*PRIME ministers, *FREE enterprise, GREAT Britain-United States relations
Abstract
The article reports on the revelation of the British government papers which includes records of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's cabinet towards U. S. Prime Minister Ronald Reagan. It says that the documents offered new insights into fractious relationship with France. It tells that the toughest document was the diplomatic cable from Britain's ambassador in Washington at the time Sir Nicholas Henderson railing with President François Mitterand over French-made Exocet missiles.
Reports on letter bombs which exploded at various offices of the Arabic-language newspaper `Al Hayat.' The bombings at offices in New York City (at United Nations headquarters) and in London, England; The paper's principal owner, Prince Khalid Ibn Sultan of Saudi Arabia; Question of motive; The newspaper's confusion regarding the bombings, in light of nonpartisan editorial policy.
*ACCESS to information, *MEDICAL research, *INFORMATION policy
Abstract
The article offers information on the mandatory Public Access Policies introduced by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the British agency Wellcome Trust for all research papers. The NIH policy requires all investigators funded by the National Library of Medicine's PubMed Central (PMC) to submit an electronic version of their final manuscripts. The Wellcome Trust policy mandates electronic copies of any research papers accepted for publication to be made available through PMC.