28 1997 16:32 | 21 |
| RE: Men being tied to their mothers apron strings etc etc.
{I can't remember the exact passage now, but it was a comment by some
journo at Bella. Well in response to her paragraph..}
What's wrong with that then ?
My mum and I have a great relationship, I live in Basingstoke, my
parents live in Nottingham. I phone them at least once a week (usually
more) and see then at least once a month (usually more).
I'll also admit that mum does my washing and ironing if I'm visiting
and if I have any. Mum asks if I have any washing when I go up, then
she'll do it. I certainly don't ask her to and I don't expect it. I'm
perfectly capable of living outside my parents apron strings.
I'm sure it's all a product of a good upbringing and probably always
has been. I hope to do the same for my children some day - and why
not ?
Chris
|
8.226 | | GIDDAY::HOBBS | Andy Hobbs. Sydney CSC. -730 5964 | Wed May 28 1997 22:28 | 13 |
|
Doesn't sound like you're tied to your mother's apron strings to
me, Chris. Sounds like you have a good close relationship.
The usual scenario in my mind is that of the over-protective mother
who can't face seperation from her child(ren), arguably because she
has little sense of 'self' left due to sacrifices she made to raise
the kids (Giving herself little time/resource for personal growth).
This is then compounded by the young adult who can't be bothered to
grow up and learn to be alone, again arguably due to having been over
protected all along.
Andy/.
|
8.227 | | COMICS::SUMNERC | OpenVMS Counter Intelligence | Thu May 29 1997 15:30 | 6 |
| Ah-ha, point taken.
Can't help feeling the article is a load of old tosh though.
Chris
PS. How's things in Oz Andy ? seen Anil recently ?
|
8.228 | | GIDDAY::HOBBS | Andy Hobbs. Sydney CSC. -730 5964 | Thu May 29 1997 23:19 | 10 |
|
No one article on subjects emotional can hope to capture a true
image of all cases. These particular types generally just give
positive strokes to the majority of their perceived readership
and reaffirm commonly held beliefs. No point rocking the boat,
especially when it is carrying the payload.
A/.
Ps. Good. Yep. I've sent you some mail, Chris.
|
8.229 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | Now noting in colour!" | Fri May 30 1997 08:08 | 9 |
| Compuserve is suffering from a major screw-up, all services are
temporarily suspended via the normal route. I have cobbled together
some from other sources and I'll pick up the Electronic Telegraph
later.
Next week we have visitors who have no car. So I have the week off to
drive them round. Next week looks like being a no news week.
Jamie.
|
8.230 | | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Fri May 30 1997 15:40 | 2 |
|
DOOMED! we're ALL DOOMED!!!
|
8.231 | | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Mon Jun 02 1997 12:26 | 5 |
| As Jamie is away I'll attempt to do VNS this week but no promises
after the morning hospital visit I really have little time before the
deadlines...
gerbil$YoYo
|
8.232 | VNS Tue | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Tue Jun 03 1997 10:18 | 87 |
| TIMOTHY McVeigh was found guilty yesterday of blowing up the Alfred P
Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City in which 168 people died just
over two years ago.
NIGERIAN ships bombarded the Sierra Leone capital Freetown yesterday,
killing at least 10 people.
THE victorious Socialist leader, Lionel Jospin, was yesterday appointed
Prime Minister of France and immediately set about forming a government
of the Left with the help of the Communist and Green parties.
BELFAST elected its first nationalist Lord Mayor last night, ending more
than a century of Unionist domination of the city.
SWAMPY, the environmental protester, returned to the scene of his
greatest triumph yesterday to spend nine-and-a-half hours in a hole.
HARRIET Harman, the Social Security Secretary, is withdrawing a
challenge begun by the last Government to a Court of Appeal ruling that
outlawed new regulations denying welfare benefits to most
asylum-seekers.
LOTTERY chiefs have been given until the end of the week to come up with
fresh concessions to end the row about their controversial pay rises and
bonuses.
A SWISS au-pair was abducted and raped as she walked through the suburbs
of a seaside town less than 48 hours after arriving in Britain.
A FRESH assault on cheating landlords who are defrauding the social
security system of up to �2 billion a year was promised yesterday.
RULES compelling councils to submit their services to outside
competition are to be scrapped, the Government announced last night.
TONY Blair's election promise that Labour's planned minimum wage would
not create unemployment was challenged yesterday by the man he appointed
to help to set the figure.
THE introduction of a single European currency should be delayed and the
Government should seek to prevent other EU countries proceeding with a
"fudged" version of monetary union in 18 months' time, according to John
Major.
HELEN Brinton, the Labour MP, has been mugged on London's Underground.
SIR James Goldsmith was said to be "cheerful" after treatment for cancer
and could leave hospital soon, a close friend said yesterday.
TWO boys won the first round of a legal battle yesterday to force an
education authority to carry out �2 million of repairs at their school.
THE Astronomer Royal has warned research bureaucrats that a proposal to
shut the historic Royal Greenwich Observatory in Cambridge would damage
the image and effort of British astronomy and accused them of failing to
consult widely enough.
THOUSANDS of people may be in the early stages of a "chameleon" disease
that many GPs are failing to diagnose, experts said yesterday.
A MAN who became depressed after the failure of his marriage withdrew
�100,000 from a joint account and burned it on a garden fire, a court
was told yesterday.
DIANA, Princess of Wales enjoyed the rare sensation of upstaging herself
last night as she attended a private viewing of her 79 dresses that go
on public display in London today ahead of auction in New York later
this month.
HACKWOOD Park, the home of the late Lord Camrose, the former chairman of
The Daily Telegraph, is expected to be put on the market in one of the
most important sales for several years.
A SUPERMARKET cleaner who was molested by her boss has won �12,500
compensation from the Co-op.
KAYLEE, Anna and Lucha the Asian elephants splashed out in the sunshine
yesterday at their new enclosure at Whipsnade Wild Animal Park.
IN a world where qualifications are often the gateway to success, the
parking industry is to revolutionise its image by introducing one for
attendants.
Source: Electronic Telegraph -
Electronic Telegraph is a Registered Service Mark of The Telegraph plc
For more details on any of the above headlines stories, visit the
Electronic Telegraph on the Web at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
|
8.233 | | SUPER::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Tue Jun 03 1997 14:09 | 2 |
|
thanks, gerb!!!
|
8.234 | Next! | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Wed Jun 04 1997 10:05 | 98 |
| AMERICAN Marines evacuated more than 1,200 foreigners from Freetown,
Sierra Leone, in a helicopter airlift yesterday, as fierce battles raged
between leaders of a military coup and Nigerian troops trying to
dislodge them.
THE Bundesbank yesterday forced Chancellor Kohl to back down from his
attempt to revalue gold reserves in time to meet the criteria for
European monetary union
JEAN Chrétien's Liberal government was returned to power in
Canada yesterday, but with its 58-seat majority cut to four seats which
will make the country more difficult to govern than ever before.
HONOURS, from Knighthoods to MBEs, will no longer be awarded for
political service.
THE Orange Order has used a letter to Roman Catholics living near the
route of the bitterly contested Drumcree parade to acknowledge
officially for the first time that Irish nationalists have genuine
concerns about loyalist marches.
TONY Blair has given Harriet Harman, the Social Security Secretary and
Minister for Women, the power to scrutinise all Cabinet proposals on
economic and social policy as part of the drive to put sex equality at
the heart of government.
THE prospect of an early ban on fox-hunting increased last night as more
than 100 MPs backed a Commons motion calling for the "immediate
outlawing" of the sport.
THE Government deployed its massive majority last night to ensure that
the Bill paving the way for referendums on a Scottish Parliament and a
Welsh Assembly will go before the Lords next week.
ONE of Britain's most successful businesswomen became the terrified
victim of a stalker after he read a newspaper article about her, a court
was told yesterday.
A FORMER headmistress is working as an inspector for the school
standards agency that criticised the management of her own school a year
earlier.
CHILDREN who have failed to master reading before they transfer to
secondary schools will be given a chance to catch up at summer schools,
the Government announced yesterday.
AN Asian woman who claims she was discriminated against by the
Commission for Racial Equality was offered �5,000 to drop her case, it
was alleged yesterday.
THE illegal trade in bootleg videos of Steven Spielberg's second
Jurassic Park film could be worth more than �1 million, a copyright
expert said yesterday after a pirate tape was seized at Glasgow airport.
THE founder of Dateline died a recluse and a chronic alcoholic after the
failure of his marriage and the breakdown of another long-term
relationship, an inquest was told.
CAT owners and vets are being urged to avoid vaccinations in certain
cases because of a risk of cancer associated with the injection.
THE European Commission was asked to take legal action against Britain
yesterday because many bathing beaches still do not meet EU standards
for sewage pollution, 12 years after the official deadline.
A MENTALLY ill patient who randomly stabbed a baby girl after walking
out of a hospital unchallenged, told police: "I wanted to kill a baby -
any baby".
AN American art historian who was appointed director of the
world-renowned Ashmolean museum at Oxford University has resigned before
beginning the job.
ROVER withdrew a television advertisement yesterday showing the rescue
of a blindfolded hostage after complaints from the family of a Briton
kidnapped in Kashmir two years ago.
STRICTER controls to protect motorists from harassment and extortionate
demands by private wheel clampers are being studied by the Home Office.
AN octogenarian stroke victim who had to undergo a special examination
before receiving the all clear from the Driver and Vehicle Licensing
Centre has bought a new car - a �46,000, 150mph Porsche Boxster.
STEPHEN Daldry, one of the country's most talented young theatre
directors and tipped to run the National Theatre, is switching to films
to help Britain fight back against Hollywood.
TWO trekkers were airlifted from the Arctic ice mass yesterday after
becoming the first Britons to reach the North Pole without back-up.
CHERIE Blair has invited a group of children to a party in the garden of
10 Downing Street on Budget Day next month.
Source: Electronic Telegraph -
Electronic Telegraph is a Registered Service Mark of The Telegraph plc
For more details on any of the above headlines stories, visit the
Electronic Telegraph on the Web at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
|
8.235 | Lonely in here | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Thu Jun 05 1997 10:25 | 151 |
| THOUSANDS of people poured into the main park in Hong Kong last night to
take part in a candlelight vigil commemorating those killed by Chinese
troops in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 1989.
A DEFIANT Chancellor Kohl stood firm yesterday in his decision to plough
ahead with the euro, despite opposition calls that its launch should be
postponed.
TONY Blair was heading for his first serious confrontation with Europe
last night after Brussels unveiled plans to force companies to reinstate
workers who are laid off without consultation.
SINN Fein is poised to win its first parliamentary seat in the Irish
Republic for 40 years with a former bank official who claims he has no
IRA background heading the party's list of candidates in tomorrow's
general election.
MI5 began the process yesterday of sifting through the CVs of 20,000
potential spies applying for 14 jobs.
JONATHAN Aitken, the former Conservative Cabinet minister, had his
reputation "butchered" by allegations that he provided prostitutes for
Arab businessmen and was involved in surreptitious arms deals, the High
Court was told yesterday.
UNIONS were brought in from the cold last night when the Government
announced plans to give them statutory recognition and a new advisory
role in Whitehall.
KENNETH Clarke's campaign for the Tory leadership gained momentum
yesterday when Stephen Dorrell pulled out of the contest and backed the
former Chancellor.
ROBBIE Williams, the former Take That member once held to be one of pop
music's cleaner-living characters, looks set to follow a more
traditional route for rock stars.
A NEW statutory offence of misconduct in public office is to be
recommended by the Nolan committee investigating standards following
"sleaze" allegations against MPs and councillors.
CHILDREN'S iced drinks have been withdrawn from sale after they were
found to contain alcohol.
THE IRA planned to hoax British authorities by planting fake bombs at
six electricity sub-stations - causing chaos in London, one of its
members told the Old Bailey yesterday.
THE brain of Ronnie Kray was secretly removed and experimented on by
Home Office pathologists before being returned to his family months
later, a court was told yesterday.
A WOMAN of 54 has become the oldest to give birth to test-tube twins in
Britain, it was disclosed yesterday.
THE Conservatives yesterday sacked all their unsuccessful general
election candidates and told them to re-apply for central approval if
they wanted to stand under the party colours again.
A FATHER was jailed for life yesterday for murdering his three-month-old
daughter in an outburst of temper or frustration.
THE British are unwashed, impossible to understand and live in some of
the ugliest buildings in the world, according to a tourist guide
published yesterday.
YOUTH triumphed over experience in the final of University Challenge
when Magdalen College, Oxford, (combined age 89 years) beat the
record-breaking Open University (combined age 202 years) in the
d�nouement of the popular BBC2 quiz presented by Jeremy Paxman and
broadcast last night.
MOTORISTS with high-polluting cars will face roadside checks and
automatic fines to improve air quality, Gavin Strang, Transport
Minister, announced yesterday.
TONY BLAIR has chartered Concorde to fly to America later this month at
a cost of �250,000.
PREGNANT women who work long hours in high-powered jobs may be tripling
their risk of miscarriage, a study has found.
AN employee of an American bank had to inform her superiors every time
she wanted to go to the lavatory or use a photocopier, a tribunal
hearing was told yesterday.
DRIVERS who believe they have been unfairly trapped by speed limit
cameras on the M25 may be able to escape fines, the AA said yesterday
after what it described as a landmark legal ruling.
JOHN Major last night accused Tony Blair of removing his recommendations
for political honours from next week's Honours List.
INSTRUCTIONS are to be sent to Labour MPs about the proper procedure for
claiming Commons office expenses from the taxpayer after confusion about
whether the cash could be used to reimburse party funds.
NORMA Major is furious with Cherie Blair for claiming the credit for
throwing open the doors of Downing Street to the outside world with
regular "open days" for disadvantaged youngsters.
HEART attacks and other emergencies on aeroplanes have risen
dramatically over the last decade, prompting calls for all airlines to
carry life-saving equipment.
COMPANY bosses did not wait for the full facts before sacking a manager
accused of making weapons for Ulster loyalist terrorists, it was claimed
yesterday.
GREEN tea has been discovered to contain a potent cancer fighting
substance, providing clues to a new family of safe drugs to prevent
tumours from spreading.
THE nerve-centre of the Government's communications operation GCHQ is to
move to a new site, it was announced yesterday.
THE Government said yesterday that it intended to take the lead in
international talks about climate change later this month.
SOME face paints used by children can cause skin and eye irritations,
parents are warned today.
NEW controls to protect consumers from scrapie, a fatal brain illness in
sheep believed to be the progenitor of mad cow disease, will be
announced by the Government today.
MOVES to erect a commemorative plaque in memory of William Joyce, the
wartime traitor who broadcast Nazi propaganda and became known to
millions as "Lord Haw-Haw", have been condemned by Army veterans.
A MAN was fined �300 yesterday for assaulting a Gordonstoun pupil in a
late-night brawl witnessed by the Queen's grandson, Peter Phillips.
A MOTORIST who stopped to help four crash victims watched in
astonishment as they drove off in his car after removing his grandson
from the rear seat.
A SHED may be the most common accessory for most British gardens, but
rarely does one feature on the glossy pages of a magazine on fashionable
fabrics and furnishings.
SCIENTISTS believe they may have discovered why bitter beer and salty
crisps complement each other so well.
A BUDGERIGAR's love life has a shady and illicit side, scientists have
discovered.
Source: Electronic Telegraph -
Electronic Telegraph is a Registered Service Mark of The Telegraph plc
For more details on any of the above headlines stories, visit the
Electronic Telegraph on the Web at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
|
8.236 | | VAXUUM::DENISE | unholy water.... sanguine addiction...2 silver bullets | Thu Jun 05 1997 15:17 | 5 |
|
thanks again, gerb...
my question is why would scientist want ronnie kray's brain?
to try to clone psychopathic tendencies?
|
8.237 | | JGODCL::BOWEN | Two stars short of a Galaxy | Fri Jun 06 1997 08:58 | 104 |
| AN assassination attempt on Sali Berisha, the Albanian President, during
a campaign rally has raised serious doubts that national elections on
June 29 can go ahead without widespread bloodshed.
BRITAIN will ban imports of beef from Germany and other European
countries unless the EU acts to tighten its anti-BSE controls in
abattoirs by July 22.
BREAST cancer tests on 1,900 women are to be re-examined after an
inquiry found that errors by doctors in charge of a screening unit led
to delays in detecting the disease in nine women, two of whom have since
died.
ENGLAND'S soccer players beat Italy for the first time in 20 years, its
second-string rugby side walloped Argentina and the British Lions 2nd XV
destroyed a leading South African team.
[Add to that the thrashing They're giving Australia in the First Test]
HOPES of colonising the Moon have faded with the discovery that what was
thought to be an ice lake might be rough ground.
ICI was sharply criticised yesterday after a toxic gas leak led to the
closure of roads and residents being told to stay indoors.
RAILTRACK announced profits yesterday of almost �1 million a day from
its first year in the private sector, provoking protests from rail user
groups and warnings from the Government that it might be failing the
public interest.
JOHN Prescott, the deputy prime minister, set out a series of proposals
yesterday aimed at meeting the Government's new target of reducing
Britain's fossil fuel emissions by a fifth by 2010.
SOCIAL workers could have saved two children and their mother who were
burnt to death by a psychopath given a job as a live-in babysitter, a
report concluded yesterday.
FIVE members of a Triad extortion gang were jailed for 15 years each
yesterday after their kidnap plot was foiled when British police
operated, for what is believed to be the first time, in mainland China.
THE 12-year-old son of the former Cabinet minister Jonathan Aitken
asked: "What's a pimp, Daddy?" after sordid allegations on the front
page of The Guardian, the High Court was told yesterday.
A WOMAN who was married to three men at the same time was put on
probation for two years yesterday.
FIVE people were injured, two seriously, after a man and a woman armed
with a meat cleaver, hammer and baseball bat burst into their garden
while they were having a barbecue.
DINERS at a fashionable London restaurant had the right to expect staff
to meet the highest standards of "style and appearance", it was ruled
yesterday.
A DENTIST accused of molesting 15 female patients as they lay in his
surgery chair told a jury yesterday that no one had ever complained to
him.
LEGISLATION to share pension rights between divorcing couples will come
into force by 2000, Harriet Harman, the Social Security Secretary,
pledged yesterday.
MICHAEL Howard's campaign for the Tory leadership was boosted last night
after he gained the support of two prominent members of Stephen
Dorrell's campaign team.
TWO strip club bouncers were jailed yesterday after being convicted of
blackmailing a pair of German soccer fans into paying �285 for two fruit
juices.
A LIFETIME of education and experiences cannot overcome the differences
in the intellectual ability people are born with, according to a study
published today.
SCIENTISTS have discovered a bug that munches its way through toxic
chlorine waste previously thought to be destined to pollute the planet
for ever.
THE concept of concentrating treatment in "super hospitals" with well
over 1,000 beds was ruled out by the British Medical Association
yesterday.
TONY Blair has set a new record as the most popular modern Prime
Minister five weeks after entering 10 Downing Street with Labour's
biggest ever mandate
RONNIE Lane, the song writer and bass player in the Small Faces, has
died after a 20-year struggle with multiple sclerosis.
THE Earl of Warwick sold the family silver for a total of �524,805, well
above the �400,000 forecast, at Sotheby's in London yesterday.
A MOUSE caused more than �5,000 damage to a Ferrari after being caught
in the engine's timing gear.
A MUSIC shop that helped to set the Beatles on the road to stardom has
gone into receivership.
Source: Electronic Telegraph -
Electronic Telegraph is a Registered Service Mark of The Telegraph plc
For more details on any of the above headlines stories, visit the
Electronic Telegraph on the Web at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
|