Help, please

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Help, please

Postby antiaristo » Tue Feb 14, 2006 5:59 am

Hey Guys,<br><br>I'm being shut out of key stories on the Times!<br>Guess Mr Murdoch doesn't like what I've been saying.<br><br>Please, if you can, post these two stories<br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://business.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,9071-2039385,00.html">business.timesonline.co.u...85,00.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://business.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,9069-2038881,00.html">business.timesonline.co.u...81,00.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>The first is about the Northcliffe Newspapers sale.<br>The second is about Levene. I'm wondering if it is Peter Levene, a key figure in Iraq-Contra/Iran-Iraq.<br><br>This has h`ppened before on selected stories. Seems like a good time to check out my paranoia!<br><br>Thanks <p></p><i></i>
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Levene attacks defence strategy

Postby Trifecta » Tue Feb 14, 2006 6:15 am

Levene attacks defence strategy<br>By Angela Jameson, Industrial Correspondent<br> <br> <br> <br>THE former chief of defence procurement under Margaret Thatcher has launched an outspoken attack on the Government’s Defence Industrial Strategy (DIS), saying that partnering is no substitute for competition in defence procurement. <br>Lord Levene of Portsoken, chief of defence procurement from 1985 to 1991, told the Commons Defence Select Committee that the plan for the defence industry published by Lord Drayson, the Defence Procurement Minister, last December was a return to habits that he had worked hard to undo in his time at the Defence Procurement Agency. <br><br> <br><br> <br>“One thing I have some fundamental difficulty with is the notion that partnering can be as effective as competition,” Lord Levene told the defence committee. <br><br>When asked by James Arbuthnot, Conservative MP for North East Hampshire and chairman of the Defence Select Committee, whether the DIS was a move away from the concept of obtaining best value for money, Lord Levene said: “The document tries as well as it can — and I think it has been very carefully put together — to steer a middle course and to achieve as much as it can in both directions. We will never have a perfect solution.” <br><br>Lord Levene, now chairman of Lloyd’s of London, was credited with introducing the principle of competition to defence procurement in the late 1980s. However, in the 1990s critics said that competition had deteriorated into an era of confrontation, in which the Ministry of Defence and BAE Systems, Britain’s biggest defence supplier, were often at loggerheads. <br><br>John Smith, Labour MP for the Vale of Glamorgan, asked Lord Levene whether he was concerned that the Government was in danger of conflating the interests of one private company with the interests of the country. “If I may say so, you have effectively answered your own question,” Lord Levene said. <br><br>Lord Levene’s comments are likely to surprise many in the defence industry. Although he makes clear that he is speaking in a personal capacity, he is the honorary president of the Defence Manufacturers’ Association and chairman of General Dynamics UK, the military communications group. <br><br>The defence industry has welcomed the DIS and has heaped praise on Lord Drayson, the architect of the document. <br><br>Lord Drayson said that Lord Levene had conceded in his evidence to the committee that the environment had changed greatly since 1991. “Where competition is appropriate, competition is a central part of our techniques, but, unlike in the 1980s, in some areas it is not possible to take a purely competitive approach,” Lord Drayson said. <br><br><br>The AirTanker consortium is expected to begin fundraising for Britain’s largest Private Finance Initiative (PFI) in late spring, scotching rumours that the defence contract was on the verge of collapse. The £13 billion PFI deal is on course to be completed towards the end of the year, sources familiar with the process said. <br>The deal will see a new generation of modern refuelling aircraft supplied to the RAF by a consortium of equipment manufacturers, led by EADS and including Rolls-Royce, Cobham and VT Group. AirTanker — the consortium running the programme — and the Ministry of Defence have been locked in talks for two years.<br> <br> <br> <p></p><i></i>
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DMGT's final-salary plan holds key to sale

Postby Trifecta » Tue Feb 14, 2006 6:17 am

DMGT's final-salary plan holds key to sale<br>By Dan Sabbagh, Media Editor<br> <br> <br> <br>DAILY Mail and General Trust’s pension fund will have a crucial role in coming days in determining the outcome of the hotly contested auction for its £1.3 billion regional newspaper division, Northcliffe Newspapers. <br>Greenhill, the bank handling the auction, is presenting details of the bids to the trustees, who will decide how much they would like the new buyer to put into the regional newspaper pension scheme — one of the few remaining open final-salary schemes in the country. <br><br> <br><br> <br>The fund is £100 million in deficit using new FRS17 pension accounting standards, but the trustees are expected to demand a greater contribution if they deem that the bid vehicle has a lot of debt or if they expect the group to be broken up. Some bidders say that as much as £300 million extra could be required. <br><br>That could favour Gannett, the American group behind USA Today, which is the only remaining trade bidder. The other bidders for Northcliffe are venture capital groups — a strongly fancied consortium led by Candover and CVC, plus a separate bid from Providence. <br><br>Venture capital groups will want to inject leverage and will probably break up the newspaper portfolio in due course. Either of these scenarios could worry the trustees because they reduce the long-term economic viability of the company that is supporting the pension fund. <br><br>DMGT’s pension fund is a separate operation, with its own offices in Covent Garden. It boasts property investments, including an Argyll forest and an Iceland store in Newmarket. <br><br>A formal decision on the outcome of the auction is not expected until next week<br> <br> <br> <p></p><i></i>
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Re: DMGT's final-salary plan holds key to sale

Postby GDN01 » Tue Feb 14, 2006 6:21 am

it is odd that our threads have nearly the same name. I wrestled a long time over what to title mine. <p></p><i></i>
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Muchas Gracias!

Postby antiaristo » Tue Feb 14, 2006 9:35 am

Thanks, Osculum.<br>It IS Peter Levene!<br>Check out the stuff on Truthseeker<br><br>Blood Money I - IV <p></p><i></i>
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