Italy to send 1,000 more troops to Afghanistan
The company surveyed over 700 pairs of feet to produce the catalogue, which must have been a fragrant task for some lucky employee.. Apparently a full third of the shoes bought by women don't fit properly because they aren't wide enough. He wrote a second speech earlier this week and threw that away. He then wrote a third draft which had been discarded 45 minutes ago.This couldn't possibly have been a coded criticism of the Government's policy on takeovers in the electricity industry, that was lucidly explained to delegates by the Trade Secretary Ian Lang just 45 minutes earlier?N Brown, the Manchester mail order company chaired by Sir David Alliance, has a tradition of offering items you can't get anywhere else, such as size 24 dresses and portable bidets. It sprang to fame a couple of years ago with a survey on the changing shape of women Now it has turned to women's feet.
Vaux sponsors Sunderland football club, and Mr Nicholson yesterday told journalists how he watched the match last Sunday.Sunderland had just won promotion to the Premiership, and Nicholson was painfully aware that they would be wanting to increase the amount they get from their sponsors. He was just creeping away at the end of the match when he was collared by Sunderland's chairman, who asked: "Can I have a meeting?" With the decisiveness of a Vinny Jones tackle, Mr Nicholson replied: "If it's to talk about money, the answer's no."Chuck Whitney, president, CEO and general head honcho of Southern Electric International, the American group that has been politely told to pack its suitcases and stop trying to buy up more chunks of the UK power industry, was in a sarcastic mood yesterday.Addressing the Adam Smith Institute's Utilities '96 conference, he said he had first written his speech in Atlanta, Georgia a month ago He then tore it up. Could be confusing for companies like Prudential which will now have to establish "assurance committees"...Vaux Breweries' chief executive Frank Nicholson doesn't mince his words when money is at stake. The on-line information company's shares promptly fell 12p on the news, then recovered to close 4p down at 235p. Obviously the City doesn't hold Auntie Beeb's management in great esteem.Coopers & Lybrand, Britain's biggest firm of accountants, no longer has an audit department Instead it has a "corporate assurance" department. Apparently, the bean-counters want to show clients they aren't just boring auditors, but can offer lots of exciting business advice as well.