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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 2

Publication:
The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

HOME NEWS r2 'Vpu'lfon do nothing for me' sacked banker told bodyguard; Alliance parties I ImMftl. I SB. MITT fill nTl -f I -t'1 if mm basis Doctors get new advice on Bailed prisoner for united tells of Calvi's last hours alive front 1 1 1 telling Michael White As they were all just By Julia Langdon and Paul Keal The two parties to the Alliance last night agreed a formula for cooperation in Parliament while avoiding any direct move that could lead to. a national merger. The 23 MPs elected for the Alliance are to form five joint study groups to shadow the main areas of policy.

Both parties will, put forward representatives to sit on them. The two parties are to keep individual spokesmen on different subjects, despite the fact that the Social Democrats now have only six members. Both parties' spokesmen will sit on each group and there will also be representatives from the House of Lords. Areas to be covered are expected to include the economy, personal and social services, home affairs, foreign affairs, and the environment. The agreement was reached at an amicable meeting of the two parliamentary groups attended by all six Social Democrat MPs and 15 of the 17 Liberals.

All the MPs are to meet regularly in the future, probably once a month, with Mr David Steel and Dr David Owen alternately taking the chair. At the Alliance meeting Dr. Owen said that he would not consider a merger. He was responding to a suggestion by the Liberal MP Mr Stephen Ross, who spoke enthusiastically in favour of merging the two parties The Alliance wilt be seeking a mathematical representation in the committee structure in the Commons. Mr Alan Beith, the Liberal Chief Whip, said that the parties would not be making "ridiculous" demands, but would expect a wide spread of members on select the Austrian-Switzerland border and then to Innsbruck, for the flight to London.

Mr Vittor said he understood that role was simply to keep Mr Calvi company and that eventually he would be paid for his services. The private plane, arranged by Mr Carboni, arrived in London on Tuesday, June 15. The-two men went to a flat in a service apartment block, Chelsea Cloisters. Although Mr Calvi did not like the flat, as it vras too small, he appeared On Wednesday Mr Carboni and the two women arrived in don and he and Mr Calvi met them for a conversation. Mr Calvi's mental state changed- on the Thursday.

I saw that he was troubled. He confided in me that he had spoken to his daughter (in Switzerland) -and told her to go to America." He last saw Mr Calvi at about 11.30 that night. Mr Carboni had arrived at Chelsea Cloisters and asked on the internal telephone for the two men to come down. They were planning to meet the two Austrian women. "Calvi said he wasn't able to.

I don't remember if those were his exact words. He said he didnt feel like it." Mr Vittor said that was the last time he had any contact with Mr Calvi. He left the women and Mr Carboni to return to the flat at about 12.30 am. Earlier, the City of London coroner, Br Arthur Davies, said he had had a message from the chief magistrate in Milan saying that he was prepared to release Mr Carboni to give evidence if he could be held in custody in London. After consultations with the Home Office the head of the immigration service indicated in a message that the British police had no such powers.

Mr Calvi's son, Carlo, told the jury that the recipient of the illegal currency involved in his father's trial was a Luxembourg holding company owned by the Vatican Bank. The hearing continues today. I Wi I 15 I Sparks fly as shots case electrician gets job back By David Pallister Silvano Vittor, the last person known to have seen Roberto Calvi alive, told the inquest on the Italian banker yesterday that he appeared agitated and depressed on the night before he died. Mr Vittor. who was released on bail from an Italian prison this week, told the jury that Mr president of the Banco Ambrosiano in Milan, had been in touch with his board of directors the day, before his body was found.

The jury had been told that the board had strhroed Mr Calvi of his powers that June 17, 1982. Mr Vittor said: "Between clenched teeth, he said he had telephoned the board of the Banco Ambrosiano and explained that in regard to what had happened there I could be of no assistance at all to him." Mr Vittor said he had travelled to London with Mr Calvi on a private plane from Innsbruck in Austria on June 15. They had been introduced a few days before in Trieste by Mr Falvio Carboni, a wealthy business associate of Mr Calvi. The inquest the second to be held after the High Court quashed the suicide verdict brought in by the first has been told that Mr Calvi secretly left Italy 10 days before his appeal against a four-year prison sentence for illegal currency dealings was due to be heard. His bank was in serious financial trouble with debts of $1.4 billion, and his family claims that he was trying to put together a rescue deal.

He died in the early hours of June 18, hanging from, scaffolding under Blackfriars Bridge. His family claim that he was murdered. Mr Vittor said that no agreement was reached at the Trieste meeting but a day later he met Mr Calvi at the home of two young Austrian women. There Mr Calvi asked him to accompany him to Switzerland, but the plans were changed and they went via Bregenz, on 23 unions qualify for TUC seal" By Keith Harper, Labour Editor Figures presented to the TUC General Council yesterday showed that 23 unions have mare than 100,000 members and will therefore be entitled to automatic representation when the system of representation changes in September Mr Len Murray, TUC general secretary, said yesterday that, whatever happens at this year's Congress, the system of automatic election would remain for 12 months, jje made his comment after leftwingers on the TUC had failed to get through a motion which would have scrapped the scheme. The new system for electing the General Council ensures that all the larger unions will have at least one member.

But 11 seats will be reserved for the 83 smaller unions with fewer than 100,000 members. Some TUC leaders suspect that several unions, anxious to retain their membership or to gain a seat, have submitted false membership returns. Congress House has stated firmly that an audit of each union's membership is impossible and that the figures presented will have to be accepted unless the movement is prepared to face fierce inter-union squabbles. I Calvi witness: Silvano Vittor, who gave evidence about the last hours of the Italian banker with his girlfriend Michaela Kleinzig, awitness at the inquest last week. Picture by Martin Argles Seven held as Bristol violence flares again parents Bv Pennv Chorlton The General Medical Council has clarified guidelines for doctors dealing with girls under ltt years oia wno sees aooruon and contraceptive advice.

The disciplinary body points out that doctors could get into pro fessional trouble if tney go against a patient's-wishes and inform parents without the daughter's consent. However, the GMC, along with the Brmsn meaicai asso elation and the Family Plan nine Association, said yesterday that they encourage doctors to persuaqe gins io in volve Barents in such decisions, The BMA pointed out that in 90 per cent of cases wnere a eirl first asks her doctor not to tell her parents she is per- suaaea tnat it woum ne nest: to involve them. The GMC's new guidelines are to be circulated to 120,000 doctors, this summer. The gui delines relating to nreanancv and contraception for under- 16s are: "where a minor re-fluests treatment concerning kpregnancy or contraceptive aavice, tne doctor snouia parti- t. i to avoid imparing parental responsibility or family stability.

The doctor should assess the patient's degree of parental dependence and seek to persuade the patient to involve the parent (or guardian or other person in loco parentis) from tne earnest stage of consultation." This clause was important the FPA pointed out, because not all girls come. from secure and sympathetic homes, and mav nave Barents who have abandoned them, or split up, or be irresponsible and incapable of passing on useful advice. The guideline continues If the patient refuses to allow a parent to be told, the doctor must ooserve the rule of pro- iessionai secrecy in nis management of the case." Mr Robert Gray, deputy re gistrar of the GMC. said ves- teraay that the ruling was notning new as it was based on the ancient Hippocratic oath that all doctors swear. In 1981.

the Department of Health circulated a statement to all health authorities, advising that doctors should obtain parental consent before prescribing the contraceptive pill to girls under 16. That view was supported by the majority of groups working with teenagers, including the FPA. or ray Hutcmnson, medical anviser to tne urooK Advisory Centres, said yesterday that there was not so much of a problem in London and other cities, but girls living in small country towns could be confronted by a family doctor of rigid views Doctors are normally extremely reluctant to perform abortions on girls aeied under 16 without parental involvement because of the potential risks involved. Parents do not have to give consent but this is a grey area and- one which may need further clarification. In 1980, 8,100 girls aged under 16 became pregnant and about half of them chose to have an abortion.

In that year, a total of 92,000 girls under 20 became pregnant and 40,550 opted for termination. NEWS IN BRIEF WORKERS at British Leyland's body plant at Cowley, Oxfordshire, are to hold a ballot to decide whether to give up their washing up time, writes Patrick Wintour. The ballot was decided upon yesterday when a show of hands at a meeting of 4,000 workers failed to produce a clear result. A COLLECTOR who unwittingly bought a stolen painting at Christie's, and later had to return it to its rightful owner, has received from Christie's an an out-of-court settlement of 20,900, writes Donald Winters-gill. Mr.

Beresford Wilcox, a. architect, from London, paid 20,900 in 1978 for a Madonna and Child by a follower of the 14th-century master, Agnola Gaddi. But it had ben stolen from a church in Lincolnshire. a vrroajrvrt? TirltacVi toofhor- weight boxing champion, Sammy lucuartny, was gaoieu iur xu years at the Old Bailey yester- a aay ior armeu ruvuviy. British champion from 1954 to Mt-ass 11-" -1 1 YYr lyoo.

xie uvea in vvaiiiucau, London. Two other men were aanlA ttrlti trim a-ffpr 9 rat flTY Zetters Pools in Clerkenwell Koad, norm jonaon, on oune io last year. up for council was blocking the road. Last week, Homelands Road, Birkenhead, was blocked in a similar protest. The council has expressed concern at the buildup of rubbish at a number of shopping precincts.

Waste Management's problem began the moment it took over the council's fleet, of 80 Many were in poor mechanical condition, according to Mr David Croft, the firm's local authority services manager. There were an inordinate number of breakdowns A to by to at Separate financial allocations will be made to the Alliance partners on the basis of their election results. Tne social Democrats, who previously had no cash, will receive 45,000. The Liberals will have an increase from 55,000 to about 64,000. One hundred and twenty- seven Alliance candidates de feated in the general election turned up at the House of Commons yesterday to take "their seats," claiming that they would have been elected under a fair voting system.

The gesture, timed to coin cide with the state onenine. marked the launch of the All- Party Campaign for-. Electoral Reform, although, its emergence yesterday was very much an Alliance anair. Assembling earlier at the National Liberal Club in White hall, the walking wounded of the election campaign were spoken for by Mrs Shirley Williams, president of the SDP, and herself a victim of the June 9 poll. "The 127 candidates here today should bv richts be taking their seats in the House of Commons.

They've been elected by the people but cheated ny tne system," sne said. The Liberals and SDP assert that under a system of proportional representation the 8 million votes cast them would have given the Alliance a total of. 150 seats. In the event they won 23. Mr Richard Holme, camnaien director and a former president of the Liberal Party, said later at the Commons that if the call for electoral reform became merely an expression of Alliance outrage, they would be missing an opportunity to nar-rsesa this senM of sneer Dr Owen said it was vital that electoral reform became "a people's issue, and not a politicians' issue." because he unionist was trade "Individual employees will now be afraid to press complaints about discipline because of the heavy trade union presence on the appeals committee.

Ms Bradley said The trade unions are running this city, and management are not oeing allowed to, do their job. The appeals panel Is nothing more than a kangaroo court, A Labour councillor, Mr Paul Astbury, who chaired the seven-hour hearing, denied that there was any intimidation. He said: "The foreman gave a full account of what happened, and accepted the shooting was accidental. He certainly did not appear frightened or intimidated. "Councillor' Bradley heard only half the evidence before walking out, and Councillor nne anstainea rrom voting." Mr Astbury added that air- guns have now been banned from council premises.

Tne shooting happened in the canteen of a council depot 'during lunch, when some workers were holding a snooting com petition. Warning over nurse shortages By David Hencke, Social Services Correspondent Sick children are in daneer of dyine because of a national shortage of properly trained nurses for intensive care units and children's wards. Professor cyni unanuer, chairman ox a joint nursing committee of the British Paediatric Association, said yesterday. Hospitals were turning away children needing medical attention because they could not afford to recruit enough trained nursing staff, and training courses for children's nurses were being arbitrarily cut because or funding proo-lems. Professor Ch antler, a consul' tant in paediatrics at uuys Hospital, south said that his own hospital had in one three-month period turned away 35 children because of a nursing snortage even inougn it is one of the better staffed In the country.

One survey of 352 wards. coverlne 7638 beds, found that nearly half all children's wards; were inadequately staneo and 93 per cent failed to reach optimum standards recommended In a Government report issued in 1976. Some 53 wardi had no trained staff, the main reason being a failure to recruit stair. Two other reports released today one by Dr Colin Walker, of the University of Dundee, on intensive care oaoy units, and the other by the British Paediatric -Association with the Royal College 6f Obstetricians neo-natai cue found- staff shortages a major problem. Professor Chantler said It 1e as much matter of bad organisation as lack of money, wnicn is wewouio iwe mr Kenneth the.

health to meet us- to discuss how we can tackle this. saying For wit, spontaneity and a deft turn of phrase the least-bad of yesterday's big speeches was the one the BBC shrewdly chose to highlight the Queen's. After lunch the day rapidly went downhill. The most depressing feature of the Oiiiiam'fi KraAh an ft got under way was that things resumed much where they had left off as if nothing had happened -meanwhile. Mr Foot made a pretty dispiriting speech from a prepared text like the Queen's, but less larky Mr Steel demanded PR, Mr Dalyell spoke of the Falklands.

Mrs Thatcher: she made But no, it is a tradition in this column that governments which have won huge majorities are entitled to a col-umnal honeymoon situation commensurate with their desserts. So Mrs Thatcher's speech will not be deplored for several sentences. More immediately worthy of vcuduic were uic uacK oencn Tory mover and seconder of the. Loyal Address, the formal thanks to Her Majesty for turning up without Prince William. If this is what the Government's back benches are going to be like until 1988, heaven help us.

Mr Pym sat in the corner seat ueiow me gangway, two rows behind Mr Heath and in an identical pose. For a moment it looked as if he was rising to intervene as Mrs Thatcher prattled on about but no. First, Sir Peter Mills, MP for xrowu cov ana xornagq (or is it Porridge?) who urged more godliness upon the electorate and the need to change their ways. Ditto European fanners who produce surpluses, not British ones, you Understand. Sir, Peter is himself a farmer.

At the start Of the 1979 Parlia ment mr Kenneth Baker made such an audaciously "wet" speech to his Leader's face that he prospered. But most speeches on these occasions are more like Sir Peter's. Indeed, the one which which followed from Mr Malcolm Thornton, the victor of Crosby, was if any-thing even more ingratiating and complacent to" the Particular annoyance of Can-didate Heffer. Not that Mr Thornton really icuuveircu irom a contrived. opening joke which fell so fiat that in the silence Mr Dennis Skinner could be heard to say, "if it's a joke he should tell us." Parliament, page 4 Mr Foot's speech was a cruel reminder mat ne nao once said "Klondyke or bust" and it was bust.

He. made all the points he made during the campaign, but with even less success. Manufacturing output was down 14 per cent "What about the Labour vote?" they jeered. Labour MPs were even less supportive than usual. So it will be until October 2.

Mrs Thatcher said later that! his speech had all been put to the voters who had totally and utterly rejected it" Not quite, no mora than her policies had been over whelmingly endorsed by the electorate." But everyone knew what1 she meant. The Tory benches spilled 6ver with the evidence. In the event, she was no netter. sne had nothing new to say, no generous or imaginative gesture to make, barely even a willingness to listen. "I will give way to this point" she started informing would-be questioners.

This is a new development, but understandable, tor several of them had managed to trip her up. Mr Skinner extracted the topical admission which Mr Foot should have sought. that the mortgage rise was a disappointment." Ann Liberal Richard' Wainwrisht neatly followed it up by pointing out mat tne promised rise in the mortgage tax relief ceiling from 25,000 to 30,000 would only increase pressure on the building societies. It is. of course, the kind of distortion of the free market that Mrs Thatcher is against, but she is also in the market for votes.

"It Is a great burden on young married couples," she replied. They talk of little in Cleckheaton. By the- time she got on to Rus sian imperialism even oreign Secretary Howe appeared to be dozing; it was- that dull. Later, Mr Skinner, who was having a good day in his new position over Mr John SUkin's shoulder, reported There's 15 asleep." It must be the Whips drugging their water. but "there wag tension until, the early hours and a number of shop break-ins were reported.

The injuries to police were caused mainly by 'missiles. Twelve officers were only slightly hurt, but one, Police Constable Stephen Cook, who suffered a severe blow to the head, was detained overnight in Bristol Royal Infirmary. In addition to the man whose arrest appeared to provoke the outbreak, six people were taken into custody, mainly for public order offences and assault. Police were continuing their inquiries in the district yesterday, and community leaders were nervous about the possible effects on the black community. It appears that one of the reasons why the incident did not develop into anything more serious was the accidental pre sence of Bristol's senior community relations officer, Miss Carmen Beckford, who was able to calm the crowd.

But police were frank yesterday about the social and economic background they face in St Paul's which is believed to have a much higher unemployment figure among blacks than the estimate for immigrants in Bristol as a whole. Superintendent Derek Lane, head of the community involvement" department of Avon and Somerset police, pointed out yesterday that a number of other incidents had occurred in St Paul's since 1980. OBITUARY Union leader Mr Terry Mallinson, a national officer of the Confederation of Health Service Employees since 1969, has died, aged 49. He was a candidate in a recent ballot for assistant general secretary. A new election' will now be held.

Fitzrovian TAMBIMUTTU, the creator of Poetry London and legendary entrepreneur of literary Fitzro-via in the forties, died in University College Hospital, London, yesterday, aged 67. Appreciation, page 10. A trade union convenor, Mr Pat Weathers, who shot his foreman in the leg has been given his job back after a Liverpool city council nearing. Mr Weathers, an electrician. was susnended in March after he allegedly shot a pellet from his airgun through a closed door into the tnign or ms tore-man, Mr Stephen Crisp.

It was alleged that the fore man was butted when he complained, but after a secret disciplinary hearing, by a ma jority ot tnree socialist councillors, advised bv five trade union officials, ruled that the shooting was accidental. The electrician, a member of the Electrical. Electronic. Tele communications, and Plumbing Union, was cleared and re instated. Nns a Tare pminrlllor.

Mr TTVnio Pino nnrl a T.iberal. Ms Pam Bradley, who attended the nearing, tear tnat tne council 30,000 employees will be gov- ernprl hv a "totalitarian trade union reeime." Mr Pine, who is a magistrate, said: "Witnesses clearly saw the incidents, but the hearing was biased towards the electrician FALKLANDS veteran was fined 650 yesterday after an early morning brawl between members of the Parachute Regiment and US Marines outside a discothegue in Newquay, Cornwall. He and another Falklands veteran, who, was fined 600, were among seven Paras convicted and fined. The British Army wishes to keep all the men involved, Major William Buck Kernan, the officer commanding company, told Newquay magistrates, JOURNALISTS on the Sun stopped work yesterday after the veteran political editor, Walter Terry, had been dismissed from his post, writes ram Brown. Mr Terry, aeed 59.

was siven the choice of leaving the paper or remaining on tne staff as a general reporter. The office branch of the National Union of Journalists, called for his reinstatement, or much im proved severance terms, Mr Terry was then allowed to resign with severance terms of 90,000. ABOUT 40 London schools had close or send children home yesterday because of an un official struce by memners oi the National Union of Teachers, writes Wehdjy Berliner. They were striking over the commilsorv redenlovment of teachers, which is increasing because of a combination of falling rolls and the Inner London Education Authority's policy of no redundancy. and some vehicles had been "sabotaged." A council report last week pointed to sabotage elsewhere, with a bottle bank split open an axe and contents scattered, and the water supply a public lavatory in Birkenhead cut off.

The firm is committed to buy an extra nine new vehicles a cost of 250,000 and will soon be installing a radio-control system. It has taken on more than 250 of the 406 former council employees. Findus confirms 1,400 lost jobs By Peter Hetherlngton, Northern Labour Correspondent Findus Poods yesterday confirmed the closure of the com- Sany's -largest factory on umberside as unions warned that two ther plants in the area should now be considered at risk. The company said that its Cleethorpes factory would shut by the end of the next year with loss of. 1,400 jobs.

But personnel director, Mr Russ Ellis, denied that the announcement had been held back until after the general election. He said the closure de cisiontaken independently of the Findus parent the Swiss-based Nestle combine was only agreed after the election. At a press conference Mr Ellis said that he was unable to give an absolute guarantee that the two remaining Findus frozen food plants in Grimsby were totally secure. But he said, that closure of the nearby Cleethorpes factory, with loss of 600 full time and 800 part-time jobs would help the company by reducing costs. Union officials said they were surprised at the scale of the redundancies.

Mr Jack Paine, regional officer of ASTMS, said unions were pessimistic about the future of the Grimsby factories. Untl five years ago, Findus was the largest employer in the Grimsby area with around 5,000 workers. The workforce has since been whittled down to about 2,000. Although two small groups-one a workers' cooperative, the other a local consortium have expressed an interest in the Cleethorpes plant, Findus is planning to transfer machinery to a new 30 million factory in Newcastle upon Tyne. Two other frozen food companies.

Birds Eye and Ross, employ almost 6,000 workers between them at other factories in Grimsby, which also contains several smaller freezing companies. Yesterday larger firms in the town said that they had no plans for any big cutbacks. Management, of Warrington, in a five-year deal initially worth 2.3 million a year. Waste Management, which is owned by the National Freight Consortium, blames the backlog on a poor rundown of the council-run services during the previous two to three weeks, and is confident that it will be cleared during next week. Yesterday the firm had to clear rubbish dumped in Twickenham Drive, Leasowe, by residents after police complained to the council that it By? JohnSon Seven -people had been arrested by yesterday afternoon, for their alleged part in an outbreak of mob violence in the St Paul's district of Bristol on Tuesday night.

Neither the police nor the St Paul's community would rate the outbreak as more than a relatively minor incident, even though 13 policemen were hurt, and six police vehicles were damaged. But the incident served as a reminder of the brittleness of community relations in a district which in April 1980 saw the first of the riots which later spread to Brixton, Manchester, and Liverpool. A rrnwri nf about 1 50. KDlit in to several groups, gathered after two community consiaoies nau arrasteri a man for an alleged motoring offence near the nionlr and White rafp in Oros- venor Road, St Paul's, which was at the neart 01 tne laau riot TVio man annarentlv resisted arrest and the nnlir-e had diffi- htHv In erettinv him into a nolice vehicle. Some members of the crowd started to throw stones, and the windscreens of police vehicles were smashed.

Ahntit 1 nr reinforcements arrived, and officers with riot shields and helmets moved down the road in a line clear-inn the prnvuAs and renoverine the damaged vehicles. Some batons were drawn, ine main incident was over relatively BACHELOR OF SCIENCE HONOURS SCHOOL OF PHARMACOLOGY FIRST CLASS. Clare O. SECOND CLASS (Dlvlllqn II. Ashcroft.

Helen Bapu. Vunue. Griffin. Joanne Keevll. Monica' Pearce.

Lesley Taylor. S. G-: Tebby. Sussn Wilkinson. David (Division III.

Robinson. S. THIRD CLASS. Beeston. Catherine Slsodla.

Ghanshamsinh FACULTY OF TECHNOLOGY (UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY) The following results are published subject to confirmation by the Board of the Faculty of Technology and Senate BACHELOR OF SCIENCE HONOURS SCHOOL OF PAPER SCIENCE FIRST CLASS. lle-Clnrck. SECOND CLASS (Dlvlllon I). Au. C.

Barcrort. I Humphrey. Tsui. K. (Division II) Greenwoud.

Nicholas, A. Seath. Andrea CLASS. Chroneos. Achilles: Howard, M.

Caroline A Robinson. Ruth Woodburn. ORDINARY DEGREE OF B.Sc Dlvlllon I. None Division II. Barrett.

I Brown. j. m. Rougn. i- m.

Division III. Onaran, Irian. Wind- ear. Valerie a HONOURS SCHOOL OF POLYMER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (CHEMISTRY) FIRST CLASS. Nona.

SECOND CLASS (Dlvlllon 1). II). Bhsndarl. Chian. Firth.

I. flail-Chrysanthou. Bobbie Harris. J. Mulozlan Nadla.

Mungal. Veronica Suylemez. I. H. THIRD CLASS.

Daughton. Ho. Mirasa- Azlsah. aipenrer A HONOURS SCHOOL OF POLYMER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (PHYSICS) FIRST CLASS. Nunc SECOND CLASS (Olvlllon I).

Bonnet jk Munru. Diana Simpson. Division ill- atoker. r- HIRD CLASS None HONOURS SCHOOL OF TEXTILE AND LOLUUK ID COLOUR CHEMISTRY SECOND CLASS (Dlvlllon I). FIRST CLASS.

llabs. nun (Olvlllon II). Mbeve. Angela THIRD CLASS Plnarbasl Selruk White, Manchester University Results The following results are publlihtd subject to confirmation by Senate FACULTV OF ARTS DURII OF Boyle. F.E.C.: Chan.

Vim Chi. D.i Clemance. J. S-: Dennlson. Christine E.

(with Lofthouse. Geraldlne; McCarthy. J. McCuigan. Bernadetto: Moss, Philippe.

Newbould. s. Palmer. N. Parry.

I. M. (with Credit): Read. J. Serjeant.

L. Shearman. Small. smith. R.

A DICRIK OF B.TP. Ashdown. A. Peel. Carol C.i Scott.

Mia O-i Taylor. Michael: Thorop-aon. A W-: Trubshaw, David. BACHELOR OF ARTS HONOURS SCHOOL OF TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING FIRST CLASS None. SECOND CLASS (Division II.

Atcock. C. Blrtlea. Roger. Bovey.

Uewhurat, Zoe Frislon. p. Lewis. Beverley Moyes. Qrr, M.

Taylor. 6. Turner. (blvlslon III. Chow.

Rita Daw. David, navle. K. Fagg. Grlmshaw.

R. Kenyon. ft. R. Burrowa.

Walker. I FACULTY OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Phillips. Eltn A FACULTY OF MIOICINS Tht following results are Published subject to conflrmstlon by the Board of the Faculty of Medicine and Senate BACHELOR OF NURSING Cochrane. Anne t'oa. Elisabeth Derrv.

Joanna Greaves. Pamela A Hague. Catherine Jowett. Sara A Kirby. Hilary (with Kirk.

Susan A Llppett. busanne. Bister. Deborah Martin. Surah (with Distinction).

MtAuley. Joanne (with Powoll. Jane E-. vVhhUtf.k.r.on cultv OF MUHC The following results published aubjert to coniirniation by senate MUS.B. (Ordinary Degree) Sawtell Emma (' FACULTY OF.

SCIENCE DIPLOMA ADVANCED "STUDIJJMNSCISNCE Bruce Alison. Breselull. A Euitop A England Jonathan. Harrison Ian, Paul. Hopwuoa A i MSrriivi John.

Morris Biu.e. Page en. .1. HUHRU B. urcvi minn a t' Paul.

6 "'gyy n.7.iJ Wiuide. I Woods A Zeglovskis. Rubbish problems mount By Alan Dunn After only 10. days of its contract with a local council, a private refuse firm has been forced to bring in extra vehicles and men to tackle a refuse backlog which has led to residents dumping rubbish in the streets at Birkenhead and Leasowe on the Wirral. More than 600 complaints a day are being received by Wirral borough council, which last week handed the refuse and cleaning services to Waste.

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