21. were on night duty, which you, you did, er i it was a twelve hour stint right through from eight at night till eight in the morning. And course you, other than the half an hour for a meal in the middle of the night er that was it you got no time off at all. So erm Where do you think your satisfaction came from in the job? Well I suppose you i i i th th the patients were very very grateful for anything that you did. We did get them better a lot of them at _any_ rate. Er and I think there w there was that satisfaction that you, you were doing something to help people get better. And they'd, they'd come in for surgery and you know you'd nurse them back again. Get them up on their feet. And there was a satisfaction about it although I always think in those days we had to work so fast that there wasn't the time to do what you'd really like to have done for the patients. It was a 22. James Bond movie Licensed to Kill. In Beverly Hills Cop, Eddie Murphy holds up a pack of Lucky Strikes and says " These cigarettes are very popular with the children "; and in " Who Framed Roger Rabbit? " detective Eddie Valiant is offered Lucky Strike cigarettes by a teenage boy and Camel cigarettes by the cartoon character Betty Boop (Tobacco & Youth Reporter, Spring 1989). None of these references to smoking and cigarettes has _any_ significance for the plot: they are paid advertising aimed mainly at children. (Whether the draft Directive would have any effect on them is unclear.) It is at least plausible that the cryptic advertisements widely adopted by cigarette advertisers in the UK work insidiously but effectively on children by offering them the reward of deciphering the hidden messages in (for example) the Benson & Hedges Pure Gold adverts: if they can understand and recognise them, they join an adult conspiracy or club. " Advertising helps promote new low-tar brands " It is argued by the tobacco and advertising industries that advertising is necessary in order to promote the use of low-tar 23. a note of your problem, and the symptoms you associate with it, including when they started/got worse. (d) Note down any other changes you may have noticed about yourself, even minor ones -- you may not see the connection but they may be vital clues to the doctor. (e) Keep a note of medicines or home treatments you have already tried and what effects, if any, they have had. (f) Tell the doctor if you are allergic to anything, particularly _any_ medicines. (g) Tell the doctor if any close relatives have ever had similar problems. (h) Women should make a note of the date of their last period. Be honest Honesty in answering the doctor's questions is particularly important. Do not cover up aspects of your lifestyle, such as heavy drinking, which you think may make you look less respectable. Most doctors are fairly unshockable, and they will need all the facts if they are to make a proper diagnosis. Extra questions to add to your list At the conclusion of the meeting 24. shirts and Colonel Blimps along with their twittering wives. Indeed, if we can suppress the automatic " liberal " prejudice which indexes " Newbolt, Sir Henry (1862–1938) " as " English imperialist poet " (in Ezra Pound. Penguin Critical Anthology, ed. Sullivan), we have to acknowledge that it was in many ways an attractive society, and an admirable one. That we are dealing with a privileged élite goes without saying; as also that it depended on the institution of domestic service. But there appears not to have been, for instance, _any_ of that sterile rivalry between man and wife which is now the bane of middle-class society with any claims to cultural or intellectual interests; plainly Mrs Lowndes and the young matrons who were her friends did not seethe resentfully at having their intellectual and imaginative capacities shackled to kitchen and nursery, whereas their husbands could exercise theirs in the great world. Moreover -- and more to the point -- if as literary intellectuals we feel frustrated at having no channel of access to the figures who exercise decision-making power in our societies 25. rats, chicks and rabbits. We used to catch rabbits when we could, but Maureen bought the rest of the " prey " from breeders who specialise in these things. Now that I have a number of birds of my own, I do the same. There's a hatchery in Ilminster where we buy day-old chicks by the thousand -- my birds get through about five hundred every month or two. it's always the male chicks that are killed, as they're no good to the egg-producing farmers. Force-feeding the birds of prey was Sometimes necessary -- _any_ invalid may need to be encouraged to eat -- though it is a dangerous business which I never attempted with Maureen's patients. But she was an expert and by watching her I at least gained some confidence, enough to feel I could try it myself one day. Maureen's skill lay in basic first-aid and tender loving care, so I didn't learn about diseases or complicated injuries -- but what I did learn was vital to my future work. I picked up a lot about different species and their 26. outraged, one is left with a resigned smirk. How can Darby O'Gill be dismissed as superstitious nonsense when it is part descriptive of a society where even now devotional queues are forming to watch supposedly moving statues. If there is a bit of a want about such people then the good Catholic church surely provides for it. Miracles and dramatic visions, wonderful and fearful, are the stuff on which the faith has survived. The interweave of religion, superstition and legend within Irish history and culture is a living interrelationship which has not died with the coming of _any_ modern age. Exaggeration is an integral part of the Irish storytelling and myth making tradition and any tale will be followed by the remark " sure that's nothin' " from an unimpressed listener who will then proceed to recall or invent an even more amazing yarn. The whiskey glass from which King Brian drank is given pride of place as a hallowed relic on the top shelf of The Rathcullen Arms, destined to be the basis of many a tall tale. It is no coincidence that we move from this 27. sent to the court to which the proceedings are transferred; so are all other documents, but in enforcement or payment into court cases only if the transfer ee court so requests (Ord 16, r 4(3), (4)). The court to which the action is transferred sends notice of hearing, (N 272), or pre-trial review unless Ord 17, r 11 (automatic directions) applies (Ord 16, r 4(5) and 5A). Where a judge is the judge for two or more districts the judge or district judge may at _any_ time upon application or upon his own motion direct that the hearing of proceedings pending before the judge in one court shall take place in some other court of which he is the judge. Notice of hearing (N 247) is given by the court (Ord 13, r 2(3)). This procedure is sometimes followed when a " branch " county court has a long defended action which is more conveniently heard at the judge's main court in some large town. Infants' funds The court may, 28. were under a duty to consider whether it was better for the child for a secure accommodation order to be made rather than no order at all being made upon the application in accordance with section 1(5) of the Children Act. Further, the magistrates should have considered the guidance and regulations in volume 1 of The Children Act 1989 Guidance and Regulations, vol. 1, p. 66, para. 5(1). I should add that in argument he also invited my attention to paragraph 5(7) and I will refer to that: " The justices however failed to make _any_ determination, or failed to make any finding or state any reasons for finding as to whether (i) there was any genuine alternative to the making of a secure accommodation order; (ii) all other alternatives had been comprehensively considered and rejected. I am told that certainly parts of this guidance were cited in argument to the justices and it is apparent from the report of the guardian ad litem that sections were quoted from it. It is convenient if I read paragraph 5(1) in the introduction to this section: " Restricting the liberty of children is a 29. of plague in Stirling, where Carver might, or then again might not, have been living, in the 1940s) -- seems freely based on a plainsong of the Sarum rite derived from Chapter 37 of the Book of Genesis: " Jacob... rent his garments.... and said an evil beast [ fera pessima ] hath devoured my son Joseph ". At least one writer has speculated that Carver may recently have lost a son (by circular argument, in that selfsame Stirling plague), but the truth is we simply don't know what, if _any_ , personal reference is composed into the music. It is however a magnificent piece -- the work of a great polyphonist at the very height of his powers. Dark but lustrously rich in vocal and tonal colour, the predominant mood -- if it's permissible to speak of such a thing in relation to a Mass setting -- seems to be one of elegiac lyricism. Despite many exquisite passages of florid embellishment in a manner familiar from the earlier works, there is much less of their sense of ecstatic suspension of time 30. matters concerning district councils and planning. Rev. Ian Paisley Further to that supplementary question, will the Minister also have a word with the planners about hotel accommodation, especially in the County Antrim area, and find out why so many obstacles are being put in the way of hoteliers who want to improve their facilities? Mr. Brooke I know that my hon. Friend the Member for Wiltshire, North is concerned to improve hotel accommodation throughout the Province, so I shall draw the hon. Gentleman's remarks to his attention. Mr. Jim Marshall Does the Secretary of State have _any_ further plans for undertaking joint initiatives between the Province and the Republic? Does the Secretary of State accept that the tourist industry in the island as a whole was affected adversely by British Airways' decision to stop the London-Dublin link? Will he give an undertaking to the House that he will have discussions with the chair of British Airways to try to reintroduce that important link between London and Dublin? Mr. Brooke I was asked specifically about tourism in Northern Ireland. My understanding is that the decision by British Airways 31. the dark, inscrutable carob tree, I did feel a faint touch of fear. But it was a fear of the inexplicable, the unknown, not of the supernatural. As I walked across the gravel to the colonnade, where I could see Conchis was already sitting, his back to me, I decided on a course of action -- or rather, of reaction. He turned. " A good siesta? " " Yes, thank you. " " You have read the pamphlet? " " You're right. It is more fascinating than _any_ historical novel. " He kept a face impeccably proof to my ironic undertone. " Thank you very much. " I put the pamphlet on the table. Calmly, in my silence, he began to pour me tea. He had already had his own and he went away to play the harpsichord for twenty minutes. As I listened to him, I thought. The incidents seemed designed to deceive all the senses. Last night's had covered smell and hearing; this afternoon's, and that 32. " Agreed, " said Greg. " He seems able to turn a pleasant pub into a speakeasy waiting for a raid. Not your mother's type at all, I'm afraid. Have you had much contact with him? " " He was round to me at the office the other day, wondering if I had _any_ letters. Why he imagined Walter would have written to me I can't think. Perhaps he'd heard the rumours. Anyway, of course I hadn't any. He went to Rose too, but her mother had given him any there were. Hey -- give me that rag there. " Hilary Seymour-Strachey grabbed the rag, and went over to a picture. He did something technical on it, and suddenly his attention seemed to revert entirely to his exhibition. Greg, after a perfunctory tour round the makeshift gallery decided he'd better slip off. He stood at the top of the stairs, looking back at Hilary -- chunky, lively, absorbed -- and at his paintings. What had he got from the talk? A 33. " Agreed, " said Greg. " He seems able to turn a pleasant pub into a speakeasy waiting for a raid. Not your mother's type at all, I'm afraid. Have you had much contact with him? " " He was round to me at the office the other day, wondering if I had _any_ letters. Why he imagined Walter would have written to me I can't think. Perhaps he'd heard the rumours. Anyway, of course I hadn't any. He went to Rose too, but her mother had given him any there were. Hey -- give me that rag there. " Hilary Seymour-Strachey grabbed the rag, and went over to a picture. He did something technical on it, and suddenly his attention seemed to revert entirely to his exhibition. Greg, after a perfunctory tour round the makeshift gallery decided he'd better slip off. He stood at the top of the stairs, looking back at Hilary -- chunky, lively, absorbed -- and at his paintings. What had he got from the talk? A 34. the customer unless it takes steps to ensure his " fair treatment " (this may not be sufficient under fiduciary law), and SIB Core Rule 25 which in conjunction with SFA Conduct of Business Rule 5--;36(2) permits " front running ". Further examples are given in Part V of the CP. Can the practitioner avoid the problem? --;techniques for resolving conflicts under the general law Fiduciaries attempt to resolve conflicts of interest and duty or conflicts between two duties by a variety of self-help methods. If these methods work, they may be used to modify fiduciary duties to avoid _any_ conflicts with what is permitted or required by regulatory rules. First, there are what may be termed contractual techniques which are arrived at by agreement between the parties. These include the development of trade practices which become implied terms of the contract, the use of exclusion clauses purporting to modify or exclude particular duties, and the making of advance disclosure of particular activities which would otherwise amount to breaches of duty. There are also " structural " techniques whereby the business of the firm is organised in such a 35. . Its Cambridge laboratory specialises in manufacturing and logistics and houses its CAD/CAM/CIM support facilities. This depth of experience and wide contact base is now available to assist all potential participants in CIME projects. Key PA staff involved will be Norman Schofield, Chris Strachan, David Howard and Rebecca Oxenford. Subject to the necessary agreements being reached in Brussels and Luxembourg, the next call for proposals is expected in May. In preparation for this a UK CIME Day will be held in London on the 15th March and details will soon be available from PA. If you are in _any_ way involved, potentially involved, or interested in ESPRIT CIME, you should make sure that PA are aware of you. PA are building up a definitive database of companies and contacts interested in ESPRIT CIME. Don't risk being left out. Please do not rely on the fact that you have previously received information about ESPRIT CIME or entered your details on a previous database. Make sure that you receive the maximum value from DTI and PA by contacting Rebecca Oxenford,. Pilot scheme for post-experienced training in 36. person your chances of survival are excellent. are these the chances of surviving er a hernia operation or? For the average hernia operation which is done remember as cold surgery, not as an emergency, the chances of dying under the anaesthetic are vanishingly small. How small? Put it this way, you're probably at more risk of dying crossing the road. And er one of the reasons they've reduced the levels of anaesthetic is because the more they reduce the levels of anaesthetic, the lower your chances of dying during the anaesthesia. Right. _Any_ questions about that? Yeah, what what you got under your? You've got.. I don't know.. And we're Performing this lovely task for you in Cumbernauld in bonny Scotland. It's now quarter past nine. Your old man here has brought me all the way up here for a complete and utter waste of time. and has only offered to buy me one beer so far. Two. Two. Right. Well let's see if that comes over. That's 37. last 20 years. Since the legislation assumes the existence of the common law background we must first endeavour to ascertain the general principles governing this area of tort and then see shortly how it is affected when there is a trade dispute. Secondly, the torts considered in this chapter may also come into question in cases of alleged unlawful competition between traders, but in practice they are of little significance because of the common law's refusal to adopt _any_ principle of " fair competition " other than the prohibition of obviously unlawful acts like torts and crimes and breaches of contract. Any full study of " unfair competition " would have to take account of the legislation protecting intangible business property like trade marks and patents, and of the statutory controls over restrictive trading agreements and monopolies, which have little or nothing to do with anything resembling the law of tort. One of the most significant sources of competition law is the EEC Treaty, which may be directly applicable in England and override municipal law. Article 85 prohibits agreements which have the effect of restricting or distorting competition and Article 86 prohibits 38. , yeah. Erm he just knew it and he was well known for it. He he was the last resort of anybody I knew. But if they needed it, they knew they could always get work with him. The guy was taking on ten people at o he he had ten people working for him in one day. All at five pound a day. And all working long hours. I've never heard of anyone working the hours I worked but then again I was living there and that was my disadvantage. He could get me _any_ time. And he knew I didn't have to be home for the kids or whatever, he knew my circumstances so well and he knew th exactly how much he could use me you know. And he wouldn't let me go at nine o'clock if he thought I hadn't have been knackered and ready to fall down you know. He'd have kept me there longer than that. So in fact he knew that he was known as the last resort I'm I'm not so sure 39. way I'm entrusting this story about Harry Martin to her. There's too much at stake. " Fran glanced back at the heap of cuttings, frowning as she sorted through the pile. " I know there's a link there somewhere between Martin and someone at the town hall. There's no other way to explain the fact that he's been allowed to buy that land so cheaply. It's just proving it that's going to be difficult. Most of the councillors seem to be hand in glove with each other; you can't make _any_ one of them speak to you, let alone give an interview. " " I know. It's some sort of fraud all right. That's the only explanation for it, but you try proving it... Maybe you should let it drop, love. It might be more trouble than it's worth. " " Let it drop? No way! If we did that then face it, Fred, we'd end up like a dozen other so-called topical news programmes. Our audience deserves better than 40. nature lost to humanity through Adam's sin. In assessing whether a particular doctrine might have encouraged scientific inquiry, such ambivalence must be taken into account. Even the claim that the natural order reflected the contingency of a divine will could pull in two directions. It could be used, as it was by Bacon and Mersenne, to justify an empirical rather than a rationalist approach to nature. But it could also be used to dismiss the claims, even of empiricists, that they knew how nature works. For if God could have made the world work in _any_ number of ways, would it not always be presumptuous to pretend that one had actually pinned Him down? That was an objection with which Galileo had to contend. Figure I. 8. Illustration from page 207 of Johannes Kepler's Harmonices mundi (1619). In Kepler's construction of the solar system, each planet had its own melodic line associated with a changing speed that increased as it approached its closest point to the sun. The less the variation in speed, the more monotonous the theme. SOME + singular noun 41. which to me shows a slight to her husband that she had not to her lover. I shall expect you always to be dressed by dinner time and whomsoever I bring home to my table you'll be in readiness to receive. PAMELA: I have the harmony of the spheres all around me, and every word that drops from your lips is sweet as honey. BELVILLE: I like to go to bed with my dearest by eleven. I ordinarily rise by six; I will allow you to lie half an hour after me then you'll have _some_ time you may call your own. At two o'clock I should like to sit down at table. I'd generally go to supper by eight, and when we stick to these old-fashioned rules we shall make our visitors conform to them too. In all things I expect you to be a lady. PAMELA: You oblige and improve me at the same time. What a happy lot is mine. BELVILLE: [ getting a little bored with PAMELA's compliance ] You are very obliging, Pamela, but 42. [ He unmasks. They hear a sound and both hastily resume their masks. ] My good sister, how happy should I be if I might be admitted to a conversation with you at your grate. COUNTESS: Answer me, thou bold Spaniard, is the fair lady here whose shackles thou wearest? BELVILLE: Do I look like a man shackled, my fairest nun? COUNTESS: No, no, not much like such a one. But I fancy thy wife is the fair Quaker. [ A laugh from the CARDINAL and the FOX at _some_ witticism of PAMELA's. ] Enough! She is the wit of the assembly, and her person shows some intimacies have passed with somebody. Is it with thee? BELVILLE: It would be my glory if it was, were her face as fair as her person. COUNTESS: Is it not? BELVILLE: I long to know. COUNTESS: I am glad thou dost not know. Dost thou hate shackles? Or is it that thy hour is not yet come? BELVILLE: I wish 43. : Oh yes. GUIL: You were looking? PLAYER: Oh no. GUIL: Chance, then. PLAYER: Or fate. GUIL: Yours or ours? PLAYER: It could hardly be one without the other. GUIL: Fate, then. PLAYER: Oh yes. We have no control. Tonight we play to the court. Or the night after. Or to the tavern. Or not. GUIL: Perhaps I can use my influence. PLAYER: At the tavern? GUIL: At the court. I would say I have _some_ influence . PLAYER: Would you say so? GUIL: I have influence yet. PLAYER: Yet what? (GUIL seizes the PLAYER violently.) GUIL: I have influence! (The PLAYER does not resist. GUIL loosens his hold. More calmly.) You said something -- about getting caught up in the action -- PLAYER: (Gaily freeing himself) I did! -- I did! -- You're quicker than your friend... (Confidingly) Now for a handful of guilders I 44. the Iraqi oil minister. The Texan wanted to impress him to clinch a business deal. Later that night the Duchess took Wyatt on to a dinner party at top nightspot Annabel's, where the two refused to be separated. Steve, asked to sit at another table, astonished their host, Lord McAlpine, with the reply: " Mah woman and I sit together. " This was scandalous behaviour, and the word was that Buckingham Palace began telling Fergie to cool her relationship with the Texan. By the spring of 1991 this advice was beginning to have _some_ effect . But by that time Wyatt had introduced Sarah to " my friend and distant relation ". This was Johnny Bryan, another Texan who was wrongly reputed to be a millionaire. Johnny was a show-off -- a balding braggart who was later proved to be a liar. But he held a strong attraction for the the Duchess -- and by now she was totally out of the Palace's control. Bryan assured Sarah that if her marriage to Andrew could not be saved he would act for both of them in 45. " TIGHT FIT: It's a bit of a squeeze for Derek between Hawk and Saracen, left, but sexy Panther muscles in nicely between Saracen and Shadow SWINGING IN THE PAIN: The super-fit American Gladiators get to grips with their challengers on the rings and in the Duel MESSING ABOUT AT NO. 10 ALASTAIR CAMPBELL THANKS to the economic miracle, we've sold our house after two years of trying. We've spent the first month in our new house with an assortment of builders, damp-proofers, wood-wormers, plasterers, plumbers and painters. So for once I have _some_ sympathy with John Major, who is enduring similar torture at Number 10. It may explain why he is making such a mess of the job. How can he be expected to run the country when half his time is spent waiting for people who never turn up? When they do, he's probably so busy making tea, answering their demands for more sugar, and looking for his favourite mug in the debris that he can't concentrate on his red boxes. The " phone is another problem